Insiders at the Democratic National Committee (DNC) have reportedly been looking to oust Ken Martin as chair, believing he failed to help the party recover from the 2024 election.
A report from The Bulwark spoke with at least three anonymous sources inside the DNC who confirmed that the party has grown increasingly frustrated with Martinβs leadership, especially after he appeared onΒ Pod Save AmericaΒ where defended himself βagainst charges that he has backed out of his promise to release an after-action report about what went wrong in the 2024 election, as well as accusations that theΒ DNC has had trouble raising money and balancing its budget.β
βThe concerns have become so pronounced in recent weeks that some DNC members have privately discussed trying to force Martin out of the job, according to three people familiar with these conversations,β the report said. βThe idea was put on hold after members failed to identify an alternative candidate willing to step into the role.β
The frustration over Martinβs leadership has only worsened in recent months, with some members entertaining resolutions that might force him to balance the DNC budget.
βI think that would be a very hard job, no matter who has it. But [Martin] seems to be uniquely ill-suited for it,β Democratic strategist Jesse Lehrich told The Bulwark. βTheΒ Pod SaveΒ interview was mind-blowing to me.β
Under Martinβs leadership, the DNC has spent more money than it has raised, while the RNC retains a βroughly seven-to-oneΒ money advantage,β with Martin taking out a $15 million loan last October for elections in Virginia and New Jersey. Insiders say he may take a similar loan this summer or else lay off staff.
βThe biggest strike against him is that he seems to be utterly incapable of managing a budget,β said one anonymous source. βTo put the DNC in such a bad financial situation going into what is β¦ likely to be the most wild [presidential] primary weβve had in a while β it reeks of irresponsibility and immaturity.β
βIt just feels like weβre being gaslit at this point,β the source added.
Michael Kapp, a California-based DNC member, defended Martinβs tenure, saying he has beenΒ βshifting the party away from a consultant-centered model and toward one that is more centered on state parties and organizers β and that was always going to create friction.β
βThe loudest people in D.C. β including theΒ Pod Save AmericaΒ folks β are often the furthest away from the doors that are being knocked. What Iβm hearing from state parties, organizers, and activists on the ground is overwhelmingly positive,β Kapp added. βSince [Martinβs] become DNC chair, we won 30 out of 30 State House legislative flips. The strategy is working.β


