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Is Howard Dean Getting Screwed and Why?

By Alexander Zaitchik, AlterNet. Posted February 9, 2009.


He's been a governor, an inspiring grassroots hero, a reformer of the Democratic Party -- will he join Obama's White House or head back home?
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Is Howard Dean getting a raw deal? Barack Obama owes many elements of his successful run for the White House and padded Democratic majorities in the House and Senate to the departing Democratic National Committee chairman's grassroots leadership and pioneering Internet-based presidential candidacy. But there's no clear sign that Dean figures in the new president's plans.

Hard as it may seem to recall now, parallels with Dean's 2004 surge were among the most notable features of Obama's early campaign. Not only were Obama and Dean relative unknowns who generated early enthusiasm and cash flows on the Internet, Obama campaign manager David Axelrod was a friend and admirer of Dean's campaign guru Joe Trippi.

Among the DNA and staff shared between the two campaigns, Obama's new media director, Joe Rospars, was a Dean vet and former Internet director for Dean's DNC. Obama may have refined the Webcentric Dean model, careful to avoid its most punishing mistakes, but the basic lineage was never disputed. It was a correct and easy to tag Obama during the early primaries "Dean 2.0."

Given the debt Obama clearly owes to Dean -- as well as the personal respect the president is known to hold for him -- many Dean netroots loyalists are confused as to why their man was not chosen to head the Health and Human Services Department, given his experience and interest in health care reform (Dean was a doctor before entering politics, and enacted major health care reforms as governor of Vermont). With Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said to be high on Obama's list to replace the disgraced nomination of Tom Daschle, Dean looks unlikely to benefit from the recent scandal.

But as disappointing as Dean's failure to make Obama's cabinet is for Dean's loyal legions, many felt a more stinging slap in Dean's glaring absence from the changing-of-the-DNC-guard ceremony in Washington. When Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine assumed control of the party apparatus last month, Dean was traveling. No request was made by the White House that he reschedule to attend the event. The Beltway press was soon frantically reading tea leaves for an answer to the question: Was Dean's lack of an invitation an intentional slam by White House chief of staff Rahm Emanual, with whom Dean has famously clashed over tactics and strategy for electing more Democrats? Or was it just a scheduling conflict, no biggie, as Dean diplomatically maintains?

Whatever the case, it's appropriate that Dean spent his last day as chairman of the DNC not in Washington, but in the South Pacific, visiting Democrats in the U.S protectorate of American Samoa. His visit to the micro-territory was the final piece in his jigsaw puzzle of his promise to visit every Democratic organization on U.S. soil, the perfect capstone to a tenure defined by his goal to build up the party from sea to shining sea, in states ranging across the red-blue spectrum (and, in the case of Samoa, beyond).

If one motif runs through Dean's meteoric rise from the governor of a tiny state, to a dark horse populist candidate who inspired millions with his "You Have the Power!" message, to being the campaign and fund-raising face of the ruling political party, it's that Dean has been willing to take his cause into every corner of every state. His famous "scream" after finishing third in the 2004 Iowa caucuses involved Dean listing off what seemed like all 50 states, which he promised supporters he would take in the weeks and months ahead. In 2005, he announced his intention to build the Democratic Party in all 50 states, including red regions like the Deep South, as well as red districts in blue states. Most recently, Dean has announced that he's taking the 50-state strategy global, with plans to consult on campaigns and technology for center-left parties around the world. Once humankind begins colonizing the galaxy, Howard Dean will no doubt be there to pioneer the Democrats' 50-planet strategy.


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See more stories tagged with: howard dean, dnc, 50 state strategy, hhs

Alexander Zaitchik is a freelance journalist.

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Dean and Kucinich are the hope of the future
Posted by: georgiaorwell on Feb 9, 2009 12:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dean definitely has gotten screwed by the Obama administration, the truth being that Rahm-bo et al don't like him. Then again, he's not a Washington insider, and he might not go along with the lobbyist culture that is so ensconced. I would definitely love for Howard Dean to take the Health and Human Services reins but Obama doesn't apparently reward loyalty and Dean's amazing 50 state strategy. In fact, I think Obama's people are deliberately overlooking Dean's role in the election altogether; actually, I would vote for Howard Dean for President in 2012 - happily. He truly is a progressive, like Dennis Kucinich, and I wish they would be part of a new Independent Party committed to real reform. He was sabotaged by the Repugs and his own party, and he could be a new beginning if we could get people behind him (like they did w/Obama, whom I sincerely regret voting for).

