Waters Gives Bloggers Their Props

by Paul Bass | August 9, 2006 3:10 AM | | Comments (2)


After midnight, after Ned Lamont had left the Four Points Sheraton ballroom’s confetti-strewn floor, one of the national politicians who helped him pull off his remarkable upset against Joe Lieberman in Tuesday’s Democratic senatorial primary walked down the hall to pay homage to the raucous crew she believes has rewritten the rules of American campaigns: the bloggers.

The politician was charismatic California Congresswoman Maxine Waters. She visited Connecticut three times in recent weeks to shepherd Ned Lamont through urban black neighborhoods to build support for his ultimately successful challenge to three-term Sen. Lieberman.

Waters walked in on the celebration and manic keyboard-clicking going on in the “blogger” room at the Sheraton, a room separate from the more sedate, supposedly neutral “media” room for mainstream press reporters. A cottage industry of local Connecticut and national liberal bloggers sprang up around the Lamont campaign. It built the early support, helped frame the message, elicited thousands of volunteers and donors, and dogged Lieberman’s every step.

Upon Waters’ approach, the blog room erupted in cheers. Then a hush spread among the bloggers, excepting for the clicks of digital cameras.

“Do you know what you have done?” Waters asked them. “You have upset the status quo, for real. You have given me faith that change is possible.”

Her parting message: “Keep on blogging! You’re gonna change the world!”

Videotaping Waters’ impromptu tribute was a 26 year-old London filmmaker named James Rogan. Rogan has been following the Lamont-Lieberman race for a documentary he’s producing for BBC and the Sundance Channel. Like Waters, he came to see the bloggers as the story.

“What I set out to do,” he said, “was frame a really important political debate that’s going on in America right now between the so-called netroots and the moderate establishment. I was interested in the clash of values.” He said he encountered a passion and commitment among the blogggers and others drawn to the Lamont campaign that contrasted sharply with the Lieberman camp, whose supporters emphasized their “familiarity” with their candidate.

Rogan, a self-described moderate, was surprised to find himself “battling” with Lieberman’s staff for access to the campaign. That changed in the past week “when the Washington people came down for Lieberman. People returned our phone calls and dealt with us with respect. When the bus tour started, it got better.”

Also watching the scene in the blog room — and deserving his share of the kudos — was “CT Blogger” (pictured), among the hardest-working and more talented homegrown bloggers who came into their own on this campaign trail. He was an omnipresence at both Lamont and Lieberman events, sometimes working both still and video cameras and posting copiously on his site

He preferred to remain anonymous — until now. “Now the primary’s over, you can print my name,” he said. He’s Alfonso Robinson. He’s 37. He lives in Danbury.

Also soaking in the moment were the national bloggers, some of whom, like MyDD’s Matt Stoller and Hollywood producer Jane Hamsher (pictured) of Firedoglake, camped out in Connecticut and provided some of the best scoops along with their passionate posts.

In a conversation back outside in the hallway, Maxine Waters elaborated. She said she sees “a new way of progressives connecting through blogging” that will “change the Democratic Party. What we’re seeing is a determination by young people and bloggers to make the Democratic Party stand up for the values of the Democratic Party.”

She said that in her visits to Connecticut she “really wanted Ned to understand there was a lot of potential support out there in the African=American community. Many in the African-American community do not support the [Iraq] war. We got attention from the bloggers. We didn’t get attention from the mainstream media.”

“We’re going to see a new Democratic Party,” she concluded. “I can feel it in the air.”







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Comments

Posted by: philippe | August 9, 2006 1:05 PM

Why no audio recording and no podcast?
Seems to me it would have been easy to record Maxine so we could listen to her, hear her real voice instead of only read about it :) :(
There are excellent small digital mp3 recorders available for $30 like the ones I recently bought for a bunch of young adovcates for the world conference on tobacco or health: Micro MP3 pro, from Kanguru, www.kanguru.com (one among many)
Take care
Ph

Posted by: joe de marco | August 10, 2006 4:15 PM

ned lamont is a very important token at this time in history,who could imagine the yr.2006 and to have the horrific war crimes ,by our gov. taking place ,with the zion controll of our government and support lieberman has been for them its time for this country to look at reality of what has and is taking place ,israel has totally ignored all u.n resolutions,we are freely suppling the weaponry that is slaughtering ,the u.s has blocked any advance in agreements to end the insanity in lebonon, which if anyone can justify that the action of israel is justified they should look more carefully at the facts ,not as our media put out but read some of the middleeast papers that are less bias, and hold closer to the trueth, the slaughter of women,children and civilians is beyond crimnal, there is a very informative site www.jewsagainstzionism.com of course right away the call will be antisemtic ,not so just plane facts thank you joe d

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