After Obama: How Dems Can Keep Party Going

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First Posted: 11-24-08 03:44 PM   |   Updated: 12-25-08 05:12 AM

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Much of the sweeping victories enjoyed by the Democratic Party this November have been credited to three major catalysts: Barack Obama, for his campaign and fundraising efforts; the campaign committees, for their influential fifty-state-strategy; and President Bush, for producing the most opposition-friendly political climate since Richard Nixon.

These post-election acknowledgments ignore one crucial factor. In the past two years the progressive movement has built an infrastructure that, while still in its relatively nascent stages, can be tremendously influential.

Groups like Progressive Accountability, CAP Action Fund, National Security Network, Women's Voices Women's Vote, Brave New Films and others (many of them unions), went largely unheralded during the election cycle. But behind the scenes, they put in place a system that churned up opposition research, helped influence the media, charted out the electoral landscape, and was often seamless in delivering a message. In short, they beat the GOP at its own game.

And yet, weeks after their work is finished, there is uncertainty about what's next.

The Obama team has the resources to maintain its strategic advantages. The DNC is committed to continuing the 50-state-strategy even after Howard Dean's departure. But Democratic officials are still exploring ways to ensure that an infrastructure that took more than a decade to assemble remains intact.

"The Democratic Party now has, for the first time in a generation, superior infrastructure and really good research," Paul Begala, a famed strategist who often worked with these groups, told me a few weeks ago. "As a Democrat I want the party to continue to do that. And I feel very confident that they will. If you believe, as I do, that politics is about ideas, how you argue and channel those ideas matters most. It is more important than knocking on doors, because once you knock on a door and someone answers what do you tell them?"

The benefits of a stable infrastructure -- which includes outside groups, shared data, coordinated communications, and systems that harness young talent -- are painfully clear. Beyond keeping voters active, it can give the party tremendous leverage over both lawmakers and the press. A veteran of the Clinton years recalled how each day during that administration, Rush Limbaugh and Pat Robertson "were echoing the RNC's talking points and we were beaten to the punch."

"We didn't have a capacity to get out there on a moment's notice," he added. "We didn't have our 'own' media."

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Obama does, to a large extent, have that capacity. His email list and website reach millions of people -- many of whom are as devoted to him as to any political philosophy. But even his campaign used ideologically aligned groups as an occasional crutch. And a source close to the president-elect says he is sincerely interested in keeping that infrastructure in place.

"The Obama team is committed to sustaining this outside advocacy effort," this strategist told me.

The first question facing Democrats is how to centralize this portion of the party without a galvanizing election. Howard Dean, the departing Democratic National Committee chair, has an answer.

"Do it through here," he said of the DNC in an interview last week. "I'd like to consider this becoming a grassroots organization, not just to win elections but to win programs, to get programs passed... to push out a president's message and go door-to-door for health care reform, and for climate change."

"Campaigns are not for education," he added. "They are for winning. Afterwards, governing is for education. And there is enormous potential among the grassroots community for educating by reaching out to people."

Dean may be pushing against prevailing wisdom, which suggests that elections are about learning. But in many regards he is right. An example of when infrastructure proved remarkably effective as an "education" tool is the debate over privatizing Social Security in 2005 -- when progressive groups of all colors (labor, veterans, women's issues, etc...) punched holes in Bush's proposals with a largely coherent message. On the opposite end of the spectrum is the immigration debate, in which a lack of cohesion allowed GOP groups to derail any moderate or progressive reform proposal.

But a centralizing force for the Democratic infrastructure is only helpful if there is enough money to build it. During the presidential campaign, Obama could not legally coordinate with outside groups. But he successfully convinced the Democratic financiers to channel their money to him and few else. The draining of the swamp forced many organizations to scale back their election season ambitions.

Now, without the prevailing need to get a Democrat in the White House and with a debilitating economic crisis stifling the most politically philanthropic, there may not be enough loot to keep these outside organizations operating.

