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Does the Netroots need a platform?

by: rossl

Tue Dec 08, 2009 at 17:07:48 PST

So I'm ask of all of you, would it benefit the liberal blogosphere to have some kind of a platform to unite around?  I'll keep it brief, since this should be more of a discussion than a lecture.

Let the navel staring begin!

There's More... :: (5 Comments, 279 words in story)  

So You Want To Form A New Party? First Steps

by: Archangel M

Sat Sep 12, 2009 at 14:21:22 PDT

This entry builds on what Something the Dog Said and rossl wrote in their own entries.  Before I get to the meat of my own text, I just want to summarize what each of the previous entries state.  Starting any political party, or building an existing one, is going to be a lot of hard work and progressives are going to face an uphill battle regardless of what we do.  If we're going to break away from the Democrats, however, it's worth the effort; there are parties such as the Progressives (currently in Vermont and Washington) and the Greens, among others, that have made substantial progress at local and state levels.

That's the short version of what Something's and rossl's entries have to say.  I highly recommend reading them both in full.  Now, on to my own contribution to this subject.  Because I want to provide a real-world context to the topic at hand, I'm going to pick an existing political party (The Progressives), though feel free to substitute your own.  I'm going to lay out some first steps that can be taken to get the ball rolling.

One more thing before I begin: know WHY you are forming a new political party, know what your goals are, and have realistic expectations about what you hope to accomplish.  Don't hold any illusions.  Unless either the Democrats or the Republicans implode, chances are you're not going to replace one of them on the national stage.  At most, and if you do things right, you'll force the Democrats to shift back to the left.  That's it.  If a new political party does rise to prominence, great, but that is only icing on the proverbial cake.  All you'll want to do is force one of the major parties to experience an ideological shift to the political left.  Expect at least a generation to pass before you get this result.  It was twenty years between the 1912 election, when Theodore Roosevelt led the Progressive Party and split the presidential election three ways (thus handing it to Democrat Woodrow Wilson) and that of 1932 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt led the New Dealers to power.  It was another generation before the Republicans built their party back up to the point where they could begin taking back political power in government.  Finally, don't let the progressive movement become subservient to your party - make the party subservient to the progressive movement.  David Sirota explains why far better than I can, so I'll let his words do it.

And now, without further adieu...

There's More... :: (11 Comments, 1295 words in story)  

Platform Fight: Activists Win Commitment to Guaranteed Care

by: dkmich

Mon Aug 11, 2008 at 08:20:29 PDT

(10 am - promoted by ek hornbeck)

If you are anything like me, you vacillate between: Yes, we can, I hope we can, and who the hell are we kidding.  

While I've always "sort of" been interested in politics, I fell in love with the good rebel, Dr. Dean in 04.  It was the first time in my life that I felt "we the people" had any power, let alone "the power".   After all, who can ever forget the What I Want to Know speech by our internet interloper.

Like Obama today for so many, Dean lead me to dailykos, activism, and the belief that we could make a difference; and then, he/we lost with the help of the corporate media and our very own Democratic Party.  With that loss, Kerry's 04 capitulation, and the on-going dismal performance of the minority and majority Dems in the House and Senate, I really began to doubt that we had any power at all.

So, you ask, what the hell does any of this have to do with health care?  The simple answer is sometimes we can make a difference.  (more)

There's More... :: (17 Comments, 255 words in story)  

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