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Showing Original Post only (View all)It's Al From's Democratic Party..the rest of us just live here. The takeover. [View all]
Matt Stoller in 2014 reviewed the new book by Al From, founder of the Democratic Leadership Council.
Its Al Froms Democratic Party, we just live here.
So who is Al From?
Most people who consider themselves good Democrats dont know the name Al From, though political insiders certainly do. He was never a cabinet member. He worked in the White House, but in the 1970s, for as a junior staffer for Jimmy Carters flailing campaign to stop inflation. Hes never written a famous tell-all book. He hasnt ever held an elected office, his most high-profile role was as a manager of the domestic policy transition for the White House in 1992, which took just a few months. He doesnt even have a graduate degree. From fits into that awkward space in American politics, of doer, organizer, activist, convener, a P.T. Barnum of wonks and hacks. Such are the vagaries of American political power, that those who are famous are not always those are the actual architects of power. Because From, a nice, genial, and idealistic business-friendly man, is the structural engineer behind todays Democratic Party.
To give you a sense of how sprawling Froms legacy actually is, consider the following. Bill Clinton chaired the Froms organization, the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) and used it as a platform to ascend to the Presidency in 1992. His wife Hillary is a DLC proponent. Al Gore and Joe Biden were DLCers. Barack Obama is quietly an adherent to the New Democrat philosophy crafted by From, so are most of the people in his cabinet, and the bulk of the Senate Democrats and House Democratic leaders. From 20072011, the New Democrats were the swing bloc in the U.S. House of Representatives, authoring legislation on bailouts and financial regulation of derivatives. And given how Democrats still revere Clinton, so are most Democratic voters, at this point. The DLC no longer exists, but has been folded into the Clintons mega-foundation, the Clinton Global Initiative, a convening point for the worlds global elite that wants to, or purports to want to, do good. In other words, its Al Froms Democratic Party, we just live here.
Some say that the Third Way is the new DLC.
Probably some truth in both.
An excerpt from Al From's book about how they got started.
Recruiting Bill Clinton
A little after four oclock on the afternoon of April 6, 1989, I walked into the office of Governor Bill Clinton on the second floor of the Arkansas State Capitol in Little Rock.
Ive got a deal for you, I told Clinton after a few minutes of political chitchat. If you agree to become chairman of the DLC, well pay for your travel around the country, well work together on an agenda, and I think youll be president one day and well both be important. With that proposition, Clinton agreed to become chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, and our partnership was born. With Clinton as its leader, the New Democrat movement that sprung from the DLC over the next decade would change the course of the Democratic Party in the United States and of progressive center-left parties around the world.
....Though Clinton came from a conservative state and knew how to communicate with the moderate and conservative voters Democrats needed to win back, he was also well-regarded among liberalsand so would help the DLC broaden its appeal in all but the most extreme-left parts of the party. Appealing to a broader spectrum of the Democratic Party was important for the DLC, and for me personally. Though the political shorthand had always referred to the DLC as moderate or conservative Democrats, our ideas were really about modernizing liberalism and defining a new progressive center for our party, not simply pushing it further to the right. Coming from the center-left of the party, I was tired of having the DLC labeled as conservative. I decided to call our think tank the Progressive Policy Institute because I thought it would be harder for reporters to label it as the conservative Progressive Policy Institute.
From includes a memo he sent Clinton while urging him to take the chairmanship of the DLC.
Sam Nunn has taken his meeting with you in December and your statements to me in early January as a commitment that you would take the chairmanship, and is expecting to pass the gavel to you in New Orleans. But every signal Ive gotten from you in the last month indicates youre still up in the air. That ambivalence is a killer for us as we prepare for New Orleans.
I believe you are the right person for the DLC joband the DLC job is the right job for you. We have the opportunity to redefine the Democratic Party during the next two years. If our efforts lead to a presidential candidacywhether for you or someone elsewe can take over the party, as well.
And history shows they DID take over the party.
At the national convention of a major political party, an ideologically rigid sectarian clique secures the ultimate triumph. It inserts two of its own as nominees for the Presidency and the Vice Presidency. Heavily financed by the most powerful corporations in the world, the group's leaders gather in a private club fifty-four floors above the convention hall, apart from the delegates of the party they had infiltrated. There, they carefully monitor the convention's acceptance of a platform the organization had drafted almost in its entirety. Then, with the ticket secured and with the policy course of the party set, they introduce a team of 100 shock troops to deploy across the country to lock up the party's grassroots.
This is not some fantastic political thriller starring Harrison Ford or Sharon Stone. This is the real-life version of Invasion of the Party Snatchers--with the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) burrowing into the pod that is the Democratic Party.
There was an article in the Washington Post in 2003. Can't even find the original in the Wayback Machine, but I saved most of the article.
The 'D' in DLC Doesn't Stand for Dean (David Von Drehle, May 15, 2003, Washington Post)
More than 50 centrist Democrats, including Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner, met here yesterday to plot strategy for the "New Democrat" movement. To help get the ball rolling they read a memo by Al From and Bruce Reed, the chairman and president of the Democratic Leadership Council. The memo dismissed Dean as an elitist liberal from the "McGovern-Mondale wing" of the party -- "the wing that lost 49 states in two elections, and transformed Democrats from a strong national party into a much weaker regional one."
"It is a shame that the DLC is trying to divide the party along these lines," said Dean spokesman Joe Trippi. "Governor Dean's record as a centrist on health care and balancing the budget speaks for itself."
As founder of the DLC, From has been pushing the Democratic Party to the right for nearly 20 years. He was in tall cotton, philosophically speaking, when an early leader of the DLC, Bill Clinton, was elected president in 1992. As Clinton's domestic policy guru, Reed pushed New Democrat ideas -- such as welfare reform -- that were often unpopular with party liberals.
