The
Left's New Machine
By Jonathan Chait, New Republic 1/5/07
Most political activists can point to one catalyzing event, an episode
in each of their lives (or, more often, in the life of their country)
that shook them from their complacency and roused them to change the
world. You can find many such stories if you troll through the
netroots, the online community of
liberal bloggers that has quickly become a formidable constituency in
Democratic politics. But the episode that seems to come up most
often is the Florida recount. For instance, Markos Moulitsas Zúniga and
Jerome Armstrong's book, Crashing
the Gate, the closest thing to a manifesto of the netroots
movement, begins like this:
Five years ago, the Republicans took
over the government through nondemocratic means. Establishment
Democrats, for the most part, stood back and watched as a partisan
judicial body halted the counting of presidential votes. While
conservative activists led the charge on behalf of their party, there
was nothing happening on our side. That was the spark. Fed-up
progressive activists began organizing online. Fueled by the new technologies--the web,
blogging tools, internet search engines--this new generation of
activists challenged the moribund Democratic Party establishment.
The 2000 recount is an apt birthing ground for the netroots. It
perfectly fits their view of U.S. politics as an atavistic clash of
partisan willpower. And their analysis of that episode, while somewhat
crude, has a certain truth. The liberal intelligentsia, and much of the
Democratic establishment, tried to hold itself above the fray. During
the recount, liberal pundits were concerned above all with maintaining
civility and consensus, and they flayed Democrats for any hint of
partisanship or anger. (In a New Yorker editorial, Joe Klein scolded
that Al Gore "reinforced his partisan reputation by challenging the
results in Florida" and cautioned that "vehemence of any
sort--ideological, political, analytical--seems ill-advised.") Elite
liberal opinion-makers insisted that their side play fair. Gore, they
declared, must allow for the possibility that his opponent could win a
fair recount, must renounce street demonstrations, must be
intellectually consistent--permitting, say, military ballots that did
not fulfill the letter of the law to be counted. Members of the Gore
recount team like William Daley and Warren Christopher, seeking to
uphold their reputations as statesmen, nervously complied.
The contrast with the Republican side could not have been more stark.
The only complaint conservative pundits had with the George W. Bush
operation was that it was too soft. (George Will wrote that there was a
"ferocity gap"--but, in a classic case of projection, he insisted that
Democrats were more ferocious.) Bush never conceded the possibility
that he could lose. Nor did he feel any obligation to maintain
intellectual consistency. His campaign demanded the letter of the law
be carried out in those instances when it suited his side, and it
flouted the letter of the law in those (military ballots, illegally
submitted absentee ballots in Seminole County) when it did not. It
whipped up a mob to halt a recount in Miami-Dade County that at the
time appeared potentially decisive. Conservatives celebrated these
developments without a hint of dissent. While Democrats in Washington constantly
undermined the Gore campaign by telling reporters that Gore should
concede, Washington Republicans maintained ranks. Through their
greater resolve and partisan discipline, the Republicans triumphed.
All the lessons the netroots have gleaned about U.S. politics were on
display in this noxious denouement, and those lessons have been
reinforced time and again throughout the Bush presidency. The
Democratic leadership and the liberal intelligentsia seemed pathetic
and exhausted, wedded to musty ideals of bipartisanship and
decorousness. Meanwhile, what the netroots saw in the Republican Party,
they largely admired. They saw a genuine mass movement built up over
several decades. They saw a powerful message machine. And they saw a
political elite bound together with ironclad party discipline.
This, they decided, is what the Democratic Party needed. And, when they
saw that the party leadership was incapable of creating it, they
decided to do it themselves. "We are at the beginning of a
comprehensive reformation of the Democratic Party," write Moulitsas and
Armstrong. What they have accomplished in just a few years is
astonishing. Already, the netroots
are the most significant mass movement in U.S. politics since the rise
of the Christian right more than two decades ago. And, by all
appearances, they are far from finished with their task: recreating the
Democratic Party in the image of the conservative machine they have set
out to destroy.
The most significant fact of American political life over the last
three decades is that there is a conservative movement and there has
not been a liberal movement. Liberalism, to be sure, has all the
component parts that conservatism has: think tanks, lobbying groups,
grassroots activists, and public intellectuals. But those individual
components, unlike their counterparts on the conservative side, do not
see one another as formal allies and don't consciously act in concert. If you asked a Heritage Foundation fellow
or an editorial writer for The Wall Street Journal how his work fits
into the movement, he would immediately understand that you meant the
conservative movement. If you asked the same question of a Brookings
Institute fellow or a New York Times editorial writer, he would have no
idea what you were talking about.
The netroots have begun to change all that. Its members are intensely
aware of their connection to each other and their place in relation to
the Democratic Party. The word "movement" itself--once rare among
mainstream liberals--is a regular feature of their discourse. They call
themselves "the people-powered movement," or "the progressive
movement," or, often, simply "the movement."
