Excerpted from It?s Time for Action by Eleanor Clift
Democrats needed to do something dramatic, even histrionic, to dispel the perception they are powerless to stop the war, even if they are. They?re keeping the heat on, and that?s a good thing. GOP leader Mitch McConnell, outraged at the sleepover stunt, cited a Zogby poll taken before this week?s Senate action that found voters? approval for the Democratic Congress has dropped to
14 percent?evidence to McConnell that the Democrats? strategy is failing. Pollster John Zogby questions this interpretation, saying that Congress never does well no matter who?s in charge, and in post-Katrina America, government institutions are at a low point. Liberals in particular rate this Congress very low because of the war, which is why the least the Senate could do is pull an all-nighter. ?I see this not as a stroke of desperation but something they have to do,? Zogby told NEWSWEEK. ?They have to keep trying to end the war.
They can?t be seen as throwing their arms up in the air and saying it?s impossible, or they?ll get these kind of numbers.?By cutting off the debate and pulling the bill, the Democrats denied the Republicans the chance to vote on more moderate amendments that would have given them political cover with voters while doing nothing to end the war. The antiwar wing of the party doesn?t like compromise, so they applauded the decision to put off further action until September. ?
Now the ball?s in our court,? says Tom Matzzie, Washington director for MoveOn.org, one of several groups organizing antiwar campaigns in the home states of wavering Republicans. Matzzie talks regularly with Vietnam War activist
Tom Hayden to get his thoughts about how to proceed, and how to avoid pitfalls. Hayden warned that the White House will try to divide the critics, and so Matzzie and others have worked hard to keep Senate Democrats unified. And they?ve countered White House efforts to demonize critics by putting Iraq veterans and military families in the forefront of demonstrations instead of liberal activists.
Sounds like niche marketing to me.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19875084/site/newsweek/