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  • Reply to: 96% of MoveOn Members Did Not Show Support for the Pelosi Bill   17 years 1 month ago
    Eli Pariser asked me to post his rebuttal to our pieces on their siding gainst most of the organized peace movement the current legislative debate. I did that, below, although I don't believe they have reciprocated by posting OUR pieces on their site. Maybe I should ask them to do that! In any case, here is my rebuttal of MoveOn's rebuttal: Friday, March 23, 2007 ELI SAYS: "...there are dedicated antiwar activists who oppose this bill". Yeah, I guess! As today's excellent Salon.com article points out, MoveOn deserted almost all of the rest of the organized peace groups to stand with Pelosi. MoveOn has marginalized itself among peace activists. ELI SAYS: "MoveOn refrained from taking a public or private position until late last week." That's half true. The peace lobbyists I interviewed have been furious with MoveOn for weeks because privately, off the record, they were saying that they would NOT publicly call for a vote on the Lee Amendment, and that they would be siding with Pelosi. In other words, MoveOn was with the Dem leadership and deserted the 'Out of Iraq Caucus/ and the rest of the organized peace movement from the get go. MoveOn kept quiet about it all until they sprang their rigged, biased survey and then misleadingly claimed that 85% of the 3.2 million MoveOn mailing list members agreed with them. ELI SAYS: "Here are some of the biggest inaccuracies in his articles: The Claim: MoveOn members didn't have a fair shot at participating in the vote because, in Stauber's words, 'nothing in the subject line [of the email] indicated it was particularly important.' The Reality: Our survey email had the subject line, "Important decision on Iraq." It's hard to be clearer than that." My response is: congratulations Eli, that's a good rhetorical point. Your headline DID say this was important. So what does it mean that 96% of the 3.2 MILLION people on your MoveOn list IGNORED your "important" email? Well, it means that the emails you send out with "important decision" in the title are routinely ignored, not even opened. Why is that? Perhaps if your email had said, "Hey, Are You With Pelosi and Peace or Republicans and War?? That's the Only Choice in This Survey, Let Us Know Because We Are Knifing Other Peace Groups In The Back" you might have gotten a better survey response. Also, a googling of blogs or a search of Technorati shows that many of the Netroots Democrats with big blog traffic were lobbying for their readers to vote YES with PELOSI in your poll. What this all says to me is that MoveOn has so alientated your much vaunted 3.2 million email "members", that you can't get 96% of them to even open your email. But after this betrayal, they probably will pay closer attention, or just get off your list. ELIS SAYS: "We do ongoing polling of small groups of MoveOn members to ensure we're accurately representing our membership. ... People voted this way based on the content of the bill-not the email in which we asked the question." My response: open your books and your PR and marketing files and let us see what you've got, but this survey was garbage in, garbage out. You got what you wanted with less than 4% of your members responding and a survey question that was rigged, like a Soviet ballot, to give you the results you desired. ELI SAYS: "The Claim: The vote was unfair because we didn't give people a choice between the Iraq Accountability Act and the 'Lee Amendment.' The Reality: The Lee amendment is an idea that's been discussed by Congressional progressives to speed the withdrawal of American troops. We didn't include it in this survey for a fairly simple reason: it hadn't been offered. Not even in the appropriations committee. We needed to know how MoveOn members felt about the bill that was actually coming up for a vote." The fact is that Pelosi and the leadership killed the Lee Amendment, and MoveOn among all the main peace lobby groups sat by and let it happen. This is a little like the government blowing up the union hall, and then saying there is no union hall in our town! As someone pointed out to me, in a better worded metaphor. MoveOn NEVER TOOK A PUBLIC STAND IN FAVOR OF THE LEE AMENDMENT, and stood by while Pelosi killed it. ELI SAYS: "A representative sample of these comments appears below. (You can go to their link at the top of this piece, click, and read the anonymous endorsement.)" I say, I could also post scores of comments from angry MoveOn members who feel betrayed by there actions. Maybe I should. John Stauber PS: Should I email this to Eli and ask him to publish it, and our original articles, on the MoveOn site?
