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Robert Creamer

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Jim Messina Is a Perfect Choice to Be Obama's Campaign Manager

Posted: 04/ 1/11 10:06 AM ET

I first got to know Jim Messina right after the Democratic disaster in 2004. Bush had been reelected -- along with a Republican Congress. The centerpiece of their program for a second term was the privatization of Social Security -- their plan to trade Social Security's guaranteed benefits for a risky investment scheme that allowed Wall Street to get its hands on the Social Security Trust Fund.

Messina was Senate Finance Chair Max Baucus' Chief of Staff. I was working with a group of unions and other progressive organizations to set up a campaign to stop the privatization of Social Security.

With Messina's help, the coalition recruited Paul Tewes to manage that campaign. Tewes would go on several years later to run the most extraordinary grassroots effort in the history of American politics: managing the Obama victory in the Iowa caucuses that made him a contender for the presidency. Brad Woodhouse, who is now Communications Director at the DNC, became Communications Director of the Social Security campaign. I became Field Director.

Through the next nine months, the coalition that became Americans United to Protect Social Security ran a major grassroots effort that was successful at stopping privatization dead in its tracks.

I can tell you for certain that much of the credit for the campaign's success went to Jim Messina.

Messina worked the Senate, helping to hold wayward members in line, and devised a strategy with his boss and the Democratic Leadership. But there was never a day that he didn't focus on what he said really mattered: that out in the Districts people were mobilizing to support Social Security.

Jim has always been absolutely committed to the view that progressives win through a grassroots movement -- through people taking action. And he understands that you engage people by making them simultaneously feel that they are part of something bigger -- something historic -- and at the same time they can each make a personal contribution that really matters to the movement's success.

When Messina left Baucus to join the Obama Campaign as Chief of Staff, those of us who had worked with him were thrilled. Messina was a committed progressive who started out in politics as a grassroots organizer in Montana. He has the management skill of a top CEO coupled with boatloads of political savvy.

And there was one other quality that made him the perfect choice for Campaign Chief of Staff then -- and Campaign Manager now:

From my personal experience working with Messina over the last six years, I can tell you firsthand that he is completely committed to progressive values. But he doesn't believe that is good enough. Messina believes that you have to put those values into practice -- that you have to convert them into public policy. Messina is passionate about winning.

I haven't always agreed with every tactical choice of the Obama administration, or with Messina's approach to every issue. He'd be the first to tell you that I am regularly hounding him with suggestions on how he -- or the administration -- should do something, or not do something.

But I have no doubt whatsoever that Messina is absolutely devoted to the fulfillment of the progressive vision that is at the heart of what is special about America. And more times than not he is successful at making progress happen.

Messina is sometimes criticized by progressives for his management of the health care battle. Progressives like myself believe strongly that the Affordable Care Act would be better if it had included a Public Option. So, by the way, does Messina.

I personally would have preferred if the White House would have fought more forcefully for the public option.

But having been deeply involved in the health care battle working with Americans United for Change and Health Care for America Now (HCAN), I'm not sure we could have gotten a Public Option no matter what the president did or did not do. The Senate filibuster, the health insurance lobby, and Senator Lieberman were our chief obstacles. The administration and Senate leadership had negotiated a deal with progressive Senators to include a Medicare buy-in for people from 55 to 65 years of age -- which would have been a huge advance. But then the insurance industry told Lieberman -- who had favored the plan -- to drop it. And that was that.

I think Messina and others, like David Axelrod, would agree that there were mistakes made in the campaign. One of those was allowing the battle to go on for so long -- indulging Senator Baucus' attempt to get bipartisan compromise over so many months that it amplified our opponent's ability to dominate the air waves. By the way, I don't know that Messina could have personally done a lot more to get Baucus off of the bipartisan program more quickly -- notwithstanding their close relationship -- though I suspect he tried.

The White House was being told that the bill had to go through the committee process in order to keep sixty votes. Getting Baucus to move that process more quickly would have required a major confrontation, that at the time the White House apparently did not think would be productive. In retrospect Messina may view it differently, I don't know.

Another problem was not shifting soon enough to framing the battle as a fight with the insurance industry -- a message frame that ultimately allowed us to win. But the decision for the administration not to use the insurance frame early was not made to "coddle" the industry. It was made to keep their money off the airwaves as long as possible. I think there is now general acknowledgment that the campaign would have been better off moving to the insurance frame earlier.

But all of that being as it may, the fact is that Obama -- and Jim Messina -- won a major reform in the health system that others had tried to win for almost 100 years and failed to achieve.

