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Learning From Lamont (cont’d)

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One side will say Lamont lost because he talked only about the war and therefore alienated a mythical, pro-war "center" even though polls show most Americans oppose the Iraq War. The other side will say he lost because he stopped talking about the war entirely. What really happened?
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Why the Specific Criticisms Are Off Base

The idea that we somehow abandoned the Iraq message after the primary is a fairly tale. Yes, we broadened the message after the primary, with Lamont giving speeches on health care, economic development, energy and education. But the campaign never, ever got away from Iraq. Observers outside of Connecticut will cite a decrease in the media stories about Lamont and the war during the late summer and early fall—but that brings up a famous parable: If a tree falls in the woods, and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? Similarly, if a candidate keeps talking about an issue and the media refuses to cover it because reporters believe it is “old news,” can that candidate be faulted for not talking about the issue? I would say no. Our ads always focused on Iraq, Lamont always talked about the war and the campaign held war-focused events up until the last day. Though some armchair quarterbacks on the left don’t want to acknowledge these facts, they are the facts.

The idea that running the entire primary was a mistake because Lieberman is supposedly more powerful now is laughable. Lieberman is a politician who drew most of his power not from his committee assignments or legislative prowess, but from his position as a media-ordained spokesman for the Democratic Party who had the “conscience” to attack Democrats with Republican talking points. This is why President Bush and Vice President Cheney so aggressively backed Lieberman. He wasn’t any old Iraq War promoter, he was crucial to pro-war conservatives because he was seen as a Democratic mouthpiece pushing the war and undermining the most credible war critics on the left.

Now, after the primary, Lieberman does not have this special platform anymore. He can never again purport to speak for the Democratic Party, because he no longer even has a nominal claim to actually being a Democrat. He officially left the Democratic Party when he ran under his own party in the general election, and his candidacy relied primarily on Republican votes, money and institutional support. That means while he can still be a gadfly and still draw attention to himself, his days of being able to fundamentally damage the image of the national Democratic Party are over.

The senator’s post-election anger suggests he intimately understands just how much power and credibility he has lost. His victory speeches on election night and the day after were laced with rage. Far from being magnanimous or humble, he used the occasion to attack the majority of Connecticut voters who voted against him as representing the “extreme.” He then issued the political equivalent of pro-wrestler threats, reiterating to Democrats that he will now be even more “independent” (read: Republican) than ever. His campaign website now features one giant link across the top of the page—a link to a blogged screed by former Christian Coalition official Marshall Wittman that breathlessly attacks progressives and bloggers for having the nerve to challenge Lieberman. (What a gracious winner you are Joe—really, you stay classy Joe Lieberman.)

But beyond stripping one man of the platform through which he preens his vanity and derives his power, the primary more importantly sent a message to other Democrats that undermining the progressive cause carries a price. The primary also served to frame the debate on the most pressing national security issue in a generation to the point where Lieberman, one of the nation’s chief war apologists, was relegated to campaigning across Connecticut saying “no one wants to bring the troops home more than me.”

The concept that Lieberman’s victory represents the triumph of faux “centrism” and a rebuke of the anti-Iraq-War movement is so silly it’s hard to treat it seriously, especially in the face of red-state victories by war critics like Sherrod Brown, Claire McCaskill and Jon Tester, and in light of Rahm “Candidates Shouldn’t Talk About the War At All” Emanuel delivering an election-night victory speech acknowledging that antipathy to the war was the central reason Democrats won. As the Associated Press confirms this week, Lieberman’s margin was provided by a segment of voters who are strongly against the war, but who (wrongly) believed Lieberman is strongly against the war.

Their misperception was no accident. Immediately after the primary, Lieberman unleashed an ad campaign to portray himself as anti-war, airing an ad where he says to the camera “I want to help end the war in Iraq.” He made these claims even as he attacked all proposals to end the war. As historian Rick Perlstein noted in In These Times, this was reminiscent of Richard Nixon’s similar campaign in 1969 when he delivered a national address claiming “I want to end the war” in Vietnam, just as he was intensifying the war.

Thus, Lieberman won the election not by defending the Iraq War, but by successfully convincing a key segment of voters that he was anti-war. That is, he won not by embracing faux “centrism” but by pretending to be a progressive.

For its part, the Lamont campaign worked overtime to try to debunk Lieberman’s confusion campaign. Our internal polling showed that somewhere between 12 and 15 percent of the population said they simultaneously opposed the war and supported Lieberman’s position on the war—a signal that Lieberman’s confusion campaign was working. We responded forcefully, airing TV commercials, radio commercials and Web ads pounding away at the fact that Lieberman’s anti-war rhetoric was hiding his pro-war agenda. Our closing ad, for instance, ended with Lamont stating: “A vote for Joe Lieberman is a vote for more war.” That the message didn’t get out to enough people is a commentary not on our campaign’s blindness to Lieberman’s strategy—but simply on Lieberman’s own impressive talents for persuasively lying to voters about his position on the war with a straight face.