"Every group on the left and probably every group on the right will have to face the problem that we just whipped out a trillion of stock assets among the wealthy donors of the right and left. And it is quiet possible that many progressive donors will think, oh, well, our job is done," said Bob Borosage, co-director of Campaign for America's Future, in a recent phone interview.

And yet, Borosage himself adds the caveat: having been in the political wilderness for so long, the progressive id now dictates that nothing should be taken for granted. There is, he says, an understanding that all the gains made in the last few years could be lost just as quickly. A fallout and consolidation may be likely -- the White House, for starters, will hire away many of the best staffers from these outside groups. But it shouldn't be debilitating.

Sure enough, in a diary written for the Huffington Post days after the election, Gara LaMarche, a major Democratic donor, sounded the call to arms when it came to bolstering the party's infrastructure.

"To govern effectively and promote his agenda on economic security, energy, expanded health coverage, education, the restoration of civil liberties and other matters, Obama will need to keep his army mobilized," LaMarche wrote. "Doing this is as important as drafting legislation and picking cabinet secretaries."

Much of the sweeping victories enjoyed by the Democratic Party this November have been credited to three major catalysts: Barack Obama, for his campaign and fundraising efforts; the campaign committee...
Much of the sweeping victories enjoyed by the Democratic Party this November have been credited to three major catalysts: Barack Obama, for his campaign and fundraising efforts; the campaign committee...
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- Mabila I'm a Fan of Mabila 10 fans permalink
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Keep David Plouffe and his organizational prowess within the BO campaign and DNC. Don't take him to the White House please.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 AM on 11/25/2008
- teepeeyoyo I'm a Fan of teepeeyoyo 8 fans permalink
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I agree keep Plouffe very close....he served us very well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 11/25/2008

Yep, well it's easy to overthink this one. What really happened this time is we Dems, who are normally a fractured chaotic group, were brought together by one common element - hatred of Bush, his minions, and everything his party stands for. I've been voting (sometimes Dem sometimes Rep) Since 1968. Haven't seen this kind of motivation, ever, in either party.

Now Bush et al are exiting, I think it will take strong effective leadership, at national and local levels, to keep the Dems together.

I wish I was as sure this would happen as I was that B.O. would be our next president.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 AM on 11/25/2008

I think the internet had the biggest influence on this election and will to all other elections from now on ,in a way that no one ever imagined.

Yes the progressive movements were able to make their case more noticeably this time,but thats thanks to the internet. If I were all still the MSM affair,they never would have allow the progressives enough air time to make their case.

They could have even bee cutting of Obama's inspirational speeches for the pundits to analyst and misinterprete. The internet made the difference,so massive thanks to Tim Berner Lee(the inventor of the World Wide Web)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 11/25/2008
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I completely agree with you.

I was a volunteer web strategist for the Washington State Obama Campaign. It was so much fun and rewarding that I look forward to doing it again for the mid term elections where I will e-mail 1 million people nationwide.

I helped Obama out by launching my own "50 State E-mail Strategy" - a massive one-man web campaign where I micro-targeted voters. I sent out over 50,000 e-mails on Obama's behalf over the past 9 months to people in the 50 states. I sent 1,000 to each state. I didn't e-mail them repeatedly because that would make me a bonafide spammer. So I only e-mailed them one time.

I spent two hours a day, 9 months straight, mining the internet for e-mails specific to region, race, ethnicity, etc. And this worked perfectly. Fo instance, when HUFFPOST Blogger Natasha Chen wrote this past summer that a near million member Asian-American PAC endorsed Obama, I sent an e-mail out that same day to over 500 members of Asian-American fraternities and sororities. And I went into overdrive, e-mailing Latinos across the country for a whole week straight after Obama had a rocky start with a Latina member of Congress.