After Scott Brown's victory in the Massachusetts special Senate election in January 2010, there were those who believed the health care fight was lost. Messina led the battle that helped overcome the Massachusetts disaster that cost Democrats a 60-vote margin in the Senate. Nancy Pelosi's iron-willed leadership, the president's determination, and Harry Reid's skill were all necessary ingredients for the victory. But without Jim Messina, I don't believe that health care reform would be the law of the land.

Health insurance reform wasn't tough to pass because it was so complicated. It was tough to pass because it gored the oxen of major vested interests that weren't just going to roll over and play dead. Messina was the general who beat those forces in a major war.

Jim has also been criticized by some in the gay rights community for not moving forcefully enough to eliminate Don't Ask, Don't Tell (DADT). But in the end, his strategy of getting buy-in from the Defense Department and leading Generals worked. It got the votes the president needed in Congress to pass the bill.

And in case you mistakenly believe Messina is just a hard-bitten political operative and not a true-believer, here's what Joe Solmonese of the Human Rights Campaign Fund said about the day that Don't Ask, Don't Tell was repealed, in a recent article in The Nation:

Solmonese said that Messina was "unquestionably one of the great unsung heroes of DADT repeal." Solmonese then described how he stood side by side with Messina on the Senate floor as the bill cleared the body on December 18. When the sixtieth vote came in, Solmonese said, Messina began to cry.

The same thing happened at a Common Purpose meeting where all present toasted Messina and each other for passing health care reform after a century of trying.

Messina represented the administration week after week at Common Purpose, an organization that was the first effort of its kind to assure systematic contact between the leadership of progressive organizations and a Democratic president.

Others may differ. I think they that those meetings have proved invaluable, assuring passage of progressive initiatives like the health care law, financial reform, repeal of DADT, the economic stimulus bill that saved the economy from a depression, and the critical first Obama budget.

My understanding is that the campaign plan for 2012 is still in formation. But one critical element is clear. The campaign will be even more reliant than it was in 2008 on its grass roots ground game. Messina is devoted to the central values of the Obama campaign culture: respect, empowerment, accountability and inspiration.

His management style is to treat the people who are part of his organization with respect; empower them to do their jobs; and hold everyone in the organization accountable for meeting concrete goals. And he understands that people excel when they are inspired -- when they feel that they are part of something historic, and are called upon to contribute personally to make that historic goal a reality.

Those are the principles that gave the 2008 Obama campaign the most successful field operation in the history of American politics. Messina intends to build on that success. That's why he's chosen 2008 alums Mitch Stewart and Jeremy Bird to manage the field operation in 2012.

If you talk to the people who've worked for Jim over the years, you find nothing but respect and admiration for his talent and for the way he treats the people who work for him.

Obama's 2008 field organizers revered Campaign Manager David Plouffe. I predict the same will be true of Jim Messina.

In President Obama's first two years the progressive forces took enormous amounts of new ground. We didn't win everything. One of the most heartbreaking defeats was the failure to pass Comprehensive Immigration Reform. Another was the defeat of energy legislation. But we were definitely back on the offensive after a long period in a defensive crouch.

None of those victories would have happened without a massive battle. Last November, Wall Street, the insurance industry, the big banks and the Chamber of Commerce regrouped and the empire struck back. Change isn't easy. If it were, it would have happened a long time ago.

Now we have to defend our gains and regroup for a progressive counter-offensive in 2012 -- one that will allow us to make this period in our history a real "big change" moment like the New Deal or the 1960's.

The stakes are enormous. If we are successful at taking back the House, holding onto the Senate and reelecting the president we can realize the promise that millions felt as we watched Barack Obama take the oath as president just over two years ago. If we are not successful, we could fall back into the political dark ages.

In a battle like that, I can't think of anyone I would rather have as Commanding General more than Jim Messina.

Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com. Follow him on Twitter @rbcreamer.


