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Purple America: Can the DNC's 50-State Strategy Turn Red States Blue?

By Bob Moser, The Nation. Posted August 15, 2007.


Howard Dean's 50-state strategy is helping to drive Democrats out of hiding in traditionally red states. But will the strategy be squashed by Beltway politics?

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North Wilkesboro, North Carolina

What on God's green earth has gotten into the Wilkes County Democrats? Here it is, the first pretty April Saturday of a snowy, blowy spring. There's yards to mow, balls to toss, plants to plant, Blue Ridge Mountains to hike -- all of which you'd think would be mighty tempting on Democratic convention day in a place where Republicans have a damn near two-to-one edge.

"Welcome to red-hot Republican territory," says Dick Sloop, a career-military retiree turned antiwar protester who's the new county Democratic chair. "We've been like the homeless around here: silent and invisible. The best we ever did in my lifetime, we had two Democrats once on a five-seat county commission."

Even here in western North Carolina, where Republicans have proliferated since the Civil War (when the woods were full of Union sympathizers rather than pro-lifers), Wilkes County -- Bible-thumping, economically slumping -- has stood out for its fire-and-brimstone conservatism. It's been a stiff challenge to find folks willing to run against the Republicans. Hell, it's been rare to hear anybody publicly admit to being a Democrat. "You've got a lot of people in this county who probably couldn't tell you if they've ever met one," Sloop says.

But in a scene playing out this year all across "red America," from these lush hills to the craggy outcroppings of the Mountain West, previously unfathomable crowds of Democrats are streaming up the steps of the old county courthouse, past bobbing blue balloons and Welcome Democrats! signs. They're hopping mad about the national state of things but simultaneously giddy with a new-found hope -- finally! -- for their party.

Inside, as the courtroom fills up, three symbols of the new spirit bustle around. There's trim old Clyde Ingle, a onetime Hubert Humphrey campaigner who "finally just got tired of sitting up there in Deep Gap and complaining." Ingle and his wife, Eva, have spent the past couple of years cajoling shy Wilkes County Democrats to "come out of the closet," get organized and active.

Then there's Mark Hufford, a young, towheaded bundle of energy who's been helping Democrats win breakthrough elections as a field organizer. And there's white-haired, wisecracking "Uncle Bob" Johnston, who retired to Wilkes from upstate New York and promptly found himself being talked into the party chairmanship. "You've got to be in trouble when you're asking an 80-year-old Yankee to run things," he quips.

Suddenly, though, things actually are running, as Johnston notes after the meeting commences. "The county has twenty-two precincts," he informs the folks. "And I'm proud to announce that every one of them is organized as of just the other day." It might sound dull as dirt, but this is the kind of meticulous organizing -- and pride taken in it -- that has long been key to GOP dominance in places like Wilkes.

The fifty-state strategy kicked off in 2005 by that other Yankee, DNC chair Howard Dean, has begun to level the playing field by putting field organizers, media directors and fundraisers into both "red" and "blue" states to stimulate grassroots organizing and year-round party-building.

Of course, it's not the national strategy alone that's bringing record numbers out to county conventions, precinct parties and Jefferson-Jackson Day dinners. The main event this morning is going to be a heaping helping of the other ingredients in the Democratic resurrection across so-called red America -- fury and frustration.

"Good morning everyone!" comes the booming drawl of Seth Chapman, the longtime clerk of court in neighboring Alexander County who's pondering a 2008 challenge to the archconservative Republican Congresswoman from these parts, Virginia Foxx.

"Isn't this something -- in Wilkes County of all places! I'll tell you what, I've been over here before when there was maybe six of us. This is great. How on fire the Democratic Party must be in Wilkes County -- and rightfully so. You have suffered for centuries!"

Amen! shout several voices as Chapman, a plain-looking, middle-aged fellow in a dark suit ideal for funerals, serves up a couple of laugh lines, surveys the crowd with a gimlet eye and then, rather than work himself up to it, begins to flat-out holler into the superfluous microphone.

"This hard work that we've got going on here, and the only thing the opposition is working for is their own sorry hides! Staying in there with the rats, looking out for nobody but their own selves and their own political agenda. And I for one am about fed up with it!"

Mmmm! a woman's voice rises from the second row. Tell it!

"Heard all the rhetoric. Heard everything they said they was going to do. What have they done? Bankrupted this country. Got us into a war needlessly! And doing nothing but telling us everything's all right. I'm going to go into a little more detail about that."

As he does, it becomes clear that Chapman, like speakers in many a county courthouse these days, is aiming not only to light a fire under the long-discouraged Democrats but also to pick apart the Republican messages that have proven so irresistible to folks, Democrats included, in places like Wilkes.


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Bob Moser is a contributing writer at The Nation, and is the editorial director of The Nation Institute's Investigative Fund.

