Daily Kos

Hackett, Control, Risk-taking and the Democratic Party

Tue Feb 14, 2006 at 05:46:10 PM PDT

I was one of those people who supported Paul Hackett's run for Senate in Ohio. I am not from the state. Therefore, this may seem odd that I would even care to have a horse in the race. However, let's start off by dispelling some myths. I didn't support Hackett because I thought he was or was not progressive. I didn't support him because of his policies. I didn't even support him because he was an Iraqi vet. I supported him because he was a new idea. One, which as an outsider to politics, I think the Democratic Party needs desperately to find. When I came to this blog in late 2004, what interested me was that Kos stated what I felt privately: The Democratic Party had lost its way. It's not about triangulation, being on the left, left of center or moderate. Indeed, I have repeatedly said openly that I am in fact a moderate. But, this isn't for me about moderation, conservativism, or being liberal. It's about having two strong political parties because one powerful party controlling everything always leads to disaster.

More below about my thoughts (for what they are worth)

First, let me say that I am a moderate. If you want to do the issues approach, I am probably a follower of the Powell Doctrine in foreign policy mixed in with some Clinton's belief on foreign policy. We can't do everything, we should do something, but when we do it, we should do it with such overwhelming force that we could fight two wars. My opposition of Iraq flowed from this moderate stance. Similarly, if you were to ask my opinion of such divergent issues as abortion, civil rights, gay rights, in all case, I believe there is a middle ground toward incremental change and protection of rights. This may not make me the most liberal guy here, but where I share connections to the left is that I know which values butter my bread.

In the last few years, I have watched as what I thought were moderate values shift under the quicksilver of meaningless word shifts between what is considered liberal or conservative. The truth is there are no more liberals and conservatives in this country. Just a hodgepodge of issues and teams. The team I am on- is the Democractic Party. Yet, for a long while I have realized something is wrong with my party. It's not a wrongness of ideas. Most, if pressed, can give you great ideas. It's a wrongness of execution, resolve, and yes, character.

Where, I thought Hackett appealed was that, whatever you thought of his opinion, you respected it. You could call him hothead, but that to me was better than being bland and not capable of generating buzz. We live in a pop culture society- the more the politicos ignore this fact, the more I feel we will lose. This is the new idea that Hackett brought to the table. He reminded us that Clinton didn't win due to issues- he won due to personality.

I read a great post on another blog- about how George Bush has a cult of personality. And this is true. But, personality, in and of itself, is not a bad thing. For some Democrats, I think they see any charismatic appeal as a sign that someone is not legitimate, and has not proven their bona fides. I think we need to understand there are differing approaches that appeal to voters in different ways. What Hackett would have been an opportunity to show - was what exactly that means.

We need to experiment. And, yet, we have a leadership, both off and online that seems only capable of believing in experimentation in only the most rhectorical sense.

I do applaud Kos's support of a challenge to Lieberman. The reason being that I support this challenge as a means toward seeing how the party can exert party discipline on wayward leaders. But, on other areas, the party needs to also experiment. To take risks. In poker, one learns that if one is too predictable (as the Democrats often are) then your opponents (in this case the Republicans) can use your own psychology against you. The point here is not to take all risks, but to take some risks. And, time and again, whether it was coming out against Alito when it mattered (which was after his nomination, and not at the hearings or duing the vote) or it was on a myriad of other issues the leadership has been afraid of risk. Nothing can be gained at this point with being afraid of risk.

I thik the party smells blood in the water with Republican scandals. They believe that a combo of policy wonkery and the scandals will be enough to carry the tide. I hope they right- so that our long national nightmare can be at an end. But, counting on this, and not realizing your opponent will becoming up with strategies of their own, immigration, gay rights, terrorism, our team versus their team are just a few that they will conjure and use. I think to really gain big in the fall, we need to keep the other side off kilter. To have them never see  it coming. To leave them guessing. Our predictability, the inability to let go of the control that we have been used to having as a national party is what is killing us. To suceed we need to not only rebuild the local party, I think we need to become a lab for experimentation. If nothing else, we need to learn this from the enemy- change can be your friend. The Republicans have both been consistent, and not so consistent. Modern conservatives have changed with the times. Democrats, strategically, have not.

So, when Kos argues that we needed to fear a primary challenge in Ohio. I am thinking of our fear of risk. What does this say about whether we have a strategy to suceed outside of our enemy's failures? Is that our strategy?

