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An Open Letter to the next Democratic State Chair

by: Rosi Efthim

Mon Nov 16, 2009 at 11:12:43 AM EST



I don't know who the next state Chair is going to be. I hear rumors. Then I don't hear them. And then I hear them again.

But no matter who it turns out to be, there are a few things I want to put on the table. I didn't always agree with Chairman Joe Cryan, but I can't imagine anyone more driven, more alive, and more vibrant in the pursuit of victories. I hope the next Chair has a lot of Cryan's qualities, and maybe a little of his swagger too. I admire him. And looking ahead now, a few suggestions for whoever the next Chair is:

Pretend you're Howard Dean
When Howard Dean became DNC Chair, he presided over a transformation in the way the party spent money (on local organizing, not pricey beltway consultants), and a shift in the culture from over-reliance in high Democratic performance areas/states to not conceding any voter, or any state, anywhere. We won everything on the back of that seismic shift. I'd love to see that here.  But more importantly, I hope the next Chair has their own clearly defined idea of what the NJ Democratic Party can be. Imagine something different, cast that line far out in the water, and change everything. Because there's a lot in this party that needs to change, and everybody knows it. Imagine what's possible statewide like Dean did nationally. Stick to your guns, and surprise the hell out of everybody. Because that's what it's going to take.

Aggressively pursue 21-County Strategy

Concede no voter. Concede no town. Concede no county. Be the sharpest, cleanest party with a mission that can be understood all over the state. And remember that red county parties need more resources to crack open those places and bring change.  And in an atmosphere of crushing GOP infrastructure, the Chairs, county committees and candidates need all the training, and connection you can give them. Form a Red County Task Force at NJDSC.

Exist between elections for people - Have cool events
NJDSC needs a vibrant events arm. Issues Town Halls, Democrat-sponsored book talks with authors on book tours, movies outside in a park in Trenton, or against an outside wall in Jersey City or Camden. Brainstorm. Keep the idea of Democrat alive in people's minds. Then employ or implore the people who can do it.

Get the Dem State Conference out of Atlantic City, and out of September
I'll say this as plainly as I can: It's insane to take 1,000 of the state's most passionate Dems out of play for a whole half-week just as the rest of the electorate is waking up to the fact that there are candidates running. Move the thing to late spring/early summer (after the non-partisan elections). Nothing against AC, but move it out of there or at least revolve it all over NJ.
Make it a grassroots event, not an insiders' schmoozefest.

Move it to a college campus.
Make it a convention, not a conference. Use the opportunity to develop platform, bump up training, and let the people in attendance help set the direction of the party by involving them in decision-making, platform-writing.
Make part of the convention open source. Some of the most exciting meetings in the country are run this way.

Listen to The Citizens Campaign

New Jersey has an idea factory for vibrant civic engagement and good government. They're about clean, fair politics, and they have the sharpest tools in the toolbox to get us there. They don't work for you - and that's good - but they have all the answers. Same suggestion, by the way, for my GOP brothers and sisters.

Play with New Media
Webinars for skills-building. Twitter. Show up on political blogs. Write an internship for a vlogger to travel the state and make short videos asking people why they're Democrats, or interview vets about the country they fought for, interview workers on labor issues. Experiment. Do stuff I haven't thought of. This won't cost you much, if anything. It's not about that. Do it right and it'll be fun, and make people see you differently.

Give the party a platform

Let the pro-choice ones battle the anti-choice side. Hash out differences on taxes. Make your stand clear on home rule. The party needs to stand for something, and voters need to see what that is. And not inconsequentially, active Democrats need a voice in setting your direction. That's their route in, how they can buy-in to who the New Jersey Democrats will be.

Transparency

You have a nifty website. But it doesn't do enough. Publish the DNC bylaws, NJSDC bylaws and bylaws of every county party. Everybody needs to know the rules, and how to work them to get done what they want to. Knowing the rules levels the playing field, and if you want us to believe that Democratic is also democratic, you're going to want to level that field.