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» The Commondreams article Posted by: Bliss Doubt
Gag Order
Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy on Feb 9, 2009 12:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems like around the time of his "I have a scream" speech the media decided that they just plain don't like Howard Dean. He's been an un-person ever since.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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» RE: Gag Order Posted by: georgiaorwell
» RE: Gag Order-Trick Posted by: Jo1028
Corporate health care is in the driver's seat
Posted by: gunboat diplomat on Feb 9, 2009 1:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's just too much money to be made from inflated drug prices, ripoff insurance scams and false advertising - the profits must be protected.

The corporate media take more advertising money from Big Pharma than anyone else, so they'll do as they are told - and that means making sure that a weak or ineffective person is appointed to the HHS post, or even better, one of their tools.

This is why Daschle was booted out, despite the fact that with Obama's vocal support he could have easily been in place right now, and beginning to work on reform. Obama then leaned towards some really bad candidates - governors who had cut health care benefits in their own states, and long-time personal allies - which is where things now stand.

The press is using minor tax issues to whip up outrage over certain candidates, while burying the tax issues of pro-corporate candidates like Geithner.

The greatest enemy of progress and democracy in the U.S. today is the corporate press - what is really needed is anti-trust action, the breakup of the media conglomerates, and the elimination of holding companies from the media business - it needs special rules or it just becomes propaganda.

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Um, news flash
Posted by: Erik1968 on Feb 9, 2009 1:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 50-state strategy is over. The whole grassroots-netroots-whateverroots thing is over. It was a great idea. It scares people like Rahm Emanuel, the Clintons, and the rest of the DLC crowd who were running for cover just months ago.

Incredibly, while Hilary and Obama raced to KOSfest while ignoring the DLC they apparently decided to make a pact that whichever of them won would reward the netroots-Dean-democratic wing of the Democratic Party with JACK SHIT.

We can't lose those big-money donors! Gimme a break. Obama got his hundreds of millions from US, but he's paying back the old boys club. Incredible.

Dean needs to smarten up and start over. Build a whole new party through the netroots with a real progressive new deal style 50-state strategy. We've got more money than they do. We've got more ideas. We've got more people.

We got screwed AGAIN. Bush's economic and military policies continue unabated. When Obama privatizes Social Security to "save" it, I won't be surprised AT ALL. Will you? Or will you write more of this puzzled commentary?

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» RE: Um, news flash Posted by: georgiaorwell
Rahm Emanuel & The DLC Is THE Problem
Posted by: NoPCZone on Feb 9, 2009 1:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No Dean strategy and you would have President McSame & Evita of the Arctic right now- it's that simple. Rahm knows Dean delivered and he didn't, but he sucked up and now wants him well out of the picture.

In 2006, the DCCC Rahm chaired poured tons of money into races that didn't pan out while the DNC supported candidates pulled stunning upsets in previously unlikely places.

So far, Obama is handing the keys over to the very DLC types that screwed the party up and lost election after election to the Rethugs.

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» I know Posted by: Erik1968
» Dual Citizenship Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy
Banishment of Dean Kills All Hope for Change
Posted by: lorenbliss on Feb 9, 2009 2:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama cannot possibly have been ignorant of Daschle's brazen pimping for the health insurance barons and the prescription drug lords -- the Sultans of Sickness. That Obama attempted to empower such a zealous defender of the status quo -- a protector of the $37 billion in profits the Sultans of Sickness suck like vampires from U.S. patients every year -- tells us all we need to know about "change we can believe in": that is, no change at all -- or change for the worse.

By contrast, Dean might have given us genuine health-care reform: at the very least insurance-premium ceilings, possibly even the beginning of true single-payer care, not simply mandatory insurance to ensure our eternal slavery to the Sultans of Sickness and their obscene greed. Which is precisely why Dean won't be allowed anywhere near the so-called "reform" process. He'd recognize it for what it is -- another of Obama's ploys for preserving capitalist oppression by any Big Lie deemed necessary -- and no doubt blow the whistle. Just as -- or so we should all hope -- he may do anyway.

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» No, it does not Posted by: Beck
We are missing the obvious.....
Posted by: garcam123 on Feb 9, 2009 4:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I propose that we, common Americans nominate publically and on the internet, Dr. Howard Dean to be head of HHS and be a "mirror" of whomever Obama nominates. With the power of the internet I believe we can become a force to force Obama to begin making changes we need.
I propose the formation of an American Freedom Party be established today on YOUTUBE and that all states be represented.
I will stand for Florida.