Like any movement, the netroots is a pastiche of people and groups,
with subfactions and varying levels of attachment. For that reason,
there's almost no characterization that is true of every member. And
yet, as movements go, the netroots are relatively coherent and
centralized. If you were to trace the history of the netroots, Jerome
Armstrong--sometimes called "The Blogfather"--is the place to begin.
In 2001, Armstrong began publishing a blog called MyDD, or "My Due Diligence," which made
prognostications about political events and stocks, sometimes based on
astrology. (As one astrological newsletter wrote, "Astrologer Jerome
Armstrong notes that Ixion and Quaoar are following close in Pluto's
wake in early Sagittarius, and connects the rise of the political
version of religious fundamentalism with the astronomical exploration
of the Kuiper Belt in 1992.") By 2002, MyDD allowed readers to post
their own commentaries, and it began to take off as a locus of activism
for Howard Dean supporters.
One frequent guest commenter on MyDD was Markos Moulitsas Zúniga, then
a software programmer living in Berkeley, California. Moulitsas quickly
developed a following and started his own liberal blog, called Daily Kos. In the years since
then, Daily Kos has exploded in size, long since eclipsing MyDD (which
has forgotten its financial/astrological origins and now stands for "My
Direct Democracy"). Daily Kos now attracts more than half a million
visits per day.
The next most influential netroots blog is probably Eschaton, written by
Philadelphia economist Duncan Black under the pseudonym "Atrios." There
are countless other blogs in the netroots orbit, including Crooks and Liars, Americablog, FireDogLake, and on and on.
Some of these sites have unique stylistic features (Crooks and Liars
has lots of video clips, FireDogLake has on-the-scene reporting from
such events as the Lieberman-Lamont race or the Scooter Libby trial) or
a particular slant (Americablog tends to focus on gay rights issues).
But, despite differences in ideology and style, these blogs share a
basic orientation: liberal, partisan, and strongly critical of Bush and
the Iraq war. Between them, and many smaller blogs, they have attracted
what amounts to a mass following.
Outsiders often use the terms "net-roots" and "liberal bloggers"
interchangeably, but they aren't exactly the same thing. The netroots are a subset of the liberal
blogs, constituting those blogs that are directly involved in political
activism, often urging their readers to volunteer for, or donate money
to, Democratic candidates. Other liberal bloggers, sometimes called the
"wonkosphere," advocate liberal ideas but do not directly involve
themselves in politics. Most of the popular sites in the
wonkosphere are maintained by academics or (generally) young liberal
journalists, such as former American Prospect staffer Joshua Micah
Marshall of Talking Points
Memo or Washington
Monthly blogger Kevin Drum. The quality of these blogs varies
immensely, with the best ones offering a level of reporting and
analysis far better than typical mainstream media fare. While
journalistic liberal bloggers are not directly part of the netroots,
the two groups generally regard one another as allies and criticize one
another tepidly if at all.
Two deep, organic bonds hold together the netroots. The first is
generational. Netroots activists tend
to be in their thirties, like Moulitsas and Black, or younger. Even
those who are older, such as Armstrong (who is in his early forties),
often developed a strong interest in politics only recently. Nearly all
of them, then, share the common experience of having their political
consciousness awakened and shaped by the Bush years.
Their newness makes them outsiders to the game. They are, by their way
of thinking, self-made men and women who pulled themselves up from
obscurity by dint of pure merit. They
see the Washington establishment, by contrast, as a kind of clique,
filled with mediocrities who attended the best schools or know the
right people. The netroots shorthand for this phenomenon is "Washington
cocktail parties"--where, it is believed, the elite share their
wrong-headed ideas, inoculated from accountability. "They still
have their columns and TV gigs," Moulitsas wrote on his blog last
December, describing the Beltway elite. "They still get treated with
reverence by the D.C. cocktail party circuit."
In point of fact, the most successful bloggers have been pulled into
the warm embrace of the political establishment. Moulitsas consults
regularly with influential Democrats in Washington. Presidential
candidates hire popular bloggers or court them with private dinners.
Last year, numerous top Democrats trekked to Las Vegas to attend YearlyKos, the liberal
blog convention, where they sucked up to the attendees as relentlessly
as if they were software executives. The climax of the proceedings was
a party for bloggers thrown by thenpresidential hopeful Mark Warner,
costing more than $50,000 and featuring chocolate fountains. None of
these things, however, have softened the netroots' sense of grievance
and exclusion.
The second bond is a shared political
narrative. This is not exactly the same thing as a shared ideology. The
ideology of the netroots is, indeed, somewhat amorphous, as liberal
bloggers themselves often point out. A major source of the
ideological confusion is Moulitsas himself, who is almost comically
lacking in philosophical depth. In one oft- discussed blog post, he
described himself as a "libertarian Democrat" and proceeded immediately
to outline a philosophy that was pure traditional liberalism. ("A
Libertarian Dem believes that people should have the freedom to make a
living without being unduly exploited by employers. ... A Libertarian
Dem gets that no one is truly free if they fear for their health, so
social net programs are important to allow individuals to continue to
live happily into their old age.")
