By that point in the race, there was every    reason to think that Obama could build a lasting grassroots    operation. His political machine had already amassed more than    800,000 registered users on My.BarackObama, its innovative    social networking platform. MyBO, as it was known, gave    supporters the abilityunthinkable in a traditional, top-down    political campaignto organize their own local groups, campaign    events, and fund-raising efforts. Its potential for large-scale    organizing after the election was vastand completely without    precedent in American politics. By Election Day, Obamas    campaign would have 13 million email    addresses, three million donors, and two million active    members of MyBO, including 70,000 people with their own    fund-raising pages. This wasnt just some passive list of    campaign supporters, Edley realizedit was an army of foot    soldiers, seasoned at rallying support for Obamas vision of    change.  
          Obamas senior adviser and former law professor; came up          with idea for a grassroots movement to build on the          campaign.        
          Silicon Valley legend who teamed up with Edley. Generated          support from the tech world; fought for independence from          DNC.        
          Campaign adviser tapped to co-chair project. His Vulcan          mind meldwith Kapor generated a huge vision for          Movement 2.0.        
      PAUL SAKUMA/AP IMAGES; TOM HERDE/THE BOSTON GLOBE/GETTY;      COURTESY OF CBS    
    As the primary season wound down, it struck me that the    campaigns broad-based engagement via the internet could evolve    into a powerful tool to shape progressive politics at the    national, state, and local levels, Edley recalls. One goal    would be to support an Obama presidency. But the agenda would    be far broader.
    After discussing his idea with his wife, Maria    Echaveste, who had served as White House deputy chief of staff    under Bill Clinton, Edley turned to his friend Kapor, a    digital pioneer and progressive activist who was widely    seen as a folk hero of the computer revolution. I knew that    Mitch would be an indispensable partner to judge the merits of    the general idea and help figure out some details, Edley says.    I also realized, quite quickly, that Mitch had amazing    contacts in that world whom we could enlist for the    project.  
    Opening the July brainstorming session, Edley    framed the stakes sharply, according to notes he prepared for    the meeting and a summary he wrote afterward. On the morning    of November 5, he told the assembled tech leaders, imagine    saying to millions of donors, new voters, volunteers: Thanks    for everything; so long. Instead, he urged, Imagine a way to    transfer/transmute all of that involvement into a new mechanism    or set of instrumentalities through which people can feel a    heightened and more powerful kind of civic engagement with each    other and with Obama and other leaders. And vice versa.  
    Edley echoed what many progressives were    beginning to believe was possible with a President Obama:    There is a rare opportunity to have a citizen movement heading    in the same progressive direction as an incumbent president.    According to his notes, the Silicon Valley luminaries on the    call agreed. Most felt it would be an unacceptable loss not to    take advantage of the rare alignment of an incumbent President    with a progressive agenda, and an online constituency of donors    and supporters who can press for change against the inevitable    upsurge of entrenched special interests which will resist    it.  
    As we now know, that grand vision for a    postcampaign movement never came to fruition. Instead of    mobilizing his unprecedented grassroots machine to pressure    obstructionist lawmakers, support state and local candidates    who shared his vision, and counter the Tea Party, Obama    mothballed his campaign operation, bottling it up inside the    Democratic National Committee. It was the seminal mistake    of his presidencyone that set the tone for the next eight    years of dashed hopes, and helped pave the way for Donald Trump    to harness the pent-up demand for change Obama had    unleashed.  
    We lost this election eight years ago,    concludes Michael Slaby, the    campaigns chief technology officer. Our party became a    national movement focused on general elections, and we lost    touch with nonurban, noncoastal communities. There is a    straight line between our failure to address the culture and    systemic failures of Washington and this election    result.  
    The question of whywhy the president and his    team failed to activate the most powerful political weapon in    their arsenalhas long been one of the great    mysteries of the Obama era. Now, thanks to previously    unpublished emails and memos obtained by the New    Republicsome from the John Podesta archive released by    WikiLeaks, and others made available by Obama insidersits    possible for the first time to see the full contours of why    Movement 2.0 failed, and what could have been.  