Post on your site every member of every Democratic County Committee and how to reach that person. This party should make it easy for Democrats to see who's supposed to be doing the work where they live, and if that person's unresponsive, then the party should make easy for someone to challenge and contribute that work.

Let young people in
I know the party celebrates its youngest. But I think we can be doing more to provide opportunities, access and resources to them - to College Dems, to Young Dems and to the high school kids working their hearts out in local Dem HQs all over the state. Create committees for them to serve, with real participation, direction and responsibility. Ask the Cory Bookers and the Loretta Weinbergs and the Steve Sweeneys of this party to host Open Houses for kids interested in politics, if they're not already doing that. Do what we did in the 2005 Corzine Connection part of his campaign: host First-Time Voter events where 18-year olds get access to your Senators, your congressmen, your stars. When national political hotshots come here, don't just run a fundraiser, tack on a free event for young people to meet that person and ask questions. Be creative. See where kids get interested, then find ways to up the ante for them. Above all, listen to them. In about 5 minutes, they're going to be running the show. Invest now.

That's it for now. There will be more. This is an Open Thread.  

Rosi Efthim :: An Open Letter to the next Democratic State Chair
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Oh how I long for a real 21-County strategy.... (4.00 / 2)
these are all great suggestions.  Hopefully they get implemented.    

21 (4.00 / 2)
Thanks, Matt. I know this is something you've thought about too. So I'm going to link here to a some posts I remember you writing - here and here and here.

It's not a particularly snappy signature, but here's what I think we need in the next NJ Democratic State Chair.  

[ Parent ]
One part of a 21-country strategy should be... (4.00 / 1)
...the drawing of congressional and legislative maps that are as competitive as possible.  This is something that progressives and conservatives could work together on as there have been calls from individuals on the far right for the same thing.

Progressives should not cede the redistricting process to the insiders.  We should work together to create maps for which we can advocate.

Obviously, the Voting Rights Act requires that there be some minority-majority districts and fairness/geographic realities require that there be a certain number of conservative districts, especially if we want to construct a map that has a chance of being considered, but those should be no more than 10 out 40 legislative districts and 4 out of 12 (assuming that NJ loses a Congressional district going into 2012), which should allow for 30 competitive legislative districts and 8 competitive Congressional districts in the state.

Do competive districts mean that some of our more reliably liberal elected officials would have to moderate themselves?  It shouldn't, but that is possible.  Even if that were to happen, the converse would also be true for some of the wingnuts that we have in the state as well.

Who knows?  Maybe it could result in a moderate Republican taking on the likes of a Scott Garrett in a primary if the party establishment doesn't believe that Garrett can win re-election in a competitive district.


[ Parent ]
I started this project.... (0.00 / 0)
but then didn't finish when I got wrapped up with school.  My take on redistricting.

What we (and every state in the Union) needs is an Iowa style redistricting commission.


[ Parent ]
this is a great start (4.00 / 1)
Does anybody know if a computer program exists with municipal population, voter registration, and party performance data that would enable someone to fool around with district boundaries with a click of a mouse?  If so, it would be extremely helpful.

I think that the issue when the current district map was drawn was that by breaking up cities like Jersey City and Newark, more Democratic-leaning districts were created at the expense of districts that guaranteed minority representation.

Whether or not this has been proven to be true or not can be determined by comparing the racial makeup of the legislative roster that was in place in December 2001 and the one that will be in place in January 2010.

That said, Matthew, I agree with your premise of keeping major cities in one district if at all possible, especially if it can help to reduce the number of safe Republican and safe Democratic districts.

One thing that we should be cautious about with regards to any effort to create competitive districts is to recognize the difference between party affiliation numbers and party performance numbers as we need to be cognizant of the reality that registered Republicans have historically turned out more consistently year-in and year-out than registered Democrats and registered Unaffiliateds.

Based on this, congressional districts that are competitive during a Presidential election year are not necessarily competive during a Senatorial election year or a year when there is no compelling statewide race and legislative districts that are competitive during a Gubernatorial election year are not necessarily competitive during a year when there is no compelling statewide race.