  • Reply to: 96% of MoveOn Members Did Not Show Support for the Pelosi Bill   17 years 1 month ago
    Salon.Com "MoveOn Moves in with Pelosi" By Farhad Manjoo March 23, 2007 http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/03/23/move_on/index.html What precipitated the recent scuffle between MoveOn and its former allies was an e-mail that Pariser sent to MoveOn's members on Sunday, March 18, asking them to help guide the group's position on the war debate in Congress. As Salon's Michael Scherer has noted, the e-mail read like a push poll; Pariser described Pelosi's plan and Bush's opposition to it, and made only cursory mention of progressives' concerns. He did not describe plans floated by members of the House's Out of Iraq Caucus that would have funded a quick withdrawal from Iraq. "Should we support or oppose the Democrats' plan?" Pariser asked in the e-mail. Slightly more than a hundred thousand MoveOn members voted in the poll. The vast majority -- 84.6 percent -- sided with "the Democrats." It reads like a Soviet ballot," says John Stauber, the founder of the Center for Media & Democracy, whose harsh indictment of MoveOn's survey has been a hot item on lefty blogs this week. If Pariser had more thoroughly educated members about all of the positions in the debate, many would have voted against the Pelosi plan, Stauber says. More important, MoveOn could have helped the chances of an amendment by Reps. Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters and Lynn Woolsey, leaders of the Out of Iraq Caucus, that called for withdrawal of all troops by the end of 2007. "They could have put out an alert to 3.2 million people across the country and said, 'If you do anything tomorrow, get up and call your representatives and tell them to support the Lee Amendment,'" insists CodePink's Gail Murphy. "They've got millions of dollars. If they put their money toward stopping this war, we'd have a lot more leadership in the Democratic Congress toward stopping this war." But MoveOn didn't stump for the Lee plan, and it died in committee. ...
  • Reply to: 96% of MoveOn Members Did Not Show Support for the Pelosi Bill   17 years 1 month ago
    Dear reader, Eli Pariser < eli@moveon.org > asked me to post on our site the letter they are sending to angry members. Here is below. I'll write a response to it. Eli tacked on a bunch of comments he claims support their position. I've taken those off, you can click on the link below and read them. I've gotten scores of emails damning moveon and thanking Sheldon and me for exposing their duplicity. In fact, I have never received such an overwhelming positive response to anything I've written. John ---------- THE MOVEON RESPONSE.... http://pol.moveon.org/iraq/supplemental_stauber.html Do MoveOn Members Really Support the Iraq Supplemental? By Eli Pariser, Executive Director, MoveOn.org Political Action Friday, March 23, 2007 John Stauber has posted several articles arguing that MoveOn members don't actually support the Iraq supplemental, or were duped into supporting it. This isn't true, but because there are dedicated antiwar activists who oppose this bill, it's worth explaining how we arrived at this position and pointing out the flaws in Stauber's analysis. In order to strengthen the hand of progressives who were pushing for a better bill, MoveOn refrained from taking a public or private position until late last week. Then, when the final bill was negotiated, we put the question to our membership: should we support it? 126, 000 MoveOn members participated in the vote. 84.6% supported the bill. 9.2% said they weren't sure and 6.2% opposed it. Why? The Iraq Accountability Act will, for the first time, set a deadline in law for the withdrawal of American troops. If it passes, it will force President Bush to agree to an end date for the war or to stand in front of the American people-who want a timeline-and declare his support for war without end by vetoing it . It's a first step to ending the war. That's why MoveOn members told us they support the bill. It's clearly hard for John Stauber to believe that so many progressives would support a bill that provides continued funding for the war, so he suggests that we gamed the poll. Here are some of the biggest inaccuracies in his articles: The Claim: MoveOn members didn't have a fair shot at participating in the vote because, in Stauber's words, "nothing in the subject line [of the email] indicated it was particularly important." The Reality: Our survey email had the subject line, "Important decision on Iraq." It's hard to be clearer than that. (NOTE: Stauber quietly removed this embarrassing claim from the posted version of his article after we flagged it on a progressive listserv, though he has not to our knowledge admitted the error). The Claim: People were biased by our email because we noted that most Congressional progressives are supporting the bill and Republicans are opposing it. The Reality: Leaving aside the question of whether this political context is, in fact, important for MoveOn