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Media First
Posted by: Christian Southern Liberal on Feb 9, 2009 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Starting a separate Progressive Party will only insure that the repubs win the next election. We have no choice but to continue to elect progressives for dem seats. We, also, must continue to show the repub party for what it is and financially support the journalists who are exposing their lies and crimes.

In order to have a true democracy in this country we need a TV channel that is real news. It could be started on the internet and progress to the new digital availability.

If every progressive/union/consumers advocacy group were involved we could make that happen.

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Obama bows to the DLC
Posted by: itzamirakul on Feb 9, 2009 5:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The DLC was infuriated when Obama was able to raise so much money with his own organization and not be beholden to the DNC, and the DCCC. These groups have been used to receiving all public and corporate donations and then doling them out they way they wanted to, giving more to the candidate that they desired instead of the one that the Democratic voters wanted. Hence we got John Kerry instead of Howard Dean whom they excoriated.

They were also in a position to give money to any regional candidates that THEY chose, as opposed to the people choosing same.

Because of the Dean 50-state strategy, Obama was able to raise nearly a billion dollars on his own. It came down to the DCCC begging Obama to share his donations with THEM!.

During this past election I got dozens of emails from the DCCC begging for donations because the voters were instead giving their money to the candidate of their choice - Barack Obama, leaving the DCCC helpless as to whom to choose for a candiate and with little or no money to give out in their favored regions.

Rahm Emannuel, and Nancy Pelosi were at the helm of the DCCC during this past election and found themselves weak and eneffectual in being kingmakers because they had so little money, even with the corporate (AIPAC donations they received). So they threw their support behind Obama in order to be able to control him.

The DLC (Democratic Leadership Committee) calls itself a centrist organization and pooh-poohs the strength of the Progressives in the Party. They sit back quietly while the Progressives go out and actively raise the conciousness of voters and develop the enthusiasm required to get such large numbers of people to actually come out and vote. It was the DLC that put Clinton in office and while we sat satisfied with Clinton during his term of service, we are now waking up to see how thoroughly his administration fwaked us. (fcuked without a kiss). Remember how Hillary claimed to be against Bush's policies yet she voted affirmatively for ALL of them? That is DLC-based strategy and thinking.

Now that Obama has won, Rahm Emmanuel has been put in place to control what Obama does and to influence his thinking according to what the DINOs in the AIPAC-controlled DLC want.

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» RE: Obama bows to the DLC Posted by: bloominblacksheep
» RE: Obama bows to the DLC Posted by: wrinklemomma
is this a joke?
Posted by: lorado on Feb 9, 2009 5:54 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it hurts too much to laugh

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Shirl
Posted by: toots on Feb 9, 2009 6:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Howard Dean is truly getting the wrong end of the stick.

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Speaking as one who actively worked for Dean's presidential run...
Posted by: cornsilk on Feb 9, 2009 6:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a blessing Dean isn't going to be part of this administration. One day he'll say, "Thank goodness I'm not going down with this ship."

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The Media Does NOT Like Dean
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac on Feb 9, 2009 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For a while, the MSM really seemed to like Dean, early in his run for the Democratic nomination, but then something happened.

In a TV interview, Dean was asked about the concentration of the media and he responded that we needed to break them up. The MSM was horrified.

Within a week they manufactured his scream and his political demise.

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Tell Obama
Posted by: Beck on Feb 9, 2009 6:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Comments: 202-456-1111

http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/

Tell our president to find a place for this dedicated man. It'll take less than 15 seconds, probably.

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» Thanks Beck. Posted by: jwverez
Without Dean, no 2006 or 2008. He is better than Sanjay Gupta but
Posted by: jwverez on Feb 9, 2009 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
his lack of support for single payer in the past had me concerned. If Dean supports it now unlike Gupta, he's got my backing. It's disgusting that I went through the trouble giving Obama a chance to lead but I guess I was as much a fucking idiot to finally believe in his hope and change mantra just like the Reagan voters of 1980 and the Bush voters of 2000 believing in fucking miracles ! Somebody please perform a brain surgery on Obama !! Obama's already acting as if some rightwing asshole(s) kidnapped him and reprogrammed his brain to be leaning rightwing !!

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TOAOTH
Posted by: stratton on Feb 9, 2009 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an early supporter of Howard Dean from the beginning of his bid, I thought his message and and campaigning style were the answer to getting Bush out of there. If the DNC used Gov. Dean's "unseemly" scream of excitement as the "wedge" to drive him away, then the committee is too blase to be in the business.
One critique about the article----not one word of the invaluable efforts by those of us who worked hard in the name of Minnesota's late, great Senator Paul Wellstone, whose followers are working in the same fashion as Howard Dean's---at the grassroots level. We deserve recognition.