Thus, to properly determine the competitiveness of a district, one should use party performance numbers during low turnout years or at the very least, properly weight data to reflect differences in turnout on an annual basis.

The surest way to get laughed out of a discussion with the Democratic Party establishment would be to propose legislative districts for the 2011 election cycle that reflect 2005 or 2009 performance numbers rather than 2003 or 2007 performance numbers.


[ Parent ]
short list? (0.00 / 0)
for those of us who haven't heard any chatter about this position..... who's on the shortlist?

activist for hire.

I love it (4.00 / 3)
I wrote a similar blog post on my blog just after Corzine lost the election.... while I was incredibly disappointed, I pointed out what the campaign did wrong and how he did not preach to the choir.  

I personally would love to make it my mission to turn around the party in Monmouth County, which was creamed up and down the ticket.  While I highly doubt that the powers that be are reading this, I am up for the challenge, and I have a few good ideas that will draw younger people into the party and make them more politically active (for life).

Another thing that the party needs to realize (on a national level too) is that incumbency does not always equal victory.  In this "throw the bums out" atmosphere, there should be primary challenges to any incumbent with a low approval rating.  

I will most likely be blogging some more about this over at my own blog-- http://outspokenliberal.blogsp...

http://outspokenliberal.blogsp...


tabbycat (4.00 / 2)
I just went to find your post, to link to it, because I want this to kick off a conversation that includes as many voices as possible.

Here's tabbycat31's post - What we need to do from here

It's not a particularly snappy signature, but here's what I think we need in the next NJ Democratic State Chair.  


[ Parent ]
thanks for linking me (0.00 / 0)
I will most likely be blogging more about this as I really really want to make it my mission to turn the party around.  I'm glad you posted this too because you said a lot of the things that were on my mind for the last 2 weeks.   I spent the four days leading up to the election street canvassing Asbury Park and Long Branch (the 2 Democratic strongholds in Monmouth County) and noticed a lot of apathy.  

What each party needs to do is to find out where their strongholds are in the county and open up an office in that municipality (if not year round then at the very least from Labor Day to Election Day) to get people more involved.  If you're in Asbury Park, you don't want to have to drive to Freehold to get involved with the party.  

My other issue is voter turnout, particuarly with voters under 30.  I'm 29 and have voted in all elections except 2007 (I moved from NY and did not register before the deadline).  Part of the turnout issue is the candidates themselves-- running an unpopular incumbent is not going to inspire people to vote.  The media does not cover state and local races like they do federal ones, yet very few realize how much more of an impact local politics has on their daily lives than national politics.  Another thing is that people need to realize the importance of voting, and that if you do not vote you have no right to complain over the next 4 years.  

http://outspokenliberal.blogsp...

http://outspokenliberal.blogsp...


[ Parent ]
Excellent Points (0.00 / 0)
I think transparency and access are the most critical issues facing the NJ Democratic party.

How does someone get involved at the county or municipal level?  How are non-partisan community leaders engaged, recruited and persuaded to run for office as good government democrats?

How does a person get involved and obtain a leadership position that allows them to begin revitalizing precinct and neighborhood level party activities?  

Who are the party builders in a given county or municipality?

Take a look at the Minnesota DFL Website and run your mouse over the Contact and DFL Party Tabs.  Party leaders down to the local level and almost all party governance documents are online.

While the MN DFL does have some issues -- mainly an aggressive transition to a staff driven as opposed to a volunteer driven organization under the current chair and ongoing budget and finance issues -- the path to getting involved and becoming a leader at the Senate District or Congressional District is pretty open and transparent. (MN Congressional District Chairs are the rough equivalent of NJ County Chairs).

I think one of our first steps may need to be the development of open and democratic party constitutions on a county by county basis.  The best practices developed at the county level could then be incorporated into a new NJ State Democratic Party Constitution that emphasizes openness, transparency and access.  


Why Not Have A Chair That's "Out Of The Box"??? (0.00 / 0)
If the excellent points that Rosie just raised were taken to heart, it wouldn't be too farfetched to recruit someone from the "New Media" for the job.

