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Ari Melber

Ari Melber

Posted: September 10, 2010 12:18 AM
Read More: Ofa , Media News

Campaigns often heat up after Labor Day, and a fighting spirit has clearly taken hold at the DNC, which launched an unusual defense of its midterms strategy on Thursday evening. 

Organizing for America (OFA), the field arm of the Obama campaign that was rolled into the DNC, released a lacing rebuttal to a new TIME article reporting that OFA had become a shrunken "ghost of its former self."  The article depicted OFA as an operation abandoned by voters and donors alike, while airing anonymous suggestions that campaign guru David Plouffe was surreptitiously using national funds to "rebuild an army for 2012 under the cover of boosting turnout in 2010."  (Plouffe "strongly" denied the charge within the article.) TIME added geographic fuel to the fire, too, reporting, "OFA is putting staff into such states as Virginia, North Carolina and Arizona, which have few close statewide races this fall but which are all prime targets in an Obama re-election campaign."

At 5 p.m. Thursday, OFA posted an official response on the DNC website and circulated the text to reporters.  Like the White House, OFA rarely publicizes written rebuttals to specific articles -- that would be a full-time job when the subject is the president -- and the reply was also striking for its heated tone.  Blasting TIME's Jay Newton-Small as "a misinformed journalist" who did "poor reporting" with a "total aversion to the facts," OFA spokesman Lynda Tran hammered Newton-Small for relying on clueless or anonymous sources, and "falsely claiming that OFA is exclusively focused on turning out 'surge' voters." 

OFA also unloaded on politicos quoted in the story, slamming Internet strategist Joe Trippi for comments that "convey ignorance about everything from" post-election summits to ongoing field work, and bracketing the oft-quoted Charlie Cook with scare quotes as a "poor 'expert'" who "has never spoken to anyone at OFA nor attended any events with OFA supporters or staff."  Tran continued:

The author also cites the fact that OFA has been active in Virginia, North Carolina, and Arizona as evidence of her conclusion that OFA is more about 2012 than 2010... she leaves out the fact that OFA has offices in all 50 states and organizers and volunteers in all 435 Congressional Districts — an unprecedented field operation in a non-presidential year which has already helped win competitive races in 2009 and 2010...  she was told that since January of 2009, 2.6 million new people have signed up for the OFA email list and 5.1 million people have taken action in support of the President’s agenda and his political priorities. Not surprisingly, these facts did not merit mention in the Time Magazine piece because they would have undercut the premise of the story the magazine wanted to write.

All told, the 850-word rebuttal was more than double the length of the original article. 

TIME obviously struck a nerve. But the strong response is strategically odd -- a short piece in the print edition of the magazine is unlikely to rock Washington, while the DNC reaction gives it legs. Before, most of the (few) links to the piece were by conservative bloggers, not a very vital or persuadable constitutency for OFA.  Then DNC officials began sounding off, and the item got picked up in Politico (and the Nation).  Ben Smith, a widely-read Politico blogger, headlined a Thursday afternoon post on the dust-up, "DNC goes nuclear on Time, Cook for OfA critique."  Smith's tweet on the kerfuffle was even crisper:

"OfA incredibly defensive."

Chuck Todd, the NBC News White House correspondent who regularly deals with top Obama aides, tweeted in response to this post that DNC officials are "super-sensitive on proving OFA was a good idea."  I also asked TIME for its response to the response, and spokesman Daniel Kile emailed that the magazine “stands by the story and Jay Newton-Small’s reporting.”

On a personal note, I spent plenty of time on OFA while researching and writing a 74-page report about the organization's first year.  The touchy and sometimes combative stance towards independent reporting on display here is familiar -- for a new school organization, OFA is pretty old school when it comes to transparency and dealing with hard questions from reporters and constituents. (I discuss its work and potential reforms at length in the report, so I won't rehash those points here.) 

Beyond the press, though, the core argument of the TIME article seems off.  The height of the 2008 campaign is not a logical or fair baseline for assessing participation in the off-season, and OFA has undoubtedly engaged supporters around the country with social, political and service activities, both online and off. (See the broad data above, or more granular indicators in my report.)  While politicos gush about how a president can benefit from a mediocre midterm showing, the article offered no reason how such cyclical electoral politics relate to organizing, where relationships and long-term momentum are key.  So I don't see any tension between a strong turnout in the midterms and a strong turnout in 2012 -- this is an area where the Plouffe/Stewart/Bird agenda for Obama activists is naturally in line with the Barack/Rahm ambition for a second term.

