Now what?
We’ve spent so much time on the primaries, let’s take a step back today and look at the larger picture of building progressive infrastructure.
What kinds of political organizations are we building, what networks can we develop? Who can be brought into the process and at what level? For those of us who are relatively new to political activism, how do we take that next step?
Howie, who is flying around the country today helping to build that next generation of progressive politicians, asked me to step in for him today. I thought it would be cool to look at one of our own pups who has been very involved with local and state politics and see what we can learn from her. Ladies and gentlemen, may I present our dear friend Rayne.
How did you get started within your local party as an activist?
I’m a member of a local party club, a subset of the party itself. Several like-minded folks founded this club in 2005 after a year of trying to work within the party itself; we found that as a more wired and more youthful group that we were scaring the older, more traditional party and losing traction on our objectives. Our club has a bias for action on a year-round basis, where the local party tends to work on a cycle that is geared towards the election cycle. They’re both fine, just different perspectives about getting the job done, and I’d rather work year-round.
You’ll notice we didn’t wait for a blessing from anybody; we just plunged ahead and did it.
But I started this journey back in 2003. I had been blogging for a year and thoroughly pissed off about my stepson getting shipped off to Iraq when I heard about this guy who’d balanced a state budget for eleven years straight and managed to get health care for all children and elderly residents at the same time. I was hooked once I met some of his supporters at a local Meetup — and from then on I was a Deaniac.
After Howard Dean’s exit from the primary, I stayed with the group his campaign spawned, Democracy for America. As a DFA and Dean supporter, I and several dozen fellow Deaniacs from across our state (hello, emptywheel!) met Dean only a few weeks after the November 2004 election to discuss what to do next. The answer was ‘take our party back’, or no Democrat would stand a chance in 2008. I attended my first local party meeting only 2 weeks later — and the rest is proverbially history.
What local party work are you doing?
We’ve just left a long period of fundraising, planning and provisioning as part of this year-round effort. In this next phase, we spend our time during the early portion of an election year on voter identification. We phone bank and call local voters, surveying them based on a small sampling of questions we develop in-house, to determine what are the most important issues to each voter and to determine whether that voter’s political affiliation is accurately identified in our party database.
The next phase, beginning in July and in advance of our state’s August primaries, will be door knocking with candidates and literature drops; we can ensure candidates have the right literature and the right answers for each voter they contact, based on the updated database.
And in the home stretch, close to election, we work on Getting Out the Vote (GOTV).
We’ll use our same phone bank to call those voters we’ve identified as elderly or physically challenged, and make sure they know how to get absentee ballots. We will drop literature at all voters’ homes that we know to be identified as strong or leaning Democrat, independent, or leaning Republican. (We won’t waste the time or money on hardcore straight-ticket Republicans, although this year may prove different; we may actually test Dean’s 50-State Strategy to its very limit and leave no voter unturned.)
Throughout the entire two-year cycle, from the day after the election to the next deadline before an election, we also try to register new voters, and we encourage and help folks become precinct captains and delegates. We also work to change and improve rules and operations and leadership within the party as well, so that we are ready for the rigors of election year. And we recruit interns from the local colleges, teach them how to do all this on a hands-on basis so that they are ready to work for campaigns or progressive organizations as soon as they leave school.
Right now I’m doing the technical portion of the phone bank work; I’ve set up a network with donated computers, then installed VoIP phone lines on each computer, training users on how to call from the computers, working with another fellow techie who keeps our software up-to-date and our donated machines running optimally. Another member of the club who is a political science professor at a local university has developed the survey we’ll use, and is responsible for training users on how to enter data into a database, as well as managing their access. Yet others recruit phone bankers and donors, as well as make the calls. And even more of the team help with driving candidates and route walkers for literature drops and door knocking.
Heck, we may have people on the team that do nothing but buy beer, answer phones or bake cookies, and that’s just great; every little bit helps. You can surely find something you can do, no matter what your skills are.
It’s a beautiful thing, and it’s a blast; there is nothing quite like sitting down with these folks after a long day of knocking on doors and having a beer and a laugh together. It feels so damned good to know you’ve made a difference, and that you’ve done it together with some really great people who over time become like family. One, big, progressive, biased-towards-action family.
Thank you Rayne, there are so many things to think about here. Your dedication and enthusiasm are inspiring. Well pups, what do you think? Each of us can do something to help build our progressive future, let’s brainstorm a little and share our ideas. More cookies anyone?
photo by crschmidt
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Hi EG.
