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Monday, December 13, 2004
State Parties unprepared for 2006 senate races

A new analysis by the Swing State Project reveals that three-fourths of State Democratic Parties lack the most basic tools for online organizing.

Further study of this List of Shame shows that it includes 25 states out of the 32 with 2006 Senate races. (Maryland did not make the list, but their blog only has 2 posts).

This means 80% of State Parties with senate races in 2006 are unprepared to support our nominees with modern campaigns.

Luckily, we have time to correct the gross incompetence of the State Parties before the senate races heat up.

If you care about your State Party enacting the reforms and modernizations necessary for Democrats to win back the senate, please use the DNC Get Local tool to contact your State Party.


Posted at 03:05 pm by blog swarm
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DLC Bashing Continues

Monday, December 13th, 2004
It's Time to Stop Being Hit...a letter from Michael Moore

Dear Friends,

It is no surprise that the Republicans are sore winners. They have spent the better part of the past month beating their chests, threatening to send to Siberia any Republican who doesn't toe the line (poor Arlen Specter), and promising everything short of martial law if the Democrats don't do what they are told.

What's worse is to watch the pathetic sight of the DLC (the conservative, pro-corporate group of Democrats) apologizing for being Democrats and promising to "purge" the party of the likes of, well, all of US! Their comments are so hilarious and really not even worth recognizing but the media is paying so much attention to them, I thought it might be worth doing a little reality check.

The most people the DLC is able to get out to an event of theirs is about 200 at their annual dinner (where you have to pay thousands of dollars to get in).

Contrast this with the following:

*Total members of Move On: More than 2,000,000
*Total Attendance at Vote for Change Concerts: An estimated 280,000
*Total Union Members in U.S.: Around 16,000,000
*Total Number of People Who Have Seen "Fahrenheit 9/11": Over 50 million
*Total number of you reading this: Perhaps 10 million or more

The days of trying to move the Democratic Party to the right are over. We lost a very close election (a one-state difference) by running the #1 liberal in the Senate. Not bad. The country is shifting in our direction, not to the right. But the country was attacked and people were scared. They were manipulated with fear. And America has never thrown a sitting president out during wartime. That's the facts. Oh, and our candidate could have run a better campaign (but we'll have that discussion another day).

In the meantime, while we reflect on what went wrong, I would like to pass on to you an essay that a friend who works with abuse victims sent to me. It was written by a woman who has spent years working as an advocate for victims of domestic abuse and she sees many parallels between her work and the reaction of many Democrats to last month's election. Her name is Mel Giles and here is what she had to say...

Watch Dan Rather apologize for not getting his facts straight, humiliated before the eyes of America, voluntarily undermining his credibility and career of over thirty years. Observe Donna Brazille squirm as she is ridiculed by Bay Buchanan, and pronounced irrelevant and nearly non-existent. Listen as Donna and Nancy Pelosi and Senator Charles Schumer take to the airwaves saying that they have to go back to the drawing board and learn from their mistakes and try to be better, more likable, more appealing, have a stronger message, speak to morality. Watch them awkwardly quote the bible, trying to speak the `new' language of America. Surf the blogs, and read the comments of dismayed, discombobulated, confused individuals trying to figure out what they did wrong. Hear the cacophony of voices, crying out, "Why did they beat me?"

And then ask anyone who has ever worked in a domestic violence shelter if they have heard this before.

They will tell you: Every single day.

The answer is quite simple. They beat us because they are abusers. We can call it hate. We can call it fear. We can say it is unfair. But we are looped into the cycle of violence, and we need to start calling the dominating side what they are: abusive. And we need to recognize that we are the victims of verbal, mental, and even, in the case of Iraq, physical violence.

As victims we can't stop asking ourselves what we did wrong. We can't seem to grasp that they will keep hitting us and beating us as long as we keep sticking around and asking ourselves what we are doing to deserve the beating.

Listen to George Bush say that the will of God excuses his behavior. Listen, as he refuses to take responsibility, or express remorse, or even once, admit a mistake. Watch him strut, and tell us that he will only work with those who agree with him, and that each of us is only allowed one question (soon, it will be none at all; abusers hit hard when questioned; the press corps can tell you that). See him surround himself with only those who pledge oaths of allegiance. Hear him tell us that if we will only listen and do as he says and agree with his every utterance, all will go well for us (it won't; we will never be worthy).

And watch the Democratic Party leadership walk on eggshells, try to meet him, please him, wash the windows better, get out that spot, distance themselves from gays and civil rights. See the Democrats cry for the attention and affection and approval of the President and his followers. Watch us squirm. Watch us descend into a world of crazy-making, where logic does not work and the other side tells us we are nuts when we rely on facts. A world where, worst of all, we begin to believe we are crazy.

