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Crashing the Gate: Netroots, Grassroots, and the Rise of People-Powered Politics Paperback – September 1, 2006

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 75 ratings

Crashing the Gate is a shot across the bow at the political establishment in Washington, DC and a call to re-democratize politics in America.

This book lays bare, with passion and precision, how ineffective, incompetent, and antiquated the Democratic Party establishment has become, and how it has failed to adapt and respond to new realities and challenges. The authors save their sharpest knives to go for the jugular in their critique of Republican ideologues who are now running--and ruining--our country.

Written by two of the most popular political bloggers in America, the book hails the new movement--of the netroots, the grassroots, the unorthodox labor unions, the maverick big donors--that is the antidote to old-school politics as usual. Fueled by advances in technology and a hunger for a more authentic and populist democracy, this broad-based movement is changing the way political campaigns are waged and managed.

A must-read book for anyone with an interest in the future of American democracy.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"In fact, there's something remarkably bracing about the authors' approach. The Unified Theory of Progressive Revival may remain the Holy Grail, but while pursuing it, why not start attacking the small systemic dysfunctions that cripple the movement's effectiveness?"--In These Times



"Power to the people with a political takeover plan," Los Angeles Times review by Lee Drutman-
In a given week, Markos Moulitsas Zúniga's progressive blog, Daily Kos, receives more than 3 million visits, making it one of the most widely read political blogs in the world, and earning its proprietor regular calls for advice from Democratic Party leaders. Not bad for somebody who just four years ago was a Silicon Valley dropout with no real political experience. Now Moulitsas, along with fellow blogger Jerome Armstrong of MyDD.com (the DD stands for "Direct Democracy"), has put down some thoughts in a more traditional medium -- a book.

In Crashing the Gate, the two are not shy about what they hope to accomplish: nothing but an all-out "people-powered" takeover of the Democratic Party -- which, they are firmly convinced, is the only way to take America back from the conservatives currently ruining it. "To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson," they write, "the tree of a political party must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of reformers and insiders." So begins a chapter titled "Civil War." ...

Crashing the Gate is brash and infuriating, as it should be. The progressive blogosphere is starting to feel its own strength -- in the continued growth of Web traffic, in its powerful fund-raising capacity, and in the rise of its man, Howard Dean, as Democratic National Committee chairman. As Eli Pariser of Moveon.org's political action wing wrote in December 2004 (after helping to raise a few hundred million dollars online): "Now it's our party: we bought it, we own it, and we're going to take it back." Crashing the Gate is a powerful salvo in that battle. And as such, it commands attention.



"The Hope of the Web," New York Review of Books, by Bill McKibben-
When, less than a decade ago, the Internet emerged as a force in most of our lives, one of the questions people often asked was: Would it prove, like TV, to be a medium mainly for distraction and disengagement? Or would its two-way nature allow it to be a potent instrument for rebuilding connections among people and organizations, possibly even renewing a sense of community? The answer is still not clear-- more people use the Web to look at unclothed young women and lose money at poker than for any other purposes. But if you were going to make a case for the Web having an invigorating political effect, you could do worse than point your browser to dailykos.com, which was launched in 2002 by Markos Moulitsas Zúniga.

The site, which draws more than half a million visits each day,[1] has emerged as a meeting place for a great many ordinary people (i.e., not only politicians, journalists, academic experts, issue advocates, or big donors) who want to revive the Democratic Party. Obsessed with developing strategies for defeating Republicans, the site was much involved with the campaign of Howard Dean for the presidential nomination and carrying on his forthright opposition to the Iraq war. Its sophisticated technological structure, assembled by Moulitsas, has allowed its viewers to raise money for favored politicians, rethink and debate issue positions, harass lazy or ideologically biased journalists and commentators, and even help break stories that the mainstream press managed to overlook. In doing so, it has explicitly tried to chart a new future for the Democrats--the subject of the book under review--and implicitly suggested new possibilities for the American political system that might help it break free of the grip of big money. It also raises large questions about the future of journalism. In my view, nothing more interesting has happened in American politics for many years.

From the Publisher

There's a powerful new force in the Democratic Party. People around the country are banding together to take back the people's party. Jerome Armstrong and Markos Moulitsas explain how the Republicans rose to power and what the Democrats need to do to take back Washington. This is the playbook for a new century of Democratic leadership.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Chelsea Green Publishing (September 1, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 216 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 193339241X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1933392417
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 8.8 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.63 x 0.6 x 8.63 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 75 ratings

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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2006
    As a committed and certified political junkie who spends a great deal of time on the left side of the blogosphere, I bought Crashing the Gate more out of loyalty than with a notion of adding to my knowledge base. OK, so it turns out that I was very wrong about what the book offers.