members to know, it didn't change the outcome of the poll. We do ongoing polling of small groups of MoveOn members to ensure we're accurately representing our membership. Over the last week we experimented with different ways of doing the survey. Whether we provided information on the bill, or just asked people to vote based on what they already know, or to look at external sources, the result was always same-the vast majority of members indicated support for the Iraq Accountability Act. For example, last Friday, we sent this very simple email: Dear MoveOn member, The Democratic Leadership will debate their plan for Iraq soon, and we'll be asked what MoveOn members think about it. Can you take just a quick minute to complete the survey at the link below? Completing the survey takes just a few minutes. MoveOn's mission is to serve members like you-so we really want to know what you think. Please help set MoveOn's course on Iraq. Thanks for all you do. -Nita, Tom, Eli, Justin and the MoveOn.org Political Action Team Friday, March 16th, 2007 On the survey page, people read only this text: The Representatives Pelosi, Obey and Murtha announced their plan for Iraq recently. Based on what you know about their plan for the Iraq supplemental spending bill, what do you think MoveOn should do? (Looking to learn more? Read the New York Times Story or read the Washington Post Story.) The results matched larger survey we did on Sunday, where we provided more context. People voted this way based on the content of the bill-not the email in which we asked the question. The Claim: Only a fraction of MoveOn members voted so this position doesn't represent most MoveOn members. The reality: We emailed all 3.2 million MoveOn members and gave them the opportunity to vote. 126, 000 people did. This response rate is not unusual for a vote like this. Our response rate in Connecticut when endorsing Ned Lamont was nearly identical to this vote, for example. Our biggest "poll" was the MoveOn PAC Primary in 2003, when a couple hundred thousand people participated following a major organizing drive. Moreover, this wasn't a survey, it was a vote. Every MoveOn member was invited to participate. So the argument that it isn't representative of the MoveOn membership is moot: we made our decision based on the final vote counts, after giving everyone a chance to weight in. The Claim: The vote was unfair because we didn't give people a choice between the Iraq Accountability Act and the 'Lee Amendment.' The Reality: The Lee amendment is an idea that's been discussed by Congressional progressives to speed the withdrawal of American troops. We didn't include it in this survey for a fairly simple reason: it hadn't been offered. Not even in the appropriations committee. We needed to know how MoveOn members felt about the bill that was actually coming up for a vote. Some folks have suggested that we should have given MoveOn members a choice - support the Iraq Accountability Act, or support the Lee Amendment. But this doesn't make sense: they're complementary. One is an attempt to improve the other. It would have been deceptive and confusing to pose the question as if they were mutually exclusive. The Lee Amendment would have made the Iraq Accountability Act stronger by moving the final date for withdrawal of US troops from 2008 to the end of this 2007. It's a no-brainer that most MoveOn members would support that position. And we strongly supported progressives in their efforts to strengthen the timeline in the final bill. Once the Iraq Accountability Act was negotiated and finalized, the question was, did MoveOn members feel like it was a step in the right direction, even with a 2008 deadline. Their answer was clear: "Yes." In other words, we weren't asking our members to vote on policy, because their policy on Iraq is very clear: most MoveOn members want an end to the war by the end of the year. We were asking them to make a political decision: does voting "Yes" on the supplemental advance that policy. Barbara Lee herself said, "I cannot stand in the way of passing a measure that puts a concrete end date on this unnecessary war." We know that MoveOn members are fully supportive of the content that's been discussed for the Lee amendment. We've been clear that we'll engage to support if it is proposed. We've asked our members to call Congress and urge them to support the Lee amendment and anything else that would strengthen the bill. We will continue to fight to rein in the President and bring the troops home ASAP. The Claim: MoveOn members didn't really understand what they were voting on. The Reality: Reading the 30,000 comments we received make one thing very clear: MoveOn members are very well informed, and gave this question a lot of thought. They wish the bill did more to end the war sooner, but they think it's an important first step and definitely support its passage. A representative sample of these comments appears below. (You can go to their link at the top of this piece, click, and read the anonymous endorsement.)
