Dump old consultants, embrace "netroots," say Armstrong/Zuniga in "Crashing the Gate" book



SEARCH GIRAFFE PROSPECTS | MISSION | AUDIO/VIDEO RESOURCES | >MGP-FORUM | KEY QUOTES | HOME PAGE | ABOUT US | COLLABORATORS | BLOG RESOURCE SITE | BLOG NEWS SITE | MGP2006 ALUMNI NEWS | SUMMIT WIKI | CONTACT US | SUPPORT US | SPONSORS | REPORT A SIGHTING | Google News Search
Last Updated: Oct 12th, 2007 - 21:58:21 


Newshare.net
NEWS/RESEARCH TOPICS 
 
 A-About MGP
 
 A-CONFERENCE
 
 A-AUDIO/VIDEO resources
 
 A-Blogs
 
 A-Business Models
 
 A-Citizen journalism
 
 A-Democracy Futures
 
 A-Education & Training
 
 A-Ethics and Standards
 
 A-First Amendment / Free Speech / Press
 
 A-Giraffes at Work?
 
 A-Ideas-Trends-Innovation
 
 A-Journalism Futures
 
 A-KEY ESSAYS
 
 A-KEY QUOTATIONS
 
 A-Multimedia & Video Innovation
 
 A-Ownership, governance & management
 
 A-Podcasting & Audio
 
 A-VERBATIM-Interview Q&As
 
 Broadcasting/ Low Power FM
 
 Cable Local Access (PEG)
 
 Community wireless
 
 Conferences / Events
 
 Entertainment Industry
 
 Internet-Advertising
 
 Internet-Privacy-Online
 
 Internet-Technology
 
 Music-Future
 
 Online News Services
 
 Regulation: FCC and the courts
 
 Research / Demographics
 
 Resources
 
 Trackbacks/MGP in the news



Newshare.net
A-Democracy Futures
Newshare.net
Dump old consultants, embrace "netroots," say Armstrong/Zuniga in "Crashing the Gate" book
By Bill Densmore, Media Giraffe Project
Apr 2, 2006, 12:03

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

AUDIO

Two of the most prominent self-described progressive political bloggers -- Jerome Armstrong and Markos Moulitas Zuniga -- have authored a 177-page manifesto for how the U.S. Democratic Party can help its candidates win more races. They argue that even before Democrats can work on their message, they need to start by getting better mechanics in place.

And the first thing to do, say Zuniga and Armstrong -- in the just-published (March 27, 2006) book: "Crashing the Gate: Netroots, Grassroots and the rise of People-Power Politics" -- is dump failure-prone Democratic media consultants and strategists. Media Giraffe Project editor/director Bill Densmore interviewed the blogger pair on March 31 and filed a 40-minute downloadable MP3 audio interview (18MB).    (permission to broadcast with attribution granted)

The book calls for "a new progressive movement" which tolerates differents on specific issues. "And that movement needs to remain outside of the [Democratic] party, giving Democatic candidates the freedom to get elected in all parts of the country without being smeared by association with any particular interest group."

Zuniga's "Daily Kos" website, and Armstrong's MyDD together claim to have over 1 million daily readers. The duo first began working together in 2003 as web-saavy operatives in the presidential campaign of Howard Dean. Armstrong had already begun a blog at that point; Zuniga joined in. After the 2004 election, Armstrong, 42, decided to focus on political consulting and is now helping former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner explore presidential-campaign waters; Zuniga, 34, focused on his blog. The re-united to write "Crashing the Gate" (Chelsea Green Press).

"There is a cabal of consultants in DC to make millions and millions of dollars every cycle and refuse to let any competition in because they want to do all the work themselves," Armstrong said in a Media Giraffe interview about the book. "And they're doing really, really, terrible work." 

The duo said they set out thinking they might write a scholarly volume, but ended up realizing their strength lay in a more journalistic approach. They traveled through 20 states and did over 160 interviews before writing a realtively shortly book which breaks little new factual ground, makes some assertions that conservatives dispute, but has a simple, direct and fresh message.

That message: The Democratic Party should get out of the way of progressives, stop supporting of the same old commission-based consultants who buy mass-market television advertising, recognize that one-issue organizations and candidates inhibit the party, oppose Republicans in every state (not just "battlegrounds") and support multi-issue, high-tech, independent groups such as MoveOn.org.

With a new infrastructure of think tanks, independent organizing groups and fight-everywhere attitudes, they authors say, it will then be time to hone the Democratic Party message. In short, they say, their book is about strategy and tactics, not about "the message."

"What we're really advocating," says Armstrong, "is let's have equal footing with these guys in terms of the organizational structure of the Democratic Party because we know we can beat them on the ideas."

Email, blogs and the web are great for organizing the faithful, but a resurgent Democratic party will require grassroots, not just netroots, they say.  "Everybody needs to be talking to their neighbors, everybody needs to be talking to their social circle," says Zuniga. "even if you raise $10, if you have 10 million people giving, that's $100 million. That's real money."

The duo believe Democrats have pursued a policy of targetting "battleground" congressional races and presidential-election states. This leaves Republicans able to garner wins in un-targetted areas, they say. Democrats have to return to a policy of challenging every Republican congressional seat, they say.

"Conservatives have a right-wing conspiracy except that it's not a conspiracy because it is right out in the open," says Armstrong. "They have think tanks and leadership institutes and the ability to market. Democrats are absolutely drowned out by the Republican 'noise machine.' "

OTHER RESOURCES/REVIEWS:
ADDITIONAL REVIEW, by Rob Williams, of the Action Coalition for Media Education.
http://www.beyondchron.org/news/index.php?itemid=3073
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/26/books/review/26beinart.html
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/011/967adwha.asp

OTHER REVIEWS: 
San Francisco Chronicle interview with Zuniga and his wife, including personal background

 

Newshare.net


© Copyright 2006/2007. All rights reserved by original source.

This page may contain copyrighted material, the use of which may not have specifically authorized by the copyright owner. The material is made available in the The Media Giraffe Project's efforts to advance understanding of political, economic, democracy, First Amendment, technology, journalism, community and justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' as provided by Section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Chapter 1, Section 107, the material above is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. The Media Giraffe Project has no affiliation with the originator of this article, nor is the project endorsed or sponsored by the article's originator. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

"The Media Giraffe Project was launched with the collaboration of The Giraffe Heroes Project, a separate organization that since 1982 has been moving people to stick their necks out for the common good." Top of Page


A-Democracy Futures
Latest Postings
Dump old consultants, embrace "netroots," say Armstrong/Zuniga in "Crashing the Gate" book
POLICY: Annenberg study finds public's use of Internet for politics surges
Gore warns of corporate control of Internet in wide-ranging speech about the future of American democracy
Bill Moyers calls restoration of political, social equality "the fight of our lives"
Robert Parry, ConsortiumNews.com: "Is media a danger to democracy?"
Newshare.net