Liberals unite under the title "One Nation" to counter Tea-Party

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  • senseiturtle

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    The enemy has revealed itself.


    This also helps to point out exactly how much trouble Seotoro is in.

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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/09/AR2010070903716_pf.html


    With 'One Nation,' liberal groups aim to match tea party's energy, influence
    By Krissah Thompson
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Friday, July 9, 2010; 4:21 PM



    If imitation is the highest form of flattery, the "tea party" movement must be honored.

    In an effort to replicate the tea party's success, 170 liberal and civil rights groups are forming a coalition that they hope will match the movement's political energy and influence. They promise to "counter the tea party narrative" and help the progressive movement find its voice again after 18 months of floundering.

    The large-scale attempt at liberal unity, dubbed "One Nation," will try to revive themes that energized the progressive grassroots two years ago. In a repurposing of Barack Obama's old campaign slogan, organizers are demanding "all the change" they voted for -- a poke at the White House.

    But the liberal groups have long had a kind of sibling rivalry, jostling over competing agendas and seeking to influence some of the same lawmakers. In forming the coalition, the groups struggled to settle on a name. Even now, two of the major players disagree about who came up with the idea of holding a march this fall.

    In this respect, at least, the liberal effort already resembles the fractious tea party movement. In February, some tea party groups skipped a long-planned gathering in Nashville in protest of alleged profiteering by convention organizers. Tea partiers have also argued about which candidates represent the movement.

    Despite the friction among liberal groups, the effort behind "One Nation" was born of a certain necessity: At one of the first meetings, Deepak Bhargava, executive director of the Center for Community Change, said, "Raise your hand if you can push your part of the agenda all by yourself."

    No hands shot up.

    Indeed, a promised overhaul of immigration law is virtually dead this year. Legislation that labor unions say would make it easier for them to grow their membership are stalled in Congress. The jobless rate is 15.4 percent for blacks and 12.4 percent for Hispanics, compared with 8.6 percent for whites.

    "Having been confronted with the specter of the tea party . . . we felt it urgent to organize the majority of this country, which voted in 2008 and has gone back to the couch," said Benjamin Jealous, president of the NAACP. "We've been split off in different directions."

    The groups involved represent the core of the first-time voters who backed President Obama -- including the National Council of La Raza, NAACP, AFL-CIO, SEIU and the United States Student Association. (The effort is separate from the Democratic Party's plan to spend $50 million trying to reach those same voters.)

    Their aha moment happened after the health-care overhaul passed this spring. Liberal groups, who focused their collective strength to push the bill against heavy resistance, felt relevant and effective for the first time in a long while. That health-care coalition -- composed of civil rights groups, student activists and labor leaders -- liked the winning feeling.

    "In many ways, the bitter fight for health-care reform has painfully highlighted that we must go back to the grassroots organizing that won us the election in the first place," said George Gresham, president of 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East. "We must reassert our strength as the social movement that ushered Obama into office."

    Liberal leaders see "much of the progressive agenda at risk in this election," said Paul Starr, a professor of public affairs at Princeton University and co-editor of the American Prospect, a liberal magazine. "There is no choice but for these groups to get together. The historical pattern is that voter turnout falls disproportionately among minorities and young people at these midterm elections, so they are fighting a historical trend."

    Leaders of the groups have been meeting for about three months in a planning process that some participants called arduous, debating everything from the name of the coalition to what the branding and logo should look like.

    The coalition's first goal is to plan a march to "demonstrate to Congress that these agenda items have support across multiple demographics," Jealous said. The demonstration, to be held Oct. 2, will center on pressing for more government spending on job creation.

    "This is a way to create some intensity," said Eric Rodriguez, vice president of NCLR. "Month after month, we spend time pointing to these employment figures, and we're still not breaking through on the disparities in a way that we think is important."

    This week at their national conventions both NAACP and NCLR leaders will begin talking to their members about "One Nation," and they are seeking money from foundations for the effort. They hope it will be a show of force that will remind both Congress and the White House that they are out there.

