councilor.org  


Lamont Victory--what ordinary citizens can do
Source Paul Loeb
Date 06/08/10/12:17

[From Huffington Post etc]

THE LAMONT VICTORY-NEXT STEPS FOR CITIZENS
By Paul Rogat Loeb

NED LAMONT'S PRIMARY victory over Joe Lieberman may turn out to be a key
moment in stopping the Bush Administration's destructive policies. But that
depends on what the rest of us do.

Lieberman, as a majority of Connecticut's Democratic voters just
acknowledged, was Bush's fiercest Democratic ally, not just on the Iraqi
war, but on issues from the bankruptcy bill to his regressive energy bill,
tax plans, and judicial nominations, not to mention Terri Schaivo. He was
defeated despite outspending Lamont two to one, (with the help of massive
contributions from the pharmaceutical and financial services industries) and
being supported by Connecticut's and the Democratic Party's entrenched
political leaders.

The question now is whether Lieberman can hold his seat through a divisive
third party run that ignores the mandate of Connecticut voters. If anyone
who loses a party primary, even a close one, can simply run on their own,
then primaries become meaningless as ways to democratically select our
leaders. Had Lieberman launched a third party campaign from the start, that
would have been his right, but doing so after he lost the legitimate primary
vote is unconscionable.

Though Lieberman's announced that he'll run as a third party candidate, that
isn't set in stone. Citizens throughout the country can play a crucial role
by pressuring key elected leaders and organizations that initially supported
Lieberman to switch their support. Some of this has already begun to occur,
with Harry Reid and Chuck Schumer's strong statements that the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee will fully back Lamont, and Hillary Clinton's
donation of $5,000 from her PAC. But the process needs to be taken still
further.

Lieberman's chances of splitting the party enough to win in November depend
on the support he lines up. If it's only from major corporate and Republican
interests, many of whom contributed to his primary campaign, then voters are
far more likely to see him as merely a Republican stalking horse. According
to ABC's George Stephanopolous, Karl Rove has already approached his
campaign and offered to help. Republican fund-raisers have already
volunteered to contribute. But he can't win with just Republican support.
What got Lieberman as close as he came was the active support of the local
Democratic machine and the legitimacy that he gained from the backing of key
national leaders like Schumer, Bill Clinton, Chris Dodd, Barbara Boxer, and
Barack Obama, and from institutions like the Connecticut AFL-CIO (though the
state's major teachers unions and the Machinists union backed Lamont), and
from Planned Parenthood, NARAL, the League of Conservation Voters, and the
Human Rights Campaign.

These individuals and institutions supported him, I believe, because of old
friendships and allegiances, because they didn't expect Lamont to emerge as
such a powerful candidate or his insurgent campaign to touch such a nerve,
and because there's a standard (and problematic) assumption that if an
incumbent is at least somewhat on your side, you give them your automatic
backing even if their opponent is as strong on the relevant issues or
stronger. So National Abortion Rights Action League backed Lieberman despite
his immensely disturbing position that a hospital could refuse emergency
contraceptives to a rape victim and despite his playing a key role, by
blocking any filibuster, in the confirmation of the profoundly anti-choice
Justices Roberts and Alito (who have also been as ghastly as expected on
issues of the environmental, social justice, civil liberties and
presidential power). It was the support of institutions and individuals
like these that gave Lieberman his veneer of moderation.

Now, we face a different situation. Lamont stressed from the beginning that
he would support Lieberman if he lost and even campaign with him. Lieberman
needs to do the same. The statewide turnout was nearly double the last major
contested statewide Democratic primary, a dozen years ago. Given that
Connecticut's Democratic voters have spoken, Lieberman needs to respect
their will, and not split the party (and divert limited resources) by
refusing to accept the will of the voters.

So the challenge is to line up every possible aspect of Democratic and
organizational support behind Lamont-and to strip Lieberman of the resources
and support that got him as close as he came. The initial shifts of
high-profile Democrats are encouraging, whether they stemmed from conscience
or belated recognition that ordinary Democrats want a change. But we need to
ask more of them. Their endorsing Lamont matters, as do their financial
contributions. But particularly for those who gave Lieberman credibility by
initially backing and campaigning for him, that's not enough. They need to
make clear that they will visibly and energetically campaign for Lamont as
the legitimately elected representative of their party, and follow through
on this commitment if they can't convince Lieberman to withdraw. It's up to
all of us as to make sure the leaders who represent us respond.

The same thing's true with liberal organizations that endorsed Lieberman
when Lamont's campaign had yet to coalesce. If we're members or supporters,
we need to personally contact them and ask that they back Lamont and not
Lieberman in this next round. They need to recognize that supporting
Lieberman at this point means supporting the Bush administration, and
everything it stands for.

We might remember that this isn't the first time Lieberman has placed his
career above loyalty to party and beliefs. He also hedged his bets in the
2000 election, by running for reelection as Connecticut Senator while also
running for Vice President. It didn't help the ticket, but worse yet, had
Gore won (as he would have without the Florida machinations), Lieberman
would have had to resign his Senate seat, and be replaced by a Republican
appointed by Republican Governor John Rowland. So Lieberman has a long
history of looking out only for himself, and we might also do our best to
ensure that the media remembers this.

If we're successful enough in our efforts, the wells of support for
Lieberman may dry up sufficiently that he'll decide not to make a serious
third-party race. Or we'll help Lamont gain enough support and momentum to
solidly win. Contributing to Lamont's campaign is important-money matters.
But wherever we live, we now have another task. That's to raise our voices
enough with the elected officials and organizations that represent us, so
that this campaign indeed can indeed become a potential national turning
point.

Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A
Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, winner of the 2005 Nautilus Award
for the best book on social change, and Soul of a Citizen See
www.paulloeb.org.

[View the list]


InternetBoard v1.0
Copyright (c) 1998, Joongpil Cho