  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 1 month ago
    Salon.Com "MoveOn Moves in with Pelosi" By Farhad Manjoo March 23, 2007 http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/03/23/move_on/index.html What precipitated the recent scuffle between MoveOn and its former allies was an e-mail that Pariser sent to MoveOn's members on Sunday, March 18, asking them to help guide the group's position on the war debate in Congress. As Salon's Michael Scherer has noted, the e-mail read like a push poll; Pariser described Pelosi's plan and Bush's opposition to it, and made only cursory mention of progressives' concerns. He did not describe plans floated by members of the House's Out of Iraq Caucus that would have funded a quick withdrawal from Iraq. "Should we support or oppose the Democrats' plan?" Pariser asked in the e-mail. Slightly more than a hundred thousand MoveOn members voted in the poll. The vast majority -- 84.6 percent -- sided with "the Democrats." It reads like a Soviet ballot," says John Stauber, the founder of the Center for Media & Democracy, whose harsh indictment of MoveOn's survey has been a hot item on lefty blogs this week. If Pariser had more thoroughly educated members about all of the positions in the debate, many would have voted against the Pelosi plan, Stauber says. More important, MoveOn could have helped the chances of an amendment by Reps. Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters and Lynn Woolsey, leaders of the Out of Iraq Caucus, that called for withdrawal of all troops by the end of 2007. "They could have put out an alert to 3.2 million people across the country and said, 'If you do anything tomorrow, get up and call your representatives and tell them to support the Lee Amendment,'" insists CodePink's Gail Murphy. "They've got millions of dollars. If they put their money toward stopping this war, we'd have a lot more leadership in the Democratic Congress toward stopping this war." But MoveOn didn't stump for the Lee plan, and it died in committee. ...
  • Reply to: 96% of MoveOn Members Did Not Show Support for the Pelosi Bill   17 years 1 month ago
    To follow up on Mutternich's response, MoveOn claimed that its "poll" was a <b>vote</b>. Here's what they stated: "84.6% of MoveOn members <b>voted</b> to support the bill." A poll may be a poll, but a poll is certainly not a vote. Moreover, MoveOn's "poll" was really a push poll. Rather than capture the opinions of its members, it was designed to <b>shape</b> the opinions of its members and the general public (Congress in particular). It accomplished this by selective presentation of choices and highly tendentious wording of the question. Ask any professional pollster, and they'll tell you that opinion poll results are very susceptible to manipulation depending on how the questions are worded. Studies have even found that merely changing the order in which questions are asked in a poll can substantially change the way people respond. In order to get a result that genuinely measures the opinions of a group, therefore, considerable care must be taken to ensure that the wording of questions does not determine the response. In the case of MoveOn's "poll," however, considerable care was taken to ensure that the wording <i>did</i> determine the response. What we have, therefore, is a manipulative poll, inflated by MoveOn's own rhetoric into a "vote," and then used to twist arms in Congress for passage of a bill that provides further funding of the war in Iraq. You're right that there are "legitimate concerns and issues" with this supplemental. The most fundamental issue is, "why should Congress offer additional funding for continuation of the war?" Within the peace movement, however, an important secondary issue is, "Why is MoveOn.org working so hard to convince its members that supplemental funding for the war is a step toward peace?" As Howard Zinn recently stated, "To me it is tantamount to the abolitionists accepting a two-year timeline for ending slavery, while giving more money to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act."

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