    In the midst of the 2008 campaign, the idea    for Movement 2.0 seemed both obvious and inevitable. Obama    himself recognized that he was sitting atop an organizing    juggernaut. Speaking to hundreds of his core staffers in June,    Obama praised them for building a    campaign machine that had just taken down Hillary Clinton.    Collectively, all of youmost of whom are Im not even sure of    drinking ageyouve created the best political organization in    America, and probably the best political organization that    weve seen in the last 30 to 40 years, Obama told them.    Thats a pretty big deal.  
    Movement 2.0 gathered steam quickly. In the    wake of the initial brainstorming call, Edley connected Mitch    Kapor with law professor Mark Alexander, a senior Obama    adviser, and gave them the job of chairing the project. Kapor    was excited. Mark and I are exchanging email brain dump to try    to surface big question and big priorities overall, speaking by    phone, and meeting all day next Tuesday in New Jersey to do    Vulcan mind meld, he emailed two colleagues. Already Mark and    I have shared vision its huge, and will go far beyond normal    January end of transition.  
          Obama confidant who co- chaired transition team. Called          Edley brilliant, but may not have shared his idea with          Obama.        
          Transition co-chair who seemed to support M2.0, but          warned Edley that it caused some heartburn from the          political crowd.        
          Obamas Senate chief of staff; after he forwarded an          early draft of the idea to two D.C. insiders, it quickly          ran into trouble.        
      SAUL LOEB /AFP/GETTY; CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY; WASHINGTON      POST/GETTY    
    Kapor and Alexander dived into the task. They    spoke with Bob Bauer, the campaigns legal counsel, about how    to structure a new organization after November. They had    several meetings with the architects of Obamas online    operation, including Slaby, the chief technology officer; his    boss, Joe Rospars, the new media director; and Chris Hughes,    the online organizing director. They dug into the details of    how the campaign had built and managed its online network, and    sketched out a way to transition it forward.  
    With barely three months left until Election    Day, Kapora veteran of many tech startupsknew that time was    short for such an ambitious effort. Coordination is going to    be vital, he emailed Edley on July 23, and I know campaign    time and attention is going to be very limited, so the sooner    we can figure out what the bridge is between campaign and    transition with respect to online community, and whether its a    footpath or a highway, the better. I am worried that as each    day goes by without knowing anything about what we on the    transition side might be building and how it does or does not    connect, the deadline pressure to actually deliver on time gets    worse and worse.  
    A few weeks later, on August 18, Edley sent a progress report to    John Podesta and the other two co-chairs of Obamas transition    board, Valerie Jarrett and Pete Rouse. Campaign folks are    joined at the hip with this effort (Rospars, Slaby, others),    Edley assured them. The technical discussions about the    software platform, etc., are moving quite well. While he    acknowledged that the Senator would ultimately have to sign    off on the plan, Edleyconfident that he was still channeling    his old friends wishessaid he didnt see any particular    hurry about it. The candidate, he understood, had a few other    things on his mind.  
    Edley attached the initial concept    document for Movement 2.0. It outlined an audacious vision:    to create a new home place for Obama supporters that would    be ready to go, the day after the election. The new entity    would be closely aligned with Obama but independent of the    party and his re-election campaign. Think of it for now as AFO    (Americans for Obama), the memo declared, envisioning it as    the principal means for continuing the active participation of    people in the Movement. AFO would not simply whip up support    for Obamas legislative agendait would gather the input to    help shape it. It would be a place where Obama supporters can    come together, affiliate and organize for change using    cutting-edge online tools that will create and support a new    and deeper form of civic engagement.  