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» RE: TOAOTH Posted by: jwverez
» RE: TOAOTH Posted by: Quannah
Don't click on that link (IDENTITY THEFT)!
Posted by: GuitarBill on Feb 9, 2009 7:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This asshole is not trying to protect your privacy; he's trying to steal your identity.

If you click on his "Privacy Center" link, the server the link points to will install a keylogger on your computer, which is used to steal your credit card information, SSN, etc.

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Spam! Toxic site dangerous for your computer
Posted by: Bliss Doubt on Feb 9, 2009 8:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
don't click

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The real left got 1% of the vote...
Posted by: TFYQA on Feb 9, 2009 7:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now WTF do you expect ?

That the DEM elite listen to Kucinich & Dean !

How delusional can ya get ?

"The only difference between the GOP & DEMs is the velocity with which their knees hit the floor when corporations knock at the door." - Ralph Nader

Watch the clip : HIGHEST BIDDER
at http://www.youtube.com/user/JFWilliam

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Of course Dean is getting screwed...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Feb 9, 2009 8:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...he (and Kucinich) may be the only TRUE progressives left in the party.

I hope I am wrong, but just hold on while you watch Obama kiss ass with the Repukes, only to give them the credibility and respect they do not deserve. Then watch him die a slow death as he is demonized from shore to shore. The "Stimulus Plan" is now a joke because of his trying to compromise.

Obama does not realize that this is a WAR for the heart and soul of this once proud country and should be fought as such. His goal should be to destroy the Repukes into oblivion, just as their goal is to do the same to the "liberal" (joke) Democrapic party.

I just wish Dean did not sell his soul to the Democrapic party and pretend THEY were the answer. HE was an answer and got screwed when he ran, and is being screwed now, as Obama continues to clean house of his ilk and make one bad appointment after another.

To play nice in any way shape or form with the Repukes will not win him any respect from either side and just plays into their hands.

Get a spine Obama!!!

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JT Barrie
Posted by: rimchamp77 on Feb 9, 2009 8:05 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would agree. Dean is not a good fit for this administration. He would have comparable integrity to Colin Powell and would be more effective in mobilizing Euro support for the Afghan debacle in the making. But the amount of deceit necessary to sell Dean on this disaster would leave a bitter taste.

Same thing with mobilization of support for intervention in the Mexican drug gang fiasco. We'll be sending troops and even more of our money into this problem of our own creation. Mexico would not have this problem if it weren't for its proximity to the world's largest market of illegal drug consumers. And we wouldn't be the world's largest market if not for the combination of our income inequality and the War on arbitrarily banned drugs [yes, there are no measurable standards - just as most people suspect].

The politics of Vermont are different from any other state and our federal system. It's more retail politics and less responsive to the 30 second political infomercials that dominate our discourse nationally. Dean was able to work well in the grass roots venue getting people to believe that they could do something. He could deliver in Vermont. He can't in the USA.

Obama may have been elected with grass roots support - but he seems to believe that he must reach out to the investor class of parasites. That means more of the same kind of crony capitalism that has destroyed our middle class. Dean should reserve his talents for an administration that is more radical in its approach.

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» RE: JT Barrie Posted by: patsy6
Mutt & Jeff
Posted by: willymack on Feb 9, 2009 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Way back when I was a boy, one of my favorite comic strips was Mutt & Jeff. One was a tall stringbean, and the other, a short, dumpy man. I recall the author's name as Ham Fischer, although I could be wrong. Barack Obama is the tall stringbean, and Dr. Dean is apparently the shorty of the two, although he's not exactly a midget. Mut & Jeff, although polar opposites, both appearance wise and tempermentally, still managed to get along and be friends. Obama is urbane, self-contained, and understated, while Dean (and Biden as well) is emotional, expressive, and candid to the point of being blunt. If Obama can find it within himself to choose someone like Biden to be at his right side, why not select Dr. Dean for Surgeon General or secretary of HHS? Could it be that Dr Dean doesn't WANT to be either of those? Has anybody asked him? Is it possible that this is a non-issue?

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the Medical Pharmaceutical complex
Posted by: the director on Feb 9, 2009 8:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Eisenhower warned us of the Military Industrial Complex which is still driving our bellicose nature.

The Medical Pharmaceutical complex is interested in driving our ill health for their business advantage, and Dr. Howard Dean knows the way the system promotes more medicine, the referrals, he was dependent upon the referral. That knowledge scares the hell out of the Health Industries.