"We are increasingly confident that President Bush can be beaten next year, but Dean is not the man to do it," Reed and From wrote. "Most Democrats aren't elitists who think they know better than everyone else."
When the Democrats through the DLC became beholden to big money and power, there was really no place left for the rest of us. The money and power folks did not need to stand for the lesser of us in the party. They did not have to take positions which would benefit us.
The power grab was described by one DLC member as the "intellectual leveraged buyout" of the party.
The Wise Geek says that a leveraged buyout is also known as a hostile takeover.
A leveraged buyout is a tactic through which control of a corporation is acquired by buying up a majority of their stock using borrowed money. It may also be referred to as a hostile takeover, a highly-leveraged transaction, or a bootstrap transaction. Once control is acquired, the company is often made private, so that the new owners have more leeway to do what they want with it. This may involve splitting up the corporation and selling the pieces of it for a high profit, or liquidating its assets and dissolving the corporation itself.
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It's Al From's Democratic Party..the rest of us just live here. The takeover. [View all]
madfloridian
Sep 2015
OP
We knew something was wrong with our party for a long time. I remember encountering
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#40
Yes, it apparently was cynically planned without even considering Democrats at all. And then
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#117
K & R. This information is very helpful for understanding what's happened in the last 20 years
appalachiablue
Sep 2015
#3
The discontent and differing philosphies of the two factions of the party are growing day by day.
appalachiablue
Sep 2015
#10
The People, on both sides of the aisle, are disgusted with 'politics as usual.'
CrispyQ
Sep 2015
#62
Exactly. Been thinking that for a long time, Dems have to infiltrate their own party and I think
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#41
Let me underscore: It was not only Koch money. Two Koch employees sat on the board of the DLC.
merrily
Sep 2015
#22
I wonder how many of the other DLC Board members were part of the Koch network.
hedda_foil
Sep 2015
#73
Madfloridian. ,Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for this fantastic post. You rock!
hedda_foil
Sep 2015
#74
Hi, hedda...I think the book came out just last year. Sounds like he owns our party.
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#84
Yep, that's when the party started it's corruption addiction then with the Kochaine Koolaid!
cascadiance
Sep 2015
#104
Fucking r****ds was even better. And the apology went to Palin, not the intended targets of the
merrily
Sep 2015
#23
They had lots of labels for the Left, and among their favorite attacks whenever anyone
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#42
This: I believe the Third Way despises the Left far, far more than they despise the Right. --nt
CrispyQ
Sep 2015
#63
There is evidence that the 3rd Way "Centrists" would rather give a Congressional seat
bvar22
Sep 2015
#100
Yes, all that 'compromising' and 'bi-partisanship' with people who are so extreme never
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#70
Of course they do. They can manipulate the Right but not the Far Left. Some are too easily
rhett o rick
Sep 2015
#102
Cass Sunstein always preached "harmony", be nice, don't go after war criminals...
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#133
Because we are not the professional politicians. We are just ordinary people.
JDPriestly
Sep 2015
#60
Miserable conniving rat bastards that willingly sacrifice the rest of us. Fucking Elitists indeed!
Ford_Prefect
Sep 2015
#18
Its interesting how they believed if Bill became President that they could reform the entire Party.
stillwaiting
Sep 2015
#21
Well, in Congress, as an Indie, he managed to accomplish more than Hillary did as a Dem.
merrily
Sep 2015
#24
Good point. Those who say that Bernie didn't accomplish anything in Congress are 1 of 2 things. nt
stillwaiting
Sep 2015
#25
I never accepted nor will, any brow beating from Third Wayers, we KNEW our party had been
sabrina 1
Sep 2015
#43
Lies in the OP. There is no McGovern Mondale wing of any Party. Mondale was centrist.
merrily
Sep 2015
#28
No, no madfloridian. Not your lies. NEVER yours. In the material of others quoted in your OP.
merrily
Sep 2015
#46
Fixed. I meant to say the more say we the people have, the less the country will go right.
merrily
Sep 2015
#115
Wow seafan, coming from you that means a lot. Yes, it does sound like Jeb Bush.
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#83
Unions need money also. I know teachers' AFT got millions from Gates for ed reform.
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#81
We are fighting for that right now. Asking that all voices be heard on equal platforms...
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#66
If they're not comparable, maybe you should start an advocacy group that is?
brooklynite
Sep 2015
#87
In fairness, Carter, though a wonderful ex-prez, ushered in deregulation
RufusTFirefly
Sep 2015
#103
Clinton basically undid The New Deal, deceiving the majority of the Democratic Party. As Thom
Dont call me Shirley
Sep 2015
#71
I like Al From. He's a good man. Yes, he has corporatist ideals, but the Democratic Party probably
NYCButterfinger
Sep 2015
#99
Never said they were bad people. I said they are in control of the party. That's wrong.
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#106
I understand. Southerners like Henry, Bredesen need to have bigger voices in the party.
NYCButterfinger
Sep 2015
#113
There that's condescending tone again, Capn. I did not say any of those things.
madfloridian
Sep 2015
#110
We know full well what the DLC and the Third Way are all about. They are not here to help the 99%
rhett o rick
Sep 2015
#112
I guess you missed the part where I mentioned they are done? Over? Closed?
Capn Sunshine
Sep 2015
#118
And you are certain their are no "bogymen" because everything is perfect in the Land of Status Quo.
rhett o rick
Sep 2015
#122
Yet, we're told we must vote for these kind of people because they have a (D) after their name. K&R
Tierra_y_Libertad
Sep 2015
#132