Finally, there is the myth circulating that Lamont’s loss means the Internet is not a potent political weapon. Again, this is utterly silly. With the help of top Internet political strategist Tim Tagaris, we raised millions of dollars online, created the revolutionary Family, Friends and Neighbors tool, and brought in thousands of volunteers through the Internet. Sure, it wasn’t enough to overcome the aforementioned structural challenges we faced—but without the netroots and Internet activism, the Lamont candidacy never would have gotten off the ground in the first place.

Make no mistake. Washington pundits and career politicians attack the “netroots” because the rise of the Internet threatens to undermine their relevance and expose them to unwanted grassroots pressure. But politicians who write off the achievement of this growing political force do so at their peril. A record 86,000 new voters registered during the campaign, turnout approached all-time highs, and, as the New York Times noted, “Lamont’s campaign buoyed thousands of new voters and volunteers, and many of them helped the Democratic candidates in competitive House races.” A big part of all of that was the Internet, with the Lamont campaign proving once again that this is a medium on the rise, not decline.

A year ago, Ned Lamont had a zero percent name recognition in Connecticut. He was just a guy with some business experience and a lot of money. But he said enough was enough and walked into the fire—the fire of negative attack ads, Establishment scorn and party abandonment—to help give voice to the millions of Americans who wanted to see an end to the War in Iraq.

Even those ideology-free politicos who see politics as sport can appreciate how astounding our achievement was, just in terms of sheer electoral power. A candidate who was on the statewide general election stage for 12 weeks convinced roughly 450,000 voters to cast their vote against a 36-year career politician wielding 100 percent name ID and a massive lobbyist-funded warchest. When the votes for all the candidates were counted, the majority of Connecticut had voted against Lieberman. While not enough of that majority anti-Lieberman vote supported Lamont, no one could deny that a very powerful message had been sent to both Lieberman and the country.

I expect the Bash Ned Lamont campaign to intensify over the next few weeks, with the right already working to smear him and his supporters like they smeared George McGovern. Let’s face it—in the the face of victories by people like Ohio’s Sherrod Brown, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and a new group of economic populists in the House, the right (and particularly the shrinking faction of right-wing Democrats) need something, anything, to hitch their wagon to. It’s tough times these days for both Republicans and right-wing Democrats — and tough times bring ugly desperation and historical revisionism.

But for movement progressives, the reality is clear. We need more Ned Lamonts. We need more leaders who have the courage to mount primary challenges to anti-progressive Democrats like Lieberman. We must also understand that in fighting these fights, we are going to lose more than we win. That is what happens when you challenge incumbents. But both the wins and the losses are important, because they all help build a longer-lasting movement that transcends any one election cycle.

I say all of this not as a “petty partisan polarizing negative name-calling finger-pointing extremist” — all terms Joe Lieberman used repeatedly to characterize Lamont supporters and war critics in general. I say it as a citizen interested far less in the ascendance of one party or another than in actual changes in policy, results and outcomes. Think about it for a moment. Lieberman’s victory is not a victory for any issue or policy. He all but admits this when he says his campaign is a victory for a nebulous and undefined “bipartisanship” rather than for any position or policy. His victory, in short, was a victory by one man, for one man.

On the other hand, Lamont’s candidacy was never about the candidate, it was always about an issue—the Iraq War. It is clear that even in defeat, his candidacy affected that issue in a more profound and constructive way than Lieberman has ever affected any issue in three decades on the public payroll.

In the recent edition of In These Times, I wrote a cover article pointing out that no matter what happened on November 7, the real fight in American politics begins on November 8. Lamont’s heroic campaign may have ended, but the movement that fueled his candidacy has a lot of work to do, whether it is to force the Democratic Party to use its new majority to press a change in this war’s course, or a change on all the other issues that wait to be addressed.

The hope is that the huge number of ordinary people who stepped up and supported Lamont and other progressives this year will see the campaign for what it was: a major formative step in a growing movement that has a very real opportunity to profoundly change America for the better.

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David Sirota is a senior editor at In These Times and author of the bestselling books The Uprising and Hostile Takeover. He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com.

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  • Reader Comments

    Excellent, excellent article! As one of those internaughts who contributed to Lamont early in the campaign, and as a person who regularly, in the early days, wrote in Kos and elsewhere exaclty the sentiments you have just expressed on the subject of the leadership of the Democratic Party, I am thrilled to read your comprehensive and cogent analysis. It was clear to me from Day One that the leadership of the Democratic Party was giving Lamont lip service only; and as time went on —as Reid failed to take any action to publicly support Lamont, and failed to tell the voters of Conn that Lieberman would be denied his committee assignments if he won— it was clear that The Usual Suspects were solidly lined up behind Lieberman and were quietly, stealthily, but quite unequivocally stabbing Lamont in the back.

