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Dean and Borosage: words to progressive groups from 2004, 2005.....just as pertinent in 2008.

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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:09 AM
Original message
Dean and Borosage: words to progressive groups from 2004, 2005.....just as pertinent in 2008.
In December 2004, Howard Dean spoke at GWU about the future of the party. There was sort a vacuum after our November loss. He was then only thinking about running for chairman. He had some powerful words on what the party needed to do.

Pushing off the ropes



Here in Washington, it seems that every time we lose an election, there's a consensus reached among decision-makers in the Democratic Party is that the way to win is to be more like Republicans.

I suppose you could call that a philosophy, and this is the name of that philosophy: 'if you don't beat 'em, then join them.'

I'm not gonna make a prediction -- but if we accept that philosophy this time around, in four years from now another Democrat will be standing right here giving this same speech. We cannot win by being "Republican-lite." We've tried it; it does not work.


We got lucky. We had a Democrat win the White House by sounding very much like a Democrat should. And by using the very tactics mentioned in the next part of Dean's 2004 speech.

The question is not whether we move to the left or to the right. The question is not about our direction. We need to start focusing on our destination.

There are some practical elements to the destination.

The destination of the Democratic Party requires that it be financially viable-- we're able to raise money not just from big donors but small contributors, not just through dinners and telephone solicitations and direct mail, but also through the Internet and person-to-person outreach.

The destination of the Democratic Party means making it a party that can communicate with its supporters and with all Americans. Politics is at its best when we create and inspire and sustain a sense of community. The tools that were pioneered in our campaign -- like blogs, and meetups, and most importantly, community-building -- are just a start. We have to use all the power and potential of technology as part of an aggressive outreach to meet and include voters, to work with the state parties, and influence media coverage.

And of course the most practical, and important destination is winning elective office. But we have to do that at every level of government. The way to rebuild the Democratic Party is not from the consultants down, it is from the ground up.


That was an impressive speech. He ran for chair, won, and began to employ those tactics to win. He said then that in 2008 we would have a Democrat back in the White House. We do. A very good man and a good Democrat.

But now it appears that Dean's efforts are not going to be mentioned by party leaders at all. That's disturbing, but he's big boy and can handle it. It does bother me because I see it as a sort of betrayal of efforts that changed the course of the party. I think it needs to be talked about.

There is more that was said in 2005. Change a few words around, add a name or two, and it fits right into the 2008 scenario....except we won. BUT the progressives, the left, the liberals, are now being warned just as we were then.

Heed his words.

Robert Borosage wrote this column in The Nation in January 2005. He was sending a message to progressive groups that we had just begun to organize and fight. We had lost the election, and it was easy to be downhearted about that time in January. He was warning us not to give up, not to be complacent, and to keep working for change.

Borosage, turn up the heat.

He says at first after the loss, we were on the same page on what needed to be done to hold Bush's feet to the fire. Centrists and progressives alike...but only for a while.

For a nanosecond after November's election defeat, the Democratic unity forged by the radical provocations of George W. Bush seemed intact. From the corporate-funded Democratic Leadership Council to Howard Dean's new Democracy for America, Democrats drew similar conclusions from the election about what needed to be done: Challenge the right in the so-called red states and develop a compelling narrative that speaks to working people--don't simply offer a critique of Bush and a passel of "plans." Champion values, not simply policy proposals. Don't compromise with Bush's reactionary agenda. Expose Republican corruption, while pushing electoral reform. Stand firm on long-held social values, from women's rights to gay rights. Confront Bush's disastrous priorities at home and follies abroad.

But this brief interlude of common sense and purpose quickly descended into rancor and division. Peter Beinart of The New Republic and Al From of the DLC rolled out the tumbrels once more, calling on Democrats to purge liberalism of the taint of MoveOn.org, Michael Moore and the antiwar movement. Apparently anyone who worries about the suppression of civil liberties at home, doubts that the reign of drug lords in Afghanistan represents the dawning of democracy, prematurely opposed the debacle in Iraq or isn't prepared to turn the fight against Al Qaeda terrorists into the organizing principle of American politics is to be read out of their Democratic Party. Then, normally staunch Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi floated for chair of the party former Congressman Tim Roemer, a New Democrat distinguished mostly for his opposition to women's right to choose, his vote to repeal the estate tax and his ignorance of grassroots politics. Consolidating its corporate backing, the DLC solemnly warned against "economic populism" or "turning up the volume on anti-business and class welfare schemes"--despite the corporate feeding frenzy that is about to take place in Washington and Bush's slavish catering to the "haves and have-mores," whom he calls "my base."


He said more.

After a year in which progressives drove the debate, roused and registered the voters, raised the dough and knocked on the doors, the corporate wing of the Democratic Party is trying to reassert control. Its assault on MoveOn.org and the Dean campaign--the center of new energy in the party--is reminiscent of 1973, when corporate lobbyist Bob Strauss became head of the party and tossed out the McGovern mailing list, insuring that the party would remain dependent on big-donor funding.

This time, however, the entrenched interests aren't likely to succeed, no matter who becomes party chair. That's because progressives have begun building an independent infrastructure to generate ideas, drive campaigns, persuade citizens, nurture movement progressives and challenge the right. It includes a range of new groups such as MoveOn.org, Wellstone Action, Progressive Majority, the Center for American Progress, Air America, Working America and America Coming Together, along with established groups that have displayed new reach and sophistication such as ACORN, the NAACP, the Campaign for America's Future (which I help direct) and the League of Conservation Voters. These groups--and their state and local allies--came out of this election emboldened, not discouraged. Just as the infrastructure that the right built drove the Republican resurgence, these groups and their activists--not the party regulars or the corporate retainers--will stir the Democratic drink.