I don't have any easy answers. I just find all the easy answers given thus far problematic. What are accepted risks that you are willing to take? Define them for me and others, and we would be less likely to question your sincerity about change. I know you don't give a shit what I think- but I do know something else. I have been asking everyone I can think of. Some of them unsavory, some of them cool, from the left and right what they think of our party. Some of you will reduce this to what the media presents of us, but I think you do this as your peril. Sometimes you have to look in the mirror to figure out how to win. What they have been saying to me is that we are chickenshits- that if we can't fight the Republicans, how can we fight terrorists? More importantly I think is the question of how do we change this perception. The Hackett experiment was one viable idea. But, the party fears a lose of control. The things that got them into office are not necessarily the things that are needed to regain control of Congress. This is an important point that needs to be re-emphasized: winning one election where you in the process you have lost control of Congress is winning a battle at the expense of the war. I see Hackett- not as threat as Kos has put it to our chances in the fall against DeWine, but a threat the the leaderships need to control the process. I can understand that need, but as a result, new ideas are stiffled. We will never know if Hackett could have caught on because all we are left with is wonkery about what-ifs. I suppose he could have stayed in- that was his choice to make. What bothers me, isn't him, or Brown, but the lost chance of finding a new way to think of ourselves as Democrats. And we, the the minority party, need all the new ideas we can muster.

Tags: Paul Hackett, Democratic Leadership, Ohio, Markos Moulitsas, strategy (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 14 comments

  •  this truly upset me (none / 0)

    because sherrod did not get into the race unitl late - or should i say, until hackette showed him repugs were vunerable. this is just like a spineless dem from the clinton era, triangulate, capitalize - whatever the fuck. i am so tired of the harmans, daschles, liebermans and mind you clintons (and their entourage) of our party, that i think another party is needed. i listened to lou dobbs tonite they actually had the audacity to call for border control, control in spending, and lobbying reform and not being called for it - you know why, because the old guard in the dem party is silent on reform.
  •  Well (none / 0)

    Markos pretty much recanted in his last post.

    That seemed to me a ringing endorsement of primaries.

    so much so that I thought it exactly my position of the past year.

    Dems need to fight their fights in primaries.

    Everybody dies alone.

    by Armando on Tue Feb 14, 2006 at 06:06:50 PM PDT

  •  Good Diary (none / 0)

    But I wonder exactly what you mean by "taking risks".

    Using your poker analogy, it's true that in poker, luck plays a role, and you need to take risks. However, the great players in essence make their own luck, and carefully plan their risks. Most great players don't simply say one day: "screw it, I'm putting it all in" without thinking about it all ahead of time.

    To use a closer analogy from politics, consider the different outcomes of the Goldwater and Reagan "risks" by the Republicans. Goldwater was seen as a huge risk favored by party activists, and sure enough, Goldwater won the nomination. Then he got creamed in the general election. Reagan was also seen as a huge risk, but sure enough, he won.

    The difference was that with Goldwater, the planning was not yet there. The conservatives had not yet built their grassroots machines, and had not yet started to change the debate. Goldwater was a colorful enough fellow, but his personality was not enough to overcome this underlying problem.

    By the time Reagan came along, the Republicans were truly ready to take the "risk" -- because they had set up a powerful foundation under him.

    My thought right now is that the Democrats and the progressive movement generally are building a good foundation, but we are not quite there yet. For that reason, our risks have the potential to be more haphazard, and run far more risk of failure than planned risks.

    So "playing it safe" right now may not be that bad of a strategy -- especially when the Republicans seem like they're falling apart. With a strengthened foundation in the near future, however, comes better planned, and better recommended, "risks".

    Democrats will fight for a Renewed Deal with the American people.

    by Hoyapaul on Tue Feb 14, 2006 at 06:07:17 PM PDT

    •  returning to poker (none / 0)