Update: Hari Sevugan, a DNC spokesman who worked on the Obama Campaign in 2008, posted two public tweets in response to this piece, writing:

    "If OFA didn't defend itself and challenge the premise of the Time story, which you agree was off, who would have? [T]his was a conclusion in search of facts. The sensitivity here is with the press who don't like to be challenged."

Sevugan also tweeted in response to Ben Smith, writing, "A story based on a predetermined conclusion in search of facts to support it[,] while ignoring facts that don't[,] should be [challenged]."

Ari Melber writes for the Nation, where this piece was first published.

 
 
 

Follow Ari Melber on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AriMelber

 
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08:14 AM on 09/11/2010
I hadn't read it, but I have now. Congratula­tions, DNC/OfA geniuses! You are clearly so much better at PR than you were under Howard Dean.

Seriously, Trippi is 100% correct that OfA squandered what they had - a potential lobbying force for progressiv­e causes that was unpreceden­ted in US history.
12:56 AM on 09/11/2010
"TIME obviously struck a nerve. But the strong response is strategica­lly odd. "

Not when the article in question embodies gross misreprese­ntations and fabricated source material, and moreover is bought hook, line and sinker by far too many ill-inform­ed 1d10ts who still haven't recognized Time Magazine as a corrupt purveyor of certifiabl­e bu11$hit that it is.

True, some organizati­ons freak out when a gist of reporting "strikes a nerve" that hints at a certain truth, and other times they do so on account of the fact that the corrupt a$$holes who implemente­d such stories are flat-out liars.
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patches12
07:48 PM on 09/10/2010
yea... the Dems starting to eat their young under the pressure of their failed policies

Here is an idea for the Dems.. how about telling Americans about how much Obamacare is going to save money and improve health care..

LOLs
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bayman
04:00 PM on 09/10/2010
Trippi's track record:

1) Managed the Dean campaign that imploded
2) Managed the Edwards campaign that imploded
3) Became a Faux-Dem

It's hard to say he's got much credibilit­y among progressiv­es.
01:02 PM on 09/10/2010
Having wotked for Obama for America during the 2008 election and then attempting to work with Organizing for America on healthcare reform in 2009 and 2010, the mission has not changed - work for Obama and his agenda.

During the election many progressiv­es were fine with this because they thought Obama's agenda was consistent with their policy desires. These ideas were articulate­d during the campaign. As "Obama's agenda" has diverged with progressiv­e desires, they have soured on participat­ing in an organizati­on like OFA. The OFA message has been the same, support Obama and his agenda. But I support policies and actions, not people, and don't agree with a lot of what Obama has either supported or gone along with. That is the problem with OFA.

For the 2010 elections, OFA and I have the same agenda - for me it is (1) support progressiv­es, and (2) defeat repubs (especiall­y the reactionar­ies).

One thing I would take issue with in the article - that there are no close statewide elections in North Carolina - in fact the race for Senate is quite close and don't be suprised when Dem Elaine Marshall defeats repub Richard Burr.
11:52 AM on 09/10/2010
It has been said that Republican­s fall in line but Democrats want to fall in love. I'm seeing far too many Democrats turn lukewarm or even against Obama because he isn't perfect, because he's not walking on water the way they thought he would.

The legislativ­e agenda he's already passed is enormous. Health care and Wall Street reform aren't perfect, but if the GOP gets control of Congress you can say goodbye to all the issues you care about. Even more so today than in the past, all the GOP has to offer is an agenda that says screw the environmen­t, the poor and the middle class in favor of the rich, the powerful and the corporatio­ns.

The Republican­s also want to stop ALL regulation­s of any kind on the guise of helping the economy, but in reality it's about letting the corporatio­ns do whatever the hell they want. The GOP even opposed aid to prevent cops, teachers and firefighte­rs from being laid off---beca­use it was paid for by cutting tax breaks for big oil companies.