When I met Dr Dean in Salt Lake City a couple of years back encountered a firm hand shake and the gaze of a man who was concerned about his patients, what he failed to realize is suffering does not have to be part of the health care question, prevention is more logical.

For us to address prevention we must take a hard look at the chemicals of commerce which could be the cause of our deteriorating health both nationally but also globally.

The "Scream" may have scarred to many of the gentile but changing the health care system is going to require someone with passion if we are to see change. MASH was the movie and still the way it works.

Mr Obama please sick Doctor, Governor, Howard Dean upon the Medical Pharmaceutical complex
and set my people free of chemical poisoning even by omission.

Patrick McGean
Director
Live Blood and Cellular Matrix Study

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Obama does not owe anyone anything
Posted by: veritae on Feb 9, 2009 8:36 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't this what has been happening in Washington since.... whenever? And what good has it done? What kind of changes have we seen? Why are we expecting Obama to play this political game?

Finally, what would Dean do if the tables were reversed? I do not think this article would have been written.


I never comment on articles, however, I am surprised (and disappointed) by this article!

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Dean- 'an inspiring grassroots hero, a reformer of the Democratic Party?' Give us a break!
Posted by: logansafi on Feb 9, 2009 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Democratic Party has no reform effort going on, didn't have one happening, and never will. Why? Well it has all to do with it being a completely corporatized and corporate machine political device, that's why. It really is as simple as that.

This article is nothing more than yet another commentary trying to convince all of us that the Democrats are a party of reform, when in fact they are a party of Establishment. They want the intellectual middle class and academic types to hitch all of us alongside them as they go a happily beggin' for positions and influence within the Establishment. Don't buy it! You will not be along for a pleasant ride if you do.

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Dean's an insurgent, establishments don't like insurgensts
Posted by: sausage on Feb 9, 2009 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Howard Dean's a Democratic Party insurgent. He's not even as leftist as I or many of his supporters. His vision of taking the fight to the Republicans in ever precinct, district and state, however, dovetailed with what many radical, progressive and leftist Democrats have been saying for years, "How can the Democrats remain a nation party when they don't even try?"

Dean's fifty state strategy was the antidote for the long slide into irrelevancy and permanent minority status the establishment membership of the Democratic National Committee which was dooming the party. President Obama's chief of staff Rahm Emanuel is the leading DNC establishment proponent of targeting campaign spending only in Congressional district and states that appear to be sure wins for the Democratic Party.

My home state of Iowa's Democratic Party seems to be in the grip of the Emanuelian philosophy of political campaigning. For instance, Chuck Grassley, a nominally "moderate" Republican whom Iowa's establishment Democrats seem to think they can "work with", hasn't had a tough campaign in years. The last time Grassely ran, '06, Iowa Democrats off-handedly nominated one-time state senator Art Small of Iowa City. As the Web site Radio Iowa noted of Grassely's '06 victory: Small raised less than $100,000 compared to Grassley's sizeable multi-million dollar campaign fund, fueled in large part because Grassley sits as chairman of the powerful Senate Finance Committee -- the panel that writes tax policy. As a personal aside, I donated $125 to Small's quixotic campaign, a major financial commitment for one on a disability pension.

I'm sure progressives outside the state of Iowa must wonder why major Republican dick, Steve King, still represents Iowa 5th U.S. Congressional District? Well, according to '08 Democratic loser Rob Hubler: Anecdotal evidence suggests that the GOTV effort we all worked so hard on was not directed to the folks that would have boosted our Democratic total and helped the down ticket. Democrats across the district and the state did not win where we should have. Kurt is one example of a Democrat who should have won, given the demographics of his district, but lost by fewer than 400 votes. A better GOTV effort would have helped him. Since I live in central Iowa, in Blue Dog Dem Leonard Boswell's Third U.S. Congressional District, I really do have that good of knowledge of what went wrong. However, suffice it to say, Hubler's campaign was left with a pile of debt. I guess Iowa's Democratic establishment is waiting for re-districting following the '10 census when part of King's bailiwick may fall into Boswell's lap.

But let's recall that many of the leading lights of today's Democratic Party establishment are not Democrats in the traditional FDR, Harry Truman or even Huey Long mold. For my money many of the Boomer Generation Democrats, especially of the Democratic Losership Council variety, are recast Rockefeller-Republicans at best. Remember Hillary Clinton was a Goldwater Girl in '64 and only became a Democrat due to her personal opposition to the Vietnam War.