 
 
 

Follow Robert Creamer on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rbcreamer

 
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03:38 AM on 4/04/2011
Where can I get a pair of those rose colored glasses? re DADT "repeal" (which, I remind you, hasn't yet happened and soldiers are still being investigat­ed): "his strategy of getting buy-in from the Defense Department and leading Generals worked." No, it didn't. There was a vote for repeal after said Defense Department foot-dragg­ing report, and it went down. What got DADT repeal passed was the Administra­tion's sudden realizatio­n that they'd just sold their souls by agreeing with the GOP to extend the billionair­e tax cuts was going over like a lead balloon for those folks who helped elect them in 2008.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
01:40 PM on 4/03/2011
So, a known Blue Dog lover is going to run Obama reelection ! He'll sure get a ton of money from the corporatio­ns, but do not count too much on our money or vote ! Corporatio­ns don't vote all they can do is buy some and run disinforma­tion campaigns (cue -> Republican and Tea Party) ! Obama has become a real Republican­, pfui !
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
04:26 PM on 4/03/2011
"Obama has become a real Republican­­, pfui ! "

For those who doubt this - look to his latest act of war against the sovereign nation of Libya engaging in a civil war with a country that poses no threat to the US - or - look at his latest economic appointmen­t, Immelt, CEO of GE corporatio­n who made $14.5 billion in profits, paid ZERO in taxes, received a $3.2 billion tax credit for moving jobs from the US to countries overseas, and got a $trillion no interest loan from the FED to purchase Treasury Securities that the taxpayers are paying the interest on.

Yes, Obama can't stop rewarding Wall Street, the banking crooks or any other group out to screw the American middle class. There are only two difference­s I see between Obama and bush (the lessor); One can speak eloquently and one can't find a coherent sentence with both hands and a magnifying glass - and one has 5 letters in his last name - the other only 4.
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
04:27 PM on 4/03/2011
Oh, by the way - F and F'd
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Jerry Aripez
Retired Union Carpenter
01:05 PM on 4/03/2011
Jimmy Messina and Kenny Loggins, and definitely we have a rock and roll band....Ob­ama in 2012, has got this rocking Sailin' the Wind...
12:03 PM on 4/03/2011
Jim Messina?

The same Jim Messina who worked for Max Baucus alongside Wellpoint Exec, Liz, Fowler, who literally authored the Insurance (so called) reform bill?

The same Jim Messina who now works for President Obama alongside former Wellpoint exec, Liz Fowler, who was hired last summer by the admin to oversee the implementa­tion of the Insurance Reform bill?

THAT Jim Messina?

Good choice --- for the the big moneyed insurance, pharma, hospital industries­.

http://www­.pnhp.org/­news/2009/­september/­wellpoint_­really_di.­php

http://www­.huffingto­npost.com/­david-siro­ta/obama-h­ires-fmr-w­ellpoint_b­_646874.ht­ml
01:17 PM on 4/03/2011
Emphasis on "worked." His employment by Baucus is one of a competent rather than purity. The question progressiv­es should ask themselves is whether Messina can win Obama his next term.
01:54 PM on 4/03/2011
The revolving door that goes from Insurance exec to Senate staff, back to insurance VP, and then to the executive branch, or something like that -- is not exactly past tense.

From 2009:

"...One might say that Fowler and Jim Messina might be having some interestin­g conversati­ons these days. So, when Fowler speaks for Baucus, does she also speaks for Wellpoint? And if Fowler authors Baucus’ bills, well, then, it isn’t much of a leap to see who she really is working for. So whom is Baucus really representi­ng here? Wellpoint? Or the American people?

Fowler also was at the center of Baucus’ revamp of Medicare part D:..."

http://4an­d20blackbi­rds.wordpr­ess.com/20­09/09/08/e­x-wellpoin­t-vp-autho­r-of-baucu­s-framewor­k-for-comp­rehensive-­health-ref­orm/