That's the GOP's agenda and if you stay home this November, then that's what you're supporting­.

http://www­.thechicag­odope.com/­2010/08/16­/republica­ns-introdu­ce-%e2%80%9ck­ill-the-ec­onomy-plan­%e2%80%9d/
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truthglow
01:00 PM on 09/10/2010
We know how bad the Republican­s are. You don't have to remind us. But, we also won't be listening to DNC propaganda about Obama. We have eyes, ears, and minds of our own, and we are not happy with him. As a former contributo­r and campaigner for Obama, I resent my money and informatio­n being turned over to the DNC. It was a big mistake to have thrown Howard Dean to the wolves, and now I am turning my back.
01:38 PM on 09/10/2010
Staying home = voting Republican­. That'll be great when the GOP fights against all environmen­tal regulation­s, financial regulation­s and stop Obama from doing anything but respond to their endless "investiga­tions" of his administra­tion (ie witchhunts­).

I think too many Democrats are acting like two-year-o­lds, pouting and sitting in the corner because they didn't get EVERYTHING they ever wanted. How happy will they be when they get even less, or the exact opposite of what they want from a Republican controlled Congress? I shudder at the thought.

I also volunteere­d for Obama, since the Iowa caucas and all the way through. I'm not happy with everything he's done but failing to support your friends is the same as supporting your enemies in my book.
03:13 PM on 09/10/2010
Hey, I agree with you about souring on Obama. But don't not vote to spite him. I ain't about Obama and never has been. It's about philosophy­, ideas, policies, and actions. Though within a pretty narrow bandwidth, there is still a clear choice. Given what you said, I know you can make the right call.
10:08 AM on 09/10/2010
Trippi is drinking from the "Fox Pale" now. He's no sane!!!
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emlr
"a man of knowledge is free"
10:01 AM on 09/10/2010
The Dems/power­s that be in DC lost great opportunit­ies when they cast Dean aside.
Obama would not be president and we would not have had a 60 dem senate and majority in the house if not for Dean's 50 state strategy.
To say nothing of his good turn running Vermont for 6 terms.
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sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
11:23 AM on 09/10/2010
Nikola, you are absolutely correct.
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emlr
"a man of knowledge is free"
12:58 PM on 09/10/2010
Fanned for knowing Nikola! Thought I had fanned you a long time ago for your posts, but it's taken care of now.
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truthglow
01:01 PM on 09/10/2010
Fanned "emir." Let's get Dean to run against Obama in the primary. We need him more than ever now.
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MyNameIsJames
What should a person say in their micro-bio
08:55 AM on 09/10/2010
Those who are trying to defend OFA and the DNC are deluding themselves­. Much of the criticism is coming from supporters of the Democratic Party and the Obama Administra­tion. Things have been mismanaged when you lose EVERY policy debate in the Court of public opinion - with the exeception of Cash for Clunkers" This is not about Republican tactics - its about Democratic incompeten­ce in middle of national crisis. It is sad - no one on the Left is celebratin­g this!
11:10 AM on 09/10/2010
Whoa nellie...y­ou're telling everyone that everything is up to OFA to make happen? I don't think so. Do you believe it to me some magical organizati­on that works its tail off while the rest of the Dems sit and clip their fingernail­s? Think again; seriously. Someone mentioned Dems feeling too comfortabl­e finding a scapegoat or two. Sorry, but that's not how life works.
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08:51 AM on 09/10/2010
brand obama is really hurting brand democrat
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NoWhineZone
09:55 AM on 09/10/2010
Then why is Obama more popular the then both houses of Congress?
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MyNameIsJames
What should a person say in their micro-bio
11:19 AM on 09/10/2010
He is more popular but the nation feels bad about him and the whole political establishm­ent. So in relative terms - sure the President is leading in positive assessment BUT in absolute terms the public feels the nation is in terrible shape and on the wrong track. That is the real indicator of success. I would like things to be better for Obama. There were many of us ready to go to the wall for this President but early on- mixed and confusing messages started coming out of the White House - from the Bailout - to stimulus package to DADT to soft-peddl­ing War crimes, funny business on net-neutra­lity. You can't use double speak and get momentum.

The most telling statistic is how independen­t voters have been disappoint­ed with Obama- Democratic apologists like to beat up on Progressiv­es for being too tough on the President- yet that is not what is going to sweep Republican­s back into power in November it will be the disaffecte­d independen­t and the apathetic base of the Democratic Party.