Great picture of one of the people who will spend their working lives paying off the debt that Bush, Cheney, and the Republicans have run up.
First step is to become an elected Precinct Committee Person, attend your district, county & state meetings and get involved…. get involved …. just had my petition submitted to be on the ballot in Sept as an elected PC for my district.
Hey pups!
hey egregious! Good morning! Hilliary has bowed out and thrown her support to Obama with a great losers speach to try and unite our party:>)
That is a great idea.
Hi EG…. thank you for mentioning DFA…. as the former Chair and current Vice Chair of our local DFA group, it is a fun group to join, get involved without getting into the Party muck and a way to get your feet wet……
DemocracyFest are fun events….. like mini-Yearlykos/Netroot Nation… go to DemocracyforAmerica.com and find a group near you…
Yep.
Whenever I see folks complaining about the Democratic Party rules, my immediate response is to tell them to become active locally starting at the precinct level.
I just loved this phrase of Rayne’s
We keep waiting for “them” to do something. Just find some folks and get out there and make it happen!
When I was getting signatures to be on the ballot several asked me why and I told them….. How do you change something or make an impact if you are not on the inside and a voting member?
Pretend that some of us don’t know what a precinct committee person is. ;) Is there a site that explains this a little, and how it’s related to campaigning?
Here is a DIGG for your great Post Egregious:>) Hows thing in Menlo today?
I know the DFA site has some courses, some of which may be related to my last question, but the site appears not to have been updated in some time…
THANKS!
Great reminder to do MORE than morale-building, information gathering hanging out with the enlightened choir, ruing the corporate and government bullies.
If you are not an ACTIVE part of the solution, you are contributing to the DEADWEIGHT of the problem (to paraphrase the old adage).
The grassroots level is where real change comes from, and enables enlightened leadership to buck the calcified status quo and coax the indifferent and distracted populace to truly wake up and embrace not fear REAL healthy change.
I want to be more than a weekend or election time warrior. Want to walk the walk as well as talk the talk.
Well thank you nahant :) Lovely day in Menlo Park. Went for a walk, went to the grocery store, tried to think deep thoughts about local political involvement.
Hi egregious, nice post! Love the picture of “Short Stuff,” she’s a cutie!
And thank you Rayne -for all you do- and for helping inspire the rest of us to step up and step out. You’re a powerhouse!
Think globally act locally!
She’s a cutie isn’t she? I had to decide between a picture of a child and something from Star Trek. Close call…
And for the record, this is not Rayne as a child, tho it wouldn’t surprise me to learn she was politically active even back then, and it isn’t a child of anybody at FDL.
eg,
Like you, my route to FDL began as a Deaniac, with the DFA group in Flagstaff, AZ. Dean, and that DFA group, inspired me. So our paths have been somewhat parallel. Thank you for this post!
Bob in HI
hey egregious – I’m heading out to three consecutive client meetings in your general area (Los Altos, San Carlos) – I’ll wave to ya….
OT (although indirectly, maybe not!): “the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat”
ABC sportscaster Jim McKay passed away
Somebody just zooomed by here, was that your fast wit?
he put me off ski-jumping completely
Thanks Bob, actually it’s Rayne who is the Deaniac. While I have great admiration for what he has accomplished, my entry into politics this time came over the summer of 05 when even Washington insiders were revolted by the idea of Bolton. Now you wanna talk political involvement in the 70’s…but that’s another post for another time.
well, you’re half right…
Rayne,
Can you please explain how your club was affiliated with the party and if it’s the national party or the local?
Our state and county party supposedly refused to go along with the 50 state strategy and inquiries to the county party go unanswered. I haven’t seen my precinct captain in 10 years at least, and the whole political apparatus where I live is controlled by the machine.
There’s nothing more that I’d like to see then a new slate of elected officials from precinct captain up to well every slot on the ballot except for Senator Durbin.
Info:
What Is a Precinct Committee Person? (pdf)
Are you saying you’re a half wit
Like Gen. Yevgraf Zhivago, Dr Zhivago’s brother.
Hey Raven
OK, h/t to Rayne then. And likewise, I have gone on to be the organizer of the DFA group here in Hawaii, overseeing our informal merger with Progressive Democrats of Hawaii (which I now serve as Secretary), as well as becoming Precinct Chair for the Democratic Party. I would have been a Delegate at our Democratic Party Convention, were it not for a prior commitment with my fiancee in Kauai. But we continue to have good meetings, and as a group I hear that we were one of the major organizing force at the Convention.