How to break free? Again, the answer is quite simple.

First, you must admit you are a victim. Then, you must declare the state of affairs unacceptable. Next, you must promise to protect yourself and everyone around you that is being victimized. You don't do this by responding to their demands, or becoming more like them, or engaging in logical conversation, or trying to persuade them that you are right. You also don't do this by going catatonic and resigned, by closing up your ears and eyes and covering your head and submitting to the blows, figuring its over faster and hurts less if you don't resist and fight back.

Instead, you walk away. You find other folks like yourself, 57 million of them, who are hurting, broken, and beating themselves up. You tell them what you've learned, and that you aren't going to take it anymore. You stand tall, with 57 million people at your side and behind you, and you look right into the eyes of the abuser and you tell him to go to hell. Then you walk out the door, taking the kids and gays and minorities with you, and you start a new life. The new life is hard. But it's better than the abuse.

We have a mandate to be as radical and liberal and steadfast as we need to be. The progressive beliefs and social justice we stand for, our core, must not be altered. We are 57 million strong. We are building from the bottom up. We are meeting, on the net, in church basements, at work, in small groups, and right now, we are crying, because we are trying to break free and we don't know how.

Any battered woman in America, any oppressed person around the globe who has defied her oppressor will tell you this: There is nothing wrong with you. You are in good company. You are safe. You are not alone. You are strong. You must change only one thing: Stop responding to the abuser.

Don't let him dictate the terms or frame the debate (he'll win, not because he's right, but because force works). Sure, we can build a better grassroots campaign, cultivate and raise up better leaders, reform the election system to make it fail-proof, stick to our message, learn from the strategy of the other side. But we absolutely must dispense with the notion that we are weak, godless, cowardly, disorganized, crazy, too liberal, naive, amoral, "loose," irrelevant, outmoded, stupid and soon to be extinct. We have the mandate of the world to back us, and the legacy of oppressed people throughout history.

Even if you do everything right, they'll hit you anyway. Look at the poor souls who voted for this nonsense. They are working for six dollars an hour if they are working at all, their children are dying overseas and suffering from lack of health care and a depleted environment and a shoddy education.

And they don't even know they are being hit.

How true. And that is our challenge over the next couple of years; to hold out our hand to those being hit the hardest and help them leave behind a party that only seeks to keep beating them, their children, and the kid next door who's on his way to Iraq.

Yours,

Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
MMFlint@aol.com


Posted at 10:15 am by blog swarm
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Sunday, December 12, 2004
Mark Brewer's Blogger Scandal

Trippi Expelled from Dems Orlando Meeting

Mark Brewer Embroiled in Blogger Scandal

ORLANDO, FL -- The Association of Democratic State Chairs winter meeting ended in controversy after ADSC Chair Mark Brewer banished a trio of high-profile internet bloggers from the public meeting.

Joe Trippi, the former Howard Dean campaign manager who is credited with revolutionizing internet campaigning was one of three bloggers removed by Brewer, who also serves as Michigan Democratic Party Executive Chair. In addition, Jerome Armstrong of www.mydd.com and Matt Stoller of www.bopnews.com were removed from the public meeting.

Armstrong reported the event on www.MyDD.com late Saturday, resulting in widespread condemnation of Brewer across the internet. MyDD is one of the most popular Democratic activist web communities and tens of thousands of Democrats logged on to read about the scandal.

"Mark Brewer kept relishing kicking out bloggers," Stoller commented. "We've moved from a losing party of the 20th centurty to a losing party of the 21st century. "

An analysis on www.SwingStateProject.com revealed that under Brewer's leadership of the ADSC, more than three-fourths of Democratic State Parties still lack blogs. Blogs, or web logs, are the most basic tool for internet campaigning and have been proven to be the most efficient way for politicians to raise money and activate volunteers. Brewer's own Michigan Democratic Party has yet to create a blog according to the study.

Leaders in the left-leaning blogosphere were highly critical of Brewers decision resulting in mass ridicule and calls for his resignation.

The scandal and the ensuing online investigation have thrust the issue of modernization to the fore-front of calls for reform of the Democratic Party.

"One of the tenets of "reform" is accountability, and you cannot have accountability without transparency." said Markos Moulitsas on www.DailyKos.com where he referred to the incident as "unacceptable."

Additionally, some experts speculate that Brewer's actions may have violated the Democratic Party Charter which could result in his removal absent his resignation. Article 9, Section 12 of the Charter appears to ban actions such as the ones at the heart of this scandal.