Some liberal bloggers have tried to turn this ideological confusion
into a strong point: Far from being ideologically hidebound, as their
critics often contend, they are ruthlessly strategic political
calculators. Moulitsas eagerly touts this line. "They want to make me
into the latest Jesse Jackson, but I'm not ideological at all," he told
The Washington Monthly. "I'm just all about winning."
It is true that the netroots embraces political calculation. But the
strategies put forward by these activists almost invariably involve
shifting the Democratic Party at least a bit to the left. Some of them
are explicit about this. "Hiding from progressives and the left will
lead to Democratic losses in 2006," wrote MyDD's Matt Stoller last
year. "Running as a progressive will lead to victory." One survey of
netroots members found that two-thirds wanted the Democratic Party to
move to the left.
So the netroots are clearly liberal, and more liberal than the
Democratic Party as a whole. Ideology, however, is not the movement's
defining trait. What unites them is a
desire to replicate the successes of the conservative movement dating
back to the 1960s.
When you turn to the '60s to find an
antecedent for the netroots, the natural comparison would seem to be
the New Left. The parallels are certainly there: Both movements were
led by young people and political outsiders, driven by distrust of
establishment liberalism and stoked by an unpopular war. But the
netroots do not see themselves in the New Left mold. Rather, they see
themselves in what was called, in its insurgent days, the New Right,
and before that was known as the Goldwater movement.
The intellectual genesis of the netroots analysis lies in a book called
Before
the Storm by left-liberal historian (and tnr contributor) Rick
Perlstein. He argues that the conventional narrative of the '60s pays
far too much attention to left-wing activism. After all, he observes,
the '60s ended with the left smashed by a rising conservative tide that
has continued to this day. The real
story is that of the grassroots countermobilization on the right, which
took its most public form in the Barry Goldwater campaign. This
movement built counterparts to the dominant liberal institutions,
slowly took control of the Republican Party from the moderates who had
been running it, and jerked the national agenda sharply to the right.
Perlstein's book, wrote blogger and George Washington University
political scientist Henry Farrell in a Boston Review essay, "enjoys
near-canonical status among netroots bloggers."
Like the New Right (and unlike the New Left), the netroots is committed
to working within the two-party structure. They have relatively little
use for street demonstrations and none at all for Naderite third
parties. They fervently support Democrats and, with increasing
frequency, work for them directly.
Indeed, if there is a single thing that the netroots most admires about
the right, it is its philosophical and political unity. There are, to
be sure, numerous strands of thought on the right, each of which
emphasizes different elements of the conservative canon. But there is
far more holding together the conservatives than there is breaking them
apart. This has been true dating back to the founding of National
Review, with its emphasis on fusionism--the conservative creed uniting
economic libertarians and social traditionalists. Religious
conservative groups lobby for tax cuts, and economic conservatives
support anti-abortion judges. One of the key figures uniting the
conservative movement is Grover Norquist, a GOP activist/lobbyist who
holds weekly meetings in which conservative activists and intellectuals
hammer out a common agenda.
The netroots look upon this great right-wing apparatus with unconcealed
envy. Traditionally, to the extent that movements exist on the left,
they have been dispersed among single-issue
organizations--environmentalists, labor unions, pro-choice
activists--that mobilize only when their own pet issues are on the
agenda. This piecemeal structure leaves each component group fighting
solo battles against a large and cohesive coalition. Also, since there
are political issues that do not directly affect the single-issue
groups, it leaves swaths of liberal territory unguarded.
The netroots are scornful of
single-issue liberal groups--or, really, any liberals at all who are
not wholly dedicated to the cause of Democratic victory. As
Stoller has written on MyDD, "To the extent that I have a political
hero, it's probably Grover Norquist, not Ralph Nader." The netroots'
dream is of a liberal army of grassroots activists, pundits, policy
wonks, and politicians all marching more or less in lockstep.
This dream inevitably brings the netroots into conflict with many
liberal political commentators, the Democratic
Leadership Council (DLC), and other outposts of the center left.
The traditional interpretation of this feud is as a pure ideological
spat between the left and right wings of the Democratic Party--and it's
true that there's a strong ideological component to the spat. But the
deeper divide is ethos, not ideology. The movement sensibility of the
right, which the netroots are so determined to replicate, is largely
foreign to the liberal and Democratic elite.
One of the defining features of the
conservative movement is an intense social pressure upon its adherents
not to break ranks. One episode from the 1990s demonstrates a
fair sense of the prevailing ethos on the right. David Brock, until
then a member of the conservative movement in good standing, set out to
write a book about Hillary Clinton. Rather than producing the undiluted
hit job he and his readers expected, Brock found himself painting a not
entirely unsympathetic portrait of the first lady. The reaction among
his colleagues was swift and brutal. The organs of the right--The Wall
Street Journal's editorial page, National Review, The Washington
Times--denounced him for his heresy. A conservative friend of Brock's,
the late Barbara Olson, disinvited him from a dinner party she and
husband Ted Olson were throwing for fellow righties.
