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What will become of Obama’s vast grass-roots network?

By E. J. Dionne

WASHINGTON — While the nation’s capital obsesses over who will be the next pick for Barack Obama’s Cabinet, the president-elect’s lieutenants are engaged with what may be a more important long-term issue: What will become of Obama’s vast grass-roots network?

Electoral campaigns, like circus tents, quickly disappear after the show is over. But Obama is our first community-organizer president, and he sees the way he got elected as being almost as crucial as the fact that he won. Because of the emphasis he put on organizing, barackobama.com might fairly be seen as the most successful high-tech startup of the last two years.

Over and over, Obama has spoken of change coming from “the bottom up,” and the organization he built down to the precinct and neighborhood level could be an agent of that change. But how?

The discussion among Obama’s lieutenants focuses on several alternatives. In one view, the Obama apparatus could be integrated into the Democratic Party and be run through the Democratic National Committee. Many of Obama’s top lieutenants, including his campaign manager, David Plouffe, are veterans of traditional Democratic politics.

Turning the Obama network into a vast national party organization could give Democrats durable advantages it has not enjoyed since the New Deal era, when Franklin Roosevelt built an alliance between local political machines and a growing labor movement.

But Plouffe himself has been much affected by the new way of campaigning he oversaw. His regular video reports to the troops turned him into something of a hero to the Obama faithful.

Moreover, Steve Hildebrand, Obama’s deputy campaign manager, has argued that members of the Obama network include many who are averse to traditional party politics: young people with weak party loyalties, independents and even some Republicans. He has been suggesting at Democratic gatherings that the Obama apparatus might instead constitute itself as an independent political organization — friendly and parallel to the Democratic Party, but a separate entity nonetheless. Obama supporters are also discussing how local Obama networks could integrate themselves into their communities through various forms of service work and activism. Obama’s Web site is currently raising money for the victims of recent Southern California fires.

The importance of cultivating the network and keeping it intact was underscored by an online survey that Plouffe sent out to supporters on Tuesday. The survey explicitly asked: “How would you like to see this organization move forward in the months and years ahead?”

Offering a clue as to what Obama insiders are thinking, the survey asked supporters to rank four objectives: helping the new administration “pass legislation through grass-roots efforts”; helping elect state and local candidates “who share the same vision for our country”; training others in the organizing techniques perfected by the campaign; and “working on local issues that impact our communities.”

Notably absent from that list was the word “Democrat.”

Yet there is only so much distance that Obama either can or wants to keep from his party. He is, in important ways, a loyal Chicago organization Democrat. Plouffe is currently using the Obama fundraising network to help the Democratic National Committee erase its deficit.

Obama supporters have been moving into Georgia to help Democrat Jim Martin in his Dec. 2 runoff campaign against incumbent Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss. Yet Obama himself has yet to make clear how forcefully he’ll intervene in a state that he lost. A Martin victory would signal the depth of the nation’s desire for change, but a new president with soaring popularity may not want to subject himself to such an early test on not-entirely-hospitable terrain.

One Democratic strategist said that parts of the Obama organization are still mistrustful of the national committee as a redoubt for Hillary and Bill Clinton loyalists. But this view is waning since Obama, as the party’s undisputed leader, will inevitably take over the party apparatus, and he is making peace with the Clintons, notably by suggesting he may want Sen. Clinton as his secretary of state.

The urgency of the organizational discussion signals that Obama’s lieutenants see the 2008 campaign as having fundamentally altered the contours of American politics.

Democrats believe (and many Republicans fear) that Obama allowed his party and its allies to take an enormous leap forward in both technological sophistication and grass-roots activism. Preserving those gains and building on them is a high priority for a man who sees organizing not only as instrumental, but also as a way of transforming democracy itself.

– The Washington Post

One thought on “What will become of Obama’s vast grass-roots network?

  1. Why the opposition should be worried about Obama

    By: Dibaba Regasa

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    Recently, Ethiopians in the Diaspora and local opposition leaders have been engaged in interaction regarding the next US administration’s policy towards Africa in general and Ethiopia in particular. The opposition believes that unlike Bush who sees relations with Ethiopia solely on narrow security issue, Democrats will not be soft on Ethiopia because they will also give a priority for democracy, human rights and good governance. According to the opposition, the EPRDF is worried about its relations with the democrats given the two houses in the congress plus the executive are now in the hands of Democrats. They are certain that the EPRDF will have a tough time ahead. Some opposition members in the US who supported Obama during the campaign are now lobbying in the Obama camp to create wedge between the EPRDF and the incoming administration. This is normal but a futile attempt.

    The opposition should understand that the fundamentals of US foreign policy do not usually change with the change in government. Look at history. During the 17 years of EPRDF’s rule, Bush senior, Clinton and Bush junior were in the White House. Eventhough the three Democrat and republican administrations use different approaches when dealing with the EPRDF, the fundamentals did not change. All you have to ask is “what is the national interest of the US?” The three administration’s common national interest was to have a stable Ethiopia, an aspiring democracy, a responsible government, and a peace anchor in the region (the Horn is a tough neighborhood). They strongly believe that the EPRDF with all its shortcomings is a party that have accomplished those and is a party they can deal with. According to the three US presidents and the US power establishment, EPRDF does not hurt the national interest of the US. Obama advisors know it very well. Period.

    The exaggerations, lies and fabrications by extremist opposition in the US about the conduct of EPRDF can not change US foreign policy towards Ethiopia what so ever. The approach may change because various interest groups will day and night bombard the Obama administration with petitions and demonstrations. Nothing more. A giant country’s foreign policy can not be drastically changed because few extremists paint a bleak picture on Ethiopia. The good professors should know better. That is the ABC of US foreign policy.

    The information I have is that the EPRDF is not worried about Obama’s foreign policy. It is in fact to the contrary. The reasons are clear for everyone to see. For the survival of Ethiopia (not for the sake of the US or others), the EPRDF is trying to democratize Ethiopia, even though it has a long way to go. Because of this, EPRDF and Obama will be happy to work together. Within the tough neighborhood, Ethiopia is an anchor of peace trying to resolve all issues peacefully to make the Horn a tranquil place. The democrats know it and are happy to work with the EPRDF. With a long history and large population, Ethiopia is considered by the US to be a vital country in the Horn. The EPRDF with all its shortcomings is considered to be a true partner in global issues.

    By the way, Obama’s election is a historic one in all dimensions. The World is extremely upbeat. While all countries in the world are trying to work together with Obama, why should the extreme opposition go the other direction and work hard to create animosity between the new administration and EPRDF? So strange. The extremist diaspora should follow Obama’s motto of “Change”. While everyone is talking about change, the opposition is stagnant. Please do not spoil this historic election.

    Infact, the opposition should be the one that should be worried about this tsunami change in the US. No more rooms for hatred, division, confrontation and racism. Obama’s era is for unity, forgiveness, reconciliation and engagement. Let all of us change for the better and be part of this monumental history. Let all of us work hard to strengthen the US-Ethiopia relations.

    Dibaba Regasa

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