Obama proved that you can indeed win by marrying assertive grassroots politics with cutting edge technology. This must be repeated yearly. E-maling works.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 11/25/2008
- reggieb I'm a Fan of reggieb 82 fans permalink

Wow. Impressive! Thank you for all your hard work. I agree with you, that e-mailing works, but I worried that my 82 year old mother was a good candidate for the "He's a Muslim" type of emails. I visited her in the fall and was pleasantly surprised to find that she was not falling for the smears.
I think the same type of grassroots movement will be needed when it comes to health care reform.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 11/25/2008
- Wiserone I'm a Fan of Wiserone 11 fans permalink
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And, this is why the Rethug's were at a loss because they were employing 90's campaign style politics. As soon as I heard that McCain didn't even know how to use a mouse, it was very revealing. Sure, it was made fun of by the pundits, but it told me far more. The head of the campaign and he was so out of touch with the technology spoke volumes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 11/25/2008
- ccmd I'm a Fan of ccmd 18 fans permalink



impressive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 AM on 11/25/2008
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 53 fans permalink
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The very first thing that can be done is to hold both Republican and Democratic feet to the fire on a stimulus package. It is critical that the package contain money to fund rebuilding of the nation's infrastructure. Republicans will say that it will take to long to get infrastructure programs moving but they are lying. Many states have projects that are just setting and waiting for federal funds but Republicans will want to delay any start just so they can make political hay about nothig happening.

A high-ranking official in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's office has confirmed that Democratic leadership is looking to have a stimulus package ready for Barack Obama to sign shortly upon taking office. The target should be that President Obama, immediately after taking the Oath of Office, should pull out his pen and sign the stimulus package.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 AM on 11/25/2008
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Obama needs to appoint or recommend a GREAT leader for the Party! Someone who understands how the organization could work in this new environment and help it grow in capabilities.

It would be a shame if the approaches developed over 22 months did not continue to build and mature as you can bet the Republicans are going to try to catch up. So why start all over-keep building!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 AM on 11/25/2008
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 53 fans permalink
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Bush is gone in 60 days. The critical point will come once Bush isn't around to kick anymore.

Between now and January 20 the Democrats have to refocus on supporting the Obama agenda. This will be harder than the campaign because it means not only pushing hard against Republicans when they obstruct legislation but pushing against those Democrats that are almost Republicans in the way they think.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 AM on 11/25/2008
- SSF I'm a Fan of SSF 31 fans permalink
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We can keep the unity going by supporting Jim Martin in his runoff against Saxby Chambliss for U.S. Senate down in Georgia!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 AM on 11/25/2008

Anything is better than Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 AM on 11/25/2008
- Tom Payned I'm a Fan of Tom Payned 73 fans permalink
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One thing the Dems could do to keep me in the fold and donating both time and cash, is to send us all a message that hard work, values and fighting for our principles to be upheld.

I know wanting Lieberman stripped and tossed is a pipe dream, but making him stand there in front of a group of questioning reporters after giving a full Mea Culpa with specifics would go a long way to keeping me working for the DNC. It appears the DLC still rules, and they have been nothing but a disappointment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 11/24/2008
- SOLERSO68 I'm a Fan of SOLERSO68 36 fans permalink
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I love this conversation. It exactly the kind of thing we should be talking about, which is where to take the giant grass roots machine from here. There are local elections, there are the midterms in just 2 years and there are policy issues. Dean is right, the run up is NOT the time to win people over to our side, its now, two years before. We should be distilling the message, the selling points of each major policy like health care, card check, and so on, and educating voters about it. We need to get past YEARS of republican "branding" which is confusing a lot of people. Lets do away with shallow, name brand politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 11/24/2008
- TMAN I'm a Fan of TMAN 16 fans permalink
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Agreed. I love the question: "where to take the giant grass roots machine from here." good post!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 11/24/2008

wow........so you now want to take away an EMP's right to vote in secret.......and you think that will not be abused by both sides.........

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 11/24/2008
- dizmo4 I'm a Fan of dizmo4 48 fans permalink

The democrats need to govern effectively to maintain their advantage. The chief mistake the republicans made was governing from the right and running in permanent campaign mode. I know this will anger many on here but this country isn't quite center-left yet. Presidential elections aren't truely national elections rather 50 state elections. Key states like Ohio, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, Indiana, Missouri, Iowa, Pennsylvania aren't quite center left yet. Obama won those states ( and came close in Missouri) because the GOP had failed so miserably and voters in those states -- the Reagan democrats--were ready to give the democrats a chance.

