Posted by
bigredcon on Tuesday, July 11, 2006 2:01:32 PM
Jim Geraghty's
TKS post from 6/20/2006 chronicling the Kos/Armstrong timeline got me thinking. Geraghty's timeline regarding Kos/Armstrong/Mark Warner/DLC sparked some memories. The TKS excerpt follows:
MARK WARNER
August 2005: Governor Mark Warner's PAC hires Armstrong.
December 2005: Newsweek interviews Kos <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10629288/site/newsweek/page/2/> :
Newsweek: Looking forward to 2008, what do you think of Hillary Clinton's presidential chances?
Kos: The