CNN -star commentator of Jones launched a sizzling Diatribe against the Democratic Party and says he can see why the bleeding voters are.
Jones, a former Obama adviser, left Rip on CNN Newsroom on Sunday and could not help it, but laughed at the recent struggles of his party.
He warned that the “Democrats don't know what to do” because of disagreement within the party. He then framed the situation 'as a nightmare' deteriorated by the loss of the House of Representatives to the Republican Party.
“Look, man, we are sewn,” Jones said, and presented the situation as almost a point of no return.
“You know, someone like Donald Trump, we thought we would at least have Hakeem Jeffries in the speaker's chair to stop him,” he continued before offering another alleged solution.
'[I]f We didn't have Kamala inside to do the right thing, “he shouted, detailing two fatal strategies that he claims to continue to pursue Democrats.

CNN Pundit van Jones on the set of 'CNN Newsroom' Sunday – where he couldn't help it, but got a smile while he went through the recent struggles of his party

Displayed, senate minority leader Chuck Schumer and house minority leader Hakeem Jeffries in the Capitool last month. The minority leader of the house had reprimanded some of his most vocal rank-and-file democrats on Thursday, after the debacle that was seen during Trump's speech to the congress
He said that Dems' insistence to claim that the status quo was fine, despite their shocking defeat is one of the most important issues.
The other is the constant defense of the party of very unpopular social issues such as supporting transgender women in sport.
'Listen, the Democratic Party goes through a huge series of internal crises. You have a feast that caught in two ways, 'Jones – often criticized as' radical' by his conservative contemporaries – explained.
'One, defending a broken status quo that nobody likes because they thought Donald Trump would make it worse.
“But when you defend the status quo, you will lose,” he continued and did not report the previous administration and its failures.
And then, [the other faction] Insouring most people in the country, call everyone sexist and racist and transphobic and any other name, and then say, “Please follow us,” he said, apparently figures such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
“That is not a good strategy, people,” continued.
“Defending a broken status quo and insulting most of the country, it turns out not to be as popular as my party thought it would be,” Jones said after the display was spectacularly falling in the midst of a storm of Republican spot and democrat-in-Fighting.
“And so it will take a while before people have sorted it out,” concluded Jones, in what amounted to a pessimistic prognosis for the fate of the more progressive party.

“That's not a good strategy, people,” Jones said about one of the two fatal strategies he said
Jones' anger came from Donald Trump's first address to the congress last week since he was inaugurated in January as the 47th president.
Texas Rep. Al Green, a Democrat, was cast out because he tried a loud protest while the president spoke.
Other Democrats held black cardboard signs who complained about what they claimed that they were Republican failures.
Jones was one of the many personalities that responded to these figurative fingers during the weekend, in which others, including former NBC 'Meet the Press' moderator Chuck Todd and Michigan Democrat Sen. Elissa Slotkin.
Todd said that Democratic leaders such as Jeffries and Senator Chuck Schumer both simply “paralyzed” acted because of the two ideologically opposite wings within the party, before he thought he thought: “This anger in the base is real.”
He also repeated the opinion of Jones and said there are many Americans who say, “Hey, I won and Trump wore my state. So I have to do this.”
“I think that is why Jeffries and Schumer come across as paralyzed, because they try to calm a coalition party that does not know which direction they should go.”
In the meantime, Slotkin said that it was up to Democrats to be more transparent with both leadership and strategy to prevent such embarrassing cleaning.

Jones and other liberals have blamed both leadership and strategy for the recent embarrassing brushes that showed a lack of unity among Democrats. Democratic Rep. Al Green, from Texas, caused controversy after interrupting the first speech by President Trump for congress on Tuesday

The Democrats division is bad news for Jeffries, who needs his party to stay together to make progress in the house. He will be confronted with an important moment next week, with his effort to accept a resolution before a potential closure
“I think you can't get better until you admit that you have a problem,” said the former CIA that was recently chosen in the office at Sunday's edition from Meet The Press.
“And for me that's one of the things that I think some of the new voices in the party are really agitating, right?”
In addition to the walkouts and signage that was seen during the joint address of Trump Tuesday, Democratic Rep. Al Green from Texas controversy after he interrupted it with his own comments.
While his party continues to rake in record-loage approval classifications. A CNN poll from CNN showed that 80 percent of the respondents were inappropriate.
He was later censored by the House of Representatives with 10 Huis Democrats who voted for the measure.
The Democrats division is bad news for Jeffries, who needs his party to stay together to make progress in the house. He will be confronted with an important moment next week, with his efforts to assume a resolution for a potential closure.
Only the Gop has the voices to avoid it.