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Populist Reform of the Democratic Party

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KoKo

(84,711 posts)
Sat Dec 20, 2014, 05:52 PM Dec 2014

Matt Stoller: "Why the Democratic Party Acts The Way It Does" [View all]

By Matt Stoller, who writes for Salon and has contributed to Politico, Alternet, The Nation and Reuters. You can reach him at stoller (at) gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at @matthewstoller. Originally published at Medium

A book review of “The New Democrats and the Return to Power” by Al From
Posted on November 9, 2014 by Yves Smith at "Naked Capitalism"

There is no end to the whining from Democratic activists after a rotten election, and no end to finger pointing after legislative defeats on contentious questions. This story in the Washington Post is the tell-all of the 2014 wipe-out, featuring the standard recriminations between the President and Congress. In it, the chief of staff of the Senator Majority Leader Harry Reid, David Krone, attacks the White House. “We were never going to get on the same page… We were beating our heads against the wall.” The litany of excuses is long. Democratic candidates were arrogant. The White House failed to transfer money, or stump effectively. The GOP caught up in the technology race, or the GOP recruited excellent disciplined candidates.

Everything is put on the table, except the main course — policy. Did the Democrats run the government well? Are the lives of voters better? Are you as a political party credible when you say you’ll do something?

This question is never asked, because Democratic elites — ensconced in the law firms, foundations, banks, and media executive suites where the real decisions are made — basically agree with each other about organizing governance around the needs of high technology and high finance. The only time the question even comes up now is in an inverted corroded form, when a liberal activist gnashes his or her teeth and wonders — why can’t Democrats run elections around populist themes and policies? This is still the wrong question, because it assumes the wrong causality. Parties don’t poll for good ideas, run races on them, and then govern. They have ideas, poll to find out how to sell those ideas, and run races and recruit candidates based on the polling. It’s ideas first, then the sales pitch. If the sales pitch is bad, it’s often the best of what can be made of an unpopular stew of ideas.

Still, you’d think that someone, somewhere would have populist ideas. And a few — like Zephyr Teachout and Elizabeth Warren — do. But why does every other candidate not? I don’t actually know, but a book just came out that might answer this question. The theory in this book is simple. The current generation of Democratic policymakers were organized and put in power by people that don’t think that a renewed populist agenda centered on antagonism towards centralized economic power is a good idea.

The book, however, is not written by a populist liberal reformer. It’s written by one of the guys who put the current system in place. And it’s a really good and important story. The New Democrats and the Return to Power is the book, and Al From is the man who wrote it. From was one of the key organizers of this anti-populist movement, and he lays out his in detail his multi-decade organizing strategy and his reasons for what he did.

Now, of course it’s an exaggeration to say that Al From created the culture of the governing class in the modern Democratic Party. But not by much. Don’t take it from me, take it from Bill Clinton. In 2000, at Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt’s Hyde Park residence, Clinton said of From, “It would be hard to think of a single American citizen who, as a private citizen, has had a more positive impact on the progress of American life in the last 25 years than Al From.” Clinton overdoes the rhetoric sometimes, but not in this case. From helped put Clinton in the White House.

So who is Al From?

Most people who consider themselves good Democrats don’t know the name Al From, though political insiders certainly do. He was never a cabinet member. He worked in the White House, but in the 1970s, for as a junior staffer for Jimmy Carter’s flailing campaign to stop inflation. He’s never written a famous tell-all book. He hasn’t ever held an elected office, his most high-profile role was as a manager of the domestic policy transition for the White House in 1992, which took just a few months. He doesn’t even have a graduate degree. From fits into that awkward space in American politics, of doer, organizer, activist, convener, a P.T. Barnum of wonks and hacks. Such are the vagaries of American political power, that those who are famous are not always those are the actual architects of power. Because From, a nice, genial, and idealistic business-friendly man, is the structural engineer behind today’s Democratic Party.

To give you a sense of how sprawling From’s legacy actually is, consider the following. Bill Clinton chaired the From’s organization, the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) and used it as a platform to ascend to the Presidency in 1992. His wife Hillary is a DLC proponent. Al Gore and Joe Biden were DLCers. Barack Obama is quietly an adherent to the “New Democrat” philosophy crafted by From, so are most of the people in his cabinet, and the bulk of the Senate Democrats and House Democratic leaders. From 2007–2011, the New Democrats were the swing bloc in the U.S. House of Representatives, authoring legislation on bailouts and financial regulation of derivatives. And given how Democrats still revere Clinton, so are most Democratic voters, at this point. The DLC no longer exists, but has been folded into the Clinton’s mega-foundation, the Clinton Global Initiative, a convening point for the world’s global elite that wants to, or purports to want to, do good. In other words, it’s Al From’s Democratic Party, we just live here.

Much More (scroll down a bit link) at..........

http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2014/11/matt-stoller-democratic-party-acts-way.html
22 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Really lays out what has happened to the Democratic Party very nicely. djean111 Dec 2014 #1
Who will be able to stop the "bi-partisan grand bargain". n/t PoliticAverse Dec 2014 #2
Real Partisans, that's who Demeter Dec 2014 #7
Gotta Keep our Voices Out There..and make sure they are Heard...... KoKo Dec 2014 #10
Only my lifetime Demeter Dec 2014 #12
It started in the 60's ...Beginning of Reform... KoKo Dec 2014 #18
Yes, that is why they are so antagonistic towards all those people. They are a threat sabrina 1 Dec 2014 #13
I know...it seems he's had a "turn" in his thinking. KoKo Dec 2014 #14
Populism is Working For The Middle Class Cosmic Kitten Dec 2014 #19
If social security or medicare is cut Enthusiast Dec 2014 #3
The sounds of "dots Connecting" fredamae Dec 2014 #4
They're all convinced they need Big Money to win, and Jackpine Radical Dec 2014 #6
Well, it seems clear to me fredamae Dec 2014 #15
Too many Democratic representatives are part of the system. We can't advance if we don't make rhett o rick Dec 2014 #5
wow...this says it all, doesn't it? antigop Dec 2014 #8
I know....it was an interesting, informative read, and an "Eye Opener." KoKo Dec 2014 #9
a Better Way, not the Third Way. Yes! nt antigop Dec 2014 #17
simply put, it's because they're now republicans Doctor_J Dec 2014 #11
kick nt antigop Dec 2014 #16
Framing and Narratives... Cosmic Kitten Dec 2014 #20
HUGE K & R !!! - THANK YOU !!! WillyT Dec 2014 #21
Thank You, Willy T.... KoKo Dec 2014 #22
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