Look: More Democrat Texts Leak, Exposing Senator's Brutal Comments on Dem Women

Democrats might not want to hear it, but one of their own just said the quiet part out loud. Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona — a freshman Democrat now learning what his party actually looks like behind the curtain — managed to summarize the modern left with brutal accuracy in a series of leaked text messages first published by Human Events.

The texts, reportedly exchanged in a private chat, show Gallego mocking the appearance of Democratic women, lamenting the party’s cultural decay, and admitting that Democrats have morphed into the nation’s permanently aggrieved scolds.

When an acquaintance encouraged him to climb the party ranks, Gallego responded with exasperation: “Oh man have you met my party? I have been yelling at them this whole time.”

The other individual cheered him on, saying he’d “gained the strength and the wisdom” and suggesting it “seems like it’s time for you to flex and battle your way to the top of that party.”

What followed was not exactly the self-congratulatory messaging Democrats typically dish out.

“We look like the not fun party,” Gallego wrote. “Always telling and correcting people. Not allowing men to be men. Women to be hot.”

He continued, “We used to be the party of sec [sic] drugs and rock and roll.”

At another point he delivered the line that will no doubt set off sirens in Democratic headquarters: “Dem women look like Dem men and Dem men look like women.”

For a party obsessed with messaging discipline, pronoun policing, and perpetual outrage, Gallego’s private honesty is a political grenade. And yet, he isn’t wrong. American voters see the transformation. Democrats, once self-advertised as free-spirited rebels, have become the party of finger-wagging, moralizing, and forcing everyone else to play along with their cultural fantasies.

Instead of walking anything back, Gallego later doubled down publicly — just not in the most direct way. His follow-up commentary played directly into the same criticism.

Meanwhile, figures like Tennessee state representative Aftyn Behn — who is running in a December special election — continue embodying exactly what Gallego was referring to: a hyper-progressive caricature chasing national relevance by parroting the latest left-wing neuroses.

For years, Democrats like Behn have defined the party by embracing every trend of cultural extremism: puberty blockers, pop-star activist politics, ideological purity tests, and therapy-as-identity politics. And they are “darned proud” of it.

The real question now is how long it takes before Gallego is hauled before the party’s internal tribunal to atone for his heresy. The left is highly efficient at enforcing conformity — far less efficient at asking whether the critiques are true.

But Gallego’s comments hit a nerve because they expose what many Democrats privately suspect but would never dare to voice. He simply slipped — and admitted reality.

In a party where no one can deviate from the script, even saying the obvious counts as bravery. That such honesty is a rarity for Democrats in 2025 is proof enough of how far the party has fallen.

Subscribe to Lib Fails

Don’t miss out on the latest issues. Sign up now to get access to the library of members-only issues.
jamie@example.com
Subscribe