podesta-emails
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How Progressives Can Deliver on the Promise of Change in 2009 – Seven
Rules for Success
A little over a year and a half ago I published a book called Stand Up
Straight: How Progressives Can Win. At the time, Progressives were emerging
from decades in the political wilderness after Democrats had taken control
of Congress in 2006. That was followed by the extraordinary campaign of
Barack Obama that convinced Americans to bet on progressive change.
In 2008, America voted for the hope that change would bring them better
lives than the status quo. But hope will only last so long. In 2009,
Progressives have to deliver the goods. We have to convert the “change we need”
into change in people’s lives.
The opportunity we have to make serious progressive change in the next six
months is unparalleled in the last half-century. But our success is not
preordained.
To succeed, we need to remember seven key rules:
1). The critical battles being fought in 2009 are not about “policies” –
they are about the distribution of wealth and power. When we talk about
putting an end to exploding health care costs for families, the money we save
will come out of someone’s pockets. In the case of health care, those
pockets belong mainly to the insurance and pharmaceutical companies. In the
case of energy, it’s the oil companies. When it comes to re-regulating Wall
Street the oxen being gored belong to the big Wall Street banks.
These interests won’t roll over and play dead simply because they have
driven the health care system into bankruptcy, caused the collapse of the
economy, and jeopardized our future by blocking the road to energy
independence. They will fight tooth and nail for the status quo.
As Frederick Douglass famously wrote, “Power concedes nothing without a
struggle. It never has and it never will.” They will mobilize all of their
wealth and connections and the power of their political donations. We have to
counter by mobilizing every resource at our disposal – mainly the
organized power of millions of voters.
The President can’t do this alone. We have to make sure that every
member of Congress understands that they will not return to Washington in 2010
if they don’t deliver on health care reform, a path towards energy
independence, regulatory reform, and immigration reform in 2009.
That will require millions of phone calls from constituents, angry town
meetings, lobby days, protests, letters, email, TV ads -- and cornering
Members of Congress in the grocery store. It will require intensity. It will
require a massive progressive mobilization that won’t take “no” for an
answer.
2). Progressives – and our Democratic Members of Congress – have to
remember that we have the high political ground. In times past, Progressives
have correctly mobilized to protect minority rights, or defend other causes
that challenge the popular view. This is not one of them. Today, 73% of
the population favors allowing consumers to have a choice of a private or publ
ic insurance plan. Overwhelming percentages favor legislation to create a
new generation of clean energy jobs. Three-fourths favor comprehensive
immigration reform. And nobody likes Wall Street banks.
We are demanding that Congress enact programs that are politically
popular. The other side will try to sow confusion and fear. We must proceed with
self-confidence and clarity – and not let one word of their attempts at
misinformation go unanswered.
3). We must always present our case in populist terms. We represent the
interests of average people – not the elites that benefit from the status
quo. The other side will try to argue that we favor a “government takeover”
of health care that allows “Washington Bureaucrats” or some other elite
to control our lives. If we spend all of our time talking about “insurance
exchanges” and the arcana of health care policy we will lose.
We must frame the debate for what it is – a battle between the private
health insurance companies and their multi-million dollar CEO’s on the one
hand, and the interests of average Americans on the other. Populist frames
are necessary for each one of our fights. Populism always trumps
policy-speak.
4). Actually, it’s not just the sizzle; it is the steak. We have to get
the reform right. Especially when it comes to health care, people will put
pencil to paper and determine right away how the “reform” affects them. It
’s not good enough to pass just any bill and call it reform. In the end,
health care reform has to bring down the cost of health care for everyday
families – and make health care affordable for all Americans.
That is why it is essential, for example, that reform includes a public
health insurance option that will compete with private insurance companies and
end their ability to control health care in America – a public plan that
incentivizes the delivery of health care for an affordable price, not
maximizing profits and market share. That’s why reform has to include enough
money for subsidies to middle class families to actually make premiums
affordable.
In 1989 all of the “wise men” in Washington passed a “catastrophic health
care bill” for seniors that was supported by Washington insiders. But they
failed to see that it would make the average UAW retiree pay a higher
percentage of his income towards taxes and premiums than Warren Buffet. Seniors
across America rejected the plan.