For conservatives, it was simply the expected outcome--a traitor
getting his due. "People get bumped off invite lists every day,"
shrugged then-Weekly Standard writer Tucker Carlson. Such a blasé
reaction might not say very much if Carlson were known for his movement
reliability. But, in fact, just the opposite was true: Carlson himself
was (and is) one of the most independent conservative pundits. Indeed,
earlier that year, he himself had written an unflattering article about
Norquist (perhaps motivated, in part, by a long-standing feud between
Norquist and Carlson's father). When the Standard, in a display of
movement loyalty, refused to publish it, Carlson sold it to The New
Republic. Norquist subsequently confronted Carlson at a restaurant and
called his article "not helpful to the movement." Other conservatives
laid into him. "No one who believes what we believe should be attacking
Grover," chastised Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute.
None of this is to suggest that lively debate cannot be found on the
right. To the contrary: Conservatives have always argued fiercely
amongst themselves. The difference is that conservatives are expected
to toe the line in disputes between their side and the left. A
conservative can criticize President Bush for being insufficiently
conservative or suggest that running against Social Security is
tactically unwise. What he cannot do is denounce the idea of impeaching
a Democratic president for covering up a sexual affair in 1998 or
question Katherine Harris's capacity to administer Florida election law
fairly in 2000.
Most liberals find the movement ethos of the right incomprehensible.
"This kind of treatment has no parallel among liberals," wrote Slate's
Jacob Weisberg in 1997. Among intellectuals and commentators on
Weisberg's side, the prevailing norm is largely the opposite: to go out
of one's way to demonstrate nonpartisan bona fides. Around the same
time that Brock was getting shellacked for failing to toe the party
line, Sidney Blumenthal was all but drummed out of liberal journalism
for toeing it too closely, thanks to his chumminess with the Clintons.
The worst thing that can happen to a conservative is to be seen as
disloyal. The worst thing that can happen to a liberal is to be seen as
"in the tank."
This ethos of political detachment among liberal intellectuals finds
its natural counterpart in the strategies of the DLC. The DLC's basic
idea is to embrace the political center--a model that is incompatible
with movement politics. Movements require unanimity against external
critics. The DLC model not only permits divisions among Democrats; in a
sense, it relies upon them. The premise of the DLC's strategy is that
the left wing of the party is unacceptable to the majority of voters.
The answer is to explicitly disavow that left wing--to create a Third
Way between the left and right poles.
Initially, at least, this seemed a successful strategy. Bill Clinton
won the presidency in 1992 in part because he defined himself as "a
different kind of Democrat"--one who favored capital punishment,
welfare reform, and so on. But, over time, the DLC strategy led to a
kind of ideological retrogression. Having reestablished the left pole
of the national debate further to the center, the only way for
Democrats to maintain their centrist image was to move further right
still. By the late '90s, the DLC had abandoned its preference for
universal health insurance for small piecemeal reforms and flirted with
partial privatization of Social Security.
This veneration of centrism created an atmosphere in which Democratic
unity was impossible. Democrats who unequivocally opposed the Bush
administration's agenda were not, by definition, "centrists." And so,
during the early Bush years, Democrats eager to preserve their standing
as moderates often found themselves acquiescing to a conservative
agenda that, not long before, would have been considered far outside
the mainstream.
The netroots understand that this is not a fair fight. As Black (aka
Atrios) has argued, you cannot sustain "a Democratic party in which all
the leading Democrats are forever running against their own party. Triangulation can work for one man, but
when every leading Democrat is constantly falling all over himself
(yes, this is exaggeration) to get away from Those Damn Dirty
Democrats, you have a party which is without foundation and where
capitulation is confused with bipartisanship."
For the netroots, partisan fidelity is the sine qua non. As Moulitsas
told Newsweek in 2005, "The issue is: Are you proud to be a Democrat?
Are you partisan?" What they cannot forgive is Democrats or liberals
who distance themselves from their party or who give ammunition to the
enemy. The netroots will forgive
Democrats in conservative districts for moving as far to the right as
necessary to win elections. But they do everything within their power
to eliminate from liberal states or districts moderates like Joe
Lieberman or Jane Harman, whose stances are born of conviction rather
than necessity. This is precisely the same principle espoused
by Norquist and other GOP activists. They will defend Republicans who
need to demonstrate their independence from the national party in order
to maintain their electoral viability. (As Norquist once remarked about
Lincoln Chafee, "A Republican from Rhode Island is a gift from the
gods.") But deviation by a Republican from a conservative state--say,
Arizonan John McCain--is unforgivable.
Another point of commonality between the netroots and the conservative
movement is the belief that moderation is a kind of social malady
brought about by residence within the Beltway. Conservatives believe
that Republicans generally begin their national careers in a state of
innocence but are perpetually susceptible to the blandishments of the
liberal elite. The right has developed its own idioms--e.g., "strange
new respect"--to describe the ways that they believe establishment
bastions like The New York Times flatter and cajole conservatives into
abandoning their principles.
