Dylan Loewe served as the campaign manager for wind energy executive Michael Skelly's Congressional race during the 2008 election cycle. Prior to that, he was the founder and executive director of Ballotground, a multi-state anti-war ballot initiative campaign. Dylan is a regular op-ed contributor for The Guardian and is currently pursuing a law degree from Columbia Law School and a masters in public policy from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. His first book will be published by Three Rivers Press in the Fall of 2010. You can email him at dylanloewe[at]gmail.com or follow him on twitter @dylanloewe.

Blog Entries by Dylan Loewe

Weathering the 2010 Storm

11 Comments | Posted December 7, 2009 | 09:02 AM (EST)


There are a number of things the Democrats can do between now and next year to mitigate the losses they are sure to experience in 2010.

1. Pass health care reform before the State of the Union: The biggest no-brainer on the list, the Democrats must pass their...

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The Patience to Govern

49 Comments | Posted November 3, 2009 | 12:29 PM (EST)


What Arianna calls timidity, I call patience.

Campaigning is not the same as governing. In 2007 and 2008, Obama never needed Congressional approval for the executive decisions his campaign made. He never had to worry about securing Joe Lieberman's vote. Governing is more complex, certainly less pure, and noticeably...

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Open Letter to Sen. Blanche Lincoln

115 Comments | Posted September 30, 2009 | 10:54 AM (EST)


Dear Senator Lincoln:

As you know, yesterday you were among a small group of Democrats who voted against including a public option in the bill you will report out of the Finance Committee. As you also know, earlier this year, you went on record supporting a public option, only...

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Where's the Change? It's Everywhere

660 Comments | Posted September 28, 2009 | 09:22 AM (EST)


I wrote an article on HuffPost a couple of days ago that spoke, among other things, about Barack Obama's ability to mobilize the Democratic base. One commenter responded with this: "With all due respect Mr. Loewe, Obama's base is also furious....with him." Another said: "The author neglects a critical logic....

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Everything You Think You Know About the Midterms is Wrong

91 Comments | Posted September 23, 2009 | 08:53 AM (EST)


I keep hearing that the Democrats are totally screwed come November 2010, that the midterms are going to be a bit of a bloodbath. Democrats have an outside shot of losing control of the House, according to Charlie Cook. A one in three chance according to Nate Silver....

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Taking the Long View

41 Comments | Posted August 3, 2009 | 11:54 AM (EST)


Deep breaths, folks. Deep breaths.

During the campaign, we were a lot like this. It didn't matter that Obama was consistently walloping McCain in the polls, or that our most credible political analysts were predicting a landslide. It didn't matter. Everywhere you'd go, wherever Democrats were hanging out, they'd be...

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The End of Palin

186 Comments | Posted July 6, 2009 | 09:09 AM (EST)


Well, she didn't quit to run for president.

Nobody would do that, could possibly do that, could at any point be told by any person that an idea that crazy might actually work out. It's not just that it's irrational; it's that it's insane. There is no political playbook...

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The Trouble With Terry

72 Comments | Posted June 5, 2009 | 08:41 AM (EST)


On Tuesday, Democratic primary voters in Virginia will have the chance to decide a neck-and-neck race for the gubernatorial nomination between former state Delegate Brian Moran, state Senator Creigh Deeds, and long-time Democratic fundraiser Terry McAuliffe.

A new PPP poll shows Deeds leading with 27% to McAuliffe's 24% and Moran's...

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The Politics of Sotomayor

230 Comments | Posted May 26, 2009 | 11:30 AM (EST)


This morning President Obama announced Second Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Sonia Sotomayor as his nominee to replace Justice David Souter on the United States Supreme Court. In his press conference unveiling the choice, Obama described Sotomayor as an inspiring woman with a distinguished career, holding a "depth of experience...

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A Political Masterstroke

177 Comments | Posted May 20, 2009 | 07:45 AM (EST)


Over the weekend, President Obama named Utah Governor Jon Huntsman as the next Ambassador to China, a masterstroke of political strategy.

Huntsman may be the most important person you've never heard of. He's a moderate Republican governor in one of the most conservative Republican states, where, until the time of...

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100 Days Report Card: Political Strategy

6 Comments | Posted April 29, 2009 | 08:36 AM (EST)


During the first 100 days of his presidency, Barack Obama's political team scored a number of big victories. With few exceptions, the political strategies they've employed have been effective, helping to lay the foundation for a broad domestic and foreign policy agenda. Here's how the administration stacked up:

Dealing with...

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The Specter of Arlen Specter

75 Comments | Posted April 28, 2009 | 01:00 PM (EST)


In what will certainly be the biggest political story to cap off the first 100 days of the Obama administration, Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) has announced he will be switching parties. Once Al Franken is seated in Minnesota, an inevitability expected to happen shortly, the Democratic party will have a...

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The Republican Point of No Return

Posted April 17, 2009 | 08:56 AM (EST)


There was a point not long after the 2006 midterm elections when observers began to note that Republicans were in truly terrible shape, that a staggering number of Senate and House Republicans were acutely vulnerable in their re-elections, and that in all likelihood, if the GOP failed to reconnect with...

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Why Immigration Reform Now Isn't Such a Bad Idea

Posted April 9, 2009 | 10:45 AM (EST)


The New York Times is reporting that the White House intends to jump-start a new debate on immigration reform this year, a move in line with promises made by the president during the campaign season. Not surprisingly, there is some trepidation among Democrats as to whether an issue as...

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What the NY-20 Special Election Means for the Midterms

Posted April 1, 2009 | 12:01 PM (EST)


The race to fill the Congressional seat left vacant by Hillary Clinton's Senate replacement is too close to call, with Democrat Scott Murphy ahead of Jim Tedisco by only 65 votes. Absentee ballots have yet to be added to the tally, suggesting the race will almost certainly hinge on which...

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How Democrats Might Actually Build a Permanent Majority

Posted March 19, 2009 | 01:59 AM (EST)


Roughly four years ago, the Republican Party was on top of the world. President Bush had just been re-elected. Both the House and the Senate were controlled by the GOP. The Democratic Party had a bumbling message, so nuanced that it was becoming increasingly difficult to explain. Republicans had an...

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Whigs: It's Time for a Comeback

Posted March 5, 2009 | 07:47 AM (EST)


With apologies to Tippecanoe...and Tyler too.

This is your chance. Come out from the shadows. I know you haven't been a political party in 150 years, I get that. But this might just be the chance of a century.

The leaders of the Republican Party have just finished convincing...

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Obama's Great Society

Posted February 25, 2009 | 12:01 AM (EST)


In 50 minutes last night, the president of the United States used his first speech to a joint session of Congress as a launching point, a chance to transform the bulk of his entire campaign platform into the core of a bold first year agenda. In one of his most...

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McCain's Viagra Problem

Posted February 19, 2009 | 11:38 AM (EST)


Losing the presidency must be pretty tough. It's worse than losing a Super Bowl -- at least then you're a worthy prospect for the following year. It's worse than losing the gold -- at least that gets referred to as "winning the silver." A presidential loss signals the beginning of...

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Moderates... in Moderation

Posted February 13, 2009 | 09:58 AM (EST)


Last Tuesday afternoon, President Obama met with forty three of the forty nine Blue Dogs, an increasingly influential group of fiscally conservative Democrats, to discuss changes to the stimulus package. The big topics of discussion: fiscal responsibility, balancing the budget, and reducing government spending, an agenda with uncanny resemblance to...

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