Brewer has not yet stated whether he will resign from his leadership position with the ADSC, resign from both the ADSC and Michigan Democratic Party, or attempt to ride out the controversy.


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Mark Brewer Blogger Scandal

MyDD broke the story which has since been blogged by Tim Tagaris, Kos, Blogging of the President, Atrios, Mathew Gross, Steve Gilliard, Suburban Guerrilla, Mahablog, and Change for America.

Swing State Project now has an analysis of state party blogs which reflects quite poorly on DNC and ADSC leadership.


Posted at 06:22 pm by blog swarm
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Democrats Netroots Scandal

Change for America is covering the scandal on the front page. Blogging of the President is also talking about the scandal.

There are calls for heads on Daily Kos and now a top recommend diary.

Of course, the exclusive is on MyDD.

Posted at 04:53 am by blog swarm
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Idiots


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Saturday, December 11, 2004
DNC Election Rules

From the Swing State Project:

DNC Chair Election

Posted by Bob Brigham

On February 12, 2005, the 447 members of the Democratic National Committee will elect a new Party Chair, five Vice Chairs (including the President of the Association of State Democratic Chairs), a Treasurer, a Secretary, and a National Finance Chair.

Historically, this has been an insider only event. However, with record numbers of activists following the campaign on the internet, I am going to begin my coverage of the race with information on how this election is conducted. For further information, I suggest viewing the Democratic Party Charter and Bylaws (PDF).

The Chair will be selected by majority vote from among candidates who qualify for the race by submitting 20 nominations from current DNC members by 8 PM on February 10.

With a crowded field and competitive race there is a potential for none of the candidates to receive the necessary simple majority on the first vote. In this scenario, the candidate who garnered the fewest votes is removed and another round of voting occurs with the process repeating until a victory is achieved.

There are a number of important rules governing this election that should be known to understand the dynamics:

  • The election will be open to the public and votes shall not be taken by secret ballot Charter, Article 9, Sect.12
  • Roberts Rules of Order is used Charter, Article 9, Sect. 14
  • Terry McAliffe will preside over the election Charter, Article 5, Sect. 3
  • Of the five Vice-Chairs, three shall be of the opposite sex of the Chair Charter, Article 3, Sect 1(e)
  • A roll call may be requested by 25% of the voting members present Bylaws, Article II, Sect B, (d)(ii)

Considering the make-up of the DNC, there is definitely potential for parliamentary maneuvering. Blocs operating under pre-defined strategies are most likely to be successful if such tactics are employed. It is important to note that McAliffe operated under a parliamentary games-player paradigm when changing the rules to shorten the 2004 primary election calendar. Remember, this is a fight for control of a budget that could exceed a half a billion dollars by the end of the 2006 cycle.

There are currently multiple lists of DNC members online, including: DNC List PDF (from Daily Kos): Draft Howard address list; Phraxos phone list. Jerome Armstrong at MyDD is in charge of the Cattle Call and also has a new Straw Poll of members at the Orlando Winter Meeting.


Posted at 06:10 pm by blog swarm
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Friday, December 10, 2004
Simon Rosenberg Stump Speech

Simon Rosenberg: "Who We Are"

It is shaping up to be a real debate over ideas in the race for the DNC Chair. In addition to Donnie Fowler: Embracing the New Politics and Perfecting the Old and Howard Dean's GWU speech we now have "Who We Are" by Simon Rosenberg:

Democrats need to start winning again - for the good of our country and for the health of our democracy. The Republican Party is in a position of dominance unseen in our lifetimes. Their misguided agenda threatens to put our country on a dangerous downward path. It is up to us to offer an alternative way - a vision for our country and a smart political strategy to implement it.

I have no doubt that in the coming weeks, the conversation about where Democrats need to go and how to get there will grow in intensity - as it should.   It is a vital conversation that is essential to our party's future.

For the conversation to succeed in helping us tackle the challenges in front of us, it is crucial that we start first with an accurate assessment of where things stand today.

In the spirit of NDN's continuing mission to help build a better, stronger, winning Democratic party, here is our analysis of where we are.  In coming days, we will outline our ideas for a path forward.

Our Challenge:  Republicans Ascendant

1. The Republicans have become the dominant national party.  They control the White House, both Houses of Congress, and the Supreme Court.  They now also control more governorships, more state legislative chambers and more state legislative seats than the Democrats.  They have more political power than any time since the 1920s.  Our 62-year run as the dominant Party in America - from 1932 to 1994 - has come to an end.  What worked for Democrats for so long is no longer working.  We need a new modern strategy that faces squarely where we are, and understands how to craft a new Democratic Majority for the 21st century.

