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A New Moment?
The Grassroots and the Party, 1964 and 2008
by Laura Flanders
The
swirl of the primary season is intoxicating and the media love it. If
the ratings records set by the recent political debates are any
indication, the ongoing primary battle may yet save cable TV.
"Super
Tuesday" -- the night that was supposed to wrap everything up -- didn't
(for either party). Clearly, this extended nomination contest is
getting people excited, but will that excitement translate into
substantive change -- for Democrats in particular? The past offers some
hard-knocks lessons worth thinking about.
Tomgram: Laura Flanders, Whose Political Moment Is This?
"Not
long ago," began Wednesday's lead Los Angeles Times election piece by
Doyle McManus and Peter Wallsten, "political strategists viewed Super
Tuesday as a day that would likely crown the Republican and Democratic
presidential nominees, a 24-state extravaganza that would bring the
long primary campaign to an orderly conclusion. They were wrong." That
was pretty typical of the press coverage of what ABC had labeled a
"showdown coast to coast" and, while it wasn't wrong, it wasn't quite
right either.
After all, there already was a winner from this
primary season (other than Senator McCain): the media, which had
mustered its all, campaigned extravagantly coast to coast, and
installed "eye-popping technological wizardry" like CNN's MagicWall, "a
huge monitor upon which newsman John King could manipulate maps and
images with the poke of a finger as if handling an oversized iPhone."
The good news -- for cable TV in particular, which has been getting
splendid enough ratings off the "historic" primary season to generate a
"ratings war" -- is that it is now guaranteed to go on and on. Okay,
it's not "American Idol," but by November 4th, it is likely to be the
longest running continuous "reality show" on television, which isn't
bad either. As Charlie McCollum of the San Jose Mercury has written:
"Television executives have reacted to these [ratings] numbers the way
television executives always do when ratings spike. They have ordered
more episodes,' expanding the time devoted to the campaign." In fact,
media enthusiasm for the primary season, as I wrote recently, has
reached "feeding frenzy" proportions.
It seems that Democratic
voters have also ordered a few more "episodes" of our electoral reality
show. Host of RadioNation on Air America Radio Laura Flanders has spent
her time in recent years considering quite a different kind of
enthusiasm than the media one, an enthusiasm that has slowly been
rising from grassroots activism in and around the Democratic Party and
whose spirit she's caught in her book (just published in paperback),
Blue Grit: Making Impossible, Improbable, Inspirational Political
Change in America. Now, as the media revs up for the next set of
primaries leading to the two super-Conventions and a superduper
presidential election for "change" (which will put neither a Superman,
nor a Superwoman in the White House), she suggests we take a breath and
consider where change is really coming from and whether it will ever
actually arrive. Tom
A New Moment?
The Grassroots and the Party, 1964 and 2008
by Laura Flanders
The
swirl of the primary season is intoxicating and the media love it. If
the ratings records set by the recent political debates are any
indication, the ongoing primary battle may yet save cable TV.
"Super
Tuesday" -- the night that was supposed to wrap everything up -- didn't
(for either party). Clearly, this extended nomination contest is
getting people excited, but will that excitement translate into
substantive change -- for Democrats in particular? The past offers some
hard-knocks lessons worth thinking about.
Give this long
primary season credit: It has, at least, turned that overused word
"change" from a bumper slogan pooh-poohed by all knowledgeable pundits
into a fact-based phenomenon. In the closest thing the nation has seen
to a countrywide primary, first term Senator Barack Obama overcame
Hillary Clinton's double-digit leads in major states and national polls
to win a majority of states on February 5th and draw into a tight
battle over the delegate count. The two candidates closed out the
evening with their spinmeisters already talking up Beltway Tuesday --
the next catch-phrase friendly multiple-primary day -- while promising
more debates. Now, their operatives are off to Ohio for a March 4th
primary that everyone assumes will be crucial.
The chance to
be seen and heard in more than just a handful of quirky early-primary
states has already made a striking difference for the Illinois Senator,
who was the clear underdog when he entered the race. "What was a
whisper has turned into a chorus," Obama told his hometown crowd in
Chicago on Tuesday night.
But a whisper, many would like to
know, of what? For more than thirty years, Democratic voters like those
pouring out of their homes to get involved this primary season have
doggedly trooped to their polling places with no expectation of having
an actual impact. Young voters, poor voters, urban voters, anti-war
voters, women, people of color, lesbian and gay (LGBT) folk,
immigrants, the Democratic party's so-called base -- would turn out
and then be sent home. Come the general election, Democratic candidates
typically tacked right, ignoring those reliable, old blue-base voters.
Thanks to the tyranny of the two-party system, they could remain
confident that the base wasn't going to defect to the -- gasp! --
ever-more rightward-tacking GOP. And mostly, they were on the mark.
