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David Sirota
David Sirota
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Elites' Democratic Days Are Numbered

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Call me an '80s junkie, but when I saw the results of this week's closely watched Colorado election, I immediately thought of "Spaceballs." In that Mel Brooks masterpiece, a Darth Vader spoof named Dark Helmet says "evil will always triumph because good is dumb." Make it "dumb and broke," and you have a powerful explanation for incumbent Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet's narrow victory over former state legislator Andrew Romanoff (D).

In just the 20 months since being appointed to fill the vacated Senate seat of now-Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Bennet became one of Congress' top recipients of corporate cash. A wealthy businessman who had never held elected office before, he ultimately raised and spent almost $6 million on his campaign — more than any primary candidate in the history of Colorado. He was additionally aided by the Democratic National Committee and Organizing for America's phone-banking, by President Obama's full-throated endorsement and by the built-in advantages that come with a taxpayer-financed Senate office.

Romanoff, by contrast, swore off special-interest money from the beginning. As a former state House Speaker with a deep grassroots network throughout Colorado, he constructed a scrappy campaign on less than $2 million of mostly small-dollar, in-state contributions. In the relatively few ads he was able to afford, he juxtaposed his own progressive economic platform with Bennet's odious Senate votes to protect the big banks, oil firms and health insurance companies that Americans despise and that financed Bennet's campaign.

Alas, it wasn't enough. The Bennet campaign's ads obscured the incumbent's true record, and because those ads were backed with so much money, Romanoff's spots were like a pin dropping at a Metallica concert, and the challenger lost.

So it's true — this particular political contest, like so many others, can indeed be summed up by paraphrasing Dark Helmet and noting that malevolent forces triumph because good is dumb and broke.

The simple fact is, in elections across the country, many well-intentioned voters remain ill informed and many principled candidates are still too underfinanced to mount a winning campaign.

However, the longer view tells a different story — one that may foreshadow the end of this "Spaceballs" axiom in the future.

Considering Bennet's wealth, corporate fundraising, incumbency and presidential support, it is astounding that a whopping 46 percent of this bellwether state's Democratic voters cast their ballots against him, against their own party's establishment and against their own party's president.

For those who care about a progressive economic agenda and about injecting democracy into the Democratic Party, this is encouraging when put next to the similarly impressive results of White House-thwarting Democratic primary challengers in Pennsylvania and Arkansas. And that trend explains the increasingly fierce pushback from Washington.

Yes, this is why President Obama's spokesman, Robert Gibbs, so vociferously berated the progressive movement on the eve of Colorado's primary, and why DNC powerbrokers moved so forcefully against Romanoff. He was the latest candidate to represent what those elites know to be an ascendant national progressive uprising inside the Democratic Party — one that keenly understands money's corrosive effects on public policy and that, therefore, rejects the Beltway's corporatist model.

Seeing that this uprising threatens their power and their D.C. worldview, these elites are desperate to preserve Dark Helmet's principle — so desperate, in fact, they have resorted to employing Obama's presidential campaign infrastructure to prop up more conservative candidates against progressive challengers in intra-party battles.

This unholy alliance managed to hold off the onslaught this time. But make no mistake — Colorado is yet more evidence that the days of "Spaceballs" defining the Democratic Party are ending.

David Sirota is the author of the best-selling books "Hostile Takeover" and "The Uprising." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Hello
Comment: #1
Posted by: robbin_ashes
Sun Aug 15, 2010 1:07 PM
I agree that it's regrettable that Romanoff lost to that conniver Bennet. Based upon your opinion in the Denver Post of August 14th as well as casual observations in various elections it would seem that a big part of the problem is finding honest information about each candidate in a central, easy to access place familiar to everyone across America. Most people do not have time to read dozens of websites, bushels of newspapers, periodicals and flyers or dig through various records to find genuine facts on each candidate. Most of us barely have the time to listen to the radio or watch television. There is so much going on out there and such tremendous overload that people just can't sift through it all to make intelligent decisions. Of course no amount of facts will help some people but one can always try.
I don't have an answer as to how this can be accomplished but it would be nice if each state would have an easy to locate website that would include both state and county candidate information that contained the truth about each candidate on it (truth meaning "just the unvarnished facts ma'm"). There could be a place for each candidate to candidly explain their actions and give them context. It would include voting records, where their money and support comes from and various positive and negative actions taken by the candidates.

Most people have access to a computer. Possibly a non-profit or existing credible group could create very simple websites for each state with verifiable candidate information and then find a way to publicize these sites. If this exists already then no one knows about it. Where does one go to quickly get the facts we can trust on all the candidates?

Anyway, there will always be people who will oppose this sort of idea but it might be something to think about and discuss. Perhaps there are better solutions. TV ads are HARDLY a way to make important decisions but that's really the way many people do it.
Comment: #2
Posted by: MagicalMindz
Sun Aug 15, 2010 4:45 PM
Thanks for expressing the reasons for my frustrations as a Romanoff supporter so clearly and concisely. I must say that I do not share your optimism regarding the progress made since the Mike Miles/Ken Salazar race. Though Romanoff garnered 46% of the vote and Miles only 27% in 2004, I do not believe that this is an indicator of a win in the near future. Romanoff is clearly the class of the Progressive field by virtue of his legislative experience, his bipartisan successes in the House, his part in gaining the majority in both houses and his extreme devotion to the Democratic Party and the children and citizens of Colorado. If he cannot win, the future is not promising for any Progressive candidate.

My question to you, David, is with 155,000 voters who supported Romanoff, determined to have our voices heard, how do we effect change now? If an excellent Progressive candidate like Romanoff can't win, who can? The Romanoffs of the political world who have the back bone, intelligence and skills to stand up to this corrupt system do not come along every election cycle. We must move now!! Help!!! Jo Ann Fujioka
Comment: #3
Posted by: Fujioka, Jo Ann
Mon Aug 30, 2010 9:00 PM
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