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Marta Mossburg: Why Democrats lost the health care debate

By: Marta Mossburg
Examiner Columnist
September 4, 2009

Where were the crowds Tuesday evening? Where were the fans camping overnight to shake the hand of their rock star?

That's when Wade Rathke, founder of Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, came to West Baltimore to promote his book, "Citizen Wealth: Winning the Campaign to Save Working Families." President Obama was a leadership trainer for ACORN, which champions "living wage" laws and unionizing Wal-Mart employees. Prosecutors around the country recently charged the group and its employees with wide-scale voter fraud in the 2008 election.

When even the Bono of the community organizing world can only draw 30 people to the basement of SEIU 1199, something is wrong.

And something was wrong. Perhaps that's why Rathke, clad in a downtrodden chic look - weathered brown cowboy boots, jeans, khaki jacket with leather elbow patches - kept his remarks short and rhetoric subdued. I expected a Jesse Jacksonesque call to arms. What emerged was more like Jimmy Carter's "malaise" speech.

Rathke lamented the infighting within different unions and the inaction of Democrats in Congress on behalf of low-income Americans. "We're not going to get what many of us thought was possible a year ago," he said.

And even if organizers could unionize 100,000 or 150,000 Wal-Mart workers, no plan exists for how the organizations could handle the influx of new members, he said.

One bright spot is overseas, Rathke said, where unions are signing thousands of garbage pickers in India and Argentine cartoneros, the ultrapoor in Buenos Aires who recycle cardboard and other trash.

He said these informal workers are the fastest growing group of workers in the world. While that may be true, if the only place where U.S. unions are relevant is outside the United States, someone should be questioning the sustainability of their model.

Some in the group offered common explanations for union troubles. Bob Moore, a community organizer for more than 40 years, said local groups had no chance against well-funded opponents on the right. "There is nothing behind us," he said.

But Les Bayless, the retired treasurer of Service Employees International Union 1199, blamed poor leadership within the union community for its troubles. "We need different leaders," he said. Of the health care protesters, he said, "I think they are out there because of TARP [the $787 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program passed by Congress]. TARP p*** me off, too. We let them own that issue."

The group collectively lamented that the Right discovered Saul Alinsky's "Rules for Radicals." "It's kind of scary! They have learned all of the tricks," said Sue Esty, the assistant director of American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Maryland.

But maybe it isn't the Right learning the rules. Maybe it's the community organizers losing the anger so necessary to keep the fight alive. Angry people drive beat-up hatchbacks and eat ramen noodles.

They don't show up to greet their leaders in a Volvo, Lexus, Cadillac or Chrysler 300, like some of the cars parked outside SEIU 1199, and eat grapes and cheese like at this meeting.

And they have a passion to get their message out. Rathke said part of his reason for writing "Citizen Wealth" was to engage people in today's world. He wants people to ask themselves "Are we doing things we always did? Or are we doing things that actually work?"

But even he seemed disinterested in figuring out what ignites Americans' passions. Asked about MoveOn.org, the liberal equivalent in power to the Christian Coalition in the 1990s, Rathke said "that's more Internety" than what community organizers do, but he admired the group's fundraising prowess.

MoveOn.org seems like the epitome of what community organizers should be in the Internet age. The group is widely credited with helping to solidify Democratic control of Congress and is known for quickly mobilizing its left-leaning troops against anything proposed by the previous administration. It is currently organizing health care "vigils" around the country to promote a government-run health care system.

If Rathke and his supporters want to remain relevant, they can't go it alone. And they must come up with a new agenda that stirs the hearts and minds of workers. When they can buy a luxury car, live in the suburbs and retire on a pension, it's hard to tell their troops that they are oppressed, much less stir them to protest.

Examiner Columnist Marta Mossburg is a senior fellow with the Maryland Public Policy Institute and lives in Baltimore.




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Sep 4, 2009

how can the dems lose the debate when the gop refuses to debate. you can't lose something that hasn't started yet. the examiner really does suck.

 

myna

Sep 4, 2009

The Dems really sucks. If bigger government is the only reform, then we are really in big trouble. Most of the ills in the society coming from the government.

 

Unions

Sep 4, 2009

Contrary to what the above poster said, the Republicans have not refused to debate, but the Democratic Party's auxiliary, the mainstream media, has refused to cover their plan for healthcare reform. The reason the media won't do it is that it is a market based plan, which provides consumers with choice, and does not involved the government in a heavy-handed way, as the Democrats and the media(I'm being redundant, I know) desire. The media suspects the public would go for it and since it's against the "agenda" it won't get any coverage. The media is also pretty silent on the disaster that is British and Canadian govertnment run healthcare.

 

dorf

Sep 4, 2009

The real problem is the message is wrong. Most citizens (the Voters) understand correctly that the admin message is a takeover of the country and they Reject it.

 

megapotamus

Sep 4, 2009

Just how does one go about "organizing" the "garbage pickers in India and Argentine cartoneros"? They draw no salary or benefits from anyone. They salvage and sell. There is only one way: the guildist minded trash pickers will assign some of their group to security rather than rummaging. These lucky ducks will drive off any non-guildists that have the temerity to aspire to wade through the dump in search of wealth. Those who still peruse the refuse will be dunned for the upkeep of the enforcers and at an ever greater rate as enforcer and worker realize that the fate of the worker lies in the hands... or the stick morelike, of the enforcer. So the guildist will be poorer while non-guildists starve and the enforcers reap larger and larger rents. Hmm. I guess it isn't any different from organizing a WalMart after all.