    Critically, the Movement 2.0 team envisioned    AFO as a tax-exempt organization that would operate free of the    Democratic National Committee. Mitch and I argued that to make    the movement authentic and entrepreneurial, Edley says, it    would have to be built outside of the DNCwhich has    institutional commitments and incumbent allegiances that will    always be a fact of party life. The team concluded by asking    for permission to raise $250,000 to set up a staff    infrastructure and develop the web site. The founding board    would include Edley, Kapor, Alexander, and Podesta.  
    Podesta decided to circulate the concept    document to higher-ups in the campaign. He asked Pete Rouse,    Obamas Senate chief of staff and key political consigliere,    to forward the memo to Steve    Hildebrand and Paul Tewes, partners in a political consulting    firm who had risen to positions at the top of Obamas    organization. Hildebrand was the deputy national campaign    manager, and Tewes, after directing Obamas Iowa campaign, was    now running the DNC on the candidates behalf. Podesta had a    simple question for them about Edleys plan: He wanted to see    if they care whether this goes forward to a planning    stage.  
    That was the moment when Movement 2.0 began to    stall.  
    The proposal had started with the campaigns    technology team and true believers, but now it had landed in    front of two consummate Washington insiders. Hildebrand came to    like the idea; creating a movement free from the DNC, he    believed, would put more pressure on Congress to implement    Obamas agenda. But where others had seen great possibility,    Tewes saw potential disaster. Four days later, he wrote to Rouse and his colleague    Hildebrand:  
      As both of you know, I have many concerns      about this..... as a lover of Party I really dont like      this.    
      I think the decision needs to be made and      discussed on this vs. party or this and party. The      discussion should focus onWhat is best for Barack Obama, his      politics, his agenda and his future.    
      If the first step is to move outside the      party with your organization, the political ramifications and      future ramifications need to be thought through. Further, a      discussion should be had of party over thiswhy and why      not?    
      Marching into this seems premature and      secondly creating something before hand (before e-day) has      appearance problems in my opinion.    
      I would ask that we postpone any of this      till after the convention and do a little gathering where we      can discuss. Please.    
    Rouse forwarded Tewess response back to    Podesta. Podesta, in turn, sent it along to Edley with a pithy comment: Lets    discuss Monday. Obviously some heartburn with the political    crowd.  
          Deputy campaign chief and top D.C. consultant; argued          that keeping M2.0 out of the DNC would put more heat on          Congress.        
          Political consultant who ran the DNC for Obama. His          reaction to the idea was swift and decisive: I really          dont like this.        
          Told by Obama to keep our supporters involved, the          campaign manager bottled up the movement inside the DNC.        
      JAMES NORD/AP IMAGES; COURTESY OF CQ ROLL CALL/THE ECONOMIST;      MICHAEL KOVAC/WIREIMAGE/GETTY    
    There was plenty in Movement 2.0 to inspire heartburn in    that crowd. In Silicon Valley terms, Obama 2008 had disrupted    presidential campaigns, demonstrating how an underdog candidate    could defeat a more experienced opponent by changing the terms    of the game and empowering millions of people in the process.    Now, it seemed, the Obamaites and their tech wizards wanted to    disrupt the Democratic Party, diverting money and control from    the DNC into an untried platform, while inviting input, and    possibly even organized dissent, from Obamas base. Earlier    that summer, activists unhappy with Obamas flip-flop on    warrantless surveillance had used MyBO to build a group of more    than 20,000 vocal supporters, earning national press    and compelling a response from the    candidate. What if Obamas base didnt like the    health care reform he came up with, and rallied independently    around a single-payer plan? Besides, grassroots movements, no    matter how successful, dont reliably yield what political    consultants want most: money and victories for their    candidates, with plenty of spoils for themselves. For insiders    like Tewes, Movement 2.0 was a step too far.
    Edley knew that Tewess blowback spelled    trouble. On August 24, the day before Obamas triumphal    convention began in Denver, he emailed Podesta to express hope    that it was just a misunderstanding. He asked Podesta to keep    the issue off the agenda of the transition boards next meeting    until they figured out what to do. Podesta agreed. I think we    should [n]ot raise at all tomorrow, he told Edley, and come    up with seperate [sic] plan on how to proceed.  