      the point here is to learn sometimes when its important to bluff, and when not. To know what pschology works on people, and what does not. I agree the party has a huge amount of building to do. The playing it safe comment is about them not thinking in terms of psychology of the voters- to find out what type of Democratic leadership appeals to them. instead, they ran scared of the possibility of a primary challenge- as a result the experimentation- the chance to learn was lost. Some will say primaries are simply about who wins, and then the general, but they could be about stylistic issues as well- ie, what personality tends to connect to voters, how can we recruit more like those types of personality. Instead of giving up the reigns just enough to figure this out- they decided for the voters by pressuring Hackett. Now- in terms of character- does that mean also that Hackett is to blame. yeah- because it shows he wasn't as strong as I had thought. but then I hoped to find this out through the primary process. People here said Hackett was a hothead- but how do we know that a hothead would not have appealed to voters? by the way- your goldwater- reagan example is perfect- the gipper won because of charisma first, politics second. not the reverse as the democrats tend to do it. so did FDR- the man wouldn't even let people know that he couldn't walk just to maintain a public image of strength.
      •  to me, this is more about emanuel's (none / 0)

        punkass than anything. he convinced paul with dnc backing they could flood his congressional race with cash and undo that bitch as well as put up a good race for the senate. two seats vs one. what i hate, the dems are always scheming vs. winning on ideas. dam, if you just get rid of these old, tired, counselor suit dems - we would be in good shape
  •  If we could have turned back the clock... (none / 0)

    What should have happened was Sherrod should have declared in August 2005 after being begged by the Dem establishment to run in the Senate.

    Then the Dem establishment would have begged Hackett to run in a Oh-02 rematch with Schimdt.

    That is what SHOULD HAVE HAPPENED.  

    We ALL would have been unified as the netroots behind both candidates.

    But no...Brown had to do a flip flop.

    Obama: "Because We Won... We Have to Win." 6/6/08

    by Drdemocrat on Tue Feb 14, 2006 at 06:10:32 PM PDT

    •  Usually I agree (none / 0)

      with you, but not on this one.

      Im still convinced a Brown run means another term for Dewine, even if Brown announced right out of the gate in August. Hackett was the right guy for the Senate job. Brown should have stayed in his nice safe seat in the house and gone after the 2010 Senate race.

  •  I thought the Democratic party (none / 0)

    stood up for the "little guy" thought they were an equal opportunity party, thought they believed in "the people"...maybe the DLC just want a good crack at the "cash cow" called Iraq...after all the Republicans have certainly got their pound of flesh for a pound of gold, why shouldn't the DNC..(well it wasn't exactly "their flesh") but they got the gold didn't they...? Business as usual
  •  The Threat of a Good Example. (none / 1)

    [I posted this in another thread too]

    The energy that would have been created by a Hackett campaign is now lost.  It was the perfect experiment-- a no bullshit candidate taking on the corrupt Republicans in a red state.  The Democrats have let so much air out of the party's balloon, and they're too F*CKING stupid to realize it.

    Maybe the Democratic "establishment" sees this as "the threat of a good example".  Hackett is beholden to no one, including the entrenched Susan Estrich/ Bob Shrum wimp-types running the Democratic party.  If Hackett had won in November, leading to more Hackett-types running in the future, then the entrenched useless placque clogging the Democratic arteries would thankfully and finally dissolve away into irrelevance.

    But hey, these f*cking assholes running the party are still keeping their powder dry!

    -N.B.

    "Don't look back... something might be gaining on you..." -Satchel Paige.

    by npb7768 on Tue Feb 14, 2006 at 07:53:28 PM PDT

  •  great diary. thank you. recommended. (none / 0)

  •  Good thinking! (none / 0)

    Well done!  Wordy and long, but basically right on the mark.  The problem with the party is all the scheming, the posturing without any real guts.  This whole debacle is about character: Hackett has it, Brown doesn't, and certainly the national party runs up character-deficits the same way the Rethugs run up debt.  

    And you know what?  All those smarty-ass boys in the national party (including kos, I'm sorry to say) don't get it, but the average voters do.  They can tell when Democrats are calculating their words for votes, when they phrase things with just enough vagueness so that they don't offend someone they hope to fool into voting for them.  

    Just for a minute, hold in your mind two images: Harry Truman and John Kerry.  The one was blunt and direct, the other waffled and wiggled.  We should throw away the lesser one and cling to the memory of the Man from Independence.  That image was reborn in Paul Hackett--a man whom Ohioans would have voted for, who could have given the Ohio Democratic party a new lease on life.

    Could have.  But the party can't trust the people, can't take a risk.  No risk, no win.  Sometimes it really is that simple.

    I spoke to a Republican friend today about the Hackett mess.  He told me he used to be a Democrat, "back when they stood for something." Something made me say, "Like Bobby?"  He smiled: "I  always knew what he stood for."  We have lost so many people because we want to please rather than lead.

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