 

Kelly

Sep 4, 2009

It wasn't the lack of debate by republicans that killed healthcare. Instead of sitting down and thoughtfully hammering out a few well chosen, easy to implement and easy to explain items, the democrats chose to throw a plethora of left leaning idea's into 5 competing bills, than they weren't able to articulate any of them...many of the members didn't even know what was in any of the bills. That scared the American people, and rightly so.

 

J

Sep 4, 2009

"When even the Bono of the community organizing world can only draw 30 people to the basement of SEIU 1199, something is wrong"

Yes - the leadership of the union is supporting and promoting something that would be severely detrimental to the membership, and the members know it.

If my union leadership was openly supporting this lunacy, they be looking at a recall election, followed by a comprehensive mental evaluation.

 

apetra

Sep 4, 2009

GOP is "refusing to debate"?

I recall Pelosi refused to debate or offer an alternative to the Bush social security plan (which might have saved the financial system, infusing a trillion of new liquidity).

Why should the Republicans play by different rules?

 

Schooner

Sep 4, 2009

The problem with this healthcare plan is in the product not the marketing. No one likes the product. It truly is socialism. Its funny that liberals call themselves progressives when their ideas of government running everything proved unsustainable with the fall of communism all over the world.

 

Trouble

Sep 4, 2009

Let's not break our arms patting ourselves on the back just yet. We have a long way to go. We must hang tough and remain vigilant.

This ain't over.

 

Trouble

Sep 4, 2009

Whoo-boy, T - read the article more carefully next time.

I should have added: it almost looks like this author is admitting defeat - sort of a 'false surrender' like AQ in Iraq used to do - to lull those of us on the Right into a false sense of security.

It ain't going to work, ma'am. We know you'll try again, we will hang tough, and we will remain vigilant. We won't be lulled to sleep, and we won't celebrate victory until every incumbent is tossed from the Congress and proposed trillion-dollar boondoggles like this are automatically DOA.

Eternal vigilance is also the price of economic liberty.

 

Steven H

Sep 4, 2009

myna

"how can the dems lose the debate when the gop refuses to debate. you can't lose something that hasn't started yet. the examiner really does suck."

Naaa, they did what they did in the campaign. Side stepped and evaded and claimed they were addressing issues.

Oh no, you won't loose your insurance. Oh no, it won't cost more. Oh no, there will be no rationing.

The above is NOT debating the issues. It’s evading them and being dishonest. The 'other side' won by getting that out there. That the people pushing for reform were not being upfront.... That and the widening opened by the delays caused by the blue dogs and tea parties let people read the bills a bit… and they didn’t like them.




 

Warren Bonesteel

Sep 4, 2009

Heh.

So...you still think this is all about Republican vs Democrat and liberal vs conservative, eh?

The times have changed, folks. Do try to keep up.

 

Peg C.

Sep 5, 2009

Had to laugh out loud at the line about how scary it is that we've learned their Alinsky tricks. Like we're mental defectives. All it took to galvanize us was a wholesale theft of our and our descendants' futures by incompetent yet persistent, Marxist thugs and liars. Too bad we waited until 1 second before midnight to finally fight back, but we're outraged and activated now. So who are the real community organizers? Not folks on fat union and government pensions, that's for sure.

 

John Fembup

Sep 5, 2009

So Les Bayless, the retired treasurer of Service Employees International Union 1199 said

"We need different leaders"

Yeah, hasn't that been exactly the problem with all totalitarian and socialist governments in history?

They just needed different leaders.

If only we could get different leaders, we'd have paradise on earth.

If only . . .

 

Leo D

Sep 5, 2009

Are you sure you're not confusing TARP with the '$787 billion' stimulus bill or did TARP come to the same figure?
Accuracy matters, it goes directly to credibility.

 

kyleb

Sep 6, 2009

I keep seeing Democrats seeing this as a Democrat/Republican thing. It's way beyond that. Half the people raising hell against Obamacare are Paulians and former Perot voters and they HATE republicans. What Democrats don't get is that hardcore leftists make up only a third of the country. A whole lot of people voted for Obama for what they THOUGHT was a lesser of evils. They're rethinking now.

 

Stella Baskomb

Sep 6, 2009

Leo D said "Are you sure you're not confusing TARP with the '$787 billion' stimulus bill or did TARP come to the same figure? Accuracy matters, it goes directly to credibility."

So does nit picking, Leo, so does nit picking.

So how about we agree that stimulus and TARP both consume "incredbly freakin huge numbers of dollars."

That work for ya?

 

Platon Rigos

Sep 8, 2009

"Its funny that liberals call themselves progressives when their ideas of government running everything proved unsustainable with the fall of communism all over the world."
Schooner go get an education. All of the world's democracies have a single payer plan and it works better and cheaper and is not "government running everything". But keep believing the bilge they (Rush, Hannity and the Republicans)are feeding you until you find yourself paying 20,000 for one year's health insurance. Leave the insurance companies get fatter as you are denied coverage for a desease and find yourself facig a real death panel. Finally leave business (Wall Street) running everything, they did such a better job last fall.



 


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