Scout Tufankjian / Polaris
Play it Again: Tewes (far left) will try to replicate his insurgent strategy in the general election
CAMPAIGN 2008

Everywhere and Beyond

Will Obama win Wyoming? Don't be silly. Still, Paul Tewes's job is to make McCain defend his turf.

 

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Barack Obama's supporters talk about how they've given sweat and tears to the cause. Paul Tewes can do better than that: he gave his eyebrows. Last Fourth of July weekend, Tewes, who led Obama's winning campaign in Iowa, pushed his staff of field organizers and volunteers to sign up thousands of new supporters around the state. He set an unreasonably tough goal and didn't really expect them to meet it. To motivate his overworked underlings, he joked that if they succeeded he'd shave off his eyebrows. At least he thought he was joking. At the end of the weekend, the organizers reported their tallies on a conference call. They'd done it. At first Tewes tried to back out. He worried his brows wouldn't grow back. But his staffers held him to the promise. "It was very painful," he says now with a laugh. "When I'd go jogging, the sweat ran straight into my eyes."

That kind of dedication gets you noticed by the higher-ups. A year later, Tewes has a brand-new set of eyebrows, and a new job: head of the Democratic Party's massive national field operation to elect Obama. In the coming weeks, Tewes will lead the effort to put the national party under the Obama campaign's control. The idea is to re-create the kind of success he had in Iowa, but on a much larger scale—mobilizing tens of thousands of volunteers and organizers nationwide in what the Democrats call their "50-state strategy." Instead of the usual way of doing things—putting precious campaign dollars into only those states the candidate has a chance of winning—the Obama team will run hard everywhere, even in traditionally Republican states.

Sort of. Obama's strategists don't really believe he can beat John McCain in Utah. So why blow cash there? To force McCain, who has far less money on hand than Obama ($24 million versus $46 million) to spend more there, too. Ed Rendell, the Pennsylvania governor who won his state for Hillary Clinton but now backs Obama, suggests the 50-state approach is more like the arms race with the Soviets than a presidential-campaign strategy. "There's something to be said for … making sure the other side spends resources to defend areas that they don't normally spend resources in," Rendell tells NEWSWEEK.

There's another reason for spreading the wealth: winning "down ticket" congressional races that could pay off later if Obama takes the White House. "While we might not win Wyoming, there's a very important congressional seat that the [Democratic] candidate lost by 1,200 votes in '06," says Steve Hildebrand, Obama's deputy national campaign director, who started a consulting firm with Tewes. "What can we do in '08 to help [the Democrat]? Can we register new voters, or increase the number of Democratic voters to turn out? Can we use our volunteers that are motivated by Barack Obama to help him? We don't have great expectations that we can win everywhere. But we … might help elect members to Congress. And they might help pass universal health care and bring the troops home from Iraq."

Tewes, 38, has spent years trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. He got his start in big-time politics in 2000, when Hildebrand hired him to help run Al Gore's Iowa campaign. That time, he was on the side of the establishment candidate who was battling an insurgent Bill Bradley. One thing he's learned in the field: the importance of getting there early. The Obama campaign began organizing a national voter drive even before he secured the nomination. Last week the camp deployed 3,600 volunteers to 17 states, where they are proselytizing for the candidate and looking for recruits.

In election years, the nominee is usually also the head of the national party; in case anyone had any doubts that Obama was serious about taking control, Tewes announced he's effectively moving the DNC's offices to Chicago, where Obama's campaign is headquartered. Party Chairman Howard Dean—who faced a nasty fight with party elders when he proposed an expensive 50-state strategy to win back Congress in 2006—will continue to raise funds and give speeches, but the money and the message are now in Obama's hands. State party leaders, long used to running things their way, will take directions from Obama's field operation. Campaign aides say they want to put an end to the usual confusion that comes from the party's saying one thing and the candidate another. It's easy to find the guy giving those directions. He's the one with light brown hair. Medium build. Eyebrows.

