http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-sirota/a-party-is-not-a-movement_b_278214.html
The Huffington Post September 20, 2009
David Sirota
Political journalist, best-selling author and syndicated
newspaper columnist
Posted: September 5, 2009 05:18 PM
A
Party Is Not a Movement
The difference between parties and movements is simple:
Parties are loyal to their own power regardless of policy agenda; movements are
loyal to their own policy agenda regardless of which party champions it. This
is one of the few enduring political axioms, and it explains why the
organizations purporting to lead an American progressive "movement"
have yet to build a real movement, much less a successful one.
Though the 2006 and 2008 elections were billed as
progressive movement successes, the story behind them highlights a longer-term
failure.
During those contests, most of Washington's major labor,
environmental, antiwar and anti-poverty groups spent millions of dollars on a
party objective -- specifically, on electing a Democratic president and
Congress. In the process, many groups subverted their own movement agendas in
pursuit of electoral unity.
The effort involved a sleight of hand. These groups begged
their grassroots members -- janitors, soccer moms, veterans and other "regular
folks" -- to cough up small-dollar contributions in return for the promise
of progressive movement pressure on both parties' politicians. Simultaneously,
these groups went to dot-com and Wall Street millionaires, asking them to chip
in big checks in exchange for advocacy that did not undermine those fat cats'
Democratic Party friends (or those millionaires' economic privilege).
This wasn't totally dishonest. Many groups sincerely
believed that Democratic Party promotion was key to achieving progressive
movement causes. Additionally, during the Bush era, pushing progressive causes
and helping Democrats was often one and the same, because those causes
primarily indicted Republican obstructionists.
But after the 2008 election, the strategy's bankruptcy is
undeniable.
As we now see, union dues underwrote Democratic lawmakers
who today block serious labor law reform and ignore past promises to fix NAFTA.
Green groups' resources elected a government that pretends sham "cap and
trade" bills represent environmental progress. Health care groups,
promising to push a single-payer system, got a president not only dropping his
own single-payer promises, but also backing off a "public option" to
compete with private insurance. And anti-war funding delivered a Congress that
refuses to stop financing the Iraq mess and an administration preparing to
escalate the Afghanistan conflict.
Of course, frustrated progressives might be able to forgive
the groups who promised different results, had these post-election failures
prompted course corrections.
For example, had the left's preeminent institutions
responded to Democrats' health care capitulation by immediately announcing
campaigns against these Democrats, progressives could feel confident that these
groups were back to prioritizing a movement agenda. Likewise, had the big
anti-war organizations reacted to Obama's Afghanistan escalation plans with
promises of electoral retribution, we would know those organizations were
steadfastly loyal to their anti-war brand.
But that hasn't happened. Despite Democrats' health care
retreat, many major progressive groups spent the summer cheering them on,
afraid to lose access and, thus, Beltway status. Meanwhile, The New York Times
reports that MoveOn.org has "yet to take a clear position on
Afghanistan" while VoteVets' leader all but genuflected to President
Barack Obama, saying, "People (read: professional political operatives) do
not want to take on the administration."
In this vacuum, movement building has been left to underfunded
(but stunningly successful) projects like Firedoglake.com, Democracy for
America, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and local organizations. And
that's the lesson: True grassroots movements that deliver concrete legislative
results are not steered by marble-columned monoliths, wealthy benefactors or
celebrity politicians -- and they are rarely ever headquartered in Washington.
They are almost always far-flung efforts by those focused on real-world
results, not partisan vanity -- those who don't care about congressional
cocktail parties or White House soirees they were never invited to in the first
place.
Only when enough progressives realize this truism, will any
movement -- and any significant change -- finally commence.
# # #