The Progressive Frontier
The governor of the Big Sky state has important lessons to teach Democrats across the nation
Last November 2, as progressives watched state after state turn red in the presidential race--and in Senate races that were supposed to be close--something funny was happening in Montana. The state that went for Bush by 20 percent handed a solid victory to a new Democratic governor, 49-year-old rancher Brian Schweitzer. And, unlike other elected red-state Democrats, it quickly became clear he was not going to be alone at the top.
Along with the governorship, Montana Democrats seized three other important statewide executive offices, held their majority on the state's Public Service Commission, took a majority in the State Senate and fought their way to a 50-50 draw in the State House.
Montana governor Brian Schweitzer based his agenda on conversations with ordinary citizens.
Since then, Democrats across the country have turned to Montana for answers and hope. Some critics denigrate Schweitzer's victory, claiming that a red-state Democrat must simply be a Republican lite. But that analysis falls flat: Schweitzer is a strong proponent of choice, as well as an advocate for the environment and for middle-class Montanans. And those who have seen the outspoken Schweitzer challenge the Bush administration in the press lately realize: Real Democrats, not faux Republicans, won in Montana.
If Democrats can succeed this well in Montana, they can win anywhere. The question is how.
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