Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Dean and party fundraising

Dave Weigel of The Daily Kos quotes the following from The Hill:

Three top fundraisers at the Democratic National Committee have resigned at a time when its chairman, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, has come under fire from fellow Democrats for controversial comments and his Republican counterpart has raised more than twice as much money.


Democratic sources link the resignations to Dean’s decision to focus on raising money in small increments through the Internet, as he did during his 2004 presidential bid, and building up the party’s grassroots infrastructure while paying little attention to major Democratic donors.


Sounds like a good idea to me.
But he didn't quote the following:

But other Democrats say the first several months after a party’s losing presidential campaign are naturally a time of transition and it will take time for committee officials to get their “sea legs.”


Dean’s defenders also note that DNC fundraising is ahead of where it was at this point after the last presidential election, when Democrats could still raise unlimited amounts of soft money.


Changes the story a bit, doesn't it?

1 comment:

Contested Terrain said...

Thanks for responding so quickly.
I certainly agree-too many anonymous chatterers, I just thought Dean needs to get his due, there are enough people on his case.
If he doesn't move the Democratic Party to the "center" (ie. "right"), he could be the best thing to happen recently.
We'll see.