went for hillary clinton. where brett welder is running, for instance. so i don't think he can say generally speaking. there are obviously a lot of people who still strongly support trump, although his numbers are diminishing. i think what it actually is going to come down to is the kind of messaging you have from democratic candidates and whether or not they can offer something that's a positive alternative to what trump has been selling. >> so what is the positive alternative? >> i think that what you see from people like cortez and bernie sanders is these affirmative policies that go directly to what people need. what their material needs actually are. so when you talk to people about health care, when you talk to people about raising the minimum wage, when you talk to people about housing, as a human right, people on the ground respond. and i've seen that as i've traveled with bernie on a couple of occasions. it's working-class people who are not hesitant at all about his message. >> danielle, do you think there's a fear out there, or there's an issue with regard to how the democrats are going to be campaigning in the mid terms, in that the same thing could happen now that happened in 2016, where they could be a split between the progressives and the centers, the clintons