The lure of this seduction is held to be so strong that it can only be
prevented through regular doses of ideological inoculation. Part of the
function of the conservative counter-establishment was to create
separate social networks for the right that would counteract the
effects of Georgetown cocktail parties. The old Washington social set
rewarded Republicans for bipartisanship and punished them for hewing to
their original beliefs. The new counter-establishment would do the
opposite. Norquist has boasted about spurning traditional Washington
social life for his alternative, movement-only dinner parties. "We
didn't come to get invitations to their dinner parties or their
receptions," he told The Washington Post a decade ago. "We don't need
permission, seek approval, or hang out with the people who built the
welfare state."
The netroots harbor a similar anti-Washington populism and, like the
conservative movement, have set about creating alternative institutions
and social networks. Some of them--such as Media Matters, which
monitors conservative bias in the news, or the New Politics Institute,
which promotes innovative approaches to organizing--are based in
Washington. (Neither is a creation of the netroots, but both are
closely allied and hire bloggers as fellows.) Others are virtual. The
most important of these is an e-mail list called Townhouse. It includes
"many bloggers and other representatives of the netroots as well as a
large number of partisan journalists and grassroots groups," Moulitsas
has written, and its purpose is to "have a unified message in the face
of a unified conservative noise machine."
The party-line sensibility that pervades the netroots is not some
artificial, Stalinist imposition. The
close ties that exist among the netroots and its allies grow out of the
technology they use so naturally. As insular as elite Washington may
be, the netroots' world is arguably more so. The leading liberal
bloggers all know one another and generally regard one another as
friends, or at least allies. The countless smaller liberal bloggers may
not inhabit the same social circles, but the nature of the form
encourages them to share the same political sensibility. After all, if
you are a new liberal blogger, your only way to escape total anonymity
is if larger, established blogs point readers to your site. E-mail
feedback and reader comments tend to be uniformly partisan as well,
reinforcing the path of least resistance.
Even Matthew Yglesias, who writes one of the most independent-minded
liberal blogs, confessed in March that he had soft-pedaled his
opposition to gun control. "I don't write about this issue much
because, hey, I don't want to be a wanker," he wrote. "Wanker" is the netroots equivalent of the
conservative term "squish"--an expression of derision reserved usually,
but not exclusively, for ideological defectors. It describes behavior
that, for liberal journalists and policy wonks who came into politics a
generation earlier, was a badge of honor.
In replicating the form and structure of the conservative movement,
inevitably the netroots have replicated its intellectual style as well.
The netroots, like the conservative
movement, believe that they represent a natural political majority, one
that can only be stymied by the timidity of their party's political
establishment. A Choice Not an Echo, Phyllis Schlafly's 1964
pro-Goldwater tract, insisted "there is no way Republicans can lose so
long as we have a presidential candidate who campaigns on the issues."
The logic of the netroots is eerily similar. "If we do our part to
support the new generation of Democrats, the opposition doesn't stand a
chance," writes Moulitsas. "Because all the money, all the name ID, all
the connections don't stand a chance against a real people-powered
movement."
Just as the Goldwaterites reserved their strongest contempt for the
moderates who controlled the GOP, the
netroots are at their most single-minded in their opposition to the
moderates who they believe control the Democratic Party. The
netroots often identify this enemy in amorphous, populist terms--"the
Beltway," "the D.C. establishment," etc. When it comes to identifying
its adversaries more specifically, the two institutions named most
often are the DLC and tnr. Netroots activists speak of these two
institutions in stark terms. "This is the modern DLC--an aider and
abettor of Right-wing smear attacks against Democrats," wrote
Moulitsas, who proceeded to threaten to "make the DLC radioactive." In
a posting about tnr, titled "tnr's defection to the Right is now
complete," Moulitsas wrote that this magazine [the New Republic] "betrayed, once
again, that it seeks to destroy the new people-powered movement for the
sake of its Lieberman-worshipping neocon owners." Both the DLC and tnr
are perpetually described as "dying" or "irrelevant," yet
simultaneously possessed of sinister and ubiquitous control over the
national discourse.
In reality, of course, the DLC is a political enterprise and tnr a
journalistic one; each has on its staff individuals who do not always
agree with each other; and neither institution exerts total control
over every individual on its payroll. While both the DLC and tnr
supported the Iraq war, both stridently opposed almost every other
element of the Bush agenda. The overwhelming majority of DLC missives
and tnr articles are perfectly congenial to mainstream liberalism and
perfectly hostile to the Republican Party of George W. Bush. But these
sorts of subtleties generally escape the Manichean analysis that
pervades the netroots.
What makes such internal enemies so dangerous is that they engage in
self-criticism. It is not that the netroots forbid internal debate. Far
from it: They indulge in all sorts of disagreements, tactical and
substantive, just as conservatives do. What they consider treasonous is
any criticism of any part of the Democratic Party or its activist base
from the right. You can attack the Democratic leadership in Congress
for failing to force a troop withdrawal from Iraq, but you cannot
attack it for opposing a troop surge.