Bob in HI
Let me know what you find out about the local Dem groups… we are neighbors ya know…. just north of you in RWC!
Hello there!
Hey, EG and Rayne
Thanks for the great post. Timely for me, since I’ve been thinking seriously about getting actively involved locally (first time ever, for me). So, I’ll be heading to DFA.com to find a local group.
Hey, RBG, you’re a neighbor, any suggestions?
Libbyliberal: I’m really glad you’re getting active, too. But to read “if you’re not active, you’re deadweight” was extremely offputting. We’re all on a different journey, with a unique set of circumstances and resources. And the activities you list are all a good start and thus “count” toward being active.
FunnyDiva
obama is not gonna win Texas anyway so I am spending three weeks this summer working for rick Noriega for senate from texas.
What I see is a big opportunity…. by getting involved… many times I have seen activists become elected to party offices and it is a way to move the party in the direction you would want….
In my county in AZ…. the Repugs have over 3000 PC’s and the Dems have around 1100…. very rarely do we have a full slate of PC’s for that Precinct.
Well, I’m trying to do my civic duty by transitioning away from my beloved Virginia work to California groups. Gathering info about what groups are active here and where they might be looking for a clumsy newcomer.
I would like to encourage you guys to consider running for elective office yourselves. Pick something in your town that you care about and go for it: school board, local planning commission, whatever. I ran as a write-in candidate for board of health and won. I even went out there and had to Talk With People™ and it was a great learning experience.
If you don’t win the first time, you learn a lot and might win the second time. We have a number of Blue Am candidates that narrowly lost in ‘06 who are likely to cross the finish line this time.
and I am in HS young dens.
I am going to be working with others here in AZ to make sure that McBush looses his home state…..
oops — DEMS
is it part of the YD’s group?
Young Democrats = YD’s
That’s a GREAT idea to get people organized at the high school level. Some are old enough to register to vote, but everybody can help out in some way.
I like to say everyone can do something: lead, follow, support, teach, learn.
Good for you Cassie:>) We still need more and more of the young to get involved in the politics of this country and make a difference that they can help make for the betterment of our great country!
yes.
Now Cassie, don’t be so negative! Maybe we can get Noriega with some reverse coattails and at least force McCain and the Rs to spend money defending Texas.
(I was gonna use the phrase from Oddball: “Cut with the negative waves and hit me with some positive waves Moriarty!”)
I digg you Egregious! And I had no idea Rayne was so young…
I just hope we leave this next generation something beyond debt and misery. It’s highly likely they’re going to come to hate us. Let’s work to give them some reason not to.
I also made my first ever call to my congressman the other day, about FISA.
We’re hoping Rayne can stop in for a moment to say hello. True to form, she is in the middle of running a training session for local folks as we speak.
My thing is not necessarily HOW you get active, as long as you do.
Two of the hardest workers who volunteered in my Kerry Phone Bank were two HS kids where would be there every day right after school (weekends too) and would make hundreds of calls…… neither would be old enough to vote for Kerry but they would take a stack of call sheets and a couple of hours later they would be back asking for more….. They rocked…
gotta go smile & look pretty! Giving back the iPhone.
Good for you!
I ended up calling my senators’ local offices twice in one day, once on the resolution to sign on to an international agreement on banning cluster bombs, then on FISA (called the congressman for that one, too).
Nice to see you, btw. When’s the wedding, again?
FunnyD
Ok so do we know any high school folks, nieces and nephews, neighbors, who we can encourage to get involved? Speaking of the next generation?
A lot of people will do something if you will only ASK THEM.
Thanks, katymine. Looks like a job for someone who’s way more sociable than I.
On a positive note, I did send DFA a patch for their home page. I’m fairly certain the response will be “WTF is this?”, but you never know.
3 hrs but we are on our way to the church for pix
Howdy, FirePups!
We started a club chartered under the local and state party; it’s not always an easy route to take, but we managed to pull it off. The old guard rattles the chain at least a couple times a year, threatening to yank our charter — but we make them look good by getting progressives elected to office.
If they ever did get nasty and actually follow through with the threat, we have at least two other alternatives open to us. We build upon our local DFA chapter and use it as our platform, or we take over the party by stacking the executive committee (and we now have the numbers to do it) and remove the chair and seat a new chair.
