Michael Lux is the co-founder and CEO of Progressive Strategies, L.L.C., a political consulting firm founded in 1999, focused on strategic political consulting for non-profits, labor unions, PACs and progressive donors. Previously, he was Senior Vice President for Political Action at People For the American Way (PFAW), and the PFAW Foundation, and served at the White House from January 1993 to mid-1995 as a Special Assistant to the President for Public Liaison. While at Progressive Strategies, Lux has founded, and currently chairs a number of new organizations and projects, including American Family Voices, the Progressive Donor Network, and BushRecall.org. Lux serves on the boards of several other organizations including the Arca Foundation, Americans United for Change, Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, Center for Progressive Leadership, Democratic Strategist, Grassroots Democrats, Progressive Majority and Women’s Voices/Women Vote.

In November of 2008, Mike was named to the Obama-Biden Transition Team. In that role, he served as an advisor to the Public Liaison on dealings with the progressive community and has helped shape the office of Public Liaison based on his past experience working on the Clinton-Gore Transition, as well as in the White House.

On January 14, 2009, Lux released his first book, The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be. Lux's book was published by Wiley Publishing. You can purchase The Progressive Revolution by clicking here.

Blog Entries by Mike Lux

That Gollum-Like Feeling on Health Care

18 Comments | Posted December 19, 2009 | 08:44 AM (EST)


I find myself gripped in a bitter argument -- with myself -- about the fate of health care reform. It's sort of like watching the schizophrenic Gollum in the Lord Of The Rings saga fight angrily with himself over how to deal with Frodo: "the master is so nice to...

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GOTV

Posted December 17, 2009 | 10:31 AM (EST)


Okay, I know the health care bill is a big disappointment. And climate change is stalled. The big banks aren't being broken up. Who knows when immigration reform is happening? And don't even get me started about the 2nd big escalation into Afghanistan.

Politics sometimes really sucks. But I want...

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A Bridge Too Far

31 Comments | Posted December 15, 2009 | 11:20 AM (EST)


I am a team player. I believe in compromise and negotiation, and have always been okay with taking half a loaf or even a quarter at times. I have never believed in making the perfect the enemy of the good. And as an aging diabetic, a small businessman with skyrocketing...

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The Decisions That Must Be Made

7 Comments | Posted December 14, 2009 | 11:33 AM (EST)


The health care debate has officially arrived at its most critical juncture. Joe Lieberman's "I will never compromise in any way whatsoever that could hurt Aetna" tantrum, which proves definitively once and for all that he needs to be stripped of his committee chairmanship and targeted for defeat by...

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Better or Worse

14 Comments | Posted December 11, 2009 | 10:36 AM (EST)


The new Senate deal over the public option has its good points and bad points, which I wrote about on Wednesday, and which everyone right now is analyzing and debating. A lot of how people feel about it, though certainly not all, is a classic glass half full vs....

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Ten Reasons

Posted December 10, 2009 | 03:12 PM (EST)


I love the four other candidates in the Air America contest. They are all great bloggers and a couple of them I am delighted to call friends. This is an election, though, and I like competing in elections, so I thought I would give you reasons you should consider...

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Senate Muddle

2 Comments | Posted December 9, 2009 | 12:09 PM (EST)


I am still in a haze over the deal struck last night on the public option, not helped by the fact that they are keeping the details close while CBO scores the bill. As anyone who has read my past blog posts knows, I think the "details" on all...

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The Same Old Tricks

2 Comments | Posted December 8, 2009 | 04:18 PM (EST)


Republicans were outraged, outraged that Harry Reid suggested they might be trying to obstruct progress in the health care debate- and that there was gambling in Reid's casino as well. Absurdly suggesting that Reid was "race baiting" when he compared their obstructionism on this issue to obstructionism on...

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Beck = Loser

53 Comments | Posted December 8, 2009 | 02:35 PM (EST)


Glenn Beck is a serious loser, one of the worst people on the face of the planet. And I am trying hard to be diplomatic, because telling you what I really think would not be permitted on the pages of the Huffington Post.

This is a guy who called...

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Getting More of What We Want

27 Comments | Posted December 7, 2009 | 08:42 PM (EST)


We are getting to that gritty grimy disgusting part of the legislative sausage making on health care where the fight is less about what shining principles we will achieve, and more about the best possible negotiating strategy for getting the best possible details in the bill. On a wide range...

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The Crazy Season

28 Comments | Posted December 5, 2009 | 11:01 AM (EST)


The end game of any major legislative fight such as what we're going through on health care -- when the final deals are being cut on the inside, and the rumors are flying around like starlings -- is what I call the crazy season. It's a time that's generally very...

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The President and His Base

150 Comments | Posted December 4, 2009 | 11:33 AM (EST)


Coming off the disturbing news on Afghanistan, the relationship between the President and his progressive base is in a very tenuous place. Not to be overly dramatic, but I think we're at a crucial moment. The deal on health care is about to get done: will progressives come out of...

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Anguish and a Ray of Hope

5 Comments | Posted December 2, 2009 | 11:30 AM (EST)


I am deeply saddened on so many different levels by the President's speech last night, and his Afghanistan policy in general. Steady escalation is not the answer to this godawful complicated mess. It's all well and good to keep making the argument as to why this is not another Vietnam,...

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A Surprised Thank You

1 Comments | Posted December 1, 2009 | 02:35 PM (EST)


I am surprised, delighted, but mostly humbled to report the news that Air America is reporting that I am currently 3rd on their list of nominated bloggers going into their contest's Dec 3rd deadline for deciding which five bloggers make it into their final round for being selected. I...

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Death Wish Politics

46 Comments | Posted November 30, 2009 | 11:38 AM (EST)


Digby (taking numbers and quoting from Markos) had a great post over the weekend about the single most urgent topic facing Democrats going into the 2010 elections: the lack of enthusiasm by Democratic voters about voting next year. I have cited some polling and turnout statistics in the...

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Progressive Hope

36 Comments | Posted November 25, 2009 | 10:02 AM (EST)


I don't want to get too gooshy as we go into the Thanksgiving holiday weekend by giving you all the stuff I'm thankful for, but it does seem like an appropriate moment to be a little more reflective than usual. The thing I want to focus on today is the...

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Challenges, But No Excuses

1 Comments | Posted November 24, 2009 | 11:19 AM (EST)


One of the biggest differences between insiders and outsiders is this question: why can't they just get it done? And both sides of the divide have a point.

The single biggest complaint I hear by non-DC insiders is the sheer dysfunction of Washington. Whether it's Jon Stewart's very funny...

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Substance Over Symbolism

9 Comments | Posted November 23, 2009 | 10:53 AM (EST)


Each painful step, this health care keeps moving forward. As I've written, it is destined given the nature of this issue that every single step will be difficult as hell. Somehow, though, we keep making our way toward getting a bill done.

Harry Reid deserves the lion's share of...

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What the Passage of Health Care Legislation Means for the Future

292 Comments | Posted November 20, 2009 | 11:13 AM (EST)


Being into the whole history thing enough to have written a book on it, I tend to take a long view on the big policy battles we fight today. As I wrote the other day, no piece of legislation ever gets to perfection, and on plenty of them...

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Senate Slowly Creaks Forward

4 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 10:21 AM (EST)


If you want to stop things from happening, or slow things down to the speed of molasses, being a U.S. Senator is the world's greatest job. And if your entire political party's complete strategy is to kill every single thing proposed, it's a hell of a deal. But ever so...

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