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LEADERS WITH
COMMON SENSE

Building a coalition of pragmatic leaders who prioritize results over partisanship

We are Democrats, Independents, and responsible Republicans united by ethical governance, economic opportunity, and community-driven policies.

Derrell Simpson, Executive Director

CommonSense Democrats Appoints Derrell Simpson as Executive Director

Veteran public servant, political strategist, and community leader to help lead the organization's next chapter of growth.

CommonSense Democrats is pleased to announce the appointment of Derrell Simpson as Executive Director. In his new role, Simpson will oversee the organization's day-to-day operations, lead strategic initiatives, and help expand CommonSense Democrats' work supporting candidates and promoting practical Democratic leadership across the country.

Meet Our Executive Director

Learn more about Derrell Simpson's background, experience, and vision for CommonSense Democrats

Derrell Simpson - Executive Director
CommonSense Democrats

Leadership is often measured by the positions a person holds. Derrell Simpson has built his career by the impact he leaves behind. For more than two decades, Simpson has served at the intersection of public service, education, government, business, and political strategy, guided by a simple philosophy: listen first, build partnerships, and focus on results that improve people's lives.

Who We Are. Who We Support.

CommonSense Democrats is a national political action committee built and led by experienced campaign operatives who have served in every position of a campaign, from field organizing and finance to communications, data, operations, and senior strategy. We have run races at every level, won tough fights, and seen firsthand what it takes to support candidates and serve communities. That experience drives everything we do. We back leaders who reflect the values shown below, the kind of leaders our neighborhoods deserve.

Policy Priorities

We focus on issues that impact everyday Americans

Affordable Housing & Urban Development
  • Accelerate affordable housing approvals while balancing smart urban growth
  • Protect homeowners and renters from unfair policies
  • Invest in community-driven development projects
Public Safety & Criminal Justice Reform
  • Modernize policing policies with a focus on community safety and trust
  • Expand mental health crisis response teams
  • Strengthen crime prevention initiatives
Economic Growth & Small Business Support
  • Reduce unnecessary regulatory barriers while maintaining worker protections
  • Support small businesses and job training programs
  • Offer tax incentives for local job creation
Education & Workforce Development
  • Improve funding and efficiency in public schools
  • Expand career and technical education for high school graduates
  • Reduce reliance on standardized testing, focusing on real-world skills
Local Governance & Representation
  • Advocate for D.C. statehood and local decision-making power
  • Improve infrastructure, broadband access, and public transit
  • Ensure local leaders have a direct impact on national policies

Join the Movement

CommonSense Democrats is powered by people like you who believe in common-sense governance

Donate to Support Our Cause
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Volunteer for Campaigns
Help with outreach, events, and organizing
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Our Perspective

Insights and commentary on pragmatic leadership and policy solutions

The Economic Reality Nobody Can Ignore
The Economic Reality Nobody Can Ignore

Every election cycle, candidates try to control the conversation. But heading into the 2026 midterms, there is no clever way around the central issue in American life...

What Happens When We Don't Elect CommonSense Democrats?
What Happens When We Don't Elect CommonSense Democrats?

Education is often discussed as if it begins and ends inside a classroom. But education is bigger than a building...

Why Aren't Our Leaders Putting Jobs, Workforce Development, and Small Business First?
Why Aren't Our Leaders Putting Jobs, Workforce Development, and Small Business First?

In communities across the country, the message is loud and clear: people want to work, build, and grow. They want their children to have opportunities to succeed without having to leave their hometowns...

The Midterms Will Be a Stress Test for the Country
The Midterms Will Be a Stress Test for the Country

You can feel it. Confidence in Congress is thinning out. Voters are tired of performance politics...

The Housing Crisis Isn't Coming. It's Already Here
The Housing Crisis Isn't Coming. It's Already Here

The American Dream used to include a home, a little stability, and the belief that hard work could turn today's paycheck into tomorrow's security. For too many Americans, that dream now looks like five roommates, a rent increase, or a down payment that moves further out of reach every year...

Public Safety Isn't a Slogan. It's a Daily Reality
Public Safety Isn't a Slogan. It's a Daily Reality

Public safety has become one of the most abused phrases in American politics. Meanwhile, most Americans are not living inside those slogans. They are living real lives...

The Democratic Party Is Quietly Breaking Apart From Within
The Democratic Party Is Quietly Breaking Apart From Within

By Derrell Simpson, Executive Director

Over the last several weeks, Democratic primary elections across the country have revealed something party leadership should not ignore...

The Case for Generational Change in American Political Leadership
The Case for Generational Change in American Political Leadership

Across the United States, trust in political institutions is waning, polarization is deepening, and voters, especially younger ones, are disengaging from a system that feels stagnant and unresponsive...

The Uphill Battle for Medical Marijuana Patients in Texas
The Uphill Battle for Medical Marijuana Patients in Texas

For many Americans living in Texas, accessing medical marijuana is not simply a policy debate. It is a daily struggle against restrictive laws, limited access, high costs, and lingering stigma...

The Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act. Black Voters Will Pay the Price.
The Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act. Black Voters Will Pay the Price.

The Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana v. Callais is a dangerous setback for voting rights, fair representation, and the promise of equal participation in American democracy. By weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the Court has made it harder for communities of color to challenge maps that dilute their voting power.

The Supreme Court Got This One Right: A Ballot Cast on Time Should Count
The Supreme Court Got This One Right: A Ballot Cast on Time Should Count

Today's Supreme Court decision in Watson v. Republican National Committee is a victory for voters, for common sense, and for the basic principle that lawful ballots should not be thrown out because the mail moves slower than democracy.

Birthright Citizenship Is the Constitution's Promise, Not a Political Loophole
Birthright Citizenship Is the Constitution's Promise, Not a Political Loophole

Trump's attack on birthright citizenship was not just an immigration fight. It was an attempt to revive the old idea that belonging in America depends on bloodline. The Supreme Court got this one right in Trump v. Barbara.

If Campaign Finance Rules Keep Getting Weaker, Why Have Campaign Finance Rules at All?
If Campaign Finance Rules Keep Getting Weaker, Why Have Campaign Finance Rules at All?

The Supreme Court's decision in National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Federal Election Commission raises a question bigger than one campaign finance statute: if the Court keeps weakening campaign finance rules, what purpose does campaign finance law still serve?

Latest Endorsements

Supporting pragmatic leaders who deliver results for their communities

Jacque Patterson for DC Council At-Large - CommonSense Democrats Endorsement
Jacque Patterson for DC Council At-Large
Washington, DC | Vote May 11 - June 16

Washington, DC needs leadership that is grounded in real experience, proven accountability, and a clear understanding of how decisions affect everyday life. Jacque Patterson brings that level of leadership.

With nearly three decades in the United States Air Force and years of hands-on leadership across DC's education, housing, and community development systems, Jacque understands what it takes to move systems forward.

Marketta Nimo for Grand Prairie City Council - CommonSense Democrats Endorsement
Marketta Nimo for Grand Prairie City Council
Grand Prairie, TX | At-Large Place 7 | Vote May 2

Marketta Nimo represents the kind of public servant our communities need right now: grounded, practical, accessible, and focused on the real issues that affect working families, seniors, small businesses, and young people every day.

At a time when too many people feel disconnected from local government, Marketta understands that leadership begins with presence. She will bring a balanced voice to the City Council, supporting progress while making sure families are not left behind.

Fuel Independent Leadership

CommonSense Democrats is structured as a Hybrid PAC, which means we operate two legally separate accounts under federal law.

However, the engine of our impact is our Independent Expenditure Account.

That is where your support makes the greatest difference.

Why the Independent Expenditure Account Matters

Federal law allows political committees to operate an account dedicated exclusively to independent advocacy. This account allows us to:

  • Raise unlimited contributions from individuals
  • Accept corporate support
  • Fund digital advertising, streaming, mail, voter education, and large-scale messaging
  • Support candidates without coordinating with their campaigns

Independent expenditures allow us to communicate directly with voters at scale. They allow us to act quickly. They allow us to compete.

If you want CommonSense Democrats to amplify pragmatic leadership across the country, this is the account that powers that work.

Donate to the Independent Expenditure Account

When you click Donate, you will be directed to contribute to our Independent Expenditure Account, where your support has the greatest reach and flexibility under federal law.

Contribution Details

There is no contribution limit for the Independent Expenditure Account.

All contributions are publicly disclosed in accordance with Federal Election Commission regulations. Federal law requires us to collect contributor name, address, occupation, and employer.

Contributions are not tax deductible.

Independent expenditures are not made in coordination with any candidate or campaign.

Donor Recognition Tiers

Advocate Circle

Up to $50,000

Support our mission with meaningful contributions

Leadership Circle

$50,001–$250,000

Join strategic discussions and shape our direction

Strategy Council

$250,001–$500,000

Non-voting member with insider access to campaign strategy

National Strategy Board

$500,000 and above

Voting member with direct influence on national priorities

What About the Other Account?

As a Hybrid PAC, we also maintain a separate Federal Contribution Account that can make limited direct contributions to candidates.

That account is subject to a $5,000 annual limit per individual and cannot accept corporate contributions.

While important, it is not the primary vehicle for scaling our impact.

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CommonSense Democrats is a hybrid political action committee registered with the Federal Election Commission.
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© 2026 CommonSense Democrats. All rights reserved.