Oh, and a third option: we launch a PAC (which only requires two people!!) and begin an initiative of our own.
The lesson is this: DO NOT TAKE NO FOR AN ANSWER. If you get NO, it means you have to be resourceful and creative and find another way.
Go for it!
what I found is that really want to help but don’t know how they can and can be intimidated by a room of old folks… YD chapters help kids get involved… When we have someone young show up to one of our groups we make sure they feel welcomed and ask them back….
Our guest star is here! Hey Rayne, thank you SO much for this interview. Your work is inspiring.
[from IMDB]
Maybe that’s a little bit too much dedication …
Is it this website?
http://www.democracyforamerica.com/
they have been redoing their website and email system lately…
Say, I did not know a PAC only takes 2 people. [scribble scribble scribble….]
That’s the one. I sent them a patch so that if you’re not running Javascript, you see a helpful message that says “turn on Javascript” instead of filling the screen with the script itself.
Send me the email and I can forward it on to the tech guys (am on the state leader email list)
Hey bobschacht — glad to hear from a fellow DFA’r!
In our state, the DFA folks across the state merged their efforts with another fine progressive group whose mission was nearly identical. Justice Caucus originally started as a judicial vetting group, formed of progressive attorneys — but they didn’t have enough critical mass. Neither did DFA here.
But combined, we are a force to reckon with. I can call a few key folks now and get legal resources quickly; the same folks can rely on the DFA network of members to do messaging for them.
Find natural alliances and use them whenever you can, just as you folks did with PDA in HI.
*Applause* For a job well done. Rayne, I think that your story sets a standard for us to emulate. Thank you for sharing.
Rayne, did you think when you were little you might end up doing something like this?
OK. Are you still in AOHell?
Hey thanks for the forum, egregious!!
And yes, is that not one of the most intriguing pieces of information ever???
2 people. That’s all it takes for a PAC.
You can begin to take back your country in so many ways, and that one is one of the most intriguing ways that I’m still wrapping my head around.
Ya but just use webmail :)
This might be an answer to prayer here. Time for another long walk and more deep thinking.
Oh no. Absolutely no idea I’d end up doing this, ever.
Never saw myself as political, just well-informed and progressive.
But I was soooooo damned angry, and I wasn’t working full-time, as if the cosmos gave me the opportunity to do and be more at that very moment in my life. So I took the plunge; I figured, what the hell do I have to lose?
I was losing my sanity from impotent rage and frustration; if I actually did something constructive, I might at least preserve my mind.
And lo, I got so much more than I bargained for. Friends for life, by the tons.
And even the work I’m paid for now is a direct result of taking that first step…it started with looking for a Meetup near me in August 2003.
Then an e-mail should be slowly making its way through the AOL server farm by now.
A lot of the folks in here already do something — besides bobschacht with DFA, what’s everybody else doing locally?
So many great things from that first little step! To find something you care deeply about, and take one small step towards, can lead to wonderful and unexpected outcomes.
Or, I would add, what are some things you pups are considering becoming involved with? Maybe we can help with that little nudge :)
current Vice Chair for DFA-MC (Maricopa County) and former chair…. just submitted my petition to be on the ballot to renew my elected Precinct Committee Person… our DFA endorsed and working for Dan Saban for County Sheriff running against Sheriff Joe
I notice that people have mentioned that so many voters say they just don’t know Obama – especially in rural areas. Seems to me it would be a good idea if teams of people would go out for a day or so and just canvas as small town talking to people. I grew up in a small town and no politicians ever came around.
Well, as I said, I’m interested in getting involved locally, so I’m at the point of looking for groups/meetings to attend to explore what my local issues are and who’s out there making a difference.
FunnyDiva
Rayne, thanks so much for coming by and sharing your thoughts with us. You’re doing truly inspirational work.
Can you talk a little about where the 50-state strategy plays into all this? I’m a former rural progressive who finally got tired of fighting what felt like a solitary battle and moved to the city, but I remain in close contact with my colleagues back there and can tell you that it has made a critical difference on the ground, at least in the interior West.
Woohoo!! good on you!!
Howard Dean reminded us back in 2004 after the election, that the Republican Party became a majority by running for every office, from dogcatcher to president.
If you’re not running, the next best thing is to help other progressives run for office — from dogcatcher to drain commissioner, to state house rep and to president.
And you’re doing it!!