For instance, Moulitsas wrote that Tom Vilsack, in his former capacity
as chairman of the DLC, "not only signed off on editorial decrees by
the DLC opposing [John] Murtha's and other withdrawal plans, but also
gave safe haven for these warmongering Democrats' to divide the party."
It is permissible to divide the party from the left, by opposing a
moderate Democratic position. But if you divide the party from the
right, you are an enemy of the movement.
Like any political community, the
netroots have developed distinctive linguistic tics that hold special
meaning to adherents, and these reveal something about the way the
movement thinks. Among the most revealing is the netroots' incessant
use of the words "meme"
or "frame"
to describe ideas. It is a formulation that assumes that establishing
the truth about an idea matters less than phrasing the idea in the most
politically effective way and repeating it as much as possible.
As Ed Kilgore (a moderate liberal blogger with a complicated
relationship to the netroots) has put it, this wording "reflects the
strange belief that politics is all about noise' and narratives';
whoever makes the most noise or gets the most Google hits is going to
win, regardless of objective reality."
This somewhat cynical outlook is not a habit the netroots have merely
fallen into; it's a deliberate strategy. Political punditry, in their view, is not a
form of intellectual discourse but of political battle. In an
interview last year with ABC News, Moulitsas explained the ethos with
remarkable clarity:
I learned to talk the way I do in the U.S. Army. And we don't mince
words. In politics, I don't see it any different. I see it as a
battlefield. We didn't create this political environment; the
Republicans did. The Rush Limbaugh[s] and Ann Coulter[s] created the
world we live in, and, for too long, Democrats tried to keep the high
ground: "Oh well, we're not going to go down in the muck with them."
And the bottom line is that they've been winning and we've been losing,
and it isn't because a couple of people use a potty word. It's because
they were aggressive, they promoted their side very effectively, they
riled up the troops, they motivated their supporters, they made sure
their base was well-nourished.
When you're in a battle, you use any weapon available. One of the
netroots' distinctive contributions to American political discourse is
the extremely promiscuous use of the insult "chickenhawk." To be sure,
people outside the military who favor a war ought to be conscious of
the fact that they will not personally bear the risks of battle. In the
hands of the netroots, however, it has become an all-purpose
refutation. In response to one Thomas Friedman column, Black wrote,
"You' are not surging' so go back to your billionaire's pad and shut
the fuck up. You've helped cause enough misery, none of which actually
involved you." The insult can even be used to discredit critics on
subjects unrelated to warfare. When National Review reporter Byron York
wrote an unflattering account of YearlyKos last year, Moulitsas
sneered, "Byron is just another chickenshit who didn't serve his nation
in uniform."
As a matter of logic, these insults are preposterous. Taken at face
value, they suggest that it's illegitimate to support a war if you're
not fighting in it. But nearly all
liberal bloggers claim to support at least some wars--say, the fight in
Afghanistan--and very few of them have ever served in the Armed Forces.
(Moulitsas is a notable exception, having served in the Army.) So, by
their own standards, most liberal bloggers are chickenhawks, too. In
the netroots, though, the measure of an idea is its rhetorical
effectiveness, not its truth.
The notion that political punditry
ought to, or even can, be constrained by intellectual honesty is deeply
alien to the netroots. They have absorbed essentially the same
critique of the intelligentsia that the right has been making for
decades. In the conservative imagination, journalists, academics, and
technocrats are liberal ideologues masquerading as dispassionate
professionals. Those who claim to be detached from the political
struggle are unaware of their biases, or hiding them.
Norquist once said something to me that gave perfect expression to this
view. During the 2000 campaign, the two of us were making small talk
before we were set to debate, and he offered that the event would be
clarifying for his team as well as for my team. I replied that, while I
certainly have strong opinions, I wasn't working for any "team."
Norquist smiled at me in a slightly condescending way and said,
"Sometimes, we're on a team and we don't realize it."
This is more or less the same view of the netroots. They attack
liberals who, in their fervor to be seen as fair-minded, bend over
backward so far that they do violence to truth. And they are quite
right to do so. But the netroots critique is not that the liberal
intelligentsia has stretched the conception of fairness too far; it is
that the conception of fairness itself is folly. Any sense of
detachment from the partisan fray is impossible. Earlier this year,
Black made the point quite lucidly:
Lots of people imagine themselves to
be, somehow, above
the fray. The most obvious group which does this is journalists and
their brethren. They fail to see themselves as actors on the political
stage, instead of detached observers. ... I've also seen it in
academics, who for all their supposed liberalness, to a great degree
really see themselves outside of this grand messy business called
politics. It's dirty, somehow.
You see it in technocrats, who too often devise their magical pony
plans without considering the need to understand the broader context.
From what people say, you see it in a lot of liberal
donors/institutions, who somehow like to see what they do as operating
outside of politics.