    Looking back, Edley says now, Podesta made a    tactical error by sharing the plan with party regulars like    Tewes and Hildebrand before it had garnered more high-level    support in the campaign. John shouldve realized that of    course the DNC would have competitive objections, he says.    Our proposal wouldve created, at least in our dreams, yet    another set of political forces and policy energy. At the time,    I just didnt realize the powerful pull that the architects of    the Obama movement would feel away from movement building and    toward paranoid possession of the conventional trappings of    political power. If youre not really that committed, as a    matter of principle, to a bottom-up theory of change, then you    will find it nonsensical to cede some control in order to gain    more power.  
    It would be five long weeks later, on October    2just a month before Election Daybefore any reference to    Movement 2.0 would surface again in Podestas emails.    By that time, radical revisions had been made to appease the    political crowd. Chris Lu, the transition teams executive    director, circulated a revised concept memo    to Podesta and its board, in preparation for an all-day    meeting. It was a far cry from Edleys original call for a    citizen movement. Instead, the memo explained, we recommend    a new, integrated approach to the Movement 2.0 work, in    complete coordination with the ongoing efforts of the DNC, to    plan for the continued growth and development of the    online-offline community in support of Barack Obama and the    Democratic Party, our candidates and issues.  
    Gone was the idea of a new organization,    independent of the DNC. A key working assumption, the memo    stated, is that we should affirmatively empower Barack Obama    as the head of the Party, and in the process strengthen both    him and the Party. All Obama politics should be filtered    through the DNC, and all Party politicsincluding existing    organizations that support candidates for Congress and    statehousesshould be filtered through the DNC. This all    serves the agenda of one person, Barack Obama.  
    The original backers of Movement 2.0 had been    sidelined. I had nothing to do with the new memo, Edley says.    I guess they liked our name for it, but chose to pervert the    idea to something quite conventional and, forgive me, trivial.    To me, real movement building had to be about defining and    advancing progressivism, not a communication strategy from the    West Wing basement costumed as faux movement. The kind of    movement we wanted would have helped Obama a great deal,    without making it all about him. After all, even Obamas    campaign wasnt only about him or his policy platform.  
    Edley and his cohorts werent finished yet.    The idea of keeping Obamas online loyalists involved and    active had not entirely died; the new memo called for moving    quickly to enable the campaign to keep engaging its grassroots    supporters after the election. Steps should be taken    now to ensure this possibility does not evaporate,    leaving no vehicle for community in the short-term, the memo    read. But there was no proposed budget for that to happenjust    a call for the formation of a new working group for Movement    2.0, to pull all the stakeholders together. That group never    materialized.  
    The revised memo was not the only postelection plan being    considered. Julius Genachowski, co-chief of the transition    teams Technology, Innovation, and Government Reform group,    wanted to launch a White House web site aimed at engaging the    public in policy discussions. The TIGR group was a powerhouse    of wonks, many of whom were headed into top positions in    government, and its planning memo ran to 12,500 words, compared    to just 1,500 for the revised Movement 2.0 proposal. The    resultin the middle of a heated campaign and a global economic    meltdownwas widespread confusion about what would happen to    Obamas campaign machine after Election Day.  
    On October 10, Edley told Kapor and Alexander    by email that Pete Rouse had agreed to try to arbitrate all of    this. But five days later, Edley reported that he was getting    nowhere. I am frustrated beyond words on this. Will work it    hard today. I think since the campaign team has rigged    something for the transition period they just keep    back-burnering the longer run issue. A day later, Kapor    reported back that Rouse was too busy (w/ debate prep and all)    to deal with M2.0. I think fundamentally its not going to be    a priority until after the election.  
