Then what? By 2018, there'll be little hope of any major reversal of Trumpism without electoral gains against the GOP. But the current Democratic Party is unlikely to change to meet the needs of regular people; regular people will need to change the Democratic Party. That is beginning to happen -- there are already some refreshing outsider candidates for national leadership posts like South Jersey's Melissa Byrne, a longtime brawler for social justice who recently worked in the Bernie Sanders primary campaign. But ultimately, the real reformers and anti-Trump newcomers will need to tackle the on-the-ground jobs like ward leader or committee person, the unglamorous soul of the Democratic Party machine. And the more predictable party hacks should expect primary challenges. Those are the kind of things that make party insiders cringe -- but they ought to be cringing after November's debacle.