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View:
DNC strategy will sadly fail
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Aug 15, 2007 12:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Howard Dean's meteroic rise so threatened beltway wackos that it became necessary to gut his exciting campaign that feasted on his ability to generate grassroots support while rejecting failed national strategies. His resurrection at DNC was a surprise and no doubt pissed off the wackos anew, but true to his soul he eagerly strove to restore the party to its former heights when liberal and progressive values were lauded rather than impugned. His success is documented but will never be formally adopted because his vision extends beyond the kneejerk and must be implemented to overcome 27 years of neocon horseshit that commenced with Reagan. Hillary is a pariah and the worst nightmare the Democrats face. If nominated, she will bring every dropout Republican to the polls and the result will be more division of the type we are experiencing with Bush and probably worse. Dean's good grassroots work will be lost in vain and he will be villified again by the wackos while Democrats wait for another shot in 2012. Sadly, DNC will be emasculated and there will be no worthy successor to Dean. Intramurally, the beltway wackos will likely prevail despite losing the presidency in '08 and/or the thin majotities in Congress and it will result in more failed campaigns. Who loses? Us, and Dean will have done all that he could to prevent it. Here, here Howard-you're a good man and deserve better!

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Indiana and John Edwards
Posted by: dustinblythe on Aug 15, 2007 4:58 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in Indiana, our Party chair has said that no DNC chair has showed more concern or support for Indiana than Howard Dean. From upgrading our online voter file to hiring field organizers to holding campaign training sessions for mayoral candidates the DNC has helped us every step of the way. What does a mayoral race have to do with the 2008 elections? A lot, if you have a phalanx of trained, organized candidates who know how to target, deliver a concise and disciplined message and who can mobilize Democrats. Our mayoral training had 180 candidates. Not all will win, but imagine 180 newly trained community leaders fanned out over Indiana working for the Democratic Party.

To my mind, one of the biggest proponents of the "50 State Strategy" is John Edwards. If you look at the website for his activist/volunteer group One Corps, www.onecorps.com, you will see at least three chapters in every state, even Idaho and Utah. Sen. Edwards is challenging his supporters to work for a positive change in their community, not just if they live in Iowa or New Hampshire but in all 50 states. He could just as easily asked them to carpool to Iowa or Nevada in January. To my knowledge, he is the only candidate with such an organization. We can no longer rely on the defeatist "Swing State Strategy", relying on a handful of big electoral vote states to counter the Plains and the South. We need to work in every state; after all, how can you expect someone to believe you will fight for them in Washington when you do not even send them any yard signs? (That happened in Indiana in 2004; the yard signs we received were either purchased from out of state or "borrowed" from Michigan. Sorry, Michigan)

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Howard Dean...The Republicans best friend
Posted by: bestofthebest on Aug 15, 2007 5:08 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time Howard Dean opens his mouth he puts his foot in it.
The only time he said something worthy was the day Saddam Hussein was captured. "It's a great day for the American people that this tyrant was apprehended. It's a great day for President Bush. I will give him this one day."

Sadly, most Americans either don't know he said this, or don't remember. I have it on videotape.

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I'll read this article later
Posted by: Boomerang on Aug 15, 2007 6:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But let me tell you this:

I live in Alabama. My vote here is so useless that last year I registered to vote in TN while I was finishing up school there just so I could have my vote possibly mean something (Corker won anyway because of some pretty ridiculous racial campaigning, but I digress). Now that I've moved back to Alabama, I find that I can't have a 10-word conversation about politics with people.

When I told one of my coworkers I had a degree in Political Science specializing in the Middle East, his immediate response was "The Middle East? I say bomb 'em all!" And he meant it. He actually meant that.

The 50-state strategy will never work because in places like the Deep South, voting Republican is generationally ingrained. People generally don't get their political views from their own deeply-held beliefs, they get them from their parents (it's true, trust me, I have a degree in Political Science). Alabama is so solidly red that the only possible way for Democrats to get elected here is to court the black vote (solid democrat), which then allows the Republicans to use race politics to whip up their base into a frenzy. Guess who turns out more?

The only thing that will turn the South blue again is for a major generational change to take place, something that would really force them to change parties. Unfortunately, support for the war here is still very high even though everyone knows it's going poorly and since the Democrats can't do anything about illegal immigration, they can't force a change on that front either. Alabamians view Hillary Clinton as THE DEVIL, and I'm being literally serious here. A friend of mine works in a Christian bookstore, and he gets customers all the time who chat him up about how Hillary Clinton is the anti-christ incarnate. It's terrifying.

So make it a 44-state strategy, or a 46-state strategy. Cut the South out entirely and defund all their federal funding so they can quit mooching off their rich northern cousins. This backwards, third-world country of a region needs a severe ass-kicking to get its act together. Coming here and saying "Vote Democrat!" is more likely to get you shot at and spit on than anything else.

P.S. Have I mentioned I hate this state?