Borosage ends with these words:

All stripes of Democrats agree on the need to persuade voters, not simply mobilize the base. But persuasion requires committed activists, passionate in their cause, ready to enlist and challenge their neighbors. Progressives haven't yet made up for the decline of union halls, nor matched the right's ubiquitous media clamor. But the pathbreaking house parties organized by MoveOn.org and the Dean campaign, and the extraordinary training provided by Wellstone Action, provide new models for educating activists and encouraging them to organize their neighbors.

So forget about the chattering classes and the corporate wing of the party, now fantasizing about purging the new energies unleashed in the last election. What matters isn't what they say in Washington, but what progressives do on the ground across the country. We have just begun to build. The radical agenda of the Bush Administration--and its abject failure--will continue to set the stage not for a retreat to the center but for a fierce, passionate reform movement.


We have a great president-elect. We are very lucky. But we need to continue speaking out, lest our voices be marginalized by those whom he chose first to be the gatekeepers.

Many of us here at DU are not just liberals, not just "the left", we are intelligent, well-educated people who know when our party just might take a quick turn in the wrong direction. They really don't want to hear from us right now. And that is the very reason why they need to do so.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:29 AM
Response to Original message
1. Yeah, I know. Not a good time to speak out....so soon after the election.
Not a good time for free speech...wait till later.

It's become almost unbearable here with all the shame being directed toward those who have something to say. GDP is really sad to visit now.

There should always be a time to speak out on issues and things that are happening in our party.

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elleng Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:40 AM
Response to Original message
2. Hey madflorid, Dean is and was great. Who is 'they' now?
rahm is busy, but still involved in the party stuff? (He opposed Dean's 50 state strategy, ya know.)

Who must we 'watch?' And what actions? Like debbie w-s, acting against a particular grass-roots candidate? Others? Keep me/us informed. (like, van hollen is my Rep.)
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:44 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Oh, the names change, the words change.
The groups that formed during the last four years, the people who learned to speak out against things that were wrong in their own party.....that is what is most important.

They really do not need us until the next election....I mean that honestly. They don't. It is our job to make clear we want input.

Van Hollen several times gave money to Blue America/Act Blue candidates. It was a good thing. Debbie WS got the message and did begin supporting some candidates she had ignored before.

Speaking out does matter with many Democrats.

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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:52 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. What I was trying to say...Van Hollen and Wasserman Schultz responded to us
in the blogosphere when we wanted them to take action. That is what we have to do....stand up for what we think should happen.
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elleng Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 02:03 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Good. Glad to hear
that he did the right thing; will keep watching!
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 03:59 PM
Response to Reply #5
10. But it took a lot of bloggers to make a difference.
Debbie WS once pleaded with a blogger to call off the others. Didn't work.
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Two Americas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 02:26 AM
Response to Original message
6. "not a good time"
"Not now, it is too early for that."

"Not now, we have to win the midterms."

"Not now, we don't have the numbers."

"Not now, we don't have enough time."

"Not now, it wouldn't be practical."

"Not now, the Republicans will use it against us."

"Not now, it would be hurting the party."

"Not now, we have an election to win."

"Not now, he hasn't even taken office yet."
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 12:00 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Good points.
Very true.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 02:44 AM
Response to Original message
7. Apparently I am not the only one.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 01:24 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. Making a difference is possible. From the link.
"Now the same millions of left-leaning voters who worked relentlessly to get Obama elected want results. That means ending the war in Iraq, ushering in universal health care, halting harsh interrogation tactics against suspected terrorists, making it easier to form unions and aggressively tackling global warming.

“We’ll see,” said Eli Pariser, executive director of the liberal powerhouse Moveon.org, about what Obama will deliver. “If they turn out to be all disappointments, we’ll have a good three years to storm the gates at the White House.”

Already, the liberal blogosphere is showing its influence.

John Brennan, Obama’s top pick to head the CIA, suddenly withdrew his name from consideration under pressure this past week. His potential appointment had raised a firestorm among liberal blogs that associate him with the Bush administration’s interrogation, detention and rendition policies. Within hours, blogs that raised concerns about Brennan’s career claimed victory about their successful exercise in free speech."

http://blackpoliticsontheweb.com/2008/11/30/liberals-to-keep-pressure-on-obama-for-results/

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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 10:03 PM
Response to Original message
11. I share you concerns about the Democratic Party being taken over by those who are more interested in
winning and staying in office than they are in moving us in the right direction.

I think that one important manifestation of that is the unwillingness to go after the war criminals and those who have taken part in destroying our Constitution. Why is it that when politicians advocate going after working class criminals they're praised as being "tough on crime", but when we advocate going after Republican white collar criminals we're criticized for being "partisan" and "divisive"?
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-01-08 10:58 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. I am hoping against hope that maybe later after the inauguration...
that they will speak differently.

The other side never ever never hesitates to find a Democrat who broke a law and make an example of them.

I have often said it is the mindset of the party since the late 80s. They never want to offend.

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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-03-08 12:28 PM
Response to Original message
13. Good post at Open Left about Dean not being part of things anymore.
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