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Edited on Wed Feb-16-11 05:06 PM by BlueDog22
A lot of the anchors for the moderate Democratic wing have been cut loose or fallen off the machine last year. The DLC was only one of the many causalities. Many of the policy nonprofits and political action committees have been devastated because of a lack of fundraising. A lot of the PACs and groups that still exist have had their experienced leaders retire.
I have experience in third party politics and I'm trying to rally a lot of the moderates in North Carolina, mostly because North Carolina is now a toss up state and secondly because we lost the democratic majority in North Carolina Legislature for the first time since the late 1800s.
I would like to start a new organization. This 501(c)(4) will be a policy steering committee similar to the DLC, and it will work with both New Democrats and Blue Dogs by focusing on policy they both agree on. If everything works out it will also be a spring board to help organize new Political Action Committees, clubs, college chapters and other political nonprofits.
There will be four main missions for this group:
1. Attempt to stop moderate Democrats from leaving the party
I joined the third party movement originally because I felt like I was left out of the Democratic tent. We really need to reach out to these people and try to figure out how to make it so these people don't feel left out.
2. Recruit and train new moderate Democratic leaders
One of the most important programs within the DLC is DLC Fellow Program which reaches out to rising democratic stars and helps them with what they need to move up. It also holds workshops to train party leaders with the skills they need to lead the party.
Let's be truthful here. We took a beating in the last election and lost a lot of a moderate leadership, and because of that beating a lot of the moderate leaders are going to retire. It's sad, but we have to start rebuilding that wing ASAP.
3. Do research and build policy that most moderates in the democratic party can agree on
One thing the DLC had was a policy institute that did research on and then promoted issues. It was known as the Progressive Policy Institute.
People disagree and we will never get everyone to agree on everything. I think one of the reasons the DLC wasn't as effective as it could have been was that it didn't try to give the moderates issues they could rally around. If we could come up with issues that we can mostly agree on then it would help us find common ground and give us "rally points". This way we have a common bond that can hold us together, instead of having three factions that sometimes agree on a few narrow points (Try to get New Democrats, Blue Dogs and Progressives to agree on anything in the economic policy and see what I mean).
When you have a few things that are common ground you can always go back to those to help compromise.
4. Creating a Spring Board for other Democratic groups
We need political infrastructure in the ways of PACs, Nonprofits, councils and other political entities. We can use all means open to us to help organize new infrastructure. Most of this has to do with organizing and as hard as I look there isn't any sort of organization in either party that helps organize other organizations.
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What I need is money and people with the necessary skills. I would like to get some of the elected democrats in North Carolina on board, we wouldn't be much without them, and then later on move towards stepping out onto the national stage.
Thoughts? Comments? Opinions?
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