2. The Republican/conservative alliance has built a superior information-age political machine.  By investing billions of dollars over 40 years in a vast array of powerful institutions and capacities, the Republicans have changed the national political playing field.  Their combination of mature and modern intellectual, political and media capacities is simply bigger, better, more coordinated and more strategic than the arrayed set of institutions on the progressive side.  We like to think of it as an information-age Tammany Hall.

Even at the campaign level they have a much more modern model for reaching voters.  They began investing heavily in databases and direct one-to-one marketing in the 1970s, and have built a campaign communications system that has much greater ability for "smart" narrowcasting - personalizing messages to specific groups and individual voters and reaching them through specialized communication.  Though we made great strides in the last two years, our campaigns are still built around an aging "dumb" broadcast model that blasts a more generalized message to a larger and much less differentiated audience - which in an era of Blackberrys, Amazon.com, Tivo, hundreds of television channels and even radio simply cannot compete with the personal, increasingly iterative, segmented "smart" model used by the other side.

3.  As an intellectually-based movement born when the Republicans were a true minority Party, their infrastructure is built on a foundation on the need to persuade.  At the very core of their collective institutional ethic is that they must persuade, persuade, persuade.  The institutions and leaders were born and grew when few listened to them, let alone agreed.  In a recent Washington Post piece, incoming RNC Chair Ken Mehlman talks about their plan to persuade - through issues and message - Republican voters to vote for the President.   All of their infrastructure, talk radio, direct mail, and television ads are built around a modern argument about where they want to take the country.  Our politics must become much more about sophisticated communication of a compelling message. We cannot assume voters know what we are talking about.

4.  9/11 gave the Republicans an opening that they have adroitly exploited.  The recent Republican gains have been much more pronounced at the federal level, than at the state level, where Democrats have gained ground.  While there are many issues that play differently at the Federal level, the basket of issues around security are the most electorally salient, and the area of the greatest Republican advantage.  Democrats must look hard at the new post-9/11 security environment as a major cause of the recent Republican surge.  Particularly study should be made of how these issues may have created their big gains with white women.

5.  Bush's brand of conservatism has had a particularly big impact in the South.   Often overlooked in the press is that George Bush is the first truly southern Republican incumbent president Democrats have ever faced.  While national polling numbers have never shown great strength for Bush, he has helped his party gain disproportionately in areas with high level of social conservatives, particularly the South.  Much of the gains Democrats made after 1994 in the South have been reversed.  Our Senate losses in 2002 and 2004 were largely in areas of high concentrations of social conservatives.  Reversing the very strong gains made by Republicans in the South during the Bush years has to be one of the Democrats' highest priorities.

Bush's politics has been less transformative in the more libertarian Mountain West, where even under Bush we've seen Democrats score significant wins in Arizona, Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming, and hold strong along the West Coast.   In 2004, Bush saw his winning margin decrease in 10 states that he also won in 2000 - 8 of them were the western states Montana, Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, South Dakota, Nevada, North Dakota and Wyoming.

6.  The new Republican momentum with Hispanics is a grave threat.  With Hispanics projected to become a quarter of all voters in our lifetimes, Democrats must make reversing the Bush gains with Hispanics one of our highest strategic priorities.  In the last two elections, Bush has more than doubled the GOP share of the Hispanic vote, taking Dole's 21 percent in 1996 to 35 percent in 2000 and 40 to 44 percent in 2004.   If the Republicans can consolidate Bush's gains, and keep the Hispanic vote in the high 30 to low 40 percent range, Democrats will have a very hard time winning national elections.

However, with NDN's historic $6 million, multi-state Hispanic Project, we also learned in 2004 that when Democrats communicate directly and specifically to Hispanics, we gain ground.  With Hispanics only continuing to grow as a percentage of the population, the number of Asian-Americans growing nearly as fast, and African-Americans always remaining an essential part of the winning Democratic coalition, it is clear that NDN's Hispanic Project needs to be replicated across the party as a way of communicating persuasively with minority voters, particularly African-Americans.

Reasons for Optimism


1.  Democrats have kept it close in recent presidential elections.
 Elections may be about winning, but not all losses are the same.  Our loss in 2004 was narrow, not a wipeout.  A few breaks in Ohio, a few more votes in NM and NV and we have a very different national narrative.  We've received 48% or more in the last three Presidential elections, 250-plus Electoral College votes in the last two, and have won more votes in three of the last four.  These numbers are not the numbers of a Party deeply out of touch with America, or that far away from the road back.

2.  The Democratic brand remains strong.
 In a poll taken in mid-November, the Democratic Party had a 54%/39% favorable/unfavorable rating, a net positive of 15 points  The Republican Party, on the heals of its strong showing, had only a 49%/46% rating, a net positive of 3 points.  Despite losing, Kerry won independent voters, 49%/48%, and moderates 54%/45%.