The way to bring about a sustained democratic control of Congress, the Presidency and the states ( equally important as controlling the national government) is to govern effectively from the center or center-right at first and bring the country along towards the left. That requires patience. I just hope that all progressives have that patience.

L

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 11/24/2008

no they don't have that patience. good

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 PM on 11/24/2008
- TMAN I'm a Fan of TMAN 16 fans permalink
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I believe they do. This was a different kind of election. the long term mechanics of the thing were better understood. The economic situation in addition will impose that expectation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 11/24/2008
- TMAN I'm a Fan of TMAN 16 fans permalink
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..."is to govern effectively from the center or center-right at first and bring the country along towards the left. That requires patience. I just hope that all progressives have that patience."

That's for me a very accurate analysis. He needs to get much accomplished that is difficult, very early on, that won't happen if he blatantly swings left at the outset. the strategy-the "world view" is what is important, or 2010 will be the democrats undoing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 11/24/2008

The Democratic Party is, for the world, conservative.

I think if people wanted center right legislation, Congress would have more than 12% approval (roughly). There is not enough liberal legislation and opposition, as we saw in the buildup to the Iraq War.

Build what it takes for new energy. Don't wait for seniors and boomers to do it. Make health attainable, and I don't mean insurance. There's more than enough money it's just the allocation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 AM on 11/25/2008
- DCinFrance I'm a Fan of DCinFrance 33 fans permalink
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They don't. Already it looks to me like they are falling over each other to be first to once again bitterly divide the party, howling and crying how Obama's appointments are treason to their support and effort. It's just begun. For the progressive it seems that it is tout ou rien.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 11/25/2008
- Klimb I'm a Fan of Klimb 21 fans permalink

People...the left, center and right mentality is very and utterly NAIVE, especially when you all examine the present state of the USA! The only thing that will work is "COMMON SENSE" and I personally applaud Presid. elect Obama for running a campaign based on the USA and not "Blue" and "Red" which would have failed.

I would like somebody to define how this country was governed in the las 8 years: Left, center or right? I need your help or answer...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 AM on 11/25/2008

Obama is a once in a generation politician, but the progressive movement was getting strong before he came onto the scene and became our candidate. He is going to be instrumental in helping to lead this country, but the Democrats are only getting started. In 2008 the goal was to elect more Democrats. In 2010 the goal is to elect better Democrats.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 11/24/2008

"better Democrats." is there such an animal

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 11/24/2008

The great thing about the Democratic party is this: The Republicans are the party of the Rich, the top 10%(the ReallyRich). Thus, they will always be for just one thing: whatever benefits the Rich. The Democrats, on the other hand, can be anything we want them to, if our voices are strong enough and loud enough. The internet is starting to make that happen, and yes. the 50-state strategy is paying off, and yes, education is how we get there. Remember, there is nothing in the way of individual liberty, or benefit to the working class, that the Republicans can deliver that the Democrats can't do better, if we push them to it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 11/25/2008

Newsflash: Obama is the Party.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 PM on 11/24/2008
- darker I'm a Fan of darker 40 fans permalink

it's past time for OBAMA TIME! !
HURRAY!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 11/24/2008

The 50 state strategy is the way. The dems also need to articulate their message better than they have in the past. Some how we have this mass group of citizen have attention deficient disorder they are so easily distracted. Everytime that they cast their votes for a republican they cancel themselves out of the loop. These people bring new meaning the the word oxymoron.

Like the Blue-Collar republicans (identity issue are seriouly going on here) And Black Republicans?????? Gay republicans?????? Or my favorite the blue collar black gay republican­s?????????­Who are these people really and why do they believe that the repugs are the only way forward? And seriously why do they believe in everything that Rush Limbaugh says?

Knowlege is the Key. Please address Education. Make it your mantle piece.

Also we need some dems with b@!!s. The Joe Lieberman debacle. They have to stop waiting for what the polls are going to say. Bring this country together and drag this nation kicking and screaming into the future. Enough with the dumb $h!t.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 11/24/2008
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