This ethos helps explain the enormous distrust between the netroots and
the traditional liberal intelligentsia. (Or, as Black put it, the
"incredible gap between those who see the debate as a kind of game and
those who, you know, actually give a shit about stuff.") Part of it is
the slight whiff of anti-intellectualism in some quarters of the
netroots. (Moulitsas, echoing Black's thoughts, suggested that
"intellectuals' who'd rather read books and measure purity are
next-to-useless. I prefer people of action, not of [sic] elitist
academics.") The prevailing sentiment here, however, is not a distrust
of pointy heads. Rather, it's a belief that political discourse ought
to be judged solely by its real-world effects. The netroots consider the notion of
pursuing truth for its own sake nonsensical. Their interest in ideas,
and facts, is purely instrumental.
Because they convey facts and opinions about the news to their readers,
bloggers associated with the netroots
are often mistaken for journalists. That is, as reporter Garance
Franke-Ruta (who covers the blogs) has put it, a "category error." This
was thrown into stark relief earlier this year, when John Edwards hired
Amanda Marcotte and Melissa McEwan, two bloggers who were prominent in
the netroots. The pair quickly came under enough fire for past
controversial blog posts--Marcotte, for example, had speculated, "What
if Mary had taken Plan B after the Lord filled her with his hot, white,
sticky Holy Spirit?"--that the Edwards campaign decided to cut them
loose. Before it announced the decision, however, Marcotte and McEwan's
allies lobbied heavily on their behalf. The liberal online magazine
Salon reported the firings, but the Edwards camp hunkered down and
refused to release a public statement while it decided on a course of
action, then denied the firings to Salon the following day. Liberal
bloggers in close contact with the campaign remained resolutely cryptic
about what they knew. "The bloggers closed ranks around the Edwards
campaign, some even claiming that Salon had gotten the story wrong,"
Salon's Joan Walsh later reported. To Walsh and other journalists, the
relevant metric is true versus untrue. To
an activist, the relevant metric is politically helpful versus
politically unhelpful.
There is a term for this sort of political discourse: propaganda. The
word has a bad odor, but it is not necessarily a bad thing. Propaganda
is often true, and it can be deployed on behalf of a worthy cause (say,
the fight against Nazism in World War II). Still, propaganda should not
be confused with intellectual inquiry. Propagandists do not follow
their logic wherever it may lead them; they are not interested in
originality. Propaganda is an attempt to marshal arguments in order to
create a specific real-world result--to win a political war.
The netroots have already changed U.S.
politics in sundry ways. They have pressured the Democratic Party to
adopt more innovative tactics rather than rely on the
cookie-cutter advice of high-priced consultants. And they have pressed
the party to adopt a more adversarial tone. Earlier this year, for
instance, liberal bloggers successfully lobbied Democratic candidates
to boycott a debate forum sponsored by Fox News, on the grounds that
their participation would legitimize Fox's dubious claim to be a
balanced news organization.
They have raised significant sums of
cash for politicians, organized volunteers, and brought together
like-minded activists. This has, in turn, created an
alternative power center for recruiting candidates for office. Before
the net- roots, potential candidates who wanted the national party to
take them seriously needed to raise large sums from familiar donors.
Now they can raise money on the Internet and approach the national
party from a position of strength. "They have totally changed the
equation for what makes it possible for somebody to be a viable
candidate," notes Mark Schmitt of the New America Foundation.
But the most important role played by the netroots is to purvey liberal
and pro-Democratic propaganda to offset that coming from the right. As
Moulitsas has noted, "We're better as a message machine."
It has taken an abnormally long time for this message machine to come
into existence. In the decades after World War II, the news media
evolved a strong professional standard of nonpartisanship. Network news
broadcasts faced little financial pressure, and newspapers--fattened up
by advertising monopolies--followed the dictates of their professional
values rather than the demands of the market. They maintained costly
bureaus in Washington and abroad, and their ideology was mostly
high-minded establishment centrism.
The first outlets to break away from this news oligarchy all sprang up
on the right--talk radio, Fox News, the Drudge Report. Such partisan
outlets did a brilliant job of injecting pro-Republican stories and
ideas into the mainstream public discourse, using classic propaganda
techniques, endlessly repeating ideas, phrases, and images that helped
their side with little regard for truth or intellectual consistency.
During the '90s and the outset of the Bush years, this was the
landscape: a large mainstream media, with a social liberal bias mostly
buried beneath studious nonpartisanship, and a wildly partisan
conservative media. All the pressure on the mainstream media came from
the right. Even liberal opinion journalists, in this unbalanced world,
felt obliged to demonstrate their nonpartisanship.
Liberals made several attempts to recreate the conservative message
machine--Jim Hightower, Mario Cuomo, and countless others attempted and
failed to create talk-radio programs. Most people concluded from these
failures that liberals simply didn't want partisan vitriol of the sort
offered up by Rush Limbaugh and Fox News. They wanted high-minded
discussions of the sort found on National Public Radio.
Nonconservatives, wrote The New Yorker's Hendrik Hertzberg in 2003,
"wouldn't think it was fun to listen to expressions of raw contempt for
conservatives."