We used to say that you may not get their vote if you ask for it but you certainly won’t get it if you don’t ask. People want to be personally asked.
Interesting observation. In my case, almost the opposite is true – I want you to tell me why I should vote for you. If you’re the person to vote for, you don’t need to ask.
We get more smart folks like Cassie involved in this process we’ve got a real chance of turning this country around in a few cycles. Too bad she had to make like a tree. I love talkin’ to young revolutionaries.
Of course you need to tell people why they should vote for someone, followed by “I would appreciate your vote” or “we hope that you will consider our candidate.”
New Dave Neiwert upstairs pointing out to Broderella the difference between criminal acts and policy differences.
PDA TX CD-21 Point Dude (no Candidate due to super gerrymandered District, Thanks Tom Delay & all of those blatantly illegal, obviously criminal, but A-OK, according to our Republican packed Courts, National Republican Committee laundered contributions), DFA/DFTexas, Veterans for Peace, and down here, one just has to be involved with the Hill Country Conservancy.
I’ve been considering getting involved in Darcy Burner’s campaign, but she’s now headquartered in Bellevue, which is a long commute for me, particularly from work. Last time, she was in Auburn. I think Bellevue’s a better location for her, since it’s central to her district, but it’s a long way from the South Sound when traffic’s bad.
So I keep looking around for candidates worth working for who are more local.
Well, for me the 50-State Strategy was an obvious extension of the conversation we Deaniacs had with Howard Dean in 2004. Not only should we leave no seat uncontested, but we should leave no voter uncontested. We should talk about progressive values with everyone, because once they’ve heard them, it’s much harder to deny them as a viable alternative to conservatism.
One of the first things — in fact, the second thing I did when I attended my first Dem Party meeting — was ask about goals and objectives. The local party had none. That’s where the 50-State Strategy changes the equation; it makes it difficult for the state and local party apparatus to coast. It makes things black and white and quantifiable (which can be pretty threatening to power gods who have gotten comfortable with the status quo) — and it is something that anybody can point to as a goal from within and without the party and ask, Hey, are we making progress on this?
The precinct captain/delegate roles are part of this process; they are the people who are the official standard bearers of the party at its most local level. We’ve heightened the value of this role now, since it’s at this level that those 5, 10, 20 more votes per precinct will be won back for Dems.
I can tell you that our state senate was lost to a Republican majority, screwing up our entire budget process, for the lack of an effective precinct delegate system in 2006; 11 precincts in a senate district undervoted, resulting in a loss by approximately 300 votes, or less than 1% of the total vote. This hurt us so badly — I cannot understate how badly. This loss of the state senate provided an opportunity for a Republican legislature to batter the Dem governor, hold all kinds of legislation hostage, and force votes on truly bad legislation.
So for all my rah-rah talk, we have had losses and they hurt — and we know from those losses that the 50-State Strategy can and does work, and that when we don’t take it seriously as a tool, we will lose. We have painful proof.
Me too
Only for me it was June 2003
My name is John and I am a Deaniac
Seems like a lifetime ago ;-)
My DH and I do most of our work at the State level, raising funds for and doing calling for a state legislator. We also attend functions for Maurice Hinchey and Mike Arcuri – though I think we will probably do a lot more for Mike(who is really our guy even though he’s physically located up in Utica)Arcuri — he’s a freshman Rep. and I think will need some help.
Have you thought about political work not specific to individual candidates? Get out the vote efforts in your neighborhood, petitions, canvassing door to door to see who your likely supporters are for the future, etc etc.
It was a lifetime ago, John.
We all got a second act, and so did our party and our country.
Can you imagine where would we be today if we had not had one incredible guy remind us that we have the power to take our country back?
Yeah, I know, for some of you folks out there who never grokked the Dean thing, it sounds cult-ish. But ask yourself about Ned Lamont; did you know he was a Deaniac, too?
We r in ur party, tking bk r country…
I’m not big on organizations, first of all. Organizations tend to exist for their own purposes after a while. Like Gen. Zhivago, they tend to forget why they exist. That’s certainly been true of the Democratic Party, at least until recently.
The other thing is that, at least in the case of the sorts of things you mention, I really do hate doing them. I’ve tried them. I think it’s best to leave them to the folks who can at least sound like they’re sincerely interested in meeting you and hearing what you have to say.