I nominate Rosi Efthim!   She has the smarts, energy, charisma, communication skills and the practically progressive values to influence the process and the debate in a way that would represent the best traditions and values of the democratic party.  The same could be said for Jeff Gardner.

Whoever is chosen, it really does need to be someone who THE PUBLIC will see as a fresh face that is 100% free of the taint of machine politics.

The future of the Democratic party in New Jersey lies in a far more aggressively progressively populist direction.......if we DO that, (not just thematic slogans, but concrete actions) we don't just win elections; we transform this state in ways that will make this a shining example for the whole nation to follow.


Juan Melli for State Chair n/t (4.00 / 1)


To hell with what she wants, let's make Rosi Efthim the next DSC chair.

[ Parent ]
Now If We Can Just Get Him To... (0.00 / 0)
...cut his well deserved vacation short and to run!!!    

John Bartlett is another name that comes to mind along with yours too Thurman......and probably a dozen others that we could look toward for genuinely believably progressive leadership.

This is NOT the time for the state party to tack to the right or in the direction of hunkering down with the old school machines.

New directions and new blood are required.

 


[ Parent ]
Not me (0.00 / 0)
I'm now a registered Republican.  Thanks, Hudson County Democrats!

To hell with what she wants, let's make Rosi Efthim the next DSC chair.

[ Parent ]
because Bret Schundler is someone to emulate (0.00 / 0)
What do you hope to accomplish in Hudson County as a Republican?  It would have made more sense to move to another county.

As corrupt as Hudson County Democrats are, they do serve their constituents to a far greater degree than they would be served under Republicans.

If Schundler had his way when he was Mayor of JC, the public schools would have been bulldozed with every family getting a voucher check that wouldn't have come close to paying a parochial or private school's tuition.  He would have had his pro-life Gestapo raid every free clinic to make sure that abortions weren't being performed.

Yes, the Hudson County Democrats probably skim 20% of the money that runs through their treasuries off the top, but 80% is still better than nothing.

There are people in Hudson County like Steven Fulop and Jake Stuiver who are working their asses off to change the way Hudson County politics operates and it might take their lifetimes for change to actually occur or it may never happen, but switching teams, especially when the opposing team is as impotent as the HC Republicans are, is definitely not the answer.

I wish you the best with whatever you do, but this has to be the most nonsensical thing that I have ever read from one of the most sensible people here.


[ Parent ]
Re (0.00 / 0)
Well, first of all, I've never lived my life to please anyone else.  

Secondly, Brett Schundler isn't even involved in things around here.  He can't even pay off his campaign debt from his last failed attempt to hold office.

Third, your attitude is a HUGE part of the problem.  As long as people like you are blindly obedient to a criminal organization, it will persist in being a criminal organization.

Fourth, the Hudson County Democrats do not serve their constituents.  They serve their bank accounts.  Period.  Any benefits that occur are incidental to their primary goal.

Fifth, Fulop and Stuiver are not going to change anything.  Fulop can hold onto his seat, but nothing else.  Jerramiah Healy just threw away three million dollars to remain mayor.  Fulop doesn't have that kind of juice.  The only reason there's any progress in Hoboken is because Cammarano got busted, and now the "reformers" are learning to act just like the people they replaced.

Sixth, the Hudson County Republicans are no less hamstrung than the Democratic reformers that get buried in every election.

Seventh, I may change parties, but I'll never stop fighting for the things I believe.  The plain fact of the matter is that I sat down and asked myself if it was more likely for the Hudson County Republicans to welcome a liberal or for Hudson County Democrats to take a stand against corruption.  Then I took appropriate action.

Democrats outside of Hudson are not going to take action against Hudson so long as they depend on it to win state-wide elections.  That means that people who live outside of Hudson County can have some impact on the state and local parties.  But Hudson County Democrats are not going to change until enough people indicate a willingness to take their votes elsewhere.

A lifetime?  I don't have that long.

To hell with what she wants, let's make Rosi Efthim the next DSC chair.


