The Growing Power (Scary Power) Of Moveon.org
A recent editorial in the Wall Street Journal raised red flags at just how much
the website moveon.org is
influencing the Democratic Party. Backed by serious money, it’s now
able to do far more than web strategies – it’s creating full-page ads
in major newspapers, and funding documentary films. As a result,
it’s able to dictate terms to Democratic candidates and criticize those
who deviate from the standard moveon.org positions. In this case,
their shockingly harsh criticism of General Petraeus - a current
battlefield general from the front. From a media perspective, it’s
interesting to see how a simple website has grown to be such a formidable
force for the hard left.
Here’s the editorial:
Trashing Petraeus
September 11, 2007;
Important as was yesterday's appearance before Congress by General David
Petraeus, the events leading up to his testimony may have been more
significant. Members of the Democratic leadership and their supporters have
now normalized the practice of accusing their opponents of lying. If other
members of the Democratic Party don't move quickly to repudiate this turn,
the ability of the U.S. political system to function will be impaired in a
way no one would wish for.
Well, with one exception. MoveOn.org, the Democratic activist group,
bought space in the New York Times yesterday to accuse General Petraeus of
"cooking the books for the White House." The ad transmutes the general's
name into "General Betray Us."
"Betrayal," as every military officer knows, is a word that through the
history of their profession bears the stain of acts that are both
dishonorable and unforgivable. That is to say, MoveOn.org didn't stumble
upon this word; it was chosen with specific intent, to convey the most
serious accusation possible against General Petraeus, that his word is
false, that he is a liar and that he is willing to betray his country. The
next and obvious word to which this equation with betrayal leads is
treason. That it is merely insinuated makes it worse.
MoveOn.org calls itself a "progressive" political group, but it is in
fact drawn from the hard left of American politics and a pedigree that sees
politics as not so much an ongoing struggle but a final competition. Their
Web-based group is new to the political scene, but its politics are not so
new. More surprising and troubling are the formerly liberal institutions
and politicians who now share this political ethos.
In an editorial on Sunday, the New York Times, after saying that
President Bush "isn't looking for the truth, only for ways to confound the
public," asserted that "General Petraeus has his own credibility problems."
We read this as an elision from George Bush, the oft-accused liar on WMD
and all the rest, to David Petraeus, also a liar merely for serving in the
chain of command. With this editorial, the Times establishes that the party
line is no longer just "Bush lied," but anyone who says anything good about
Iraq or our effort there is also lying. As such, the Times enables and
ratifies MoveOn.org's rhetoric as common usage for Democrats.
Late last week, for instance, we heard it said of General Petraeus that,
"He's made a number of statements over the years that have not proven to be
factual." This was from Harry Reid, the Majority Leader of the U.S.
Senate.
The Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Tom Lantos, said
Thursday that General Petraeus would not be the author of his report; it
would be written "by Administration political operatives." He opened
yesterday's hearing, moments before General Petraeus was to speak, by
saying, "We cannot take anything this Administration says on Iraq at face
value."
So far, only two Democrats that we are aware of have repudiated this
political turn. Joe Lieberman, already ostracized from the party for
dissent, called the MoveOn ad an "act of slander that every member of the
Congress -- Democrat and Republican -- has a solemn responsibility to
condemn." And Joe Biden, after the MoveOn ad was read to him on "Meet the
Press" Sunday, replied: "I don't buy into that. This is an honorable guy.
He's telling the truth."
These are the exceptions. Another of the party's activist groups,
Democracy for America, released a statement about the time General Petraeus
began to speak: "It is offensive that our commander-in-chief has ordered a
four-star general to mislead Congress."
As General Petraeus finished his statement yesterday, Senator Chris
Dodd's Presidential campaign spammed an email about "the accuracy" of the
report: "The fact that there are questions about General Petraeus's report
is not surprising given that it was brought to you by this White House."
Thus in Mr. Dodd's view, General Petraeus, returned from the Iraq
battlefield, is a complicit ventriloquist's dummy.
Can this really be the new standard of political rhetoric across the
Democratic Party? There was a time when the party's institutional elites,
such as the Times, would have pulled it back from reducing politics to all
or nothing. They would have blown the whistle on such accusations. Now they
are leading the charge.
Under these new terms, public policy is no longer subject to debate,
discussion and disagreement over competing views and interpretations.
Instead, the opposition is reduced to the status of liar. Now the
opposition is not merely wrong, but lacks legitimacy and political
standing. The goal here is not to debate, but to destroy.
Today General Petraeus testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. Its Democratic Members include Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, Barack
Obama, John Kerry, Barbara Boxer and Jim Webb. This would be the
appropriate setting to apologize to General Petraeus for the MoveOn.org ad.
Or let it stand.