3.  While the Washington party was weakened, the Democratic Party's national infrastructure became stronger. As NDN has been arguing for the last two years, we suffer from a capacity gap on our side.  Billions of dollars of investment, intrepid entrepreneurs and a forward looking-strategy has given the Republican/Conservatives a superior mechanism to develop and bring their ideas, values and politics to the American people.

In the last two years we've seen progressive investors and our own entrepreneurs working successfully to close the capacity gap.  New voices like Air America, Center for American Progress, Media Matters, Democracy for America, the Democracy Alliance, JohnKerry.com, MoveOn, ACT, America Votes, Democracy Radio, a revamped NDN, the influential blogosphere, and a revived and smarter DNC and state parties have given us a much greater capacity to bring our ideas and values to the American people, helping counter the vast message machine on the right.

4. We have the resources we need to compete.  Thanks in large part to the leadership of Chair Terry McAuliffe, who worked tirelessly to turn a moribund infrastructure into one that can sustain the party for the 21st century, the DNC outraised the RNC in 2004 for the first time on record. Defying predictions of a fundraising blowout for Bush and the Republicans after the passage of McCain-Feingold, Democrats actually raised and spent $925 million to the Republicans' $822 million in the presidential election.   The party and our presidential candidates adapted to the new fundraising reality, capitalized on Internet fundraising, and added millions of new small-dollar donors across the country.  We've built a strong and growing donor base to keep our party on solid fiscal ground.

5.  Our ground game is the most sophisticated it's ever been.  The DNC and the state parties,  America Coming Together, the America Votes partner organizations, the labor unions, and the Kerry-Edwards campaign combined in 2004 to create the strongest ground game our side has ever seen.  Nearly six million more voters turned out for Kerry in '04 than did for Gore in '02 - 554,000 more in Ohio alone.  Our ground operations contacted more voters, in more sophisticated and personalized ways, than ever before.  We know how to identify our voters, and how to get them to the polls.


6.  We can win back key Bush voters.
  Bush won in 2004 in part by making gains with white women (particularly married women) and Hispanics - groups that have traditionally been strong sources of Democratic support.  Still, he did not win with insurmountable margins, and we still have the opportunity to prevent the Republicans from creating a solid, long-lasting majority.  We have won these groups before and we can win them again if we do not take their votes for granted, and instead make a smart, concerted effort to persuade them.  Moreover, with a strong message on national security, Democrats can close the gap among white male voters, including those in the South.

7.  Democrats are gaining ground at the state level in all regions of the country.  The red state/blue state maps that show the 18 states Kerry won in the presidential election only tell part of the story.  Despite losses at the Federal level in 2002 and 2004, we won elections at the state and local level in tough places at the same time, with strong candidates and state parties.  We flipped governorships to Democratic control in NJ and VA in 2001; in AZ, IL, KS, ME, MI, NM, PA, OK, and WY in 2002; in LA in 2003; and in NH and MT in 2004.  We held on to governorships in IA in '02 and WV and NC in `04, despite Bush's wins there, and had encouraging wins in the statehouses in Colorado and Montana.  Moreover, we protected Senate seats in IA, LA, and SD in '02 and ND in `04, and won Republican-held seats in AR in '02 and CO in '04.  Add all of these recent gains at the state level to Kerry's states in '04, and you see 33 "blue states" (including DC.)

8.  The Republicans are not a permanent majority party yet, and they're not proving to the country that they should be.  The numbers at the state level show convincingly that while the Republicans have built a sophisticated operation that is winning elections, they have not achieved permanent majority status yet.  Nor are they proving to the country that they deserve it.  Americans are less prosperous, our country is less safe, and our government is significantly less fiscally responsible than when Bush took office. Iraq has become a massive foreign policy disaster, and the Republican majority in Congress has succumbed to DeLay-style excess.  With complete control in their hands, Bush and the Republicans have no one to blame for the results but themselves.  By failing to govern successfully, they're leaving the door open for us to present a stark contrast and a winning message to the American people.  It's an opportunity for us to win in the near term, not just the long haul.

Swing State Project also discusses this.


