As to why some of us are very skeptical about the Democratic Leadership Council. They are the ones forming the policies for the Democrats, so it would be wise for us to watch and question.
Here is an article about how they became the business/corporate party...quite openly in fact. They never made a secret of it.
How the DLC Does ItSimon Rosenberg, the former field director for the DLC who directs the New Democrat Network, a spin-off political action committee, says, "We're trying to raise money to help them lessen their reliance on traditional interest groups in the Democratic Party. In that way," he adds, "they are ideologically freed, frankly, from taking positions that make it difficult for Democrats to win."
Freeing Democrats from being, well, Democrats has been the Democratic Leadership Council's mission since its founding 16 years ago by Al Gore, Chuck Robb, and a handful of other conservative, mostly southern Dems as a rump faction of disaffected elected officials and party activists. Producing and directing the DLC is Al From, its founder and CEO, who's been the leader, visionary, and energizing force behind the New Democrat movement since Day One.
Privately funded and operating as an extraparty organization without official Democratic sanction, and calling themselves "New Democrats," the DLC sought nothing less than the miraculous: the transubstantiation of America's oldest political party. Though the DLC painted itself using the palette of the liberal left--as "an effort to revive the Democratic Party's progressive tradition," with New Democrats being the "trustees of the real tradition of the Democratic Party"--its mission was far more confrontational.
A lot of the tension between the DLC and the people of the party who opposed the war started back in May 2003. Howard Dean governed as a centrist governor in VT for 11 years. He was highly respected by the DLC. During his campaign there were words from both sides. He questioned the Democrats support for Bush's unilateral war, and that was it.
Here is a post about a meeting held by the DLC leaders in 2003, May. BTW, that is always who I have had my gripes with...the leaders mostly. They had some things to say about "activists" and Dean.
I knew of Dean memos in 2003, but I did not know they had a meeting.The 'D' in DLC Doesn't Stand for Dean (David Von Drehle, May 15, 2003, Washington Post)
More than 50 centrist Democrats, including Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner, met here yesterday to plot strategy for the "New Democrat" movement. To help get the ball rolling they read a memo by Al From and Bruce Reed, the chairman and president of the Democratic Leadership Council. The memo dismissed Dean as an elitist liberal from the "McGovern-Mondale wing" of the party -- "the wing that lost 49 states in two elections, and transformed Democrats from a strong national party into a much weaker regional one."
"It is a shame that the DLC is trying to divide the party along these lines," said Dean spokesman Joe Trippi. "Governor Dean's record as a centrist on health care and balancing the budget speaks for itself."
As founder of the DLC, From has been pushing the Democratic Party to the right for nearly 20 years. He was in tall cotton, philosophically speaking, when an early leader of the DLC, Bill Clinton, was elected president in 1992. As Clinton's domestic policy guru, Reed pushed New Democrat ideas -- such as welfare reform -- that were often unpopular with party liberals.
"We are increasingly confident that President Bush can be beaten next year, but Dean is not the man to do it," Reed and From wrote. "Most Democrats aren't elitists who think they know better than everyone else."
I will post more later, as I have been accused of making my posts too long.
The DLC in 2003 took it upon themselves to announce to anyone in general that Howard Dean was NOT going to be the president or even nominee. They had no right to do that. More later. Oh, well, ok. One more link from Liberal Oasis. It is called Kneecapping Dean. It was in reference to the memos the DLC was sending out about him. It is kind of funny, kind of sad.
http://www.liberaloasis.com/archives/051103.htmThe DLC memo is titled "The Real Soul of the Democratic Party."
But it should be "Kneecapping Howard Dean." However, it is so ludicrously ham-handed, Dean trumpeted it himself on his campaign web site. (A smart rapid response that bodes well for the future.)
If the memo was a principled argument over what the party should stand for, that would be fine. You can have honorable disagreements within one's party.
But the memo is nothing but a string of half-truths and contradictions designed to ward off insiders from backing Dean, while at the same time undermine Dean's support from the Left.
In fact, before the memo rips Dean as a leader of the "out-of-touch" "activist wing," it goes right at Dean's current base of liberal support"
And Dean himself explains all that in an article he wrote for Common Dreams about that time.
Bush: It's Not Just His Doctrine That's WrongOne of my goals as a Presidential candidate is to represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party – a line made popular by the late Paul Wellstone. Some have questioned why I would so closely align myself with a politician whose politics were considerably more liberal than mine. The fact is that I admired Paul Wellstone greatly, not only because of his politics, but because he stood up for his beliefs and fought for them until the day he died. I can only hope that someday people will say the same about me – that I, too, remained true to my core principles no matter what. I believe that the Democratic Party needs to stand for something if we want people to vote for us. And by standing against the Bush Doctrine of preemptive war and domestic division, we may yet rediscover the soul of our Party.
Someone asked why the tension about the DLC...so I am answering. This is only a small part of the research I have done. More later.