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    The Democratic Revolution Is Now: the grassroots movement is on the ground and the domestic policy that will define Democrats in 2012 is on the House floor

    The Democratic Party’s hesitance to fully embrace the president’s American Jobs Act isn’t just another example of the ever-powerful role big donors and the corporate lobby play in national politics; it’s a further demonstration that Democrats are scared, lazy and deaf to the American public’s call to end the “Affluent Only” political caste system we live in.

    A recent article in The Hill reported that Democrats in the House have been reluctant to co-sponsor the American Jobs Act because it was drafted by the White House, “which should have stream-lined the proposal for floor consideration without official endorsements.”

    Obviously, arguing what “should have” happened in the Teapublican-controlled House of Representatives is no more productive than teaching trigonometry to a turtle. But whatever excuses they want to make, the truth is that Democrats hoped to avoid attaching their name to a bill that Republicans have already lambasted as a another “stimulus bill” that “increases taxes on job creators.”

    And of course, Congress members are coming up on an election year, which means they have to explain their support of another “stimulus” and debunk the “job creators” myth both to constituents and, more importantly, to their corporate campaign donors.

    Clearly worried about the Republican-led backlash against the bill, Democrats in the Senate exempted those making $200,000 a year from the tax increases in Obama’s original plan and focused the increases on those making a million dollars or more a year. The move was purely political, as there isn’t a huge difference in public opinion between taxing the rich (66 percent approve) and taxing the super rich (73 percent approve), but it’s a difference that Republicans have been quick to exploit.

    (Fox News particularly likes to make the argument that individuals making $200,000 a year aren’t “rich.”)

    The fact is, money matters, and because millionaires, corporations and national political action committees have the most to spend, these big campaign contributors matter most of all. The American Jobs Act offends these political power players and has the potential to turn away the biggest sources of campaign contributions. If Democrats back the bill, they could be seen as biting the very big, very soft, and very powerful hands that feed them – not the hands that directly elect them, but the hands that fund the TV, radio and print advertisements, the rallies, the town hall meetings, the bus tours and the state-by-state campaign offices, staff and other resources that spread the word to the people who do elect them.

    Conventional wisdom says that no candidate can mount a powerful campaign against his or her opponent without the support of Big Business. The multi-billion-dollar lobbying apparatus in Washington has been generous to both parties, and making up for that lost revenue would be no small feat.

    That said, there is precedent for going in the other direction, for thinking of constituents first and Big Business last, for creating a truly grassroots movement that’s funded by the actual people who will cast their votes in the election. And there is a very recent precedent showing how successful such a campaign can be on a national level.

    I’m referring, of course, to Barack Obama.

    The half-term Senator of Illinois called on not only Democrats and Independents but also moderate Republicans across the country to show their support for a representative of the middle class, an advocate of change, a candidate who believed (perhaps idealistically, but not incorrectly) that Washington should serve the interests of the American people, not the D.C. lobbyists. By calling on each individual citizen to donate $3, $5, or $20 during his 2008 presidential campaign, Obama proved just how powerful a truly grassroots movement can be in a national campaign.

    He created a network of nearly 4 million total contributors. A quarter of his total contributions came from those giving less than $200. And he won. As a generally unknown freshman senator, Obama beat both Hillary Clinton – whose campaign was thought to be untouchable – and John McCain, both of whom were powerhouses in Congress and household names in America. And he did so by bucking historical trends and relying on individual donations instead of the large unions, corporations and political action committees to fund his campaign.

    Yes, Obama raked in millions from the Big Business lobby, but his top corporate contributor in the 2008 election cycle, Goldman Sachs, provided only $1 million out of nearly $750 million total contributions. Fifty-seven percent of Obama’s total contributions came from people donating less than $1,000. In contrast, the majority of McCain’s campaign (60 percent) was funded by contributions of $1,000 or more. Obama could have denied every big donor’s contributions and still outraised McCain by $56 million. Had McCain done the same, Obama would have outraised the Arizona Senator $377 million to $150 million.

    It’s not realistic or necessary to forego all large donations or all corporate donations, and that isn’t the point. The point is that big donors are no longer necessary for winning elections.

    The size of the supporter base is.

    What I’m advocating is a simple realignment of priorities.