Posted at 08:04 pm by blog swarm
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DLC Lies

Writing in the American Prospect, David Sirota lays out a strong case against in favor of continuing the success of Democrats winning on economic populism. Of course, some corporations wouldn't like that so they had their bitches over at the Democratic Leadership Council attack Sirota with a bunch of lies. What a minute you are probably thinking, the DLC wouldn't lie and distort the message of a good Democrat to further the interests of the clients...I mean supporters. However, Sirota is as tough as he is smart so instead of rolling over he did what all Democrats should do and stood up for reality:


Attack of the DLC

In response to my new American Prospect cover story, the corporate-backed Democratic Leadership Council has responded with a pathetic and laughable attack on me that is so defensive/dishonest/factually inaccurate it reeks of desperation. For those who are interested, here is a quick "Claim vs. Fact" on the DLC's attacks on me:

DLC CLAIM: "I hate to sound like a pointy-head here, but the argument Sirota's making--that economic 'populism' of the most atavistic sort trumps cultural conservatism--has been around for a long time, dating back at least to the early '70s."

FACT: The implication here, in classic-DLC denial, is that economic populism was tried and it failed. Yet, what goes unmentioned is that when the Democratic Party did fracture and factions did embrace the DLC's corporate model, Democrats lost the congressional majority for the first time in 40 years, and are now, unnecessarily, on the verge of permanent-minority status.

DLC CLAIM: "Schweitzer blasted Montana Republicans for corporate subsidies, government inefficiency, etc....[this is a] strateg[y] the DLC has strongly and repeatedly endorsed."

FACT: As just one example of how false this statement is, according to the New Democrat Coalition (the DLC's congressional arm) "New Democrats have long been supporters of the Export-Import Bank, and it has been a key part of our pro-trade agenda. This year, 96 percent of NDC Members supported the conference report on Ex-Im reauthorization." As you may recall, 80 percent of Ex-Im money goes to Fortune 500 companies including Boeing, General Electric, Catepillar Inc., Mobil Oil, Westinghouse, AT&T, Motorola, Lucent Technologies, Enron, IBM , FedEx, General Motors, Halliburton, Siemans, Raytheon, and United Technologies (many who bankroll the DLC). These companies are some of the biggest job cutters in the country, yet when progressives tried to prevent Ex-Im subisidies from going to companies that are sending jobs overseas, they were voted down with the help of DLC leaders in Congress. Even the Cato Institute notes that "the Export-Import Bank is corporate welfare - it benefits a small number of private businesses at the expense of other businesses and taxpaying citizens."

DLC CLAIM: "It's pretty clear Schweitzer himself didn't think populism made it unnecessary to deal with cultural issues on their own terms."

FACT: No one said that economic populism made it wholly uneccessary to deal with social issues. As the Prospect article specifically said, "The point is to follow red-region Democrats who have diminished the electoral impact of traditional social issues by redefining the values debate on economic and class terms. Granted, the progressive populists profiled above do not uniformly hew to the standard liberal line on social issues: some are pro-life, some pro-choice; some pro–gun ownership, some pro–gun control; some pro–gay marriage, some anti–gay marriage; some vociferous about religion, some subdued. But they have shown that there is another path that moves past wedge issues if the party is willing to fundamentally challenge the excesses of corporate America and big money."

DLC CLAIM: "Sirota goes on to list a lot of other red-state Democrats who have succeeded by defying the 'corporate/DLC argument,' and most of them are actually politicians with long-standing close connections with the DLC: Ken and John Salazar of CO, Janet Napolitano of AZ, John Spratt of SC, Eliot Spitzer of NY, and Stephanie Herseth of SD."

FACT: This shows how the chameleons at the DLC have shamelessly name any up and coming politician a "New Democrat" so as to cover their own hide inside the beltway - even if those politicians reject huge portions of the corporate DLC agenda. For instance, Sen.-elect Barack Obama rejected any “suggestion” that “inclusion of my name” on a DLC/New Democrat membership list amounted to “an endorsement on my part of the DLC platform.” Similarly, with the exception of Spratt, the leaders cited in the Prospect article broke with the corporate/DLC model in defining themselves, instead raising their profile on a populist progressive message. The Denver Post noted that Ken Salazar won his "Senate seat with [a] populist campaign" – not the DLC's Republican-lite model. CBS 4 Denver reports John Salazar won by "hammering home a populist message that included bashing tax cuts for the rich" – the same kind of "class warfare" the DLC criticizes. Janet Napolitano built her record going after big corporations like Arthur Andersen, who had contributed lavishly to one of the DLC's key leaders, Sen. Joe Lieberman. She also built up a record prosecuting Qwest, a company that has been a major backer of the New Democrats. Wall Street, which contributes heavily to the DLC, sees crusader Eliot Spitzer's "as a meddler poking into issues best left to federal regulators and as a rabble-rousing populist," according to the Washington Post. And Stephanie Herseth hammered her opponent for supporting pacts like the Australia free trade deal, while the DLC applauded its passage.