[ Parent ]
primaries are easier to win than general elections (0.00 / 0)
Obviously, primaries are probably harder to win in Hudson County than in any other county, but it is better to be a longshot than have no shot at all.

There are going to be no compelling statewide races over the next two years, which means that primary elections will have the lowest turnouts of any years.  During these two years, all 21 counties, including but not limited to Hudson, will be electing new County Committees.  If progressives begin to organize and recruit now, there is plenty of time to run a significant number of candidates for these seats.

You have to do what you think is right, Thurman, but I think that you have made a big mistake.


[ Parent ]
If Thirman Hart Ever Decides To Run.... (0.00 / 0)
...for anything in Hudson County, I will enthusiastically support him in any way I can.

The party label, in this case, means next to nothing.    The guy is smart, competent, progressive and HONEST!!!   That puts him heads and shoulders above 99.9% of every pol in Hudson.

My sense is that Thurman isn't interested in running himself.....but if the Republican party had any brains at all, they would go all out to recruit him and to back him...as I believe that the people there would register and come out in droves to say FUCK YOU to the machines!

Most of New Jersey's problems are due to the systemic CORRUPTION that permeates the whole political and economic system.

In a clean state we would have ZERO debt!!!  That goes for the whole nation.   There's NO good reason to have any national debt except for the complex of legalized corruption that we have taken to be business as usual.


[ Parent ]
Thanks, Nick (0.00 / 0)
But I'm not running for anything.  Everytime someone says something like that, I wonder if they have a life insurance policy on me or something.

To hell with what she wants, let's make Rosi Efthim the next DSC chair.

[ Parent ]
Not here (0.00 / 0)
The only election that counts is the primary.  It isn't like corruption is a new problem around here.  It predates the ascendancy of Frank Hague.  You have to believe that, if it were possible for Democrats to change internally, someone would have had the combination of guts and integrity and pulled it off.  Instead, the most likely happening is that the "reformers" get co-opted by the same old tricks of the trade - note that Lou Manzo and L. Harvey Smith both started as reformers (as did Hague).  Now they are the establishment that sent twenty representatives before the courts in this past six months alone.

I still believe in the same things, and you should know me well enough to know I'll fight anyone for them.  If I am ever able to get a Progressive wing going in the GOP, it will be better for everyone.  If not, then it's no more a fool's errand than trying to change the HudCo Dems.

To hell with what she wants, let's make Rosi Efthim the next DSC chair.


[ Parent ]
I disagree :-P (0.00 / 0)
(in degree, not spirit) As important as the Chair is in terms of overall direction, the real key is the Executive Director.  This figure is the one who implements the vision of the party, who either sics the Chair on fundraising or media building or handles him or her to not have foot-in-mouth moments like the whole "Cryan: Daggett Robo-Calls thing in the last few hours before Election Day"

The Chair has the pick of the ED, but I feel that's the key position to focus on.  Gotta be someone who can crack some heads among the county chairs and get buy-in from the municipal and other key leaders from around the state.


[ Parent ]
Outstanding (0.00 / 0)
Rosalie this is outstanding. And the all-county approach is no joke, I really hate how many towns are tossed aside because of Republican voter majority and then Dems there get swept under the carpet never searched for again.

Is there a reason the convention is in September - is it supposed to be a rally?

I thought Tom Giblin was an excellent chair, I hope they choose someone just the same who travels the state and gathers and rallies everywhere they go.


Convention (4.00 / 1)
Completely agree about the convention. Not only smack in the midst of campaign season, also right when school starts. And why have it in the middle of a gambling meca? It should be more serious than that.

Fall vs Spring (4.00 / 1)
Prior to 2008, the NJDSC conference was always a weekend or two before or after Memorial Day Weekend and usually followed the June primary, although I remember in 2000, it was a weekend or two before the June primary.  I remember this sadly, because it was such a Jon Corzine lovefest and I was there working for Jim Florio.

I believe that the reasoning behind the shift to September in 2008 was because the Clinton-Obama primary battle ran long and the Democrats wanted their conference to be a rallying and unifying event and not an angry and divisive one.

