SANTA CLARA — The day before U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna set out on a three-stop “Benefits over Billionaires” town hall tour of Republican-held congressional districts, hundreds of the Democrat’s own constituents packed a school gym filled with frustration.

In Khanna’s 17th Congressional District, which stretches across parts of Alameda and Santa Clara counties, nearly 49% of registered voters are Democrats — no party preference is the second-highest group at 30%. But the tone of Khanna’s monthly town hall on March 22, which saw a record turnout, reflected an overwhelming sense that many of those Democrats were feeling abandoned by their party.

Tensions bubbled over at Don Callejon School as attendees voiced their concerns about the Trump administration’s recent actions and executive orders and Elon Musk’s surging power in the White House.

“I was taught real leaders always lead from the front. Why are Democrats not doing that?” veteran David Tang asked Khanna. “I’m a longtime Democratic voter, but I’ve really lost faith in the leadership.”

As Democratic legislators look toward the 2026 midterms, still struggling to regain their footing following the November election, many are testing the waters at town hall meetings, a longstanding political tradition that seems to be having a moment not seen since 2010, when Tea Party members stormed town halls to protest the Affordable Care Act.

While Democrats have caught heat from their voters at these meetings — Khanna faced criticism last Saturday for his occasional defense of Musk, whose electric car company has a factory in his district — Republicans earlier this year faced anger from their own base at town halls. It’s led House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, and other GOP leaders to advise their members of Congress to stop holding them altogether, claiming without evidence that the turmoil stemmed from “professional protesters.”

Republicans’ pause on town halls has given Democrats, particularly those in the progressive wing of the party, an opportunity to organize in red and purple districts that will be the key to their efforts to take back the House in 2026. Khanna last weekend stopped in Bakersfield, Norco and Anaheim — cities that fall in the congressional districts of Republican Reps. David Valadao, Ken Calvert and Young Kim.

“In America, leaders aren’t supposed to hide from people,” Khanna told the Bay Area News Group in an interview. “I’ve been offended that Republicans have decided as a policy not to do town halls. Many of the people who are going to be most impacted by cuts to Medicaid are in some of these districts, so I thought I’d go and hear people out and give them a voice.”