Daily Kos

Four Years Ago, Wisconsin Was Where It Ended

Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:36:55 PM PDT

Four years ago, the Wisconsin primary was where Howard Dean made his last stand. After a disappointing third-place finish, Dean pulled the plug on his campaign.

I was 19 at the time, and Dean's campaign was the first presidential campaign I had ever been involved with. When I began supporting him in March of 2003, I knew he had little chance, but I liked what he had to say. In addition to working and getting ready to go away to college, much of that summer was spent attending meetups, printing up and handing out flyers locally, and taking trips to New Hampshire to knock on doors.

Seeing Dean go from long-shot to frontrunner was incredible, and seeing it all come crashing down after Iowa broke my heart. By the time Wisconsin came around, Dean's withdrawal from the race seemed inevitable, and I thought I was prepared. But when he actually dropped out, I fell apart all over again, not only because I was sad to see a great candidate go down, but because the campaign had become a part of my life that I was sad to lose.

Fortunately, I was not alone among Dean supporters who felt that the organization we had built was worth maintaining in some form. Dean and his campaign team had not merely built a campaign organization; they had built a grassroots movement that had challenged the party establishment and demonstrated how powerful the grassroots could be when armed with new technology. After Dean withdrew from the race, he and some of his advisors brainstormed about how to channel the grassroots energy the campaign had generated.

Thus, Dean for America became Democracy for America, a political action committee dedicated to supporting fiscally responsible, socially progressive candidates at all levels of government, with the long-term goal of rebuilding the Democratic base from the bottom up.

In May of 2004, three months after Wisconsin marked the end of Dean's campaign, Democracy for America launched the Dean Dozen, an effort to highlight and support "twelve diverse candidates that represent the spirit of grassroots democracy." Among the 12 candidates selected for the original Dean Dozen was a little-known state senator from Illinois named Barack Obama, who had recently won an upset victory in the Democratic primary for the open US Senate seat.

Even before he was selected for the Dean Dozen, Obama had already drawn comparisons with Dean for his outspoken opposition to the war and the grassroots energy he inspired. But when he picked Obama for the original Dean Dozen, Howard Dean probably never imagined that four years later, Obama would be standing in his shoes.

Obama's 2004 convention speech had made him a celebrity, and he did not have to struggle to build name recognition or begin his campaign on a shoestring budget the way Dean did. But he was still clearly the underdog, and for most of last year, Hillary Clinton becoming the nominee was treated as almost a given. Despite his celebrity status, few within the party or in the media thought Obama could take on the party establishment and overcome Clinton's institutional advantages.

Yet Obama defied the odds, building a grassroots on-the-ground organization that enabled him to win in lily-white Iowa (and later  caucus states). As a former community organizer, Obama understood the importance of grassroots activism, and he has been able to build upon the movement that Dean started. For me, a Deaniac who is now supporting Obama, this campaign feels to me like an extension of the Dean campaign. Like Dean, Obama is an anti-war progressive who gets crowds riled up and generates a lot of excitement among rank-and-file Democratic activists. Yet with more inclusive rhetoric, as well as a smarter, more targeted on-the-ground strategy, Obama has succeeded where Dean fell short, expanding his appeal beyond the base of enthusiastic activists while continuing to grow the base by bringing new people into the process.

Wisconsin marked the end of Dean's campaign, but it was the beginning of a movement, a movement that has empowered the grassroots to take on the party establishment and enabled Obama to overcome Clinton's institutional advantages. But if Obama loses Wisconsin, which polls show to be a real possibility, it could once again be the end, not only for him, but of some of the power grassroots activists have successfully fought for. Grassroots and netroots supporters (including Kos) helped Dean take over the DNC and implement the 50-State-Strategy, but if Hillary Clinton wins the nomination, we all know that it's only a matter of time before Dean is replaced with an establishment hack in the mold of Terry McAuliffe.

I know that we as Deaniacs and netroots activists began the primary season divided, with some of us supporting Obama and some supporting Edwards (and a few supporting Dodd, Kucinich, or other candidates). But at this point, the choice should be clear. The contest between Clinton and Obama is not a fight over ideology or the details of a health care plan - it is a fight for the soul of the Democratic Party. It is a fight between grassroots empowerment and traditional establishment control.

So therefore, to my fellow Deaniacs, and to other progressives who believe in the power of grassroots activism, I issue a call to arms to help Obama win Wisconsin and beyond. Make phone calls, donate, travel to Wisconsin or later states if you can. Do not get complacent, and do not forget that if we let Obama go down, we'll be letting a movement go down as well.

Note: The poll below is only for people who supported Dean in 2004. If you were not a Deaniac, please don't vote.

Poll

Deaniacs: Regardless of who you started out supporting, who do you support now?