There was no good reason to continue that tradition this year unless there was concern that the LG question was not going to be resolved in time and was going to have the potential to divide the attendees.

There is no good reason why they do a conference instead of a convention, except for the fact that the Democratic establishment doesn't like to address substantive issues in open forums and they prefer to party more than anything.

Being someone who is neither much of a drinker nor a gambler, I always thought that they were a complete waste of time, except for the 2003 conference, when Howard Dean spoke and electrified the conference.  It was without a doubt the high point of my experiences in NJ politics with the McGreevey/Democratic establishment's endorsement later that year being a close second.

Undoubtedly, our state's Democratic Party should have a platform that comes from the party membership.  The existing caucus structure should be expanded and utilized to provide a significant amount of the platform's structure.

It would be a nice change of pace if the party establishment chose a chair, or if that is asking too much, a vice-chair from the grassroots.

That said, the next NJDSC elections will take place in 2013.  If the NJDSC does not make changes to make the party leadership look more like its grassroots, the grassroots should spend the next four years putting more and more members on County Committees, and if there is a contested Gubernatorial primary in 2013, candidates who are running opposition slates should make it a point to run candidates in the NJDSC party elections as well.  Hopefully, this should create opportunities for the progressive grassroots to run candidates in these elections.

As great as Cory Booker might be, the one downside to him running unopposed in 2013 would be that it would make it very difficult for the grassroots to run opposition candidates in that year's party elections.


Ditto. (4.00 / 1)
Dead on, Rosi, dead on.

Walk away from all that corporate money (0.00 / 0)
and the developers' agenda, and make amends with progressive environmentalists.

Rosi for State Chair (0.00 / 0)
seriously, how is the chair chosen exactly?  we need Rosi's integrity, organizing skills, political smarts,  and a fresh approach

Chair and Vice-Chair elected by the Democratic State Committee (0.00 / 0)
During every gubernatorial primary election, every county elects its members to the Democratic State Committee.  Like the last few gubernatorial primary elections, these elections are usually uncontested.  As a current/former State Committeeman, Nathan Rudy could probably provide us with some degree of insight about how the DSC elects its Chair and Vice Chair.  It is unclear if a legitimate vote takes place or if the DSC is just a rubber stamp for the will of the elected leaders in Trenton.

That said, if the Democrats in Trenton do not pass marriage equality legislation during the lame duck session, it really doesn't matter who the next Chair/Vice-Chair will be.  There comes a point in time when progressives have to draw a line in the sand and now is as good a time as any.  Rather than continue to be the good soldiers that we have been election cycle after election cycle, we need to start standing up to the Democratic elected officials and party leaders in Trenton and making it clear that we will not be taken for granted any longer.

Everything that Rosi has written above is more likely to happen if we were to create a New Jersey Progressive Democratic State Committee and 21 Progressive County Committees and do what she proposes ourselves instead of continuing to beg and plead for the bones that the Democrats in Trenton occasionally throw us. I am not proposing that a NJPDSC become a third party as much as we create a party within a party that challenges the Democratic establishment in every primary election for every government and party office in the state.  We need to make it clear that we are willing to risk losing Democratic control over the State Senate and State Assembly in 2011 if it means that we can rebuild the progressive base of our party and elect a progressive Governor and a courageous, progressive Democratic majority in both houses to replace the cowards that currently sit there.

In addition, by creating a NJPDSC and 21 PCCs, we could reach out to the members of the left-wing third parties in the state and convince them to be a part of our effort instead of continuing to tilt at their 3rd party windmills.  Greens, Socialists, et al can become Green Democrats, Social Democrats, etc. and play a major role in creating a progressive movement in our state that could become a model for Democrats nationwide.

One of the first things that a NJPDSC would need to do after establishing its platform is engage the redistricting process that will follow the taking of the 2010 census.  We need to work with conservatives who are equally opposed to the lack of competitive districts in the state to create a map that will enable progressives to compete in both primary and general elections in every part of the state.  This is the only way that we will ever have a chance to elect a progressive majority in Trenton.


[ Parent ]
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