Can Democrats poach MAHA voters ahead of the midterm elections?

Published May 24, 2026 7:00am ET



Ahead of the November midterm elections, Democrats are making a play to peel away as many tenuous Republican voters as they can. If Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) gets his way, a core group of voters that his party will go after is the “Make America Healthy Again” movement.

Booker recently implored Democrats not to fight the MAHA movement at a gathering of liberals in Washington.

“We should be telling those loving moms and dads that they are right, right about the chemicals, right about the ultra-processed foods, right about the chronic disease, right that something in America is profoundly broken,” Booker said at the Center for American Progress’s Ideas Conference.

The MAHA movement, a diverse coalition of groups, coalesced around Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s concerns that too many factors in the United States were making people sicker at the expense of enriching the coffers of corporate America. The movement has mostly also aligned with the Trump administration, but Booker believes that Democrats may have an inroad to winning MAHA voters over.

The Monsanto Company v. Durnell case has caused some frustrations from MAHA advocates after the Trump administration supported Bayer, the maker of RoundUp. Bayer manufactures the herbicide glyphosate, the main chemical in RoundUp.

Roughly 1,000 people, the New Jersey senator included, participated in the “People vs. Poison” rally at the Supreme Court late last month. MAHA advocates have also slammed the Environmental Protection Agency for rolling back restrictions on forever chemicals in drinking water.

Some Democrats argue that the GOP’s general opposition to government regulation makes it difficult to achieve MAHA’s ambitions. Yet, that doesn’t mean the movement is an easy fit for the ideology of most Democrats either.

“The core of MAHA fundamentally distrusts science and institutions,” said Kaivan Shroff, a media and culture commentator. “Part of the core Democratic base is deeply institutionalist and is very concerned about the trend away from science and facts. Still, there is definitely an opportunity for Democrats to reach the MAHA-lite crowd that is focused on items like banning harmful food colorings or limiting pharmaceutical advertisements.”

“Those are actually socially positive policy issues, and a smart Dem could come up with a policy or two that attracts some of those voters — especially as they start to grow frustrated with Trump, as many in MAHA have,” Shroff added.

Booker, along with Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM), introduced last month the No Immunity for Glyphosate Act, which would overturn Trump’s executive order promoting the production of glyphosate. While speaking at the CAP conference, Booker claimed that MAHA parents “are being betrayed by the current administration” over the herbicide.

Another Democrat, Rep. Chellie Pingree (ME), teamed up with Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and introduced an amendment to the farm bill, which removes language shielding chemical companies from health-related lawsuits. Massie’s primary loss last week was also a blow to MAHA supporters, who championed his work on agriculture.

Jennifer Galardi, a senior policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation, disagreed with the suggestion that Democrats could persuade MAHA voters to defect from the GOP.

“Booker, I think, took a genuine interest in MAHA, but when it comes down to the votes, they have Trump Derangement Syndrome,” Galardi said of Democrats. “I think MAHA has its challenges and faces really some tough uphill battles, but I don’t think those will get any easier under Democrats.”

Galardi claimed that, by definition, MAHA is incompatible with political liberalism.

“I just see it more aligned with conservative thinking,” she said. “The natural order, food is medicine, no foreign substances in our body, no controlling of Mother Nature.”

Chief among the tensions for Democrats courting MAHA voters is the Left’s ire toward Kennedy, a former Democrat who is now an independent. Kennedy has riled Democrats by questioning the effectiveness of vaccines, firing federal health workers, and expressing skepticism about the scientific establishment.

“Any candidate that comes forward and stands up for the health and safety of our children is very likely going to earn the vote of the American people, and that could be Democrats, or they could be Republicans,” said Zen Honeycutt, the founder and executive director of Moms Across America. “Now this is a very tricky election because the Democrats have threatened to impeach Trump and Kennedy, so there is a major movement from the MAHA movement to maintain a Republican majority in the House so that that does not happen.”

If Democrats can prove they are willing to work with Kennedy and take action on pesticides, that could help make inroads with MAHA voters. But another core principle of the movement could complicate issues.

“They have to stop mandating vaccines,” Honeycutt said. “There’s not a single MAHA voter that’s going to support a candidate that’s pushing vaccine mandates.”

Democratic strategist Randy Jones conceded that party members need to address past messaging failures to a public increasingly skeptical of the medical and scientific community. But he stressed the importance of honesty and credibility, especially when dealing with health policy and vaccines, in reaching MAHA voters.

“I absolutely think we need to have dialogue with those voters, but I think in doing so we need to point out the lies,” Jones said. “We need to point out the fact that MAGA and MAHA are doing everything they can to limit scientific and medical advancement in this country through DOGE cuts and in other ways.”

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The Democratic Party has struggled to rebuild its image after the 2024 election, as polling has shown voters view the party as weak and believe it has gone too far left.

“We lost because of a math problem. We have to win people back to take back Congress and take back the White House,” Jones said. “But I think when we do that, we need to continue to be the party of science, the party of advancement, and the party of being honest with voters about their health and health policy.”