10 Nov

Howard Dean to Step Down as DNC Chair

This makes me a little sad. Howard Dean was the reason I started believing in the Democrats again. His 50-state strategy gave me hope and is why I started donating to the party in 2004. At least it would seem the 50-state philosophy is here to stay:

“Regardless of who takes over, the next chair will inherit an organization far different from the one that existed four years ago. Under Dean’s tenure, the DNC implemented the hotly-debated 50-state-strategy, a program designed to rebuild the party into a continental force, one in which Democrats drained the resources of Republicans while simultaneously building up younger talent. Obama’s incoming chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and others were critical, believing that the policy wasted valuable resources on impossible races and needlessly forfeited otherwise winnable seats during the 2006 congressional elections. Successes in 2008, however, have largely quieted those critiques.

Indeed, four years later, it seems, Dean’s vision is poised to become party orthodoxy. Dean told a Democratic operative that he is hoping to extract promises from all potential replacement candidates to preserve the 50-state-strategy. Other insiders, meanwhile, say that the next DNC chair, regardless of who it is, will build upon the model because of its tangible successes.”

One Response to “Howard Dean to Step Down as DNC Chair”

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    Loganotron » Blog Archive » The Beginning of the End of the 50-State Strategy Says:

    [...] post over at The Democratic Strategist made me a little sad. I recently praised Dean and his 50-State strategy. So, news of the DNC pulling out field operatives isn’t great. The only upside is that [...]