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What A Big Tent Means

Below, I wrote my personal reaction to the Ellen Tauscher election eve stinkbomb in our Big Tent Democratic Party. But I really like what Chris Bowers had to say about it and our Big Tent, even though Chris and I have substantial ideological differences - particularly on tax and trade policy. While Chris and I differ on many issues, we agree completely on how our Big Tent Party must function. Let's look at what Chris wrote on the flip side.

We need a broad coalition in order to govern, and neither conservatives nor progressive will ever be thoroughly purged from a Democratic governing coalition. Nor should they be, considering our nation's diversity and historical tolerance for dissent. To keep the coalition together, we need to do three things. First, we all must have an ownership stake. Second, we must all agree to act within mutually agreed upon rules to resolve intra-coalition conflicts. Third, we have to all be working for each other, despite our differences.

When we are told that we are driving the party off a cliff, it becomes clear that whoever made that comment it is not working for everyone in the coalition. That person is distancing herself form the party, as we move closer toward it. That alone means it will never be her victory more than it will be ours, no matter what numbers she cites. You can't run against / from X and then claim you catalyzed X's victory (well, maybe you can, considering the frequent illogic of our national political discourse). It also becomes clear that that person has less of an ownership stake, and is less willing to follow party rules if they don't suit her. She isn't willing to make the sacrifices that will allow us to govern together--she only wants to govern for herself and with a few of her friends. When a person like that rises to prominence in the party, that person becomes destructive to the party as a whole. In my book, that becomes the number one reason to run a primary challenge against someone. That's why I was on board with Lamont from before he even announced. Lieberman's Nader-like trashing of the Democratic Party for personal gain was a long-term pattern in his behavior. Iraq and his refusal to accept primary results are just some of the latest examples of that behavior.

I am a progressive, and I joined the Democratic coalition because that is where progressives belong. Just one look at the opposing coalition should make that clear. Fighting for progressives and fighting for Democrats does not in any way seem like a conflict to me. That goes for every time I support a conservative Democrat in a general election. As long as we all follow the guidelines I laid out above, it shouldn't be a problem for centrists and conservatives in our coalition to see no conflict here either. I desperately wish that lack of conflict is something more non-progressives in our coalition would come to understand, because as long as we are selling each other down the river for personal gain, our coalition stands no chance of governing to the benefit of the American people, winning elections, or even functioning as an effective opposition to Republican rule.

Chris is exactly right. And as for our ideological differences? We will hash them out - INSIDE our Big Tent.

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  • Display: Sort:
    I don't think that's the case. (none / 0) (#1)
    by Gabriel Malor on Mon Oct 30, 2006 at 01:01:06 PM EST
    Evidence that differences will not be decided "INSIDE [your] Big Tent":

    (1) Joe Lieberman. Says Matt Stoler:

    Make no mistake, these DC Democrats are only our temporary allies.  They have total contempt for the rules of the party, and they cheered Joe after he faced us in the primary.  It is no longer reasonable for them to call for party unity, because they no longer have any legitimate claim to call themselves leaders of the party.  They may be leaders for the next few decades simply due to inertia, but it's very clear that Bill Clinton and Barack Obama are liars who think nothing of insulting Democratic primary voters who play by the rules.

    Says you in a post titled "Lieberman: Not a Democrat":

    The question is why in the world any Democrat would support this Bush enabling de facto Republican?

    (2) Barack Obama. Says you:

    What Obama would need to rely on is the very thing he is eschewing, the Democratic Party playing partisan politics. so this aspect of Obama is very troubling to me, either he is naive or more likely, disingenuous, playing a role for his personal benefit and to the detriment of the Democratic Party. That bothers me a great deal.


    Response (none / 0) (#2)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Mon Oct 30, 2006 at 02:23:58 PM EST
    If Joe Lieberman won the DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, I would have supported him. I said so before the primary.

    Joe Lieberman decided to leave the Party.

    Barack Obama will have my support if he is the Democratic nominee for anything.

    You have a strange idea for a political party - basically you say we should sit down and shut up.

    That's the GOP you are describing. We do things differently in the Democratic Party.


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