5%12 votes
88%185 votes
0%0 votes
0%1 votes
3%8 votes
1%3 votes

| 209 votes | Vote | Results

Tags: Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Howard Dean, Grassroots Activism, DNC, 2008, Democratic Primaries, Recommended (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 17 comments

  •  Tips for the grassroots? (20+ / 0-)

    "There's not a liberal America and a conservative America; THERE'S THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA." OBAMA '08

    by democrattotheend on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:44:22 PM PDT

  •  thanks for all your hard work! (3+ / 0-)

    for four long years! we're now climbing the steps you built.

    éí 'aaníígÓÓ 'áhoot'é

    by Librarian on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:45:42 PM PDT

  •  Obama is no Dean (0+ / 0-)

    Edwards was the true 'Dean' of this race.  Dean was who he was because we believed in the issues he stood for.  Obama stands for Obama.  Dean didn't pretend to be pro-war after being anti-war.  He didn't try to obfiscate the issues.  Edwards was the same way. He stood for his principals, regardless of whether the media stood by him or not.  
    This is what pisses me off about the Obama campaign.  We don't look for our 'Dean' and then when he fails, choose the 'next best thing' regardless of where he stands on the issues.  

    There is no longer a 'Dean' in this race.  Let's not pretend that Obama is it.  

    I'm an Edwards Democrat!

    by invisiblewoman on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:49:37 PM PDT

    •  I always saw Obama as Dean 2.0 (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      jj32, Cc inWinston

      even when Edwards was in the race.

      As much as I supported Dean, he wasn't a saint who never played politics, and neither is Obama (or Edwards, for that matter). But both have run grassroots-driven campaigns that have given the establishment a run for their money.

      And when did Obama pretend to be pro-war?

      "There's not a liberal America and a conservative America; THERE'S THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA." OBAMA '08

      by democrattotheend on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:52:01 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  when it was politically expedient to do so (0+ / 0-)

        Dean was anti-war and continued to be anti-war.  The thing about Dean was that he stood firmly on all issues.  He even was straight about partial-birth abortion.  He didn't ever try to change his views to reflect what the media would prefer.  

        He was taken down by the media.  Obama is being pulled up by the media.  I'm not sure why the media is so pro-Obama, but our true grassroots candidate will succeed despite it, not through it.  I'm sure of this.  

        I'm an Edwards Democrat!

        by invisiblewoman on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:57:05 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  I don't think that word means what you think it (0+ / 0-)

          means.

          "Expedient," that is.

          I think you mean "inexpedient."

          If Bill Clinton was the first black president... why can't Obama be the first female president? -- wry twinger, DKos, 5 May '08

          by ogre on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 03:10:40 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

        •  Yes, there are quite (1+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          invisiblewoman

          a few differences between Dean and BO.  Dean was always ahead of the curve, and blunt about it.  BO is all flowery bullshit.

          I view BO as more beneficiary of what Dean initiated, rather than being an initiator of these forces.

          Bush's presidency is now inextricably yoked to the policies of aggression and subjugation. Mike Whitney

          by dfarrah on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 03:12:47 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  That's bullshit! (0+ / 0-)

            Obama has been about community organizing from the start, and by the looks of it, he is a lot better at it than Dean...At least at the nuts and bolts stuff, like how to train people for the Caucus. We should have won Iowa, but we got all swept up into the national movement. Obama concentrated on Iowa and delivered the goods.

            •  Well, Dean was employed (0+ / 0-)

              as a doctor most of his life and the position he had before he took over as Governor of Vermont was a part-time position [or maybe he was a legislator part-time before he became Lt Gov].  Dean's entry into full-time, higher level politics was almost an accident [the prior governor died suddenly, then Dean became governor].

              So, he may very well have known less about political organizing than BO.  

              However, it was Dean who 1st started firing up the dems/grassroots about opposing GWB's policies, Dean who 1st began criticizing congress-critters for rolling over for GWB, Dean using the internet for grass roots organizing [he likes to say that the grass roots found him], telling people "you have the power," getting younger voters excited, etc.

              Like Reagan before him, BO is riding into the WH on a wave of dissatisfaction, a wave started years ago by more liberal activists.

              It takes time for ideas to trickle into the mainstream and to influence behavior.  The dems as a party, as well as BO as a candidate, have greatly benefitted from HD's initiative and efforts.  

              Bush's presidency is now inextricably yoked to the policies of aggression and subjugation. Mike Whitney

              by dfarrah on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 04:27:36 PM PDT

              [ Parent ]

        •  With due respect (2+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          democrattotheend, Cc inWinston

          your journey has taken you down a path of voting for Senator Clinton despite ample previous reservations.

          We all can respect that. Your vote and your opinion are your own.

          I happen to disagree.

          However, the diarist is quite correct to point out that Barack Obama was part of the original Dean Dozen; he was also a part of the voting held by DFA for their endorsement as a grassroots candidate.

          My own involvement with Senator Obama's campaign has allowed me to meet and interact with a whole new generation of Democratic activists, young and old, here in Oakland CA. I tried my damndest to tell my friends in the McNerney activist base and the Wellstone club to come to meet these new activists...but, regretfully, many of them harboring similar sentiments to your own, did not.

          That's a shame.