I have a kind of personal anecdote about the difference: In 2004, while he was vacationing in Sun Valley, the local Democratic Party in Blaine County (which is well moneyed, as you can imagine, since it encompasses all of Sun Valley and environs) held a big fund-raiser for John Kerry, one at which Kerry had promised to make a brief appearance. Kerry cancelled at the last minute without explanation and left the organizers holding the bag. Kerry wound up not making a single campaign appearance in Idaho. And then they wonder why they can’t make any electoral progress in these states.
That won’t happen in 2008.
True! The key for people inside those organizations to justify why they are there, other than just existing. I have actually closed some projects and organizations when their purposes were fulfilled, so it can be done.
I hear you on the big organizations, what about a neighborhood get together to ask people what’s on their mind? That’s not political with a capital ‘p’ but might have some very interesting results.
TobyWollin (91) — thank you for helping a newbie/freshman rep, they need sooo very much help.
Cujo359 — here’s a few things you can check out if you want to find something that fits you better.
– Go to Meetup.com and look for progressive events near where you live.
– Check out DFAlink.com and find out what DFA is doing near you.
– Go to the Dem Party national site and look for activities in your area.
– Sign up for the Neighborhood Volunteer Program;
– Check out the John McCain resource page; there’s lots you can do to keep the opposition at bay, and you don’t even have to leave the quietude of your home;
– Just because you’re not a precinct captain doesn’t mean you can’t have a chat with your neighbors. Go ahead, just strike up conversation, and work on keeping it going. Maybe they don’t know any “nice” liberals like you.
There’s something you can do, just might take a little longer to find something that fits you well. Believe me, we have some very curmudgeonly people on our team that we don’t let near people, but damn, are they good with databases and crunching numbers for us.
As usual Rayne has about 12 ideas I never thought of for the answer! So this leads to another concept, which is part of the lead-follow-support-teach-learn thingie. Go out there and learn what other people are doing. Interview them, find out how they got started, what their dreams are.
For you historians in the crowd, ask really old people about what politics was like in their day. You might get some surprises. School project — interview retired politicians and good government folks.
What many people don’t understand is that we didn’t stop when he pulled out (some did) but we kept going. We went right through 2004, then 2006, and now 2008.
I got a stress fracture in my left foot in 2004 going door to door for Kerry, Boxer, and Gabe Castillo who ran for Congress against Dan Lungren. We’ve phone banked. We put on two GOTV concerts in 2004 to get Kerry elected. When he conceded to Bush, we heard the reports of what went down in Ohio and we put on a rally outside the electors meeting in the state capitol when they officially voted for President. We made a petition to ask Barbara Boxer to stand with the Congressional Black Caucus to try to get the Senate to hear their concerns about the disenfranchisement of the black voters in Ohio – and my name was the first on the petition – and she listened to us.
The there was 2006 when we came within a hairs breadth of getting Charlie Brown elected against slimy John Doolittle in the 4th CD, and now, there’s this year. Charlie is ahead so far in the 4th, but we need so much for Dr. Bill Durston to beat Lungren in the 3rd CD
I hope Hillary’s supporters can see the big picture like we did and help Obama beat McCain
LOL!
Nope. It won’t happen again. It’s already a LOT better, if the primary season is any evidence.
John Kerry’s campaign was a perfect example of the old school machine; they used people who were “entitled” to be organizers and not people who were seasoned grassroots organizers. It was a top-down, centralized, push-only system, unprepared for this new internet-mediated world where we in the grassroots aren’t content with merely being recipients of pushed messages. We pull and hard.
Kerry should have taken Michigan by a landslide; he scraped by with 3%, and the party glad-handed itself and said, “Yay, us!!”
That is so over and done.
You are giving inspiring examples of try, try, try again. We are not going to win them all, but we have to get in there and at least not allow the other side to win everything with no opposition.
Thank you for sharing your story and thanks for all you are doing!
Good gravy, I do love hearing that we aren’t the only example of keeping on, keeping the faith, keeping the fires burning.
And you’re absolutely right about Hillary supporters; I hope they have the same soul-searching opportunity we Deaniacs had.
– Could Dean run again in 2008? it would be a pointless exercise if there was no party infrastructure there to support him.
– Could he start a third party with our help? it would not garner the critical mass needed to effect change in the timeline needed to save this country from disaster.
– Could we work on rebuilding the party? It would be faster and easier to make the party we needed to support a candidate like Dean from the inside out, rather than start from scratch…
And here we are. We’ve had an extremely successful mid-term election, and now one helluva primary season with an absolute wealth of riches given the candidates we fielded. And we are going to win.
