ANALYSIS: Meet 4 ascendant Democrats leading the fight against President Trump

The left has shown unprecedented motivation in opposition to Trump.

Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle say their offices have received calls and letters at rates they had never seen before.

The left is obviously fired up, but who is leading the charge?

According to a new ABC/Washington Post poll, 67 percent of Americans think the Democratic Party is out of touch with the country, including 44 percent of Democrats.

Here’s a look at some female Democratic politicians breaking through:

Warren angered some hard-core Bernie Sanders fans last year when she did not endorse him during his presidential campaign. But this spring, she persisted.

McConnell may have scolded her, but he also gave her a gift. The line has resonated with women across the country.

Now out with a new book, Warren warned Democrats during an interview last week not to jump at every tweet or line coming out of the White House. (“We can’t shoot everything that moves,” she said.) She said Democrats should focus instead on what Trump does.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California

Washington insiders love to make shortlists of possible 2020 presidential contenders, and Harris is often on them.

Formerly California’s attorney general, she entered the Senate this year with a lot of confidence and stature. She boldly chooses the issues to get involved in and is not afraid to talk to reporters in the hallways of Congress or deliver a tough line to the White House.

As Trump began to select Cabinet officials before his inauguration, Gillibrand was catching the eye of activists and other Democrats across the country. She voted against more of the president’s nominees than any other senator, boosting her status among those looking for a leader of the so-called resistance.

She has an ability to zero in on pocketbook issues that resonate with voters — in particular, as a leading advocate for paid maternity and family leave. Lawmakers from both parties have agreed that something should be done in this space, and first daughter Ivanka Trump has championed the topic broadly, though her latest proposal is much more limited than Gillibrand’s.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California

So far, she has kept her party in lockstep: Not one House Democrat veered off during the Republican push to pass a health care bill.

Pelosi has tried over the last few months to highlight some other women in her ranks, including Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill. Bustos is a fiery representative from a rural Midwestern district. Trump may have won in her hometown, but so did she. Pelosi put her on the House Democratic leadership team this year.

On NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, Pelosi said “of course” a Democrat could be anti-abortion — an apparent attempt to broaden the party.

Bonus: The women of the resistance movement

The future of Democratic politics possibly lies in a grass-roots movement led by people — including many women — whose names are only starting to break through on a national level.

There’s Linda Sarsour, for example, an outspoken Muslim American progressive activist known for her organizing skills. The head of the Arab American Association of New York, she was a surrogate for Sanders and then co-founded the Women’s March organization. She is from New York City but often can be seen with her newborn baby among crowds of protesters in Washington, D.C., or sitting on brain-trust panels organized by the Democratic National Committee.