    Rather than running a trickle-down campaign focused on wooing, begging and pandering to large donors, Democrats should push their agenda on the people; rally their constituents with bold stances on taxes, immigration, and economic recovery; encourage volunteerism and small contributions; and rely on the support of their followers to both fund and drive their campaigns. This is what Obama did in 2008. He made the people, every one of us, a part of the campaign, and that bottom-up grassroots organization helped him overcome impossible odds.

    It’s worth remembering that corporations donate to both Democrats and Republicans. The contribution gap may favor the GOP, but corporate executives who want representation in Congress will always contribute to candidates who are most likely to win – and winners are determined by the popularity of the candidates, the size and enthusiasm of the base, and power of the candidates’ message, priorities and agendas. If Democrats are willing to put in the extra leg work of selling themselves first to the American public, the corporate backers and big donations will come.

    This isn’t the chicken or the egg theory as it applies to campaign strategy. It’s what’s necessary if Democrats want to win in 2012 and take back this country from the under-regulated, over-represented and generally unchecked power of the top 1 percent in America. Luckily, they can have their cake and eat it too, as everything they need for success in 2012 and beyond is already in place.

    The American Jobs Act is the one policy that could define the Democratic Party throughout the 2012 election season. It does what the American people (of all political persuasions) have been demanding for the past three years – it creates jobs, increases taxes on the wealthy and reduces the deficit.

    If Democrats embrace the bill, that will further demonstrate to the American electorate that the Democratic Party is not beholden to Big Business. And if doing so means corporations will contribute less to House representatives, Senators and congressional candidates running for election in 2012, so be it. That too can and should be used as yet another reason to elect Democrats.

    They may be worried about supporting a bill that Republicans have vowed to defeat, but that too is misguided. The success of the bill is irrelevant. Democrats will send a very strong message to the American electorate and draw a stark line in the sand between Democrats and Republicans if they are willing to support job-creating legislation even when the bill is unlikely to pass in the Republican-controlled House, and even if it risks offending big donors.

    Risking the abandonment of corporate fundraisers in the interests of the American people, the national debt and the U.S. economy isn’t now and likely never will be a reason to vote against a candidate seeking public office. Big money resembles everything that Americans hate about politics, as it goes to the heart of every skeptic’s argument that “your vote doesn’t matter,” “nothing ever changes in Washington,” and “there’s no difference between Republicans and Democrats.”

    Politics does matter, things can change, and there is a difference. The Democratic Party’s full, unrepentant embrace of the American Jobs Act would prove it.

    The grassroots movement Democrats will need to compensate for the potential loss of corporate backing in 2012 is already in place, and the call for economic equality, though not so easily defined as the Women’s Suffrage or Civil Rights movements, is nonetheless spreading.

    The Occupy Wall Street protests already have succeeded in creating a national dialogue about the effects on Main Street of the unchecked power of millionaires and corporations on Wall Street. In a matter of weeks, the “99 percent” movement has spread to more than 100 cities across the country, demonstrating to officials in D.C. that the future leaders of America will not be elected for being corporate-funded shills, but for actually, honestly and aggressively representing the masses whose votes sent them to Washington in the first place. 

    The battle is already won. The uprising has already begun.

    If Democrats can remember that they were elected by the 99 percent to represent the 99 percent, and if they back legislation that reflects that commitment, the 1 percent will be banging down the door trying to contribute to their campaigns – because everyone wants to be represented in Congress, and everyone deserves to be represented in Congress.

    Comments

    As I understand it, Democrats have been trying to raise lots of money from small donors.  I seem to get a couple of such solicitations each week.  Unfortunately, those small Democratic donors are now (a) poor and (b) massively disillusioned with Obama.


    ... and (c) have already responded asking why Obama would even ask for our few measly scheckels when he is expected (like last time) to take obscene amounts of money from Wall Street and others along with all strings attached? You see, I can't afford to outbid Wall Street in an auction.


    Obama is in major trouble.  A majority of Americans now, for the first time, blame him for our economic problems.  He is also on the verge of irrelevance.   Conservatives despise him and progressives and liberals pay little attention to him.  America is in the process of tuning him out.  He appeals only to the most meekly compromising of bureaucrats.   Nobody with any heart or passion looks to him as a leader.   I don't really see much that he can do right now, because he seems to lack the stomach for the kinds of dramatic changes he needs to make and risks he needs to take.   But anyway, I would recommend some steps:

    1. He needs to issue a major and high profile mea cupla.  He needs to take responsibility for the egregious strategic and moral errors he made in 2010 and 2011, and announce a complete change in direction.  He needs to repudiate debt hysteria and the Wall Street money barons who are behind it, and chart an entirely new course based on work, prosperity, equality and justice.  He needs to stop addressing himself to Republicans and begin addressing himself to the majority of Americans who are not Republicans.