For
Democratic base-dwellers, in normal times there was only one party
season when anyone wanted to hear from them -- this one. Primaries are
the one period in the election cycle when contenders suddenly seek to
curry favor with the Party's most activist -- and progressive -- part.
That's one reason a primary season this long is significant; but, for
those voters, will it make any difference at the level of policy? The
most positive answer is perhaps.
Fuelled by frustration with
the way the Party's been conducting its business and propelled by
disgust at the policies of George W. Bush, base-level Party activists,
with help from liberal bloggers and others, have already pulled off an
organizing feat that's changed the face of the presidential race.
Helped by online databases and social-networking software, volunteers
can have new impact. Unpaid volunteers have been building attendance at
local meetings through their own voter-initiated websites in red and
blue states alike. The most significant result so far has been the
record turnout. Democratic turnout was up 100% in Iowa and South
Carolina, while Georgia witnessed its biggest turnout in a primary
since 1992.
The presence of a nominee who was once himself a
grassroots organizer and recognizes the value of such work, state by
state, has had its own transformative effect. Altogether, grassroots
organizers have made the candidacy of Obama, at one time a long-shot
nominee, more than viable. And that's pushed Party veteran Clinton
whose campaign-style is naturally more top-down and disciplined to
invest her resources heavily in "field." Before this Tuesday, the
candidates were both openly competing for the label "grassroots."
"We've put together a grassroots campaign," Hillary Clinton told a
rally the Friday before Super Tuesday. "We will call one million
Californians this weekend." Obama's northern Californian spokesperson
told reporters: "We are running the biggest field campaign in
California since Robert Kennedy in '68."
With the campaign
continuing, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton must still compete for
local support and influential endorsements. And, at the state level,
that's good news for progressives. Party flacks and the traditional
"black and blue" organizing machines of black churches and labor unions
are no longer influential enough to turn out sufficient voters.
Expanding their reach, both campaigns have been delving into
non-traditional territory for community support. In South Carolina, the
Obama campaign teamed up with barbers and the owners of beauty salons.
The candidates are also competing for support from ethnic groups they
never prioritized before -- Latinos, Asians, and Native Americans --
and everyone's competing over women and youth.
Remember 1964
"This
is a moment unlike any we've ever known," Obama said in his Super
Tuesday night speech. In spirit, he may turn out to be right, but there
are obvious echoes from the past. This is not the first time that the
Democratic Party has seen an upsurge in turnout, a newly expanded
electorate, and a new generation of trained and talented organizers
coming on the scene. In fact, 2008 bears a haunting resemblance to
1964, the last time the Party's political maps were remade.
Keelan
Sanders is executive director of the Mississippi Democratic Party in
Jackson, Mississippi. Until recently, Sanders was the only person on
its payroll and the Party's "headquarters" (a renovated family home on
a residential street) was open only part of the time; no presidential
candidate ever came to visit. In 2004, isolated Democratic voters paid
out of their own pockets to produce Kerry/Edwards yard signs. Today,
thanks to an investment of funds from the Democratic National
Committee, Sanders has a fulltime staff -- a beneficiary of DNC chair
Howard Dean's drive to revitalize the party in all fifty states. When I
asked him why he stuck with the Party so long, solo, Sanders responded
quick-as-a-flash: "Because of my grandmother."
Sanders'
grandmother was a member of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
In 1964, she risked her life to register African American voters in the
Deep South; then, she carpooled her way to Atlantic City, New Jersey,
as a Freedom Party delegate in hopes of taking a seat from
Mississippi's all-white delegation at the Democratic National
Convention. There, at the height of the civil rights era, she and the
vast majority of Freedom Party delegates were locked out.
Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Council (SNCC) organizer Hollis Watkins, who
still lives in Mississippi, remembers believing what he'd been told --
if black people registered enough voters, they'd be given a chance to
unseat the state's pro-segregation delegation. "It was like being told
to scale the walls to the roof of a building on fire, and doing it, and
then realizing there were no supporting beams beneath our feet,"
Watkins told me in 2006. "We wanted to believe it, we believed it, but
we were naïve."
In 1964, the party of President Lyndon Baines
Johnson wanted to talk about civil rights -- even sign the Civil Rights
Act -- and position itself as the party of desegregation, but it wasn't
ready to fight desegregation in its own ranks. Not yet. After a bitter
stand-off, the Democratic National Convention finally offered the
Freedom Democratic Party's leader, Fanny Lou Hamer, a seat where she
could observe the proceedings, but not vote.
Just four years
later, the picture had shifted significantly. The Voting Rights Act was
law and the southern delegations had been desegregated, but the power
of the old party machine hadn't passed to the grassroots activists
who'd forced the transformation. It remained bottled up at the top of
the Party structure.