Without that dark night of the soul we experienced in 2004, I don’t know that we could have faced up to the truth and worked our way to this point today.
Double-down, Clinton supporters. Now is the time to ask yourself how we can build a party that will realize gender parity in office, from dogcatcher to the presidency.
P.S. How could I forget? Alyson Huber won the primary for 10th AD
Go Alyson!!!
Alyson Huber (10th AD) won the primary
Bill Durston (3rd CD) won the primary
Charlie Brown (4th CD) won the primary
See? It works
Gotta run. Lawn mower’s calling me
Hey, gotta run, egregious. I have a long ride ahead of myself now between our training venue and home.
Hope you folks will find something soon that fits you which will help us take our country back!
Book Salon a couple of flights up with author Amanda Marcotte.
I just finished campaigning for the only progressive democrat (Cheryl Sabel) on the ticket in the AL 2nd Congressional District. We lost, but I learned so much!
Rayne, thank you it’s been terrific!
Exactly. And think how formidable you will be next time, with this experience under your belt.
Seems like there is a fallacy built in here so deep that it can remain unspoken and assumed, and that is that Democrat = Progressive and Progressive = Democrat.
Not so, and what I’m teaching the little ‘uns is that no one has a lease on their loyalty because some other scary hobgoblin from some other party appears to be worse.
Voting as a sacrament in the American civic religion is too important to waste on a candidate who is simply the Least Worst.
If there is a candidate on some ballot who sincerely beleives in Peace, social justice and the environment, then maybe they can be supported.
Otherwise one is under no obligation to legitimize the charade of ‘choice’ or ‘change’ when there is none on offer.
You are absolutely correct.
But if you ever happen to find a Republican that believes as you just stated, please do all you can to protect them; they would be an endangered species.
Hmmm. I just got back from an organizing meeting for registration drives throughout the summer. I’m in Chester County Pa, and we’re determined to make this a big cycle for the down ticket which has suffered greatly at the hands of a corrupt powerful GOP machine. We intend to ”new voter” them in to oblivion.
Very cool, moondancer. Gonna be some surprised incumbents this year, and you’re part of the reason why.
oh come on, you remember all the drama about McCain and Guiliani not being real conservatives?
all the celebration in lefty blogostan about Bob Barr running as a libertarian because of all those righties who will bolt?
the whole reason the (R) party has gone so far into the fever swamps of the right is because their footsoldiers refuse to just go and support the least worst, as they see it, while the (D) party has been dragged easily to the right of Richard Nixon, as Noam Chomsky has pointed out.
I think part of the reason the R party has gone so far off the deep end is that we dont have very many footsoldiers, which is what I’m trying to address in this post.
Don’t like what’s out there? Let’s go do something about it.
from Arthur Silbur at powerofnarrative blogspot.
Well I appreciate your contribution to our discussion of how we can get people more involved in local politics.
my main point had to do with the assumption that:
or is this about involvement for its own sake, or is it as a means to progressive change?
After re-reading the post, I’m pretty sure I am not claiming that Democrats are the source of all good and light.
thanks e – I know I started a bit outside the scope of yr post, but the frame I mentioned is one that is often un-addressed, assumed.
Much appreciated, sporkovat. You raise a valid point about this assumption. My own read is that we all need to give a great shove in the same direction for a few more months, and hopefully after that we can all go back to cheerfully disagreeing about practically everything.
you got it!
Great post about my friend Rayne.
I did a book-signing in Lansing once. There were a couple of 60+ year old guys who had driven down from Rayne’s neighborhood. I asked if they knew her. And they raved and raved and raved.
It was pretty cool to hear about how much of an impact she has made.
EW — too funny, that, my fan base consists of old men the same age as my dad, after they’ve had a few beers under their belts.
Heh.
But it does say something about the need for us to take up the spear; one of those guys Marcy met is the father of a high-school classmate. He’s retired now, and it won’t be long from now that he’s retired from politics, too. It’s now our turn to be the standard bearers, to wear the mantle.
And sporkovat, that means it’s our opportunity to change the Democratic Party, return it to its progressive roots after the last 30 years of assault by movement conservatism.
Ideally, Democrat = Progressive. I don’t mistake for a second that this is an ideal, because the trials and tribulations we’ve faced locally since 2003 have been due entirely to an inequality in this equation.
It’s not change for change’s sake; it’s change for the sake of the future.