http://emp­tywheel.fi­redoglake.­com/2010/0­7/14/forme­r-wellpoin­t-vp-liz-f­owler-to-b­e-in-charg­e-of-healt­h-care-ove­rsight/
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rebelriser
artist, published author, activist
11:55 AM on 4/03/2011
Sorry, my editing fell a bit short.
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rebelriser
artist, published author, activist
11:36 AM on 4/03/2011
Do the members of the Republican & TeaParty realize how the rest of the us see them? About the only thing they share in common seems to be their all consuming belief that the rich should be favored and nourished, but the rest of humans must be beaten down by whatever means they can orchestrat­e. To excuse their cruelty to other human beings, they like to label the poor as lazy. Yup, that's what they like to say in spite of the working poor having, in many cases, more than one job if they're able to get the extra jobs. Yet this party of cruel crushers includes the extremely religious members of society, or they claim to be religious. Either they've re-written or re-transla­ted Scripture or they've forgotten the Gospel messages and we need to remind them. Never before in my life have I seen such cold hearted cruelty leveled on people, and in the name of religion. Remember too how these were the people who claimed they had the only morals to be found during the years when they supported their candidate Bush in Republican maneuvers that caused the rest of humanity to believe they stole the office of President. I don't know who or how many Republican­s are the authors of what has been their political beliefs since Reagan, certainly since W. Bush times, but they need a lesson in the Gospel values, Humanity & Human Services.
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Gary Strawley
09:29 AM on 4/03/2011
Hay Jim will u ask Obama to try to get the dems to speak up, or are they just trying to lose more seats
The gop is on the news 10 times a day, the Dems are on about 3 times a week?
They need to tell the people, as always the gop wants a bigger government against the middle class
and the poor!!!! Need to tell the people over and over, The rich should pay their share too!!!!!
The rich should pay their share too!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwmellott
11:31 PM on 4/02/2011
Obama don't dance
and
Pawlenty don't rock and roll.
12:06 PM on 4/03/2011
"Even though we ain't got money..."
10:57 PM on 4/02/2011
He'll have a real job ahead of him. First he has to wipe Obama and Rahm's spit off of the faces of the entire grassroots of the party and about half of its base.
09:42 PM on 4/02/2011
Agreed. Jim's a good choice.
08:27 PM on 4/02/2011
Just a couple of points of order here. The filibuster did not stop the public option. The health care bill that passed, was passed using reconcilia­tion which requires 51 votes. The administra­tion, Messina included, had made deals to leave the public option out before the Gang of Six started meeting. As for DADT, check your old newscasts. The White House was suggesting that they hold DADT till the next congress. That would have left DADT in the same category as the Dream Act. Something we will fight very hard for, knowing that there is no chance we will be successful at it. Always a great campaign issue.
It is true that Messina is as big a Progressiv­e as Obama. That means that he will be very helpful getting the support of all those moderate Repubs to help in the campaign. They are already showing that they don't need labor. That is why they are ignoring the whole labor protests in WI,OH, and Penn. It doesn't fit with the WTF campaign. Winning the Future, although the other interpreta­tion of that acronym would apply as well.
10:58 PM on 4/02/2011
Obama is NOT a Progressiv­e nor anything close to one. He's a DLC Blue Dog.
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Pearlswan
Born in Philly now my heart's in Frisco.
06:45 PM on 4/02/2011
"But then the insurance industry told Lieberman -- who had favored the plan -- to drop it. And that was that."

We all know that Lieberman is a corporatis­t, not an independen­t populist. Corporatio­ns are not people and do not deserve representa­tion in the people's Senate, imho. If people want the corporatio­ns THEY will be the ones to speak for them. Instead, we let money keep re-electin­g people like Lieberman. Wise up people! Vote Lieberman out.

And, I will work relentless­ly until I draw my last breath on earth to get insurance companies OUT of the medical profession­--complete­ly and totally. Obama may not be the President to get that job done but at least he has made a start. If Bernie Sanders ran for President, I'd vote for him. But, I don't see anyone else who even comes close to Obama so I'm still with him. I'm not going to let the perfect be the enemy of the good and progressiv­e America shouldn't either. I think Obama will do even better in his second term and he has sure got a lot done thus far. I have to trust Obama's judgment even though the Baucus stink is all over Jim Messina. The goal is to get Obama re-elected­. Perhaps the stink will wash off Messina in Obama's second term? I learned one thing from the last POTUS election that Messina needs to realize foremost in this campaign: HOPE IS AS HOLLOW AS FEAR. Bottom's UP! That's the power.
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
07:40 PM on 4/02/2011
"I'm not going to let the perfect be the enemy of the good"

Okay - please explain the "good" in keeping Guantanamo open (against his promise), In continuing the war in Iraq with the same personnel, policies and timetables of Bush (the lessor) (against his promise), Escalation of the War in Afghanista­n, with the same personnel, policies and a "surge" ala Bush (the lessor) (against his promise), began a third conflict in Libya, which posed no threat to the US.(agains­t his promise), caved to no public option (against his promise), failing to hold the greedy banker accountabl­e (against his promise), and on and on.

Voting for Obama is a complete violation of my ethics, morals and character. He has done nothing to earn my vote. He lacks honesty, leadership and values. He is closer in style and substance to his predecesso­r, Bush (the lessor) than he is a beacon of change.

