Nov. 8, 2006
'Netroots' Lose Their Grip In Midterms
Nation: Blogs Have Limited Impact On Campaign ’06
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Play CBS Video Video Notebook: The People's Voice Only On The Web: Katie Couric says that if you had to sum up the midterm election, it would boil down to one word: change.
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Video White House Election Reaction Bill Plante comments on the Democrat's big night and how President Bush may react this afternoon during his speech. Plante also comments on Sen. Nancy Pelosi's victory.
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Ned Lamont, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Connecticut, speaks at a news conference outside his office in New Haven, Conn., Wedesday, Aug. 16, 2006. Lamont, a top beneficiary of 'netroots' fundraising, lost his bid to unseat Sen. Joe Lieberman, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)
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Section Blogophile CBSNews.com's Melissa McNamara samples the best of the blogs.
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News Tools Blog: Public Eye Inside the news. Inside CBS. An unprecedented look inside the workings of CBS News. Check it out. Tell us what you think.
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Interactive Election Briefing Book Info on the races, voting statistics, and more from the CBS News Election & Survey Unit.
Howard Dean, Nancy Pelosi, and Rahm Emanuel say they are happy to share credit for the Democrats' electoral success, but not everyone in the party is feeling as generous. Progressive bloggers, who often promote and criticize the Democratic Party with equal vigor, want their props. MyDD blogger Chris Bowers concluded that netroots activists were crucial to victory — long before the votes were counted. Last month, he wrote "most, if not all, of the significant improvements Democrats have made from 2004 to 2006 were generated primarily within the netroots and the progressive movement." Yet the election results suggest the netroots' scorecard is decidedly mixed.
The blogs' most famous candidate and top fundraising beneficiary, Ned Lamont, lost his bid to unseat Senator Joe Lieberman. One of the campaign's senior advisors, former Clinton White House counsel Lanny Davis, said the victory "proved the blogosphere is all wind and very little sail." Bloggers tell a different story: the unusual, 3-way race should not be judged strictly by who won, but also by its success in helping "make Iraq the center of this electoral season," as Joel Silberman wrote on FireDogLake. If Lamont's loss is counted as a symbolic effort that beat expectations, his performance fits a pattern. Many of the netroots' most popular House candidates beat expectations this week, but ultimately lost.
While there is no single, authoritative list of netroots candidates, ActBlue.com, a Democratic fundraising clearinghouse, lists the candidates nominated by top blogs and ranks them by total donors. Looking at their top 20 Democratic House candidates, so far ten have lost, three have won and the other seven are in races that are still too close too call at the time of writing. The netroots' lost races include national names, such as FBI whistleblower Coleen Rowley in Minnesota and New York's Eric Massa, the popular former aide to Gen. Wesley Clark. Winners include attorney Paul Hodes in New Hampshire and two veterans, Joe Sestak in Pennsylvania and Tim Walz in Minnesota. (Bloggers also provided critical early support to long-shot Senate challengers Jon Tester and Jim Webb, who were locked in races that were also still too close to call on Wednesday morning.)
Yet regardless of the remaining results and recounts, the fact is the netroots' favorite candidates did not perform as well as the Democrats targeted by party leaders. And they were never supposed to. Many of the bloggers' picks were aggressive Democrats in long-shot districts who were neglected by the Beltway establishment. There is no doubt that bloggers leveraged money and political buzz to make races more competitive and put Republicans on the defensive, but it was simply not the decisive factor in the elections
John Aravosis writes AmericaBlog, which raised over $100,000 from about 1,900 activists this cycle, but on election night he resisted attempts to measure the netroots' impact. "It's too hard to define who did what. We could have defined quite easily that John Kerry lost it for us if he had not shut up after two days, but to know whether blogs [had a bigger effect than] unions is like saying was Rahm Emanuel more effective than Howard Dean? I don't know," he told The Nation. That sentiment is probably shared by many netroots activists, who are more focused on the Democratic victory than parceling out credit.
The more interesting question, Aravosis argues, is how will the blogs adapt to working with "Democrats who actually have power." In the short term, he hopes to hammer home the message that the election proves Americans think conservatism is "inherently wrong," rally support for voting rights reform, and support the House Democrats' new agenda. Other bloggers are more interested in crafting the agenda: Arianna Huffington's on election night chastised Howard Dean for backtracking so far on Iraq in a CNN interview that he sounded like he was pitching "the president's plan."