DLC CLAIM: "You don't have to be a political whiz to know that Rep. Bernie Sanders is the at-large Congressman from Vermont, a state that gave John Kerry a 20-point win over George Bush. That state's relevance to a discussion of "red-state and red region" Democrats is mystifying, to say the least."

FACT: This shows how dishonest – and desperate – the DLC has become. The article wasn't talking about Vermont as a whole - it was talking specifically about Sanders' success in Vermont's "'Northeast Kingdom,' the rock-ribbed Republican region along the New Hampshire border. Far from the Birkenstock-wearing, liberal caricature of Vermont, the Kingdom is one of the most culturally conservative hotbeds in New England, the place that helped fuel the 'Take Back Vermont' movement against gay civil unions." The DLC offers no refutation that Sanders continues to win big in this region despite its "traditionally conservative" slant.

DLC CLAIM: "The only way to shoehorn Sanders and [Rep. Gene] Taylor as fellow "populist progressives" is to make opposition to trade agreements the sole definition of both 'populist' and 'progressive,' and sometimes that seems to be the thrust of Sirota's argument."

FACT: Sanders, Taylor, and other populists have worked together not only on trade legislation, but on preventing tax subsidies to job exporters, protecting citizens' privacy, and increasing funding for veterans' benefits. That is, in part, the definition of a populist – though it is not surprising that the well-heeled suits at the DLC who have never been outside of the Beltway don't quite understand that.


Posted at 05:10 pm by blog swarm
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Thursday, December 09, 2004
DLC: Democratic Leadership Council

Q. What's a new name for the Republican Party?

A. The Democratic Leadership Council.

-Will Durst

Kos on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):

The irony is that the Democratic Party has lost access to its biggest source of revenue -- huge corporate soft dollar donations that once flowed in response to the DLC's corporatist agenda. The party now depends on small dollar contributions, something it has no long-term experience collecting. As much as the Dems like to think of themselves as the party of the people, the GOP has had a solid historical dominance in small dollar contributions (i.e. the churches).

Dean and Trippi spurred the party's small-dollar revolution, while Kerry took advantage of the strong ABB mood within the party to keep that money flowing. But the party can't take the $70 million raised by Kerry online for granted (not to mention tens of millions of offline small-dollor grassroots contributions) if assholes like From and Reed walk around pissing on the party's base -- something Josh says they actually enjoy doing

[...]

The DLC once owned the "New Democrat" space in the party, and that is no longer the case. Many in the party establishment see the critical need to maintain an energized party base, for both activism and money, and see the DLC as an impediment to that effect. Not everyone in the establishment is "status quo".

The DLC is a dying organization. But the quicker it dies, the better we'll be as a party. The path to success lies in finding common ground between the party's myriad constituencies, not in toeing the Gospel According to From and Reed.

[...]

The battle IS between the failed status quo establishment and Reform Democrats who span the party's left-right ideological spectrum

It's telling that the DLC, our party's version of the Flat Earth Society, insists on fighting the old ideological battles that have long since been abandoned by most of the party's various factions. The DLC may or may not have had a raison d'être in 1992, but the party and the political environment has changed dramatically in the subsequent 12 years.

Steve Gilliard on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):

Al From: shut the fuck up
Since everyone is going on about the DLC, I think I have the shortest essay possible on the subject.

They are losers. Al From is the political descendent of Pierre Laval.

Their 2002 was a disaster, and they backed the always pathetic Joe Lieberman for President, like he would have won one state.

So exactly why should we listen to them?

It's no longer 1992 and that's a long-ass losing record. They've been losing since 1994, so why the fuck do they think they have anything to bring to the table now?

[...]

I'll say this; there are no good folks at the DLC. Any more than there were kind people working for Petain. Unless they want to upend the organization, why are they still there?

Fuck these people. They're losers, big time losers and they act like they're the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1979. Al From is all too willing to betray the core principles of the Democratic Party because it doesn't make him a kingmaker anymore. If From wasn't an asshole, and his presence on the Journal's pages, or did he forget how Bob Bartley lied about Vince Foster, only proves it.

Look, the fact is that the Democratic Party is changing and the days of kingmakers like From is coming to an end. Howard Dean's candidacy for DNC chair should be like a slap in the face. Dean is hardly popular with the insiders, but the fact is Dean comes into the game with the most cards, including popular support. Al From couldn't get arrested in a Meetup. The fact that people care who the DNC chair is should matter. Vichyites like From represent no one but themselves. The fact that they think people still care about their opinions is amazing.

And it all boils down to this: they're losers.

Josh Marshall on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):


Suffice it to say that I asked my friend whether he thought From and Reed were fully aware of the 'optics' of running such a 'Dems get your house in order' piece on the Journal's editorial page. He said yes, they did and that they enjoyed the optics of it. I responded, yes, I knew that; but still really didn't think they quite 'got it'.

