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[big campaign] New Huff Post from Creamer - Democrats Don't Have to Moderate to Win in 2010
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Democrats Do Not Need to Become More “Moderate” to Win in 2010 – Four
Rules for Victory in November
There is little doubt that over the last several months President Obama’s
poll numbers – and those of Democrats generally – have taken a swing for
the worse. The President’s job approval numbers have drifted below 50%.
The popularity of some of his signature initiatives has dropped. Last week,
Democratic Congressman Parker Griffith of Alabama announced he was
switching parties – presumably in order to enhance his odds of political survival
next fall.
These events have given rise to calls that the Democratic agenda needs to
become more “moderate” or “centrist” and that this would somehow be more
attractive to Independent voters.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
“Moderating” our goals is not a recipe for victory. It is a recipe for
failure. Last fall, voters overwhelming voted for change, and they knew
then – and still know now – the kind of change they wanted.
They wanted to end the stranglehold of the private insurance companies
that continues to put every American a single illness – or one layoff – away
from financial catastrophe. They want to take bold, clear action to assure
that America is in the forefront of creating the clean energy jobs of the
future – and leave a thriving healthy planet to our children. They wanted to
fundamentally change the bull-in-the-china shop foreign policy of the Bush
years and re-establish American leadership in the world. Most
importantly, they rejected the failed economic policies that allowed the recklessness
of huge Wall Street banks to plunge the economy into free fall—and cost
millions their livelihoods. They desperately want leadership that will lay the
foundation for long term, bottom-up, widely shared prosperity.
In other words they wanted… and still want… fundamental change.
No one should be surprised that fundamental change does not come easily.
The massive array of forces with vested interests in the status quo will
bite, kick, poke out eyes, lie, threaten, bully and do pretty much
everything else within their power to stop fundamental change. Frederick Douglass
was right: “Power surrenders nothing without a struggle, it never has, it
never will.”
That means we might not win everything we want every time we enter the
arena of battle. But to be successful in next fall’s elections and increase
our odds of long-term victory we must do four things:
1). Democrats need to demonstrate to the voters that we are fighting tooth
and nail for the goals they support. This is critically important to
keep the base of the Party engaged and energized. But it is also important to
continually remind swing voters that we have not forgotten our mandate for
change.
Remember that there are only two groups who decide elections: swing,
persuadable voters; and mobilizable voters who would support our candidates, but
have to be motivated to go to the polls.
In the 2008 elections, the Obama campaign, and Democrats in general,
demonstrated that we can and must address both. And in off-year elections, both
are just as important. In 1994, the Democratic loss of the House not only
involved disillusionment among swing voters. It was particularly driven
by depressed Democratic turnout. And it turns out that neither the
motivation of mobilizable voters, nor the support of persuadables are generally
enhanced by a more “moderate” approach to our policy agenda or how we talk
about it. That is particularly true today.
Both base and swing voters need to be convinced that however successful we
are in each given legislative or political engagement, that we are
fundamentally on their side, and that we are willing to take on the forces of the
status quo without complaint or reservation.
I do not personally believe, as some Progressives do, that we would be in
a better position to get a strong public option as part of this round of
health care reform had President Obama been a more ardent advocate. (I do, by
the way, think that a public option – which continues to have overwhelming
public support – will be approved before many of the provisions of the
health care reform bill go into effect.) But I do believe that President
Obama would have stronger political support among base and independent voters
had he been a more forceful public option advocate. People want to see
their leaders fighting for the things they support, even if in the end they
are not entirely successful.
2). Democrats need to deliver. When you’re in power, fighting is not
enough. The President and Democratic Congress have to deliver concrete
measurable results. That is what the voters think they hire leaders to do. Voters
not only want leaders who are on their side. They also want strong,
effective leaders who can turn goals in to reality.
Even if it’s not perfect, we need to deliver on fundamental health care
reform. Even if it’s not everything we want, we need to make significant
progress on clean energy jobs and global warming. Recent immigrants – and
especially Latino voters – expect us to deliver on comprehensive immigration
reform. And of course, all Americans demand that we deliver on economic
change.
That last point requires two things. On the one hand, we have to turn
the economy around in the short term and start creating measurable increases
in jobs. By next November, the economic future must look brighter for most
everyday Americans or we will suffer significant political losses. By
Election Day people have to see things in their own personal everyday life
experience (not just political rhetoric from Washington) that gives them
hope that in the short run their economic prospects are improving.