Insurgencies start at the bottom. Dr. Dean's made a good start, so it's up to the rest of us to continue his work.

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By the way, Barry HUSSEIN is holding up Solis's nomination UNFAIRLY !!
Posted by: Jennifer Bedingfield on Feb 9, 2009 9:10 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/02/09-9

So when Barry could rush appointments for Giethner, Daschle, and Gregg, there's no reason to stall Solis. Holis has a loving husband who's trying to keep his small business afloat and his tax troubles are minor. It breaks my heart when I see good Democrats like Solis and Kucinich getting undermined all the while Rethugs, Blue Dogs, and DLCers get "quick and easy" promotions !

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Kathleen Sebelius/Howard Dean
Posted by: aonghus36 on Feb 9, 2009 9:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
>With Kansas governor Kathleen Sebelius said to be high on Obama's list to replace the disgraced nomination of Tom Daschle, Dean looks unlikely to benefit from the recent scandal.

Gov. Sebelius is reputed to have been on the Bilderbergers invitation list in their last meeting in June. Was Gov. Dean on the list?

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» Hahahaha, good one.... Posted by: Prophit
Admiral Susan Blumenthal for HHS, best for preventive health
Posted by: plantland on Feb 9, 2009 9:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(title is from when she was assistant Surgeon General to Koop in Clinton administration)

Blumenthal is intelligent, and knowedgable about Women's Health, Mental Health, cancer prevention, and Global Health (good voice for Cabinet).

Her husband,Rep. Ed Markey, heads the Global Warming Caucus, and wrote legislation, not passed yet, which would outlaw a plastic additive, BPA, from being used in food and containers.

While Dean seems the best by far of names circulated, the admirals'public health experience is even more promising.

SUSAN BLUMENTHAL, M.D., M.P.A
CSP Senior Advisor for Health and Medicine
Former U.S. Assistant Surgeon General
Former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Women's Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Rear Admiral Susan J. Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.A. (ret) is the Senior Advisor for Health and Medicine at the Center for the Study of the Presidency, where she is leading the Center’s Agenda 2008 health care initiative. As a top government health leader with over 20 years of Federal service, Dr. Blumenthal was recently decorated with the Distinguished Service Medal of the U.S. Public Health Service, its highest honor, "for distinguished and pioneering leadership, groundbreaking contributions, and dedicated public service that has improved the health of women, our Nation, and the world." Dr. Blumenthal served as Assistant Surgeon General of the United States, as the first ever Deputy Assistant Secretary of Women’s Health and as Senior Global Health Advisor in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dr. Blumenthal has also been a White House advisor on health issues, the top medical advisor to the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and a research branch chief at the National Institutes of Health.

Dr. Blumenthal has done pioneering work on women’s health, establishing many innovative initiatives including the National Centers of Excellence on Women’s Health, the National Women’s Health Information Center, and the “Missiles to Mammograms” program that transferred imaging technology used for space exploration and intelligence purposes to improve the early detection of breast cancer. Additionally, she has been an international leader in global health, the response to terrorism, emergency preparedness including pandemic flu, obesity, mental illness, AIDS, suicide, violence and disease prevention. She also fostered numerous international collaborations on health issues including establishing a Middle East Health Initiative and was the U.S. representative to the World Health Organization’s Global Commission on Women’s Health. Dr. Blumenthal has been at the forefront of applying technology to improve health, providing national leadership in digital medicine and telehealth as one of the first in the government to use the internet for health education, envisioning and establishing several award-winning health websites including 4woman.gov, safeyouth.org, nutrition.gov, globalhealth.gov, and 4collegewomen.org.

Dr. Blumenthal serves as a Clinical Professor at Georgetown and Tufts Schools of Medicine, and as Distinguished Visiting Professor of Women's Studies at Brandeis University. She has served as the Bundy Visiting Professor at the Mayo Clinic, as a Visiting Professor at Stanford University in Washington, and as a Fellow at Harvard University School of Government. Dr. Blumenthal began her career in the Federal government, serving for 12 years as a Branch Chief of major national research programs at the National Institutes of Health and was Chair of the NIH Health and Behavior Coordinating Committee. She has chaired numerous Federal committees as well as national and international conferences and commissions.

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Dean killed single payer when Vermont Governor
Posted by: larryracies on Feb 9, 2009 9:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Boy, how quickly we forget. As a worker for single payer since '93 I clearly remember when Governor Dean, almost single handedly, killed the single payer movement in Vermont. As a medical doctor he never joined Physicians For A National Health Program.

Head of HHS? Not in my book.