    CTG managed to not only challenge a few of my political "truths", it also changed my most hardcore and unchangeable policy - to never vote for or support an antiabortion candidate, even if the candidate is a Democrat.

    The authors trace the dangers of such single-issue thinking in their explanation of the actual outcome of NARAL's and NOW's "victory" of forcing Rhode Island's antiabortion Democratic candidate, Jim Langevin to withdraw from the Senate race against the incumbent pro-choice Republican, Lincoln Chafee. The bottom line is simply that while one Democrat's opposition to abortion could not have changed his party's overall stance in favor of choice, favoring a Republican did nothing to preserve choice, now and for years to come, when that Republican votes to confirm Janice Rogers Brown to the federal appeals court in Washington DC.

    That is just one small example that Armstrong and Markos use to bolster their arguments for the basic changes that are needed within the Democratic Party. They also challenge the established power base and campaign consultants who are still practicing politics from the 1970s and 1980s playbooks. "The winning twenty-first century solutions won't come from tweaking twentieth-century tactics. The world has changed far too much for that to work".

    Perhaps the most powerful message offered by the authors is in their explanation of the grassroots, netroots and people-powered politics effects on the movement and their own roles in the transformation. They do not claim to be the leaders, because there are no leaders, including the corrupted or flawed, in a movement that cannot be "harnessed, controlled, or co-opted". Instead, power is returned to the rightful owners, We The People.

    You don't need to be a political junkie to understand and grasp the political background the authors offer nor to comprehend the solutions that they propose, making this book an excellent read for anyone who is just waking up to the `political really is personal' nightmare that is taking place today. For the dedicated seekers of reality based politics, who don't believe that opinions are equal to facts, footnotes are included.
    35 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2006
    I just finished reading the new book out, "Crashing the Gates: Netroots, Grassroots, and the Rise of the People-Powered Politics" by Markos Moulitsas Zuniga and Jerome Armstrong. It is an incredible book. The words are so powerful and filled with so much truth that they leap off the page and pierce the heart. These guys speak truth in a powerful way. I'm sure that Karl Rove and the right wing think tanks have copies and are rapidly analyzing it and trying to do damage control. Buy two copies, one for your self and one for a friend! Kudos to the Daily Kos writers, the new Paul Revere of the 21st Century.

    [...]
    24 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2007
    This book covers much of the political situation for the last six years. It will madden, disgust the reader, but enlighten , too. I was only disappointed that the authors didn't seem to have any real suggestions to Crash the Gate.However since the book was published before the 2006 elections, it appears that much was successful in that task. It explains, too why the Democratic party in DC was unhappy about the final results of that election. But we are happy, though.
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2015
    Quality book in fine condition delivered in a timely way. Thanks.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2006
    First of all, I'm a democrat. Like most of my fellow democrats, I am tired of losing, and wanted to take a look at this book for strategic reasons. After about the first 95 pages, I was incredulous. No doubt the countless minions that follow these two will fill this section with GLOWING reviews, but if you want an OBJECTIVE opinion, read on.

    For those of you on the verge of spending the $15 bucks, I would say that you are about to buy a revised manual that could have been written by Bob Shrum 20 years ago. Just add the internet, blogs and update the historical context.

    In fairness to these two authors, they do bring a renewed energy, and "bright eyed" optimism, but for those of us pressing for real progress, they do nothing more than lay out a recipe for repeating past mistakes. I'm not suggesting they do this on purpose, it just appears (to me) that they either;

    1. Don't have a firm grasp on the electorate.

    or

    2. They don't understand the nuances of the political process needed to effect change.

    While I compliment them on the BOLDNESS they bring (in an effort to effect the changes they desire), it is that SAME boldness that neuters them. To reduce wordiness, and sum this up, the book basically urges us to return to the grassroots, and re-package our progressive positions via a BOLD, in your face, manner. Frankly, it's a recipe for FAILURE. These two would have us present a Feingold-Dean ticket for 2008, and then blame the moderate elements in the party for its failure. It's idealistic, and I applaud that, but they don't seem to have any grasp on elements/realities that exist outside the left side of the spectrum.

    I wish these two guys well as they mature within the party, but God help us if we ever use this book as a strategic manual going forward.
    71 people found this helpful
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