Rather than overhaul state-level
infrastructures, Party leaders gradually made an end-run around them.
That's partly why state parties like Mississippi's have been in such
sad shape for so many decades. Among other changes, the party altered
the rules of the nomination process (and the convention) to emphasize
state-wide primaries -- now generally the norm -- taking power out of
the hands of local party bosses. Advertising themselves via television,
candidates could "run" campaigns by communicating directly with voters
without the help of embedded, state-level movements.
Actually
growing the Party's base seemed to scare the establishment. Whenever
the Democratic National Committee appeared on the verge of launching a
massive voter registration program, they backed off. Insiders who lived
through the period recall how in the 1980s, when Jesse Jackson's
Rainbow Coalition showed that massive numbers of new Democratic voters
could indeed be activated with just a little attention to the base, the
Party's major donors refused to fund such an effort (allegedly for fear
that any massive voter-registration drive would only push the Party
into Jackson's hands).
Today's "outsiders" are once again
working hard, organizing locally, and counting on being seated at their
Party's table. Whoever the nominee may be, he or she is guaranteed to
enter the general election stronger in terms of state-field operations
and possible resources than any Democratic candidate in decades. In no
small measure, it will be those "outsiders" the Party has to thank.
When Democrats regained control of Congress in 2006, Eli Pariser, the
director of the liberal mass membership group MoveOn.org, boasted of
the Democratic Party, "We bought it, we own it, we're going to take it
back." If a Democrat does indeed win in November (by no means a
certainty), Pariser isn't going to be the only one with bragging rights
-- or expectations.
Will the "Change" Election Be About Change?
The
key questions are: Will progressive activists use the continuing
primary race to raise solid policy demands about peace, justice, the
environment, and healthcare -- and will whoever turns out to be the
Democratic candidate actually listen? Let's keep in mind that those
hopeful base voters aren't doing all this work simply in order to get a
change of personnel in the White House. It's change in their lives and
their communities, as well as in the country at large that they need
and want. Even a shift of power in both chambers of Congress in
November 2006 has brought them precious little of that.
If
history offers any hints, real change relies on movements very much
like the one that, however inchoately, has slowly been forming, I
believe, just beyond our sight in these last years. This is, of course,
exactly the part of our political landscape that our media covers least
well and least often (and maybe those ranks of new organizers are
actually lucky for that).
It's often forgotten that the
conservative movement, sidelined by President Johnson's smashing defeat
in the 1964 election of the original conservative presidential nominee
Barry Goldwater, spent the next decade and a half largely out of the
limelight, building up its forces to challenge the Republican Party
establishment. Through the use of the new technology of that moment --
especially direct-mail fundraising -- and the mobilization of new
ground troops (evangelical churches) through cheap media (talk radio
and cable television), they found ways for outsider candidates to mount
effective primary challenges and rattle incumbents, while they moved,
increasingly triumphantly, from the local to the state to the national
level.
With the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980, the Right
had a storyteller in the White House who could re-tell America's tale
their way. His narrative threw out the 1960s and 1970s version of an
all-in-the-same-boat society. It declared government the enemy and
asserted that individuals (and more importantly corporations)
unfettered from government regulations were what made the country
great.
Reagan himself didn't deliver all that much beyond
that. It was in the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush years that the
Right secured the tax cuts, deregulation, and roll back of government
programs they had sought so long. Eventually, they did secure many of
their goals exactly because, in the 1980s, the gang that brought Reagan
to office didn't rest on their laurels, having elected a President.
They built their movement and mobilized every last resource, in season
and out, to change the national discourse and shift public opinion
inside the Beltway, in the media, and in the states.
Asked in
South Carolina last month which of the Democratic contenders he thought
Dr. King would have endorsed, Senator Obama responded, "He wouldn't
endorse any one of us." That's because King was building a movement
meant to hold all candidates -- and Presidents -- to account. It was
that movement which made it impossible for LBJ to try, however feebly,
to accommodate Fanny Lou Hamer at the 1964 convention, that movement
which literally changed the faces in politics, that movement which made
the candidacy of Barack Obama possible, as the later Feminist movement
would Hillary Clinton's. It's that movement the Reagan-Right learned
from so well and today's progressives would do well not to forget.
The
swirl of the primary season is intoxicating -- and the media love it.
But real change happens on a different timetable. If you're looking for
estimated times of arrival, the problem is: We don't know that
timetable yet.
Laura Flanders is the author of Blue Grit:
Making Impossible, Improbable, Inspirational Political Change in
America, just out in paperback from Penguin Books, and the host of
RadioNation on Air America Radio. For more information on her click
here.