and his defense of centrism in the NYT about the election.
I agree with R. J. Eskow up to a point. I believe we lost because we failed to recognize the extremism of our opponents, and we failed in pointing out what they would do to this country in a very short time.
There should have been talking points sent out to the Democratic spokespersons, to the media...just like the Republicans do. We should have told the inattentive voters just who these people are, that they are being funded by corporate money...that there is nothing grassroots about them.
I think we feared the backlash, and that was our downfall. Being fearful.
Sit! Stay! A New York Times Chew Toy for Blue DogsThe conservative wing of the Democratic Party just drove it over a cliff, but you'd never know if from reading Matt Bai's latest New York Times piece. It's the latest in a series of Bai paeans to that odd mix of ideologies and opportunism that Washington types persist in calling "centrism," despite its ever-increasing distance from the real center of American opinion.
..."People like Matt Bai are the ones caught in old paradigms. Bai's so anxious to put old hippies out to pasture that he never stops to consider what might have happened if Democrats had enacted more of the policies the "liberals" advocated. Instead he devotes altogether too much attention to exorcising the ghosts of the sixties and their contemporary signifiers. The word "liberal" appears 16 times in Bai's 938-word piece, while the name "Pelosi" appears 6 times and the name "Dean" 4 times.Voters don't think the way journalists and politicians do. They don't share Washington's obsession with labels, groups, and personalities. Instead they're drawn to those parties, ideologies, and people who get things done the way they want them done. One poll after another has shown that voters are furious at big banks, would like to see the wealthy carry more of the tax burden, and want to protect Social Security. If Democrats had acted more decisively to reflect those positions, they would have done far better last week. It wouldn't have mattered which personalities in Congress had prevailed, or what label they had given to their policies. The voters couldn't care less.
And he points out the homage Bai pays to Rahm, the very one who encouraged us to move right on immigration to win and dare not speak about the Iraq invasion because we might lose.
Eskow gets just exactly what happened to people like Grayson in Florida and others elsewhere.
Bai's piece also includes the obligatory homage to Rahm Emanuel. He argues that progressives who criticize the the Blue Dogs today are, in effect, ungrateful hypocrites who kick somebody when they're down. Bai claims that progressives applauded Emanuel when he recruited the same pups in 2006. Bai, who not unreasonably claims some familiarity with the progressive movement, gets this one flat-out wrong. Progressives objected forcefully to Emanuel's approach in 2006, especially since Emanuel occasionally forced less popular Blue Dogs on districts where a progressive was more popular and cost the Dems some seats. And while Bai implies that Howard Dean has reversed himself - that in 2006 he wanted to "find candidates that could win everywhere" - that's not true. Dean always felt that candidates could win in Red districts by clearly articulating Democratic positions, much as Alan Grayson in Florida and Tom Perriello in Virginia eventually did.
Unfortunately Grayson, Perriello, and many other Democrats were burdened with the wreckage of too-timid policies that had been diluted by the influence of the Blue Dogs. These dogs have fleas, but there's always somebody ready to throw them a bone.
Did you get that? Eskow is correct.
"And while Bai implies that Howard Dean has reversed himself - that in 2006 he wanted to "find candidates that could win everywhere" - that's not true. Dean always felt that candidates could win in Red districts by clearly articulating Democratic positions."I have said that here over and over.
There was a day several years ago when Al From spoke as head of the DLC and said they were doing away with any stances that would keep people from voting for Democrats.
That in effect neutered the party, and we are paying a price now.