© 2008

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Jack999 @ 06/25/2008 8:47:33 AM

    BEWARE !!!!!! ALL GOP MACHINE LOBBYIST COMMING TO ROOSTS VERY SOON WITH NOW AND 5 MONTHS AHEAD TILL FALL.......AS USUAL ..WITH ALL LIES,BS,PROPA-GANDA VIDEOS,RELIGION,SEX,BIBLE,RACE,WAR,TERRORIST,FEAR,SMEAR. ...USING GOP JOURNALIST,GOP PRIEST,EVEN AN IDIOTS,.MANY MORE.....AMERCIANS ALREADY KNOWS THIS TACTICS AND ANTICS ......."NOT THIS TIME"

  • Posted By: Nins @ 06/24/2008 11:26:34 PM

    Some of you who read my posts about investment banks driving up the price of oil through commodities futures trading did not believe me that this was a real issue, despite the fact that the Senate is investigating it. Well, it really is an issue and an important one, so important that the Department of Justice is going to investigate.

    Senator Obama announced a plan to crack down on excessive energy speculation and fully close the loophole in the CFTC regulations that I referred to in my blog. This loophole is also called the "Enron Loophole" because it was created by McCain campaign co-chair Phil Gramm at the behest of Enron lobbyists, and exempts most trading on energy commodities from regulation. As a result, the CFTC is unable to oversee the oil futures market or investigate cases where excessive speculation is driving up oil prices. Just last month, John Hofmesiter, President of Shell Oil Company, says that the proper, uninflated production price of a barrel of crude oil is no more than $65.

    http://www.financialpost.com/reports/oil-watch/story.html?id=532747

    Clarence Cazalot, CEO of Marathon Oil, stated in November of 2007 that "$100 oil just isn't justified by the physical demand on the market - it is speculation on the futures market that is driving this."

    http://money.cnn.com/2007/11/12/markets/oil_hundred/index.htm?postversion=2007111216

    Larry Chom, Chief Economist of Platt's, states in a recent Businessweek article that speculation is adding at least $50 to the price of every barrel of oil. You can read this article in the May 13, 2008 edition of Businessweek, but it is no longer available on their website unless you are a member.

    http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/may2008/

    To see what Senator Obama is doing to correct this serious problem and lower the price of gas and oil, go to his website:

    http://my.barackobama.com/page/community/post/stateupdates/gG5Rzb

    Now THAT is my kind of President! Sees the problem, and moves to fix it, while Bush and McCain are sitting on their hands.

  • Posted By: Nins @ 06/21/2008 2:55:14 PM

    Readers, be informed, and beware! Sam Bodman, US Energy Secretary, is a Bush appointed Yes-man. Bodman states that insufficient production is making oil prices soar. Bush wants you to think that the OPEC countries are responsible for high oil prices, but the truth is, OPEC has been significantly increasing production over the past several months. Where is all that oil going? It's being stockpiled by US investment banks, who are creating a fake shortage to drive up the price. Congress has already started to investigate this criminal practice. Bush, who has deregulated the banking industry, tries to blame it on OPEC. By now you should be familiar with Bush's MO: he says you should be very afraid of Muslims. But who you should really be afraid of are investment bankers at Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers. Check this out:

    Michael Masters of Master Capital Management (a global investment manager) testified before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Government Affairs a couple of weeks ago. Quotes from his testimony:

    "Today, Index Speculators are pouring billions of dollars into the commodities futures markets, speculating that commodity prices will increase. In the popular press the explanation given for rising oil prices is the increased demand from China. According to the DOE, China's demand for petroleum has increased in the last five years from 1.88 billion barrels to 2.8 billion barrels, an increase of 920 billion barrels. Over the same five year period, Index Speculators' demand for petroleum futures has increased by 848 million barrels. THE INCREASE IN DEMAND FROM INDEX SPECULATORS IS ALMOST EQUAL TO THE INCREASE IN DEMAND FROM CHINA. Index Speculators have now stockpiled, via the futures market, the equivalent of 1.1 billion barrels of petroleum, effectively adding EIGHT TIMES as much oil to their own stockpile as the US Government has added to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve over the last five years."

    "The Senate has asked the question "Are Institutional Investors contributing to food and energy price inflation?" And my unequivocal answer is "YES." In this testimony I will explain that investment banks are one of, if not the primary, factors affecting commodities prices today. Clearly, there are many factors that contribute to price determination in the commodities markets; I am here to expose a fast-growing yet virtually unnoticed factor, and one that presents a problem that can be expediently corrected through legislative policy action..."

    The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission is ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL. They're supposed to be protecting us from these kinds of abuses, but Bush allowed loopholes in the CFTC regulations that you can drive a truck through. An oil truck, that is.

    Links to Masters' Senate testimony, and 2 articles:
    http://hsgac.senate.gov/public/_files/052008Masters.pdf
    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20011.htm
    http://globalresearch.ca

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