    Ultimately, the transition team agreed on only    one project: build a simple postelection site, to be called Change.gov, as    a place where people could learn more about the transitions    plans and job-seekers could submit their rsums. In the end,    there would be no footpath or highway, as Mitch Kapor had    envisioned, for transitioning Obamas two million supporters on    MyBO into a new platform. There wasnt even a rope    bridge.  
    But Kapor didnt give up. In late October, he    spoke to Jim Messina, chief of staff to campaign manager David    Plouffe, and came away convinced that both Plouffe and Rouse    now backed the original vision for the movement. Importantly,    Messina said Plouffe is not only on board but wants his sole    responsibility after the election to be getting M2.0 going,    Kapor emailed Edley and Alexander on October 23. Even if it was    too late to build on the momentum from Election Day, there was    still a chance that Movement 2.0 would take wing.  
    On November 5, the day after Obamas victory,    his headquarters in Chicago was deluged with phone calls and    emails from supporters asking for guidance on how to keep    going. Exactly as Edley had feared, no answers were    forthcomingnot even about whether the tens of thousands of    volunteers who had built personal fund-raising groups on MyBO    would be able to continue them. Were all fired up now, and    twiddling our thumbs! wrote one frustrated    volunteer from Pennsylvania. ALL the leader volunteers are    getting bombarded by calls from volunteers essentially asking:    Nowwhatnowwhatnowwhat?  
    It wasnt until three days after the election    that Chris Hughes, the campaigns director of online    organizing, put up a post on his personal    MyBO page. The site isnt going anywhere, he promised    supporters. The online tools in My.BarackObama will live on.    Barack Obama supporters will continue to use the tools to    collaborate and interact. As a stopgap, that was reassuring to    grassroots organizers who had used the site to build strong    local networks. But it wasnt a plan. There was no plan.  
    One person, however, seemed to understand that such    half-measures wouldnt be enough: the president-elect. The same    day Hughes posted his message, Obama reached out to David    Plouffe. Unlike other top operatives from the campaign, the    campaign manager had decided not to follow Obama into the White    House, but to take time off to be with his family before    returning to political consulting. His daughter was born in the    early hours of November 7, and Obama called him that    morning.
    I know youre disappearing for a while to    change diapers and play Mr. Dad, Obama told Plouffe, but just    make sure you find time to help figure out how to keep our    supporters involved. I dont think we can succeed without them.    We need to make sure theyre pushing from the grassroots on    Washington and helping to spread what were trying to do in    their local communities. And at the very least, we have to give    them the opportunity to stay involved and in touch. They gave    their heart and soul to us. This shouldnt feel like a    transactional relationship, because thats not what it was. I    want them along for the ride the next eight years, helping us    deliver on all we talked about in the campaign.  
    Three days later, Kapor emailed Edley and    Alexander, frustrated that no progress was being made. What is    needed now, he wrote, is for the President-elect and his    designees to decide how to move forward with Movement 2.0.    Would the group be independent or part of the DNC? Who would    run it? How would it interact with the White House? I dont    see how anything can happen until the project is given a green    light and the basic issue of structure and leadership is    settled by those with the power to do so, Kapor concluded. In    other words, someone please just make a decision.  
    Plouffe led Obamas supporters to believe that    the decision was in their hands. On November 19, he emailed a    survey to everyone on the campaigns list. Youve built an    organization in your community and across the country that will    continue to work for change, Plouffe told them, whether its    by building grassroots support for legislation, backing state    and local candidates, or sharing organizing techniques to    effect change in your neighborhood. Your hard work built this    movement. Now its up to you to decide how we move    forward.  
    Obamas army was eager to be put to work. Of    the 550,000 people who responded to the survey, 86 percent said    they wanted to help Obama pass legislation through grassroots    support; 68 percent wanted to help elect state and local    candidates who shared his vision. Most impressive of all, more    than 50,000 said they personally wanted to run for elected    office.  