    The Democratic Party Is Quietly Breaking Apart From Within

    By Derrell Simpson, Executive Director

    The Democratic Party Is Quietly Breaking Apart From Within
    Over the last several weeks, Democratic primary elections across the country have revealed something party leadership should not ignore. From New York to Colorado, and increasingly in local races across major urban centers, a new generation of candidates is reshaping what Democratic political power looks like and how legitimacy inside the party is earned. At first glance, these outcomes may appear disconnected. A surprising primary upset here. A grassroots candidate outperforming expectations there. But taken together, these races suggest something deeper unfolding inside the Democratic Party itself. The assumptions that have governed Democratic politics for decades are beginning to weaken, and a new political order is beginning to emerge. To understand this moment, it is important to examine the candidates and movements driving this shift. In New York, Zohran Mamdani has become one of the clearest symbols of an emerging political infrastructure operating outside traditional Democratic power centers. His rise demonstrates that candidates no longer need to rely exclusively on legacy donor networks, institutional endorsements, or long established party relationships to build viable political power. Campaigns rooted in grassroots organizing, digital communication, and direct voter mobilization are proving increasingly competitive. The ecosystem developing around candidates like Mamdani is equally important. Figures such as New York State Representative Claire Valdez (Democratic Nominee for NY-7 Congressional District), New York City Comptroller Brad Lander (Democratic Nominee for NY-10 Congressional District), and Activist Darializa Avila Chevalier (Democratic Nominee for NY-13 Congressional District) represent a broader pipeline of Democratic candidates building credibility through community engagement, organizing infrastructure, and coalition building rather than relying solely on traditional political pathways. In Washington DC, Janeese Lewis George offered an earlier signal of this same shift. Her political rise reflected growing voter demand for leaders perceived as deeply connected to neighborhood concerns rather than candidates elevated primarily through institutional machinery. Subsequently, we're learning that accessibility and authenticity are becoming political assets equal to experience and seniority. Then came perhaps the clearest signal yet in Colorado, where 29 year old Melat Kiros defeated longtime incumbent Diana DeGette, ending nearly three decades of congressional incumbency. The significance of that victory extends far beyond a single race. It challenged one of the Democratic Party's oldest operating assumptions that incumbency, fundraising strength, and institutional support are enough to guarantee political security. Taken together, these developments reveal a consistent pattern. Voters are increasingly rewarding candidates who feel culturally aligned with present day realities and less connected to institutional politics. The traditional advantages that once protected long standing political figures are no longer functioning with the same reliability they once did. For decades, Democratic politics has operated through a relatively stable internal ecosystem. Incumbency created security. Party endorsements reinforced fundraising. Institutional relationships protected political longevity. That formula now appears increasingly vulnerable. However, this shift may not be purely ideological, especially given, the too-often interpretation, that these victories are evidence that Democratic voters simply want the party to move further left. That conclusion may be incomplete. A more important question remains unanswered: Are voters embracing progressive ideology itself, or are they responding to something broader, like authenticity, urgency, cultural relevance, and a desire for candidates who communicate as if they genuinely understand the economic anxiety defining modern American life? That distinction matters enormously and if this moment is primarily ideological, these victories may remain concentrated in safely Democratic districts and progressive urban centers. However, if voters are responding to communication style, generational identity, and candidates perceived as more connected to lived experience, the implications extend far beyond isolated local races. That becomes particularly important in battleground states such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona, and Nevada, where elections are won not through ideological purity but through broad coalition politics. Candidates must simultaneously motivate younger voters while maintaining support among moderates, union households, independents, suburban voters, and persuadable working class communities, which is where the Democratic Party faces a genuine strategic dilemma. For years, Democratic messaging has centered around policy expertise, institutional competence, and protecting democratic norms. Those priorities remain important, but younger voters appear motivated by something different. They are rewarding candidates who project urgency, emotional clarity, economic empathy, and a level of directness often absent from traditional party communication. What makes this moment even more significant is that many of these campaigns share a common structural advantage. Across many of these races, candidates have benefited from organizing models associated with groups like Democratic Socialists of America, organizations that have consistently invested in grassroots candidate recruitment, volunteer mobilization, and message discipline over multiple election cycles. This should not be dismissed as simply progressive enthusiasm. It actually represents a growing organizing infrastructure operating inside the broader Democratic ecosystem, one capable of identifying voter frustration and converting that frustration into measurable political power. The Democratic Party now faces a choice: It can dismiss these victories as isolated disruptions confined to progressive strongholds, or it can seriously examine what these campaigns reveal about how a growing segment of the electorate now engages with politics. The lesson here may not be ideological, but more so organizational. These implications may soon reach presidential politics and the next Democratic presidential nominee will almost certainly face a coalition that is growing divided between traditional institutional Democrats and a younger electorate shaped by grassroots political movements, economic populism, and candidates operating outside conventional party structures. That tension will likely influence everything from primary endorsements and campaign messaging to turnout strategy and coalition management in a national election. If party leadership misreads this moment, Democrats risk entering future presidential races with a political playbook designed for an electorate that is rapidly changing beneath them. What we are witnessing is not simply a series of isolated primary victories. It is the early stage of a fundamental reorganization of power inside the Democratic Party itself. And, whichever faction learns to understand this shift first may very well determine the future direction of American presidential politics for the next generation.
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