          No one "owns" people-powered. No one owns grassroots activism. Not Howard Dean. Not John Edwards. This does not have to be either/or; it can be both/and.

          But for that to happen, like here in Oakland, grassroots activists who feel that they "own" Howard Dean's legacy have to put down some of their pre-conceived notions and go meet and greet some of the new arrivals. That's part of grassroots too.

          Is that happening to the extent I'd like it to? No. It seems some passionate Dean/Edwards folks just have a wall in this regard. In my experience here, some of them have stayed home, others have supported Obama but quietly.

          And, yeah, that's a shame. The whole point of grassroots is that we work together and learn from each other.

    •  As a Deaniac (0+ / 0-)

      who attended my first meet-up in May '03 when we hit the 20,000 mark, let me say I see Obama as having picked up Howard's mantle. No, he is not a blunt truth teller like Dean, but that is because we Deaniacs were the front-edge of the great wave to follow. We, those of us that had discovered what Bush was doing were voices crying out in the literal wilderness, looking for a megaphone to inform the rest of America that the chimp had no clothes, the Dems had no spines, and the media was complicit. He had us at "What I want to know".

      Eventually most of the rest of America woke up, and they are looking for a uniter. For the guy that could express; "We need to get the guys in pick-up trucks with the Confederate flag in their windows to vote for us", in a more palatable way. And they found him in Obama who isn't just doing that, he is getting those guys to vote for him to boot. He is running Howard's race, with the exception that the rallying cry is "Yes we can!" instead of "You have the power!". An important distinction, none the less, given the theme of Obama's campaign. However, the main point of both campaigns is the same, restoring Democracy.

  •  Thanks for this diary! (3+ / 0-)

    I was 17 in 04, and was a Deaniac living in Wisconsin. It sorta stung a bit that my home state was the final straw.

    But I've been with Obama since day one (really, ever since Feingold made it official that he wasn't running), and now it's cool to know that my state is trending (ever so slightly) toward helping him put another nail on the Clinton coffin.

    I've done my part here, but we need you to do yours!

    http://my.barackobama.com/...

    I still haven't gotten a phone call, and I'd imagine my number is somewhere on that list.

    C'mon. Make some calls. You may get me on the line. And that would make your day. Trust me :)

    in the unlikely story that is america, there has never been anything false about hope. yes we can!

    by defyingravity on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:54:31 PM PDT

    •  What kind of response are you getting? (0+ / 0-)

      And what are you hearing from your friends/neighbors/etc? How optimistic are you about Obama's chances in Wisconsin?

      "There's not a liberal America and a conservative America; THERE'S THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA." OBAMA '08

      by democrattotheend on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:59:53 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Good Diary thanks... (3+ / 0-)

    I was torn between Dean and Clark.  Now I am in Obamas camp.  I see the netroots, bottom up platform being used by Obama, and I give Howard the credit.  Howard, and Joe Trippi helped America discover People Power once again.  That's what I see as the difference between the 2.  Obama, besides being an incredible candidate, gets his backing from workers like you and me.

    Oh yeah, I get to trudge thru the snow on Tuesday to help elect Barack!

    "What is being noticed is only an indication of what is being done." Albert Einstein 1954

    by tundraman on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 02:56:24 PM PDT

  •  Clark dropped around that time too (0+ / 0-)

    broke my heart.

    "In Japan, American occupation forces quickly became 50,000 friends. In Iraq, they would quickly become 50,000 terrorist targets. " James Webb, Sep 02

    by ParaHammer on Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 03:21:20 PM PDT

  •  Little brother, this is important (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    democrattotheend

    To Obama supporters in Wisconsin:

    Wisconsin is a state where agriculture is still important, and while farming may not be as glamorous as, say, politics, we still have more people engaged in agriculture-related jobs than any other occupation in the state.

    www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/02/14/7062

    When politicians come to Wisconsin, they may do the obligatory photo op on a farm, but they spend their time courting the voters in the big cities.

    I don't live in Wisconsin but I got very interested in Wisconsin ag politics when this happened:

    Wisconsion is the first and only state to implement mandatory Premise ID , the first step of the USDA's proposed National Animal Identification System ( NAIS ).

    a number of Wisconsonites who say they have not registered and don't plan on doing so.-- Walter Jeffries , nonais.org

    .
    Wisconsin NAIS

    Wisconsinites have been blind-sided by a Bush Administration Policy that they never supported nor wanted. It was brought to them against their will and making an example of them to waive in the face of the rest of the nation. It has not worked.

    Nebraska and other states moved swiftly to squelch the inane NAIS scheme.

    Do not overlook this constituency in Wisconsin - the rural communities.

    Industrial ag corporations, their employee working conditions, ag issues need to be addressed. Time for change.

    I wonder how many Iowans sick of Federal ag policies which have ruined their family farms, ruined their environment, ruined Iowa's natural beauty, ruined their water and air quality, would have stood by and let it happen again and again and again?

    Apparantly not many. Do the same Wisconsin.

Permalink | 17 comments