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» Who is now in jail Posted by: Boomerang
» Organize in the South Posted by: rjgwood
The reason Red States and Red areas and Blue States are getting REDDER is simple !
Posted by: maxpayne on Aug 15, 2007 6:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For decades since Nixon's presidency, the Democrats have been caving in to the GOP. Of course states like Indiana and Alabama are going to vote red because the Democrats are not activating their real base. George Lakoff was correct when he pointed out that traitors such as the DLC which deserve to be SHUTDOWN make sure that the Democrats move to the "right" and hope that voters will see them as an "alternative" despite the me-too-ism BULLSHIT. The only problem is that it does NOT but instead strengthens the rightwing base while turning off our base. And then let us look at how the Democrats caved in to Bush during his second term:

1. Bankruptcy Overhaul
2. CAFTA
3. Government interfering on the Terri Schiavo matter
4. Military Commisions Act
5. "Protect" America FROM ITSELF Act - aka right for government to spy and fuck with you
6. Roberts and Alito
7. Funding for the war in Iraq
8. More tax relief for the wealthy/business ELITE
9. Gutting the CAFE standards
10. More KILL the environment laws

I'm sure there's plenty more where that came from but you get the idea.

Don't expect anything to turn purple except the blue states until the Democratic Party is REPAIRED from its SEVERELY CRIPPLED CAVE-IN PANSY STATUS !

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» There are THREE possibilities Posted by: american
The Party Structures are moving
Posted by: DrSuess on Aug 15, 2007 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I speak as a person who has been a moderate Republican for most of my 50 year lifetime. Long time Democrats cannot imagine how upsetting George Bush is to longtime moderate Republicans. I am one of those people who believe in a strong America. How is outsourcing strengthening America? How do you think American computer programmers felt when great depression unemployment rates were crushing the American computer programming industry in the early 2000’s. Bush did not help us- instead he kept the gates as open as possible to foreign programmers. This is just one example of how he betrayed Middle class Americans.

I believe in a balanced budget. This is a traditional Republican belief that is being turned upside down by Bush. Then there is George Bush’s pronounced anti- intellectual stance. Bush rewrites scientific knowledge to fit his big business mindset. How well do you think this plays with well educated middle class scientists?

Bush has reached out to Born Again Christians- the working poor- and has blatantly turned his back on the well educated middle class. Bush went into office with a Republican party that was the marriage of the wealthy and middle class. He reached out to the working poor (Born Again Christians) and turned his back on the middle class. Its not that he reached out to Born Again Christians that is the problem- it is the fact that he had betrayed the middle class.

Bush is breaking the traditional “wealthy-middle class” party structure that has defined the Republican Party for most of my lifetime. He is trying to get a total majority of the population by adding the working poor into the Republican mix. However, he is simultaneously working against the middle class. If you look at the Republican Party Presidential candidates- notice how far right they are. None of them are talking about helping the middle class. All of that discussion is on the Democratic side.

As a person with a moderate Republican mindset- I cannot stomach any of the Republican Presidential candidates. I would vote for anyone on the Democratic ticket before I would consider any of the Republican candidates.

I don’t call myself a Democrat yet- because I am annoyed at their spinelessness in letting Bush get away with unbelievable stuff. But the Republican party is heading out into what I call “law-law land”. I would rather leave the country than vote for anyone on the current Republican ticket.

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It's the economy, Stupid!
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Aug 15, 2007 9:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember that sign on Bill Clinton's desk? No Dem is "unelectable" if the economy tanks. No Republican is electable in that scenario.

What happens after '08 is anyone's guess, but who ever gets elected can run against lil' Bush for the next 20 years. Dems ran against Hoover up to the 1950s, and Hoover was an infinitely smarter, better administrator than that idiot we have in the White House.

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frank69
Posted by: frank69 on Aug 15, 2007 10:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am old enough to remember when the Republican party really stood for something. They were totally unlike the trolls of today. Those old time R's included Vandenburg, Bridges, Aiken, and Lodge. They put the good of the nation ahead of everything else.
The contrast with today's Thugs is stark to say the least. Corporate greed and criminality! "Thieves in High Places", as Jim Hightower wrote. Just compare President Eisenhower and even Richard Nixon to the current Imposter! Men compared to a spoiled little brat. The smallness of GWB never ceases to amaze me!

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» RE: frank69 Posted by: american
Permanent campaigning and the 50 state strategy
Posted by: drmflorida on Aug 15, 2007 1:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In 2004, I sat on my hands through the torturously long period from the begining of the primary campaigns until the national convention. "Can't afford to do too much too soon", "there is plenty of time", "the real campaign starts in July" is what I kept hearing. I repeatedly volunteered for inactive campaigns only to receive no replies.

I could and would have given 10-15 hours a week for the year before the election, but nobody was organized enough to use me. Ironically it reminded me of Dana Carvey's "Wouldn't be prudent" parody of George H. Bush during his downward spiral.

I finally heard from the Kerry campaign about a month before the election. Desperate to avoid the fate which befell us, I took 3 weeks off work and volunteered 12 hours a day running call centers for them. The campaign was being run by staffers from New York who didn't know where anything was and didn't understand the people they were trying to reach.

When it was all over, we packed everything down, I assume to wait another 4 years. I thought of my romanticized vision of the progressive socialist labor era, when organizing was 24x7x52, and when it was considered entertainment to go to a lecture hall and hear someone give a speech, much like the one exerpted in this article.

This is what we need. We need politics to be constant, fearless, and relevent. We need to disenfranchise the consultants and stop mincing words. We need to carefully heed the advise of the DLC, and then do the opposite. We need to remember how to win and have fun.

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