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Confusing a Party with a Movement (continued…)
By David Sirota
Though the 2006 and 2008 elections were billed as progressive movement
successes, the story behind them highlights a longer-term failure. During
those contests, most leaders of Washington’s major labor, environmental,
anti-war and anti-poverty groups spent millions of dollars on a party
endeavor—specifically, on electing a Democratic president and Democratic
Congress. In the process, many groups subverted their own movement agendas in
the name of electoral unity.
The effort involved a sleight of hand. These groups begged their
grass-roots members—janitors, soccer moms, veterans and other
“regular folks”—to cough up small-dollar contributions in
return for the promise of movement pressure on both parties’
politicians. Simultaneously, these groups went to dot-com and Wall Street
millionaires asking them to chip in big checks in exchange for advocacy that
did not offend those fat cats’ Democratic politician friends (or those
millionaires’ economic privilege).
This wasn’t totally dishonest. Many groups sincerely believed that
Democratic Party promotion was key to progressive movement causes. And anyway,
during the Bush era, many of those causes automatically helped Democrats by
indicting Republicans.
But after the 2008 election, the strategy’s bankruptcy is
undeniable.
As we now see, union dues underwrote Democratic leaders who today obstruct
serious labor law reform and ignore past promises to fix NAFTA. Green
groups’ resources helped elect a government that pretends sham
“cap and trade” bills represent environmental progress. Health
care groups promising to push a single-payer system got a president not only
dropping his own single-payer promises, but also backing off a “public
option” to compete with private insurance. And anti-war funding
delivered a Congress that refuses to stop financing the Iraq mess, and an
administration preparing to escalate the Afghanistan conflict.
Of course, frustrated progressives might be able to forgive the groups
that promised different results, had these postelection failures prompted
course corrections.
For example, had the left’s pre-eminent groups responded to
Democrats’ health care capitulations by immediately announcing campaigns
against these Democrats, progressives could feel confident that these groups
were back to prioritizing a movement agenda. Likewise, had the big anti-war
organizations reacted to Obama’s Afghanistan escalation plans with
promises of electoral retribution, we would know those organizations were
steadfastly loyal to their anti-war brand.
But that hasn’t happened. Despite the president’s health care
retreat, most major progressive groups continue to cheer him on, afraid to
lose their White House access and, thus, their Beltway status. Meanwhile, The
New York Times reports that Moveon.org has “yet to take a clear position
on Afghanistan” while VoteVets’ leader all but genuflected to
Obama, saying, “People [read: professional political operatives] do not
want to take on the administration.”
In this vacuum, movement building has been left to underfunded (but
stunningly successful) projects like Firedoglake.com, Democracy for America,
the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and local organizations. And
that’s the lesson: True grass-roots movements that deliver concrete
legislative results are not steered by marble-columned institutions, wealthy
benefactors or celebrity politicians—and they are rarely ever run from
Washington. They are almost always far-flung efforts by those organized around
real-world results—those who don’t care about party conventions,
congressional cocktail parties or White House soirees they were never invited
to in the first place.
Only when enough progressives realize that truism will any
movement—and any change—finally commence.
David Sirota is the author of best-selling “Hostile Takeover”
(2006) and “The Uprising” (2008). He is a senior fellow at the
Campaign for America’s Future and a board member of the Progressive
States Network—both nonpartisan research organizations. His daily blog
can be found at http://www.credoaction.com/sirota. E-mail him at
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(Sirota's article was e-published previously at http://www.truthdig.com .)
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