To make that happen we don’t need to “moderate” our goals. God knows
we don’t have to be more concerned with the deficit. Democrats need to use
every organ of political power available to them – in the Executive Branch
and Congress – to create jobs. A jobs bill at least as robust as the one
that passed the House in December should pass the Senate and be signed into
law ASAP. Every ounce of executive power should be mobilized to convert
available funding from the Economic Recovery Bill – and every other possible
source -- into jobs NOW. November is coming up on the horizon very fast;
we cannot afford to wait.
Second, we must lay the foundation for long-term economic growth by
continuing to tackle the problems of health care reform, creation of clean energy
jobs, immigration reform, investment in education at all levels – and
especially taking action to shrink the bloated financial sector that almost sent
the world into another Great Depression. It is no time to be “moderate”
in our approach to Wall Street.
3). Not only do we need to forcefully rein in the power of Wall Street and
the Big Banks – we need to frame the political dialogue in decidedly
populist terms.
Voters are angry – as they should be. We can’t be talking about financial
regulatory reform in cold, clinical economic terms. We need to make the
issues that brought our economy to a standstill very personal. We don’t
need “moderate” language here. The debate needs to be cast in moral terms –
in the terms of right and wrong. That’s how the voters see it.
The fact is that a tiny number of people who dominate our financial sector
systematically skimmed off all the fruits of financial growth during the
last decade for themselves. They justified literally billions of dollars of
bonuses, stock options and perks while the average income of most
households shrank. And then – as if that was not bad enough – their reckless
pursuit of personal greed created a massive financial house of cards that
collapsed and cost millions of Americans their livelihoods.
Voters are furious that after hundreds of billions in taxpayer bailouts to
prevent complete financial meltdown, much of this gang is back in business,
and worse yet, acting as if they somehow deserve to make ten million
dollar bonuses – or to get 70 million dollar golden parachutes – while everyday
people trudge through this winter’s snow to the unemployment office.
When “moderates” talk about more “centrist” positions on financial
reform, they mean positions that are more acceptable to the bankers that bundle
together big financial contributions for Republican and Democrats alike.
That’s not what we need to do to win. That’s what voters find most
repulsive about politics.
Voters want the proverbial money changers thrown out of the temple of
government. They don’t want Democrats to be more milquetoast and “sensible.”
They want something done to right this extraordinary wrong and to create a
society and economy that once again allows everyone to succeed together,
and rewards hard work – not sharp speculators whose chief skills involve
making themselves rich at the expense of the working people who actually create
the wealth that they squander on $5,000 blouses, $50 million dollar
estates, and trips to the South of France.
If you want to get people in rural and small-town America fired up for
Democrats, it won’t be by sounding more “moderate” or tepid in our goals or in
the way we talk. It won’t be by cozying up to banks and health insurance
companies. It will be by focusing their legitimate anger where it
belongs: on the Big Wall Street Banks. If it’s not focused there, it will be
focused on those who are in charge of government: Democrats.
The recipe for victory for Democrats in November does not involve more “
moderation,” it involves more populism. But holding Big Wall Street Bankers
accountable is not enough.
4). We must continue to forcefully and proudly stand up for progressive
values. And we must, in particular, contrast those values to the values of
greed and division that lead us down the path to economic failure only a
year ago.
To win, we must continue to define the value frame. We must continue to
assert that we’re all in this together, not all in this alone. We must
continue to hold up the vision of a society built on principles of unity not
division, hope not fear, equality not subjugation. We must re-commit to the
premise that if each of us is better educated all of us will be wiser, that
it is not true that in order for me to be richer you have to be poorer – but
rather that if each of us is more prosperous, all of us will have more
opportunity-- that our success comes from cooperation and mutual respect.
We have to continue to stay on the offense because in politics, if you’re
playing defense you’re losing. If we fall back into old bad habits of
allowing our critics on the right – the forces of the status quo – to define the
terms of debate, we will lose more than political ground in 2010. We will
lose an historic opportunity to create a progressive realignment in
American politics.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and
author of the recent book: “Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win,”
available on _amazon.com_
(http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Your-Mother-Straight-Progressives/dp/0979585295/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qi
d=1206567141&sr=8-1)
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