    Obama, who some activists say has not lived up to their expectations, could also be pushed harder, said Michael McGerr, a professor of history at Indiana University who has studied political campaigns.

    The effort has a historical parallel in a story that Obama has told on the campaign trail. According to the story, when labor organizer and civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph met with President Franklin Roosevelt to press his issues, Roosevelt told Randolph he agreed with him but that Randolph should "go out and make me do it."

    "They are calling the Democratic party back to what has been the pattern of successful liberalism in the 20th century," McGerr said.
     

    gbundersea

    Just my 2¢
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    Good! The radical left will fight amongst themselves, and as a group demand that 0sama live up to his radical promises. He of course cannot (though he tries!) so he'll **** them off even more, and the more public attention they attract, the better. Yet another epic fail in the making for the TOTUS.
     

    Mjolnir

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    NOT surprised. They'll get a lot of persons to support them but keep in mind that even with the Tea Party it's easy to undermine. Money buys influence. Don't put ALL of your faith in National organizations - your influence matters most locally, IMHO.

    Unless the States decide to withhold Fed Tax receipts we're done. The Beast (and that's just what it is both literally and biblically - which in this case I mean in a very broad sense to include ALL so-called Holy Books) cannot survive without money. Period.
     

    Mjolnir

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    One Nation? Just like the left to leave out the "under God" part. ;)
    That may be a purposeful ommission. Subconsciously, many will make the connection thinking that the organization is on the up and up. Others, who may be Atheist or Agnostic, will not be put off.

    I hope it fails. Miserably. ;)
     

    rebelray84

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    What a bunch of arrogant dumbasses.The "majority that went to polls in 2008",that they are so desperately seeking,are NOT "sitting on the couch" doing nothing.The fact is the majority of that majority realized what a GOD awful mistake they made in 2008 and either BECAME the TEA party movement or sympathizes with it.These people just don't get it and don't want to get it.Reality has no meaning to these fools.

    Somebody said that liberalism was a mental illness,I'm begining to think they are absolutely right.
     

    bs875

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    "large-scale attempt at liberal unity"

    They can't even get that in Congress. For instance, what killed the unemployment extension before the recess? Was it:

    A) Republicans

    B) a Democrat

    The answer of course is B, Ben Nelson (D) of Nebraska (and Cornhusker Kickback fame). If he had voted yes the extension would have passed.

    Who's making the popcorn?
     

    Mjolnir

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    Bread and Circuses. Rome (the USA) is falling...

    The parties take advantage of our gullibility while they continue onwards into the New World Order madness. It matters not which faction of the NWO "wins" because they will trample us into dust regardless.

    Focus on the Constitution and Bill of Rights and I believe we have a helluva chance.
     

    leVieux

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    Calling these communists "Liberals" honors their evil stupidity way too much for me.

    George Mitchell & Walter Mondale are Liberals.

    What were the Democrats thinking? Or, smoking?

    leVieux
     

    CloudStrife

    Why so serious?
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    Their aha moment happened after the health-care overhaul passed this spring. Liberal groups, who focused their collective strength to push the bill against heavy resistance, felt relevant and effective for the first time in a long while.

    Just like libs... they felt relevant. Too bad they weren't. That vote went right down party lines. It was going to pass regardless of what anyone did.
     

    oleheat

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    Calling these communists "Liberals" honors their evil stupidity way too much for me.

    George Mitchell & Walter Mondale are Liberals.

    What were the Democrats thinking? Or, smoking?

    leVieux

    Isn't that the truth? What was once called a liberal now looks very conservative compared to what we call a liberal today.....I haven't lived forever, but I have lived long enough to remember when even liberal politicians showed showed genuine love for their country and our way of life. I most certainly agree that American liberalism has taken a VERY hard left turn. There are of course exceptions to this rule- but clearly not in the leadership of their movement.....
     

    jimdana1942

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    "One nation" is deceptive. There are alot of "one nations" around the world. Iran, China, Russia, on and on. One nation does not and never has stood for FREEDOM. Those stupid sheeple!
     
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