“Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.”
If the Democratic party dusts off the same discredited play book in
2008, that old adage should be first and foremost in the minds of progressives.
Actually progressives have been fooled more than once. In the November
2002 mid-term elections the Democratic party made only a token attempt
to take back the House of Representatives and ended up losing control
of the Senate. Democratic Senator Max Cleland of Georgia was among
the defeated, in all likelihood the first
victim of electronic
vote fraud.
Inexplicably, Democrats didn’t rise up in protest after this disaster.
Most hoped for better fortune in 2004 when there should have been a
march on Washington heading straight for the Democratic National Committee’s
headquarters. Terry McAuliffe and all of his minions should have been
forcibly escorted out the door.
McAuliffe will soon be out, but it isn’t too late to read the riot
act to a host of inexcusably incompetent politicians, consultants and
pundits. The Democratic party was the recipient of a massive effort
to turn the tide against Bush, but it wasn’t worthy of the hard work
done on its behalf. On November 3rd John Kerry conceded
when he should have demanded an investigation into missing voting machines
in Cuyahoga County, Ohio and suspicious vote tallies in Volusia
County, Florida.
Kerry’s wimpy concession may have seemed like the lowest point in
a bad campaign but he managed to out do himself. Kerry had squirreled
away $15
million for a political rainy day. There was enough
precipitation in 2004 to have found some use for that money. Who knows
what he was waiting for, the money certainly wasn’t earmarked for a
recount effort.
Progressives will not be victorious unless they tell their own party, “No
more.” Don’t attend or host a house party to call voters in swing states.
Don’t make a bus trip to get out the vote. Don’t lift a finger again
until the party whose ineptness makes those efforts a sham proves that
it has turned over a new leaf and knows how to win an election.
Progressives must make demands. They must point out that hard work
meant nothing in the face of Democratic party ineptitude. No one should
consider doing any of the heavy lifting in 2006 or 2008 if the new
leader of the DNC hasn’t adequately addressed the issues that led to
this latest electoral catastrophe. The Democrats obviously don’t have
a clue, so they may need a list of the issues they must confront if
they are interested in winning again.
1 - Fight electronic vote fraud.
The Democratic army of lawyers were stationed at polling places but
votes were being
counted by God knows
whom with PCs at the ready, hacking into voting results. Is there
a plan to fight against electronic vote fraud?
2 - Neutralize Ken Blackwell and his ilk. In
2000 Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris counted the votes
while
also serving as state
Chair of the Bush/Cheney election effort. In 2004 Ken Blackwell
played Harris in blackface by wearing the same two hats in Ohio.
Do the Democrats
have a plan to stop this vote theft double dipping in the future? If
they haven’t, activists should find better uses for their spare
time.
3 - Fight voter apartheid. What
is the Democratic plan to insure that predominantly black voting
precincts are treated
equally in the
quantity and quality of voting machines? How will they prevent
the removal of eligible black voters from the rolls? If they have
no response,
the progressive response to their request for help should be
a resounding “No".
4 - Give pink slips to losers. If Bob Shrum
or Mary Beth Cahill are seen anywhere near the nominee in 2008
save
time by heading
straight
for Canada and call it a day.
5 - Attack the opposition. It
is news to the Democratic party, but everyone else knows that elections
are won by attacking
the other side.
Kerry was framed as a flip flopper and the most liberal
Democratic in the Senate and yet there was no reciprocal framing
of
George Bush by the Dems. He could have been labeled the WMD liar,
the job destroyer,
or the social security eliminator.
Democrats had no proactive framing of Bush or
even a response to attacks on Kerry. If the nominee in 2008 doesn’t
respond to his own Swift Boat crisis tell him no thanks when he pleads
for more worker
ants.
6 - Forget Bill Clinton and
his crew. While Paul Begala sat on Crossfire and spoke fondly of
Bush,
Joe Lockhart was
Kerry’s spokesman. Robert
Rubin dispensed economic advice and general Terry McAuliffe
gave the orders. The Friends of Bill came to Kerry’s rescue, and
Kerry lost.
In honor of Clintonian triangulation, a Republican
quote is in order. “Just
say no.” Say no if Friends of Bill are running the 2008 campaign.
7 - Embrace the base. If the
nominee acts as though the base is expendable, the nominee will be
expendable
too. By now
it is clear that Democratic
stiff-arming of black voters, union workers and peace
activists only leads to failure.
When nervous Democrats saw the danger signals in August and
September they were told to shut up. They were exhorted to be
unified and optimistic.
Like children in a dysfunctional family they were
convinced that the elephant in the living room was a figment
of their imagination. Progressives
must stop playing the role of enabler. If they
accept a losing proposition again in 2008 they will have to say, “Shame
on me".
Margaret Kimberley’s Freedom Rider column appears weekly
in Ms.
Kimberley is a freelance writer living in New York City. She
can be reached via e-Mail at [email protected].
You can read more of Ms. Kimberley's writings at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com/