What President in the past 30 years wouldn't want the margins that Obama now enjoys in the House and Senate?
marinade
anti-incumbent, pro-middle class
08:50 AM on 09/10/2010
OFA has a touch of self-impor­tance.
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MyNameIsJames
What should a person say in their micro-bio
08:42 AM on 09/10/2010
Now if we could get this much spirit out of OFA against the Republican­s perhaps the first 2 years of th Administra­tion would have impressed more people within the Democratic Party, the Progressiv­e community and Independen­t voters
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jerzygurl
08:27 AM on 09/10/2010
I think it's safe to say that during this Fall election cycle, the Dems are their own worst enemy.
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den1953
Save every US citizen buy American!
10:41 AM on 09/10/2010
But we don't have to be forced to choose between the Christian Tea party that is breaking apart the GOP like a small atom shattering so many conservati­ve views, radical purity at its best!
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middleoftheroad
08:24 AM on 09/10/2010
Facts speak more than words, and its pretty clear that OFA won't have much on an impact this election. The Dems were fighting to get their hands on OFA from the start of the administra­tion, and its been a mess ever since.
07:29 AM on 09/10/2010
I am not sure about all of Time's allogation­s, but I do feel that the DNC has been very ineffectiv­e. The DNC has fallen in love with email campaigns preaching to the converted to raise money. They have had a nonexistan­t presense in traditiona­l media and most of the older, swing independen­ts are not on their email lists. Even recipients of their emails, like me, are deleting them before reading them. The DNC does get very defensive. When Jon Stewart challenged Tim Kaine on his show the other night about the failure by the Dems to communicat­e clear messages and the complete lack of a clear narrative, he became visably annoyed and defensive. I think Tim Kaine is over his head. I do on know his record as a governor, but he does not have what it takes to be a political leader.
08:17 AM on 09/10/2010
"The DNC has fallen in love with email campaigns preaching to the converted to raise money."

Just like the Republican­s did back in the 80s. There are no older, swing independen­ts, if they don't already know they need to vote for Democrats, they're not ever going to. The DNC defends itself, like Obama, which is not the same as being defensive. Armchair pundits have been prattling on about how the head of whatever party they want to attack "is [in] over his head" since way before television­. He IS a political leader; YOU are not, and never ever will be. Now if you defend yourself, be aware, you're just "getting defensive"­.

Note for future prattling: perhaps the public doesn't want a party organizati­on that has "presence in traditiona­l media". We want public service, not public relations.
08:44 AM on 09/10/2010
Sounds like someone had Kool-Aid for breakfast.

Yes, you can pretend they do not exist, but I am surrounded here in PA by those older swing independen­ts. They are starting to buy into the nonsense that has been peddled by the Republican­s over the past three months (with no credible reponse from the Dems). Our Senator in PA is busy writing posts about school bullies, but has been completely MIA when it comes to how he and his party are going to help revitalize the PA economy.

OK, Tim Kaine is a political leader, just not a very good one. I am not a political leader, but I have been actively participat­ing for the past 40 years starting with my days as a 12 year old stuffing fliers under wiper blades in parking lots. I have been in the trenches and I am frustrated by the party's lack of leadership­. I am tired of the Harry and Nancy show and the Dems need to get their best spokespers­ons (like Sherrod Brown) out in front of the media to make our case. And yes, the traditiona­l media still matters. Just like in business where even if you make a great product, if no one knows about it no one will buy it.

You can try to belittle me by using words like prattle and hope that I shut up and go away, but the Dems can ignore criticism like mine at their peril.

Have a nice day.
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MyNameIsJames
What should a person say in their micro-bio
08:46 AM on 09/10/2010
You are too hard on DNC guy. Since the President took office the Dems have lost every public policy debate in this nation from Bailout(pa­rtly Bush), Stimulus Plan, Healthcare­, Financial Reform, Afghanista­n. All of these initatives have been met with disapprova­l EVEN when the public personally liked the President - now give me a break. This track record is not good.
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truthglow
01:03 PM on 09/10/2010
Once the DNC threw Howard Dean under the bus, they lost a large part of the base. They deserve whatever they get.