Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Sunday that the Congressional Democrats plan to roll out a much bolder agenda, which will be 'quite different than the Democratic Party you heard in the past,' the Senate's top Democrat promised.

'We were too cautious, we were too namby-pamby,' Schumer suggested. 'This is sharp, bold and will appeal to both the old Obama coalition, let's say the young lady's who's just getting out of college, and the Democratic voters who deserted us for Trump, the blue collar workers.'

Schumer, along with his counterpart in the House, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., will debut the agenda tomorrow, which is entitled, 'A Better Deal: Better Skills, Better Jobs, Better Wages.'

On ABC's This Week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., previewed an agenda Capitol Hill Democrats will unveil tomorrow

Sen. Chuck Schumer (left) told George Stephanopoulos (right) that Democrats were 'too cautious, we were too namby-pamby' and that helped cost them the election

George Stephanopoulos (pictured) pointed to polling that suggested 52 percent of Americans believed Democrats only stood against Donald Trump, and not for something

'It has three components,' Schumer explained. 'We're going to raise people's wages and create better paying jobs. We're going to cut down on their everyday expenses they have to pay. And we're going to give them the tools they need to compete in the 21st century.'

'So simply put, what do Democrats stand for?' Schumer said trying to explain the plan more simply. 'A better deal for working families – higher wages, less costs, tools for the 21st century.'

Stephanopoulos had brought up polling data that said 52 percent of Americans believed that Democrats only stood for being against President Trump.

'The number one thing that we did wrong is we didn't have – we didn't tell people what we stood for,' Schumer relented.

For the agenda, which will be rolled out Monday and then in chunks, Democrats decided to leave out social and foreign policy issues, according to the Washington Post's Dana Milbank.

Instead it will be a straight-up economic message.

Schumer and Pelosi, along with Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., and Reps. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., and David Cicilline, D-R.I., spent the last few months devising the plan, which will pitch tax hikes on the rich, more affordable college, higher wages, better job training, paid family leave and infrastructure spending, according to the Post.

President Trump, too, has said he wants to do a big infrastructure package, though hasn't made much progress, as he tried to tackle health care reform first.

'Trump, I don't know where he is on infrastructure but we're willing to work with him on that,' Schumer added.

The minority leader also said that the Democrats would be willing to work with Republicans on health care, as long as GOP lawmakers let the Obamacare repeal and repeal and replacement bills die.

Schumer also said that Democrats advocating for a 'single payer' health care system, a far more liberal position, is on the table.

'We've talked so much about health care that we are not going to address that in this agenda,' Schumer said.

The Democrat from New York argued that sticking with a strictly economic message will reunite blue collar, working Democrats with the groups that propelled Obama to the presidency – women, people of color, millennials, LGBT people and the college educated.

And their economic messaging will sound like another prominent voice in politics, someone currently occupying the Oval Office.

'You know, Donald Trump campaigned sort of on this message. He was a populist. He campaigned against the establishment,' Schumer said.

'As soon as he got into office, he embraced the Koch brother, hard right and abandoned his plans to clean up Wall Street, to drain the swamp, to be tough on trade,' Schumer continued.

'We are going to fill that gap in a way that's really going to resonate with the American people,' the Democrat offered.