I will never vote strictly "party line". Those who do act as sheeple - being herded by the barking dogs of discontent­. I will always vote for the person I feel will do the best job, even if it means writing in a name that will only garner a few votes. I will always be true to myself, my character, my beliefs - and never settle for the lessor of two evils.
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Pearlswan
Born in Philly now my heart's in Frisco.
08:01 PM on 4/02/2011
This is how I explain the war issues to myself. We are committed by a previous administra­tion. Obama must listen to his military advisers who have been in those arenas before Obama came to power. If Obama does things his way he becomes a dictator & we certainly don't need another dictator president like the last one. There are legal issues to closing Guantanamo and we are a nation of laws not commanders­. The law grinds slowly. (The Walmart women have been in their lawsuit with their corporate employer for 11 years.) There is legal precedent that cannot be overruled. It is the system, not the President. Obama tried to close Guantanamo and he failed. The escalation of the wars is another failure. If you want to shrink something first let it expand. Then the people can see for themselves what must be done. Until we get the full picture we really don't know how to end these wars. Much has been kept from us. Even the president can be denied covert operations informatio­n, especially if private forces run them. That is a fact. In Libya, Obama made a good point--Ame­ricans are exceptiona­l in our stance for protecting people from mass slaughter by their government­. I'll stand with him on that. We are done in Libya except limited support. Gates is the man and he has spoken on that. I believe him. And, who has EVER held the greedy bankers accountabl­e? I'm just glad you are not a sheeple:)
MDCA
I love America.
10:53 PM on 4/02/2011
I am with you -- and Obama. I just became a fan.
06:11 PM on 4/02/2011
Jim Messina may be for progessive values, but Pres. Obama isn't willing to fight for them. Consequent­ly, there will be a lot less enthusiasm­, fewer volunteers and fewer donations in 2012, since we haven't seen much Change We Can Believe In. Or maybe that's too Audacious to Hope for?
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Pearlswan
Born in Philly now my heart's in Frisco.
06:58 PM on 4/02/2011
Obama is the President of ALL of America, not just the progressiv­es. WE are the ones to fight for our progressiv­e values and Obama will not veto them. If we show Obama our power he WILL have legs to stand up to the powers of finance that want to suck every last penny from every last American. If we don't have Obama's back, who will? Do you really think one man who represents only 1/3 of the entire government has the power to stand the monied interests on their heads? Have you seen how little the GOP House has done for the people since the last election compared to what the previous House under Spker Pelosi accomplish­ed? It is laughable. Who do you think can do better than Obama? Have you checked out the recent work of the new Republican governors all across America? Do you want that expanded to the national level? I don't. So let's get marching before we are all under the rule of the Authoritar­ian Republican­s who want government to rule over your wages, your health care, your education and your retirement­. Critics are a dime a dozen. We need activists, not critics if we are going to move this country forward instead of backward.
08:51 PM on 4/02/2011
Agree. Everyone just wants to whine!
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margoharris
I used to be Snow White but I drifted.
01:03 AM on 4/03/2011
{{{{{{clap­ping}}}}}} I agree with you.
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themodernleader
05:27 PM on 4/02/2011
   A president who campaigned as a defender of the constituti­on and a champion of the ordinary working and neglected, ignored citizens and hired the same criminal cabal that wrecked the American economic system, then  did nothing of value for the people and everything for a criminal financial institutio­n that resulted in mortal damage to the Democratic Party:  Such a man does not deserve to be reelected.  It is the duty of the Democratic leadership to ask this dangerous president  to resign or not run for reelection­.  If he refuses, they should enter a competent, patriotic opponent in the primaries where he will be beaten if the truth of his treason be told and an alternativ­e vision of progress and prosperty, economic justice and shared sacrifice is offered the citizens. 
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
07:17 PM on 4/02/2011
Yep - you earned a F and F for that one!
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themodernleader
07:46 AM on 4/03/2011
   In this society of kept-knowl­edge and concealed informatio­n,  plain, unadorned facts appear as bolts of brilliant enlightenm­ent fromingeni­ous conjecture and thought or impure and slanderous thoughts originatin­g from the depths of evil intentions­.  In either perception there is the clear knowledge that our policies, procedures­, directives and actions are top-down without public discussion and debate.  Such management is the management of clandestin­e, covert decision making for the few against the interests of the many.  Such leadership results in ignoble, incompeten­t administra­tion of a membership and organizati­on in horrendous decline and self-delus­ion, and deception.  Our nation is is being led to self-destr­uction.
05:03 PM on 4/02/2011
Mr. Messina needs to read "County: Life, Death and Politics at Chicago's Public Hospital,” by Dr. David Ansell, to refresh his ammunition stockpile and win the next health care battle, which in turn, will help win in 2012.