Let me explain what I meant and didn't mean. I didn't mean that Democrats should boycott the Journal OpEd page or restrict their writing to house organs -- plenty of liberals write pieces there and that's fine; I wouldn't want it any other way. Nor do I mean that Democrats shouldn't air their dirty laundry. They should. And now, frankly, as far as you can get from an election, is the time to do it.

But to advise Democrats you've got to be a Democrat, part of the Democratic party. And what that means is a certain threshold level of lack of contempt for people who, day in and day out, are the Democratic party. I don't mean 'the base'. I mean everyone -- right, left and center, the volunteers, the funders and the intellectuals, the issue activists and the occasional voters. And this shows a basic unwillingness to do that -- even in the most simple symbolic ways, indeed, a delight in not doing so.


Atrios on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):

The point is that the DLC gives off the impression, quite understandably, that they're not actually interested in convincing anybody they're correct about whatever it is they're advocating that day. They just want to be smug and look down upon all the pissants who aren't on board. While they write about how the problem is that some people actually disagree with them, they don't really seem to concerned with changing anyone's mind. Peeing in people's cornflakes for fun and sport isn't a way to win friends and supporters.

Oliver Willis on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):

Kiss of Death for the DLC
Blogs for Bush has just endorsed the DLC's road plan for victory. No comment yet if it's received approval from the Fox News Channel. The DLC had the right ideas at the right time, but without Bill Clinton they're quite inept.

American voters aren't stupid. If they want right-wingers, they'll vote for them and not a facsimille.


Rob Call on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):


The DLC  (Democratic Leadership Council) flat out sucks. It's been described as a front for Republicans, Republican's light, Republicans in Democrat's clothing. They attack candidates, using the same vitriol as right wing talk radio cretins like Limbaugh, Hannity, Savage and Glen what's his name.

[...]

The fact is, the Republicans have moved so far to the radical, revolutionary right, in their efforts, now being done in plain open sight, to re-make America, that the DLC, when it seeks the middle ground, is really seeking the ground that old-time Republicans took. If you stretch so far to the right and then find the new middle, then those on the far right are winning just by influencing you-- if you are a spineless faux democrat.

The democrats were led by the DLC in the failed mid-term elections. Gore was persuaded by the DLC to do Gore light. It's time to throw these loser, fake democrats out of the sphere of influence of the Democratic party. Even if that doesn't happen, it's likely that they'll get themselves thrown out. They've been getting uglier and nastier-- as though their make-up is melting off and underneath they are becoming seen for what they are ditto-head Republicans Soon enough their real selves will become so transparent they will be thrown out, or laughed out. I'm sure Tom DeLay will welcome them. He  is probably already good buddies with them.


Real Dems on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):


The DLC would like us to believe that a "third way" can satisfy everyone -- that expanding our base does not mean neglecting our core supporters. But this is a fallacy. The definition of politics requires there to be a choice between competing interests. And when it comes down to that choice, we better know which side we are on. If we lose the support (or at least the enthusiasm) of the people who need us the most, then we do not deserve to win. And we will not win. In every Presidential election since 1976, the candidate that lost touch with his base lost the election.

More Kos on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):


As for the DLC, it's time to euthenize the organization. Whatever role it may have played is spent. As of now, it's the single most divisive Dem-affiliated organization, refusing to play nice with others even in these desperate ABB times. As such, it deserves nothing but exclusion and ridicule.
SpoonReport on the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council):

The DLC just doesn't get it. They follow big money corporations so closely that every time the big money corpos turn around the "New Dems" break their noses. The DLC attitude seems to be that "good management techniques" solve all problems. I guess of they can find a "New Democrat" with an MBA from the Harvard School of Business, he's their man. Hey, it works for the Republicans.

And if these DLC propeller-heads think that a little more praying and a little more quoting of the Scripture by their candidate is going to make a difference, they better go back to a little party history. As I recall, Jimmy Carter was the most praying, Bible reading President in my life time and he was defeated in 1980 by the least openly religious Republicans that I can remember, Ronald Reagan, but one who used it was a political weapon.

Jerks, just don't get it. When are these guys and gals of the DLC realize that you don't win votes by promising a plain, cold hamburger sandwich when the other guys are promising a Big Mac, special sauce, extra cheese.

To quote Zap Brannigan: "What makes a man turn neutral ... Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality?"

And so the DLC continues to wallow in its self-made trough of mediocrity with its surefire recipe for losing election after election.

I guess that about covers the Democratic Leadership Council.
 

Posted at 10:03 pm by blog swarm
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