FRANKFORT, Ky. — Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said Wednesday that Democrats should be thinking less about partisan politics and more about meeting people's everyday needs as they chart a comeback strategy after last month's crushing election losses.
Beshear, who has won three statewide elections in deeply red Kentucky and has been mentioned as a potential contender for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028, said the party should work on things like good-paying jobs, health care, schools, roads and bridges and public safety.
''These are the core areas the American people need help on, and that's where we as Democrats should be, but that's where every Republican should be, too,'' Beshear said during a sit-down interview at the Kentucky Capitol. ''And just imagine, if we spent most of our time working on all that, we'd argue a lot less. And the American people would be a lot better off.''
Beshear, who was recently chosen as chair-elect of the Democratic Governors Association for 2026, when a majority of states will elect governors, said he hoped to be ''a reasonable, common-sense, common-ground voice'' for the party. That should overshadow talk of whether the party should shift more to the political right, left or center, he said.
''The Democratic Party needs to stay laser focused on people's everyday needs," he said. ''I don't think they're political at all. So I don't get into the right, left or center. But focusing on jobs, focusing on health care, focusing on the roads and bridges we drive every day, public education and public safety. Those are the core concerns that if somebody's worried about it, they don't get to anything else. They don't get to the partisanship.''
Beshear's rise in national politics accelerated with his reelection victory in 2023, a year before voters decided to return Republican Donald Trump to the White House and give the GOP control of Congress. Beshear served one term as state attorney general before his first election as governor in 2019.
Beshear was in the running to be Kamala Harris' running mate this summer but lost out to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. Assessing his party's loss of the White House, Beshear avoided any criticism of Harris, saying she made the best decisions she could and tried hard to win.
He quickly pivoted to the work ahead for Democrats, and his role in the party's comeback efforts.