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» RE: Dean links Posted by: DCostello2
» Thank you DCostello2. Truth hurts but thanks. :( Posted by: Jennifer Bedingfield
For Howard Dean: just call or email President Obama
Posted by: zepher on Feb 9, 2009 10:15 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
at www.whitehouse.gov. Open and easy to use site. Bookmark it. How else is President Obama going to know what us people out here think? There are so many petty and old guard people trying to influence him, walk a mile in his shoes.

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Bryce Babcock
Posted by: bandz on Feb 9, 2009 10:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The country is fortunate that his own weakness removed wishy-washy Tom Daschle from becoming our new HHS Sec'y. Initially, I thought that Howard Dean would be my choice for that job. Then I learned that Dean does not support the only kind of healthcare system that can solve our present crisis in that vitally important area: a NATIONAL, SINGLE-PAYER, NOT-FOR-PROFIT system. Although I think Dean would be an improvement on Daschle, and I could support him for another position in the Obama administration, I would be disappointed if he were to be handed the HHS job.

I'm very much afraid that he would only repeat Hillary Clinton's mistake and support a weak, confusing, and overly complicated compromise plan that would fail to solve the problems of our present system - even if it should be passed. Let's focus our efforts on what we NEED, rather than what timid politicians think is FEASIBLE. I think the American people are ready!

For Dean supporters I urge them to read John Nichols' blog for The Nation, "Would Dean Be Best at HHS?" at http://www.thenation.com/blogs/state_of_change/404803/print, then check out http://www.pnhp.org, the website of Phisicians for a National Health Program. -- bandz

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» RE: Bryce Babcock Posted by: richholland
Dean Has My Vote
Posted by: zrants on Feb 9, 2009 11:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It does seem like Dean is at least as qualified as anyone. He is a doctor, oversaw development of a statewide health program, and ran the very successful campaign that put Obama in office. Unless he doesn't get along with the administration, or has tax or domestic help issues, (Who doesn't?) he seems like a good choice to run the Federal Health Department, especially if you want to upgrade it and make big changes. Dean ran on change too. Maybe he failed one of those crucial tests, or turned it down. Let's hope Obabma makes the right decision and fixes the health care system one way or another soon.

zrants

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Joke
Posted by: Hans B on Feb 9, 2009 2:00 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dean's fate reminds me of the pig in a French joke.

A seriously ill horse is inspected by the veterinarian. The vet says to the farmer, "If he's not on his feet in three days, we'll have to put him to sleep." But they're overheard by the pig, who runs to the horse and, for three days, day and night, implores him to get on his feet. Finally the horse does so, just in time for the vet's visit.

Hearing that his horse is cured, the farmer says to his wife: "We've got to celebrate that! Let's slaughter the pig."

Ahem.

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» RE: Joke Posted by: ppatt
Never underestimate a politician scorned...
Posted by: ppatt on Feb 9, 2009 2:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...or repudiated for that matter. And I am not referring to John Dean but rather the DLC types like Clinton and Emmanuel. Bush has not monopoly on inability to admit being wrong.

I've long believed that snubs of Dean can be attributed to this phenomenon.

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Did he want a job?
Posted by: Defenestrator on Feb 9, 2009 3:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has Dean stated that he wanted a job from Obama?

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» RE: Did he want a job? Posted by: Free Spirit
Draft Dean
Posted by: anambrose on Feb 9, 2009 4:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rahm Emannuel likes to to take credit for the House win in 06 and I've heard No interviewer or media reporter ask him; Well wasn't it really the John Dean 50 State Strategy that made the party not just competitive but successful? Rahm was getting campaign funds to a select small group of candidates based on the their having almost a sure thing. Dean was saying hell we must have people out there in those red areas that could run if only they had support and infrastructure and that's what he and his organization did. I've never heard Rahm saying no it was Dean or it was our teamwork (yeah right). So we should start a petition to draft Dean as Secretary of HHS. He is the right man for the job.

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What i like about Dean
Posted by: H.Dermish on Feb 9, 2009 8:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is the same i like about Carter, they got; keep getting screwed; it makes them Human, more like me.
some times i FANCY they know how i feel? fat chance! but FANCY to think so, as to, what's his name? that guy; W's Uncle Tom, yeah the Black guy, you know .... oh fuck him he deserves it.
another one bites the dust ....

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More thoughts on new party
Posted by: georgiaorwell on Feb 10, 2009 1:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Reid and Pelosi (Nev and Ca) need to vote these scoundrels out of office.

