GOP reboots the Red Scare as young Democrats embrace socialism

Axios
Published
1
0
Read the full story at AxiosOriginal

70 years after the Red Scare and 35 years after the fall of the Soviet Union, President Trump and Republicans are trying to re-introduce a national fear of "godless communists" ahead of the critical midterms.

Why it matters: A wave of resounding victories by Democratic Socialists has the GOP trotting out a message that last worked when most of those candidates weren't even born.


  • It's too soon to know if the message is working — but Trump and Republican strategists see an opening with voters old enough to remember Soviet-era nuclear drills and spy dramas.

The big picture: Former Trump aide Steve Bannon has argued for years that former Wisconsin Sen. Joe McCarthy was right about communism's widespread infiltration into the U.S. government.

  • On Sunday, Trump called communism "the Greatest Threat to our Country since World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, or 9/11!"
  • Once a fringe view, now right-wing voices seem to be calling for a McCarthyism revival.

What they're saying: "It's a common electoral strategy for conservatives to attack liberals, progressives, democratic socialists as communists, and imply therefore that they are much more extreme than they actually are," Kathryn Olmsted, a U.C. Davis distinguished professor of history, tells Axios.

  • But, she adds, "we're definitely reaching a new fever pitch."

The other side: "The Democrats' embrace of socialism and communism is an existential threat to our country. President Trump will keep calling out their radicalism and drawing a sharp contrast with his commonsense, America First agenda," White House spokesperson Olivia Wales said in a statement.

The intrigue: Trump mentor Roy Cohn was McCarthy's chief counsel during his infamous anticommunist campaign.

  • "Trump really is a Cold War person ... that's that's when he came of age, it's how he formed his political ideas," says Beverly Gage, a Pulitzer-prize-winning historian.
  • She adds, "But I guess the question is, 30 some years out from the end of the Cold War, is the United States actually still susceptible to that kind of political language?"

Reality check: Democratic socialism is not communism. New York's Zohran Mamdani and Washington, D.C., mayoral candidate Janeese Lewis George both call for expanded government programs, Axios' Josephine Walker writes.

  • "Any attempt to smear us as 'extremists' falls flat when so many Americans are struggling with the rising cost of housing, homelessness, unaffordable healthcare, and underfunded schools," a DSA spokesperson told Axios in a statement.
  • Still, Democrats are grappling with what it means for progressives and young Americans embracing labels that once stoked fears of communism.

Between the lines: Red-baiting "has much less resonance for a younger generation, which did not grow up living under the shadow of the Soviet Union," says Ethan Porter, co-director of GW's Institute for Data, Democracy and Politics.

  • "For many young voters, communism is just not an effective boogeyman."

Zoom out: Nevertheless, Republicans are echoing Trump's midterm message.

  • House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said last week that communism is "on our own shores."
  • Other far-right voices suggested reviving the 1954 Communist Control Act — which banned the Communist Party — as a way to crack down on Democratic socialists.

By the numbers: U.S. college students have a sunnier view of socialism than capitalism, according to an October Axios-Generation Lab poll.

  • Similarly, Americans' positive views of capitalism fell to a new low in Gallup's trend last year, but they remained higher than opinions about socialism.
  • Americans retain overwhelmingly unfavorable views of communism, per a 2025 CATO Institute/YouGov poll — but respondents under 30 were a different story, with around a third holding a favorable view.

What we're watching: Whether Trump's anticommunist alarm carries modern political weight.

Go deeper: House Democrats brace for a "Freedom Caucus of the left"

Related Markets

All Markets
View full chart →
View Full Chart
View full chart →
View Full Chart
View full chart →
View Full Chart

Market data may be delayed. Not financial advice.

Reader Reactions
Reading the article

💡 AI analysis provides alternative perspectives on current events

Support Alto & Gab

Alto is funded entirely by readers like you. Your donation helps us continue delivering curated news from a right-wing Christian Nationalist perspective, powered by Gab AI.

Gab Shop

Support free speech with official merchandise

View All Products

Install Alto on Your Phone

Add Alto to your home screen for quick access to breaking news — no app store required.

iPhone & iPad

Using Safari Browser

1

Open alto.gab.com in Safari

alto.gab.com
2

Tap the Share button

at the bottom of Safari
3

Tap "More"

More
4

Scroll and tap "Add to Home Screen"

Add to Home Screen

Tap "Add" to confirm

Alto will appear on your home screen like any other app!

Android

Using Chrome Browser

1

Open alto.gab.com in Chrome

alto.gab.com
2

Tap the menu button

three dots in top right
3

Tap "Add to Home screen"

Add to Home screen

Tap "Add" to confirm

Alto will appear on your home screen like any other app!
gab

Speak Freely

Join millions on the original and only true free speech social network.

What Makes Gab Different

We're not just another social network. We're a platform built on principles that matter.

Freedom of Speech & Reach

All First Amendment protected speech is welcome. No algorithmic throttling or shadow banning.

Family-Friendly Platform

We maintain a clean environment. Explicit adult content is strictly prohibited.

Western Nations Only

Third-world IPs are blocked. No scammers, no spam farms. Built for Western civilization.

Funded By Users

Our users are our investors and customers. You're not the product being sold.

Battle Tested

A decade of standing strong. Banned from app stores, banks—and still here.

American Owned & Operated

We reject foreign censorship demands. Built by Americans, for free people.