    2. He needs to fire Tim Geithner, Eric Holder, Geoffrey Immelt and others on his staff, and bring in a new team.  He should recognize publicly that Americans can have no faith in the progress of prosperity, eqality and justice so long as these individuals are in charge of their respective departments.

    3.He needs to go nuclear on the Republican party, and denouce them as the twisted and implacable enemies of human decency, justice and prosperity that they are.


    Actually, 70 percent of Americans still blame Bush and his policies for the current economic conditions. Obama's at 53 percent, according to polls. 

    http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/09/21/poll-majority-of-america...

    The "major and high profile mea culpa" IS the American Jobs Act. It focuses the nation's attention on solutions, which the Republican Party are opposed to. It contributes to solving the country's debt issues (The American Jobs Act reduces the annual deficit). It draws a line in the sand between his vision of the future and that of Republicans. One wants to further deregulate the markets that created the recession; one wants to protect consumers and invest in infrastructure, green technology and education.

    You have three suggestions. What policy should Obama use to accomplish them? Rhetoric won't work alone, obviously. He can't prove himself as a job creator if he doesn't try to create jobs. He can't chart a new course without a chart. He can't regain national support simply by firing people (he would need a plan, too). The American Jobs Act compared to the Republicans' "Real American Jobs Act" actually does nothing to help the unemployed, the underemployed, or the people living in poverty. As far as I can tell, Obama IS going "nuclear" on Republicans, as his plan contrasts quite starkly with their ideas, their policies, and their ideology. 


    The "major and high profile mea culpa" is the American Jobs Act.

    I think you misunderstand what I mean by a "mea culpa".  A mea cupla by Obama would  require that he address the nation in some way, list in detail the many errors he has made, and take full responsibility for those errors.  At this point, the only way Obama can build any kind of foundation for regaining the trust and confidence of Americans is that he gives clear evidence that he actually knows what he has done wrong.

    It draws a line in the sand between his vision of the future and that of Republicans.

    Obama has never once presented a comprehensive statement of his vision of the future, at least not one that is compelling to progressives.  His lack of success in mobilizing people to follow him can be tied directly to the fact that nobody really knows what the Obama vision of the American future looks like.  I think there are more windmills in it, and it's supposed to be a future where we all get along, but otherwise it's a bit vague

    As far as I can tell, Obama IS going "nuclear" on Republicans, as his plan contrasts quite starkly with their ideas, their policies, and their ideology.

    You and I just seem to have vastly different conceptions of what it would mean to take a strident line against the Republicans.

    Right now there seems to be a huge gap between the majority of Americans and those who view America from the Washington and major media plane.  I listened to the Diane Rehm show on Friday and was stunned by the total disconnect between the complacent and establishment-oriented patter of Washington pundits, and their major-party horserace obsessions, and the roiling political and intellectual ferment and disaffection that is taking place across the country.   I worried that it was just me.  But the initial calls that came into the show were on the theme of "What in the world are you out of touch people talking about?"

    We have people on the streets right now, in case you haven't noticed.  Obama needs to figure out how to connect with something deeper, or he will increasingly be seen as irrelevant and out-of-touch.  Americans of many stripes are increasingly convinced that greedy overlords have destroyed our prosperity and are stealing our future.  What side is Obama on in this fight?


    Thanks for posting, Muddy. Nice piece. I agree that web-fundraising, which Obama utilized very effectively in 2008, has great potential to change the balance of corporate donations.

    It has some limitations, however. It works extremely well for celebrity candidates like Obama or (shudder) Sarah Palin. Sharron Angle exploited Fox to raise a lot of money that way in 2010. But I suspect that it's much less effective for your average congressperson who is unknown outside his or her district. There may not be a large enough pool of donors. I also worry that the Super Pacs are going to kick the asses of the web donors.

    Regardless, I hope that Democrats do distance themselves from big business.


    they may be worried about supporting a bill that Republicans have vowed to defeat, but that too is misguided.

    I know. I agree.

    But this entire 'movement' still might boil down to this:


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