Nominations for a new party name for 2010 and 2012:

Peace Party
Labor Party (I know this sounds crazy but working people need representation)
Unity Party
Real Change Party

Come on, folks. Help me out here.

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» It's called the Green Party Posted by: chaztmac
A couple of small clarifications
Posted by: Free Spirit on Feb 10, 2009 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was a correct and easy to tag Obama during the early primaries "Dean 2.0."

While there were certainly some similarities between the two candidates, I don't think "Dean 2.0" was really an appropriate tag for Obama. It was an appropriate tag for his campaign.

His famous "scream" after finishing third in the 2004 Iowa caucuses involved Dean listing off what seemed like all 50 states, which he promised supporters he would take in the weeks and months ahead.

He promised that "we are going to Oklahoma...," not "we are going to take Oklahoma...," It was a "we're not giving up" speech, not a "we're gonna win" speech.

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Team of Rivals, Schmivals
Posted by: jmooney on Feb 10, 2009 4:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I don't get is, Obama took in rivals like Hillary into his cabinet; she was pretty hard on him in the primaries, and while that was politics, it still had to smart and all. So, the president can hire rivals but his chief of staff, Emmanuel, can't be troubled to have a "rival" on the team. Obama should tell his chief of staff and others who are keeping Dean from being part of the administration, "If I can take on Hillary you can take on Dean." It is just stupid to not bring in a guy because your chief of staff and a senate supporter had problems with him. We don't need everyone to be agreeing on everything. If two people agree on everything that's a sign that someone's not thinking. This top down push for stimulus and the apparent top down philosophy that would have been in play with Daschle (you know, he has friends in the Congress, knows the insider game) isn't how we should be approaching change. Obama should know that. He wasn't the insider choice for president; he did it through people power. That's what Dean would bring to the table at HHS. He'd bring a more outsider approach, inspiring the people from below to pressure their representatives. That's how we're going to get health care, not by insiders greasing the skids, but outsiders pushing from the bottom up.

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TimS
Posted by: TimS on Feb 11, 2009 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dean writes his own ticket. I hope he's laying low so he can run the prosecution of the Bush regime. Please GOD, let it be so.....

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LIKE OBAMA. LIKE DEAN. LET'S USE THE INTERNET
Posted by: allisartisall on Feb 12, 2009 9:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i think we should (i say we - i mean somebody that knows how) use the internet to get up a massive petition to have dean selected to take up where the lobbyist daschle left off. he would be, as far as i can tell, the PERFECT person to revamp our criminal health care system. daschle - bad taxes or no - was NOT the man i want handling anything that has to do with my money. dean i trust.

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COME ON BE HONEST
Posted by: Wattshill on Feb 12, 2009 9:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Howard Dean and the Democratic party have a lower rating than BUSH! Good God. Dean a a straight lying politican just like the rest of them. In other words GO AWAY HOWARD. And Yes the Republicans are just as bad. I am now an independent who unless someone REALLY tells the truth I only vote for those who DO NOT have incumbent next to their name.

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Reflections on Dean
Posted by: bepa on Feb 14, 2009 6:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I supported Howard Dean when he ran for the presidency and I continue to support him.

Dean may have ruffled some feathers but he is an honest man who speaks out when he sees injustice.

I don't trust Carville who is Mary Matalin's husband ..and she worked in Cheney's office. Anyone Carville opposes goes up in my estimation.

Anyone connected with Dick Cheney looks like a criminal to me.

If Dean gets no position in the Obama White House I will think that Obama is selling out.

But Obama can still do some good..but there are so many powerful forces opposing Obama..one wonders if there is any hope for America.

All I can do is watch. Average people like me have no power. If someone as talented and honest as Dean is ignored ..what hope is there for ANYONE who opposes the entrenched power brokers...power brokers like Carville.

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Dean and Emanuel supported only pro-war
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on Feb 28, 2009 8:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and globalist candidates state by state. We would have controlled Congress a long time ago if Progressive candidates had support and funding from the party. That is how the DLC took control over the party agenda.

Back to local races wasn't as they stated but a fight within the party itself.

The Florida and Michigan delegate manipulation just showed how corrupted the party can get. All primaries should be on the same day or it would not have happened. Small states deciding who wins and gets support is wrong. That insures only conservative, no union, small states win the agenda everytime. Being from a "liberal, large state" that makes me angry.

It was a Progressive platform which most Americans wanted. The Democratic Party workers expecially wanted NAFTA and the open borders gone.

After the primary in Illinois Emanuel declared amensty was the goal of the party. It wasn't even an election issue before that.

We the large states pay for the small states in many ways. Our payback is no power.

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