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Really.
of course, you realize, don't you, that you encapsulated the reason the Washington insiders don't want him in your first sentence:
...Dean's greatest asset is that he is the leader of a movement to reinvigorate the Democratic Party from the bottom up.
Dean wants to organize the Party in the way most of us either want it organized or thought it was or should be organized. Many of us have had the sad experience of calling our state Dem Party, or trying to hook up with local Dems only to find out that they're moribund or nonexistent. It didn't used to be that way -- there used to be a party structure (remember the term "precinct chair" and such??).
Now, to be honest, SINCE Dean's candidacy there have been a lot of Deaniacs reinfuse and reinvigorate the Party all across the country, but it's still not a real party organization like in the old days. He wants grassroots activists, grassroots organizations, grassroots candidates and campaigns, grassroots contributions funding the whole party.
So do I.
Does anyone remember Maynard Jackson? I've told this story before but I'll tell it again because IMO it's really relevent here and indeed in ANY discussion about what the Democratic Party should do and become.
Maynard Jackson was the first African American mayor of Atlanta, an amazing man, and one of the civil rights veterans IIRC along with Andrew Young, Hosea Williams (also now dead), Joseph Lowery, and others.
When Terry McAuliffe was running for DNC chair after Clinton got out of office, so was Maynard Jackson. Maxine Waters and some if not all the rest of the CBC backed Jackson. What Jackson wanted to do was reinvigorate the grassroots, and that's what the CBC wanted too. But Clinton and his forces were very powerful and during the actual DNC convention they finally persuaded Jackson to back away from the race and accept a brand new position -- head of the I-can't-even-remember-the-name. But it was a snazzy name for this brand NEW department within the DNC which Maynard would head starting right after the election.
And so Maynard stepped away from the race for the DNC chair, Maxine Waters and others were apparently mollified and satisfied with the emphasis there would be on building the grassroots with Maynard in that position, and ...
...was never heard from again...
... until he died of a heart attack (broken heart?) a couple of years later, coming back to Atlanta from Washington on one of his many trips.
I have NO doubt that they put him in this brand spanking new office and didn't give him anything with which to DO the job he was going to do -- budget, staff, or any other resources. We didn't see or hear from him anywhere -- no spots on any TV show, no articles or columns anywhere, no nothin'.
ABSOLUTELY FUCKING NOTHING.
I heard Jimmy Carter memorialize Jackson on a public radio program I heard one day while driving to my first Dean House Party (spring or summer 2003): when Carter was running for President, he went to Baltimore and even tho he was an unknown, he was met with a large contingency of supporters and an organization. Maynard Jackson had done that. When Carter went to Detroit, same thing. Everywhere Carter went in those early days, when he had no money and was just getting started, Maynard Jackson had done the organizing work for him. Carter credited his WIN to Maynard Jackson.
Could Maynard Jackson organize the grassroots? Yeah, apparently so, when given a chance.
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