This analysis, shared by nearly all observers just a few years ago,
turns out to be completely wrong. Maybe an audience for raw partisan
liberal attacks existed all along but was ill-served by piecemeal
forays into talk radio. Or maybe the audience was born suddenly by the
shock of the Bush years. In any case, it is obvious that a sizeable
liberal audience was not being served the red meat it craved. "People
were hungry for strong, unapologetic liberals, and those were
completely absent from the media landscape," Moulitsas writes. "I mean,
who did progressive [sic] have supposedly representing their side? Joe
Frickin' Klein. Is it any wonder blogs grew in response?"
The creation of a liberal message machine has not only filled a vacuum
in the political discourse. It has also had an impact on the mainstream
media itself. One revealing window into how this has worked, as it
happens, is Joe Frickin' Klein himself.
In early January, Time unveiled a new blog, Swampland, featuring
several of its political writers, including Klein, a columnist for the
magazine. While this was almost certainly not its intended effect,
Swampland turned out to be a fascinating experiment about the effects
of bringing mainstream journalists into close contact with the Internet
left.
Klein's initial forays were classic Klein: His second post was a blast
at "ill- informed dilettantes" of the left who prove that "[l]iberals
won't ever be trusted on national security until they start doing their
homework." Predictably, the netroots lashed into him. Just as
predictably, his immediate reaction was to lash back, in a follow-up
blog post attacking "illiberal leftists and reactionary progressives"
and suggesting that his critics did not want the administration's
strategy in Baghdad to succeed.
The next couple of weeks, however, saw none of the sorts of criticism
of liberals that marked Klein's first post and much of his career.
When, a few weeks later, he ventured back onto controversial terrain,
he did so in an apologetic tone, almost as if he were cringing in
anticipation of the blows that were sure to follow. "I know it's become
common practice to slag David Broder in the blogosphere," he wrote.
"But let me say this in David's defense ... ."
Klein still regularly took issue with his liberal critics, but the
frequency of his dissents declined markedly, and the esteem with which
he treated his tormentors rose commensurately. He continued to endure
constant criticism and would often post three or four updates to his
blog items, each replying to a wave of attacks. Moreover, Klein began
with increasing frequency to concede the truth of the criticisms
against him--e.g., "I was (correctly) hammered last year when I said on
Stephanopoulos that all options--including nukes--should be on the
table' in our dealings with Iran." And his liberal opinions seemed to
grow more frequent and less hedged. ("I'm dedicating the rest of my
life to making sure that we never go to war so foolishly again--if at
all.")
Liberal bloggers regarded the newly tamed Klein with unconcealed
satisfaction. In a post on how the netroots was successfully lobbying
the mainstream media, Yglesias wrote, "I might also note that Swampland
is suddenly full of posts I find much more agreeable than the ones they
were doing early on." His fellow blogger Ezra Klein (no relation), of
the Prospect, offered a persuasive explanation of his namesake's more
liberal-friendly tone:
It's worth remembering that, for years, the only thing these
quasi-liberal columnists heard was how biased, out- of-touch, and
incomprehensibly progressive they were. So they began tailoring,
consciously or not, their work to defend against those criticisms.
Klein, like many journalists, had spent his career in a world where
there was only one real movement in U.S. politics. He had become
accustomed to sustained ideological mau-mauing, but he had expected it
only from one side, and, over the years, this imbalance had taken its
toll. Now, suddenly, there are two such movements, balanced on either
side of the moderate mainstream.
Whether or not liberals ought to consider this a good thing depends on
how wide their frame of reference is. At the narrow level, the netroots
take part in a great deal of demagoguery, name-calling, and dishonesty.
Seen through a wider lens, however, they bring into closer balance the
ideological vectors of propaganda in our public life.
Take the case of Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a slain soldier who
camped out at Crawford, Texas, in August 2005, demanding to meet with
President Bush. The press corps did not treat her as a serious story,
and understandably so--there were many parents of fallen soldiers with
strong views on Iraq, so why should hers hold such weight? But the
netroots took hold of the Sheehan story, harping on it for days, and
forced it onto the national agenda. This is the sort of thing
conservatives have been doing for years. The Swift Boat Veterans For
Truth deserved no special credibility, either, but, in 2004, the
right-wing media apparatus elevated them onto the national stage. Was
the veneration of Sheehan intellectually shabby? Without a doubt. Was
it, considered as a whole, a bad thing? That is not so clear.
The Democratic Party, as Moulitsas has written, is indeed undergoing a
comprehensive reformation, as is liberalism in general. At the end of
this reformation, what will the left look like? It will look a lot more
like the Republican machine that prevailed in Florida. It will be
nastier and more ruthless, and less concerned with intellectual or
procedural niceties. It will be more of a disciplined movement and less
of a collection of idiosyncratic personalities.
Conservatives have crowed for years that they have "won the war of
ideas." More often than not, such boasts include a citation of Richard
Weaver's famous dictum, "Ideas have consequences." A war of ideas, though, is not an
intellectual process; it is a political process. As my colleague Leon
Wieseltier has written, "[I]f you are chiefly interested in the
consequences, then you are not chiefly interested in the ideas." The
netroots, like most of the conservative movement, is interested in the
consequences, not the ideas. The battle is being joined at last.