Posted on 01/16/2005 2:47:19 PM PST by nickcarraway
South Carolinian Donnie Fowler put it simply: A Democratic Party without the South is a little bit like greens without the cornbread.
He made the comment at a meeting of party officials who gathered last weekend in Atlanta to grill candidates for the partys highest position chairman of the Democratic National Committee.
Fowler, 37, a political consultant and son of a prominent South Carolina Democrat, is one of seven candidates seeking the job.
I did this out of frustration, he said, after seeing the party commit the same mistakes of past defeats.
Divided and battered by the second bitter presidential defeat in a row, Democrats have been seeking answers to their predicament. Nowhere has the wrangling over the partys direction been more prominent than in the search for a new party chairman.
Of primary concern is the partys inability to connect with enough voters to recapture the White House.
Well, you certainly dont do it by writing off the South, said Fowler, whose dad, Don Fowler, chaired the DNC from 1995 to 1997.
The Democratic Party has conceded so much of this country that we dont have a lot of voters to talk to, he said.
In addition to the South, Fowler said the party has written off the Rocky Mountain states and religious voters.
At some point, the national party is going to run out of people to talk to, he warned.
Others seeking the DNC post are former U.S. Reps Tim Roemer of Indiana and Martin Frost of Texas, Democratic activist Simon Rosenberg, former Denver Mayor Wellington Webb, former Ohio Democratic Party chairman David Leland, and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, a 2004 Democratic presidential candidate.
The next chairman, who will replace Terry McAuliffe, will be selected by the 431 members of the DNC at its February meeting in Washington.
At the Atlanta gathering, candidates assured party officials they have no intention of writing off the South.
Thats a familiar refrain. So, after John Kerrys crushing defeat last year, party officials have been more pointed in asking candidates how they intend to back up the rhetoric.
Its not just what they say. Its what they are going to do. I want to hear specifics, said Joe Erwin, chairman of the S.C. Democratic Party.
In 2004, Democrats proved they could win at the state and local level but not nationally.
That tells us that Democrats can compete and win when they are not encumbered with a national message that is confusing and offensive to a great many voters, Erwin said.
Democrats face an awesome task in trying to gain a footing in the South, which has become an electoral fortress for the Republican Party.
Few Democrats believe the party can or needs to be competitive at the presidential level anytime in deep South states such as South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi.
Waring Howe, a DNC member from Charleston, said theres no way the Democrats can win the solid South, but he stressed it can capture enough states to win the presidency.
In 1992, with Bill Clinton heading the ticket, Democrats were competitive in the South. Running a centrist campaign, Clinton won five Southern states.
Their best hope is to split the South and deny Republicans a total sweep of the region, said Emory University political science professor Merle Black.
The South is home to 168 electoral votes almost two-thirds of the 270 required for election.
The key for Democrats is to pick a candidate who can seriously contest a handful of Southern states.
When was that, like early last September? SBVFT + phony TxANG docs = "Mistah Kurtz, he daid."
There was also the story about a few of these DUmmie hired-hands in Ohio -- all imports, as you noted -- were wandering around a neighborhood with out-of-date voter rolls (not to mention they were lost) and at one point, actually asked a GOP GOTV group for directions.
How do you know this? How do you always manage to sound as though you are lifting what you say straight out of the ComPost?
I think their strategy in the south is perfect. Please keep it up guys.
The south has been betrayed by their own party. It has become so liberal it has threated their beliefs. The south won't change their party because of what northern republicans did to them during reconstruction but they will most certainly vote republican =)
Because the Washington Post plagiarizes me, which is why next to the Wall Street Journal, it is the highest quality daily in the nation.
I hope that helps.
It doesn't.
I remember reading some stories about liberal activists scaring the hell out of some of the ohio locals.
These people aren't the sharpest knives in the shed, when your trying to get voters, calling them stupid, yelling at them, and ranting crazy conspiracy theories, are not the way to go.
I think bringing in the lunatic nut fringe to work on your campaign is a sure ticket to losing.
If the Democrats want to capture the South, they'd better learn the pledge respect to the Confederate flag, 'cause we don' trust anybody that we send to that city that has a monument to Lincoln.
Lourie "Larry" Salley
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.