Many Members of Congress remember vividly the image of senior citizens
chasing the “powerful” Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Dan
Rostenkowski, down a Chicago street in the middle of his own district to
protest the new bill. It was repealed six months later.
Today’s Congress must remember that each of this year’s reforms will be
measured in very concrete terms by every American family. They won’t be able
to dress up the status quo in a flashy new coat and call it reform.
Even when it comes to issues that play out over the long haul, like energy
and regulatory reform, it will be pretty clear, pretty quickly, if average
people get real change or more of the same. And of course, economic
reform has to deliver a real economic recovery or Obama will be a one-term
President and the window for progressive reform in America may close for many
years to come.
5). Progressives have to keep their eye on the ball of real structural
reform – changes in the distribution of power.
From the standpoint of the long-term direction of our society, the
essential questions at stake this year are all about changes in the distribution
of wealth and power. Progressives need to focus like a laser beam on those
questions.
The creation of a public insurance option will permanently change the
structure of the health care economy. A cap and trade system will change the
economic incentives over the long haul and channel investment into clean
energy jobs – not just into hydrocarbons. The Employee Free Choice Act will
allow a massive expansion of collective bargaining rights for employees.
Immigration reform will change the status of 12 million people who should be
allowed to contribute fully to our society. A Financial Consumer Protection
Agency will radically limit the ability of the financial sector to siphon
massive sums of money from the pockets of average Americans into the
fortunes of a few.
6). No whining. Progressives have to swear off whining about the tactics
of the opposition – and match them blow for blow.
In the two days before the energy vote the opposition used Twitter to
generate a flood of calls to swing members of Congress – many from outside their
districts. There was a certain amount of whining within our ranks – as
if that were unfair.
The other side will do whatever it can to win. Next time we simply have to
deliver twice as many calls that actually come from within Members’
districts. A hundred years ago, Mother Jones said: “Don’t mourn, organize.” We
have to live by the dictum: “don’t whine, organize.”
7). This historic window for progressive change will close if we don’t
act, just as surely as a hole in the line disappears in football if a running
back doesn’t burst through.
Mike Lux’ book, The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came
to Be surveys the history of progressive change in our country. He finds
that it is not randomly spread. It occurs in clumps – during “big change
moments.”
We are blessed to live in one of those big change moments. But, Lux finds,
the lengths of those moments have varied enormously depending mainly on
how well Progressives execute.
Doris Kearns Goodwin’s book about the Roosevelt Administration is called:
No Ordinary Time. This is no ordinary time, either.
For the next year, every Progressive in America needs to realize that he
or she has an opportunity to make history that simply isn’t available to
most people at most times. That means that all of us have a responsibility to
all of the Progressives that have gone before us – and to our kids and
grandkids – to make the very most of this precious opportunity.
More than anything else people want meaning in life. They want to do
something of lasting importance. At this very moment we have that opportunity.
It is up to each of us to seize it.
I believe that President Obama and the key people in his Administration
are completely committed to using every power at their disposal to make real
progressive change in 2009. The same goes for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. But – just as in last year’s election
-- the critical ingredient that will allow us to be successful is the
mobilization of millions of Americans. It simply won’t happen without us.
Some people are lucky enough to be able to say: “I was there at Selma.”
For many, it was the proudest moment of their lives. Their eyes well up
when they speak of it. It changed the course of history.
We all have the opportunity to be present at another one of those moments.
To be there, each of us has to empty the stands --- march into the arena –
and help make history.
Sign up with Organize for America (OFA), Health Care for America Now
(HCAN), Americans United for Change, MoveOn.org, USAction, Campaign for America’
s Future, Immigration Reform for America, League of Conservation Voters,
The Sierra Club, Environmental Defense Fund, Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights, Rebuild and Renew America Now, Americans for Financial Reform, the
Center for Community Change, Catholics United – there are scores of
progressive organizations to choose from that are working together to pass the
progressive agenda. Get active with your union. Join a progressive religious
organization.
It’s simple as this: If we don’t take advantage of this historic moment
we may not have another for many years to come. If we do, we will help
lay the foundation for a period of unparalleled possibility and hope.
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&qid=1213241439&sr=8-1)
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