    All of this would leave me feeling very glum indeed about the future of any change in Washington, even after the amazing victory of so many Democrats. Many if not most Democratis office-holders DO feed out of the Rahn Emmanuel/DLC trough; many of them seem to be entirely hand in glove with the Republicans, differing with them in name but hardly in principle.

    But there is hope. Nancy Pelosi has been a member of the “out of Iraq now” crowd ever since shortly after Murragh"s (sp?) announcement on this subject; and I note with considerable delight the comments by Sen. Elect Webb in todays’s NYT, promising to be an outspoken advocate of rapid if not instant withdrawal, even if the Democratic Party is not.

    Rahm Emmanuel and the DLC may still run the show. But with this election, which will have to be understood as a victory for Howard Dean (among others);  and with such new faces as Sherrod Brown and Sen. Webb, another point of view may be taking root in Washington.

    In any case, I for one, thought your piece was definitive, and am sending it to all my friends.

    I have only one suggestion. You talk about the “structural” problems of the Lamont campaign. That is undoubtedly a useful term, but the central fact of importance to Democratic readers is the betrayal of the Democratic Nominee by the leadership of the Democratic Party. If I were you, I would call those smug bastards by the name they deserve: traitors to the Democratic Party, betrayers of the Democratic voters of Connecticut.. And I would provide even more details of how these SOBS failed, again and again, to help Lamont, when their help very likely could have produced an entirely different result.

    Keep up the good work. We need more Washington analysts like you!

    Posted by Froggy2345 on Nov 10, 2006 at 3:28 PM

    The biggest lesson is to think two moves ahead.  This loss (and abandonment by the party) was heartbreaking - but the lesson to be learned from Joe is about power. He learned to think two moves ahead after the recount in 00, and he saw here that Repubs would vote for him by a 10-to-1 margin in the main election, and that Rahm & co. would support him, afraid not to if they won. We will not be able to control Joe - but NED SHOULD RUN for Congress in 08 or work with Dean. I’d be thrilled.  The real question is how to make the netroots hold them accountable *while they’re actually governing* - make every session a Macaca moment - and think about, for the next time, how to dual-market to our base (such as the Iraq ads) and to Republicans as well (such as my http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CuVJinlWQY ad).  Because with all of our success in getting huge numbers of Dems to vote for Ned and against Joe, which is incredible, we still made our candidate impossible for Repubs to vote for - it would’ve been like if the Repubs ran Rick Santorum against Joe instead - we would’ve voted for Joe. 
    Brian Felsen
    www.brianfelsen.com

    Posted by popom on Nov 10, 2006 at 5:00 PM

    After only two days of canvassing for Lamont I found out that there are a lot of people who voted for Lieberman who really didn’t like him.  Most of their responses were about how scary the outside world was and no matter how crappy Joe was they voted for him only for the fact that he had experience.  They couldn’t chance the Senate seat on a new guy.  No matter how I tried to suggest that maybe it was Joe’s performance that contributed to the scariness they still held their noses and voted Joe.  It was pretty depressing.  But I wouldn’t have traded the experience for the world and it was a complete honor to work for such a stand up guy. 

    Lamont for President.

    Posted by lisadawn82 on Nov 10, 2006 at 6:08 PM

    Yeah - that’s Connecticut for you - liberal, progressive - but small-town-minded.  The Youtube ad I made tried to go right at the heart of that - maybe there’s little better Ned could’ve done, but I hope we haven’t heard the last of him - or of the CT netroots movement!

    Posted by popom on Nov 10, 2006 at 6:12 PM

    Imagine if Ned Lamont’s campaign had taken $387,000 out in “petty cash” in the 12 days before the primary.  Anne Kornblut and Jennifer Medina would have been on it like Doberman pinschers.  They’d have run down every name in those FEC disclosures.  They’d have forced him from the race.  His primary victory would have been illegitimate, etc.

    The Washington establishment would have had press conferences with Public Citizen and Common Cause and what else. 

    Christopher Shays, author of the Shays Meehan Campaign Finance reform, who called Lieberman a “national treasure” during the election, would have gone after Lamont every day of the week. 

    Its simple:  there are no campaign finance laws if campaigns are allowed to call it “petty cash” and take the money out by the hundreds of thousands of dollars.  There are no laws against bribing politicians if the money can be taken out as petty cash. 

    But what did Russ Feingold (McCain Feingold campaign finance reform)  have to say about it?  Hmmm?  Or Marty Meehan, who I believe didn’t even have an opponent? 

    I’m hoping Lamont invests another million to get some forensic accountants and P.I.s on the leads already in the FEC disclosures with more to come in future general election disclosures.  The FEC would have to investigate a candidate claiming a $387,000 loophole no matter what but they probably have limited resources and theres a lot to nail down.  Probably a lot of corrupt Connecticut Democratic pols are involved.

    Posted by Karen444 on Nov 10, 2006 at 6:42 PM
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