Mr. Davis, a self-described "liberal Democrat" who repeatedly tangled with bloggers during his work on behalf of Joe Lieberman, said on election night that the blogopshere must evolve in order to have a broader impact. "If the blogosphere is to have an impact on changing the country as opposed to talking to each other, the Lamont campaign is a lesson in exactly what not to do. They came out of a primary and they continued to wage a primary," he said, "but they weren't talking to unaffiliated voters and moderate Republicans." Davis told The Nation he has a new proposal that the blogosphere establish voluntary rules for "fairness, accuracy and accountability," requiring writers and commentors to provide their real names, phone numbers and addresses, and forbidding anonymous comments offering misleading or personal attacks. He argues that Democrats cannot change the minds of people voting against their "economic self-interest" by offering "words of hate" or "anonymous attacks."
Benjamin Rahn, President of ActBlue.com, believes online activists have already cleared that hurdle, because they are part of the offline political dialogue across the country. "In many ways the netroots are just the most visible part of the nationwide grassroots movement. The conversations happening online, in the blogosphere, and by e-mail from friend to friend to friend, are also happening in bars and coffee shops and PTA meetings. We just don't happen to mike them and put the audio online for everyone to hear," he explained via e-mail. "And the people who used ActBlue to fundraise are also the people who made phone calls with MoveOn's call to change, and waved signs at street corners today, and helped out at polling places. And those are the people who are going to wake up tomorrow and say "Damn, that felt good. Let's do it again."
By Ari Melber
Reprinted with permission from The Nation.
| If you like this article, check out www.thenation.com for more investigative reports, timely editorials and incisive columns |

Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective.





And it doesn't matter what the so-called analysts say now, because Howard Dean and Nancy Pelosi and Barbara Boxer all know very well how the whole thing came down.
The punditry just blathers on, pretending that the various groups are fighting for credit, when everyone who counts is happy to share credit. The Democrats in power and the blogs and the READERS of blogs and the newly elected candidates are all thrilled at the outcone, and all know how it really happened.
Blather on, you highly paid know-nothings!
As one example, take a look at New York's 19th Congressional District where John Hall scored a stunning upset win against 6 term incumbent Sue Kelly. Grassroots tech savy bloggers and You Tubers contributed heavily to his VICTORY, with the folks at Take 19 leading the way. One of the grassrooters who operated various blogs, and put up numberous You Tube pieces garnered over 30,000 hits. That is not a insignificant market share when you look at the vote totals in this race.
Trying to deny Bloggers and You Tubers their due is a very slippery slope that smart politicians will avoid.
On Lamont, the DLC estranged him from Netroots & threw him under the Go Joe bus The Sgt. Shultz media "knew nothing." Where were the reports about the Bloomberg Thugs bussed in to attack Lamont busses? Why did the 50% CT Republicans give Joe their votes & Slesenger 10%-if he pulled 30% Lamont wins wit 40%. Who is looking?
This quote sums it up best. Blogs and message boards are perfect for generating buzz and spreading information (i.e. Allen's maccaca remark) but they are not influential when voters go into the polling booth. The netroots had a huge voice this time around but they are not able to turn excitement into votes. They are part of the equation but certainly don't deserve all the credit that some bloggers think they do.
Thanks to the Bush administration's attack on truthtellers and a Republican Congress' refusal to conduct proper oversight, many holes in national security remain unexposed, waiting for us to correct them or terrorists to exploit them. Bush's salting of federal agencies with sycophantic incompetents, poisoned the federal civil service for years to come.
Thanks to the Bush administration's attack on truthtellers and a Republican Congress' refusal to conduct proper oversight, many holes in national security remain unexposed, waiting for us to correct them or terrorists to exploit them. Bush's salting of federal agencies with sycophantic incompetents, poisoned the federal civil service for years to come.
You keep believing that, and we'll keep helping the Dems to win.
BTW, if the repubs don't figure out quickly that the election results were a reaction not just to the direction of the country, but to their arrogance and incompetence, then they will lose in '08 as well.
Don't get too comfortable just yet.
America is still deeply FASCIST.
Both PARTIES were in on it. The NEWS is PROPOGANDA. The Church is CORRUPT. Business is all MONOPOLIES.
Land of the FREE? Not by a LONG SHOT.
- by one_american November 8, 2006 6:04 PM EST
- MRC President Brent Bozell says:
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See all 13 Comments"I will say this unequivocally: In 25 years of looking at the national media, I have never in my life seen a more one-sided, distorted, vicious presentation of news and non-news by the national press. The national press ought to be collectively ashamed of itself. They might as well take out membership in the Democratic national party, they were simply microphones for the party. They need to be ashamed of themselves for what they did."
Congratulations, MSM! You made the big time.
Now you are going to PAY.