    But they never got that chance. In late    December, Plouffe and a small group of senior staffers finally    made the call, which was endorsed by Obama. The entire campaign    machine, renamed Organizing for    America, would be folded into the DNC, where it would    operate as a fully controlled subsidiary of the Democratic    Party. Plouffe stayed on as senior adviser, and put trusted    field organizers Mitch Stewart and Jeremy Bird in charge of the    new group. Bird says the OFA team was never even told about the    idea for Movement 2.0. None of these documents were even    shared with us, he says. Im not sure the senior staff on the    campaign even knew they existed.  
    Obama unveiled OFA a week before his inauguration.    Volunteers, grassroots leaders, and ordinary citizens will    continue to drive the organization, he promised. But thats    not what happened. Shunted into the DNC, MyBOs tools for    self-organizing were dismantled within a year. Instead of    calling on supporters to launch a voter registration drive or    build a network of small donors or back state and local    candidates, OFA deployed the campaigns vast email list to    hawk coffee mugs and    generate thank-you notes to    Democratic members of Congress who backed Obamas initiatives.    As a result, when the political going got rough, much of    Obamas once-mighty army was AWOL. When the fight over Obamas    health care plan was at its peak, OFA was able to drum up only    300,000 phone calls to    Congress. After the midterm debacle in 2010, when Democrats    suffered their biggest losses since the Great Depression, Obama    essentially had to build a new campaign machine from scratch in    time for his reelection effort in 2012. (Plouffe and Messina    declined requests to speak about Movement 2.0; Axelrod,    Podesta, and Rouse said they had no comment.)  
    Republicans, on the other hand, wasted no time    in building a grassroots machine of their ownone that proved    capable of blocking Obama at almost every turn. Within weeks of    his inauguration, conservative activists began calling for    local tea parties to oppose the presidents plan to help    foreclosed homeowners. FreedomWorks, an antitax group led by    former Representative Dick Armey, and Americans for Prosperity,    funded by the Koch brothers, quietly coordinated hundreds    of nationwide demonstrations designed to look like a    spontaneous populist uprising. When members of Congress went    home for the summer to hold town hall meetings with their    constituents, they were confronted by well-organized and    disruptive protests over health care reform. The grassroots    discontent that Obama had harnessed so skillfully in 2008 now    belonged to the right.  
    Killing OFA reduced the possibility of    competing for the hearts, minds, and votes of the Tea Party    disaffected, says Lester Spence, associate professor of    political science at Johns Hopkins University. It also killed    the one entity possible for institutionalizing the raw energy    created by the Obama campaign in 2008.  
    Edley, for his part, still cant get over the    opportunity that was lost. He admits that he probably alienated    Obamas top campaign brass with his earlier intervention, but    he doesnt think thats why his idea for Movement 2.0 died.    Mostly, he believes, it was an issue of control. Our proposal    would have required that members of the political team who had    just won the nomination be willing to cede control of the    grassroots movement and turn it more in the direction of policy    advocacy and progressive advocacy, he says.  
    Even today, Edley doesnt know if Obama was    ever told of the idea, and he regrets not bypassing the    campaign operatives and reaching out to him personally. I was    loath to go around them and try to reach Barack directly,    Edley says. That is probably one of the biggest mistakes of my    professional life, given the dismal disappointment that OFA    became.  
    Ultimately, of course, the failure to keep the    grassroots movement going rests with Obama. It was his    original, and most costly, political mistakenot only a sin of    omission, but a sin of imagination, one that helped decimate    the Democratic Party at the state and local level and turn over    every branch of the federal government to the far right. In    December, in an exit interview with NPRs    Morning Edition, Obama himself sounded haunted by    it. You know, when I came into office, we were just putting    out fires, he said. We were in a huge crisis situation. And    so a lot of the organizing work that we did during the    campaign, we started to see right away wasnt immediately    transferable to congressional candidates. More work would have    needed to be done to just build up that structure. And, you    know, one of the big suggestions that I have for Democrats as I    leave, and something that, you know, I have some ideas about    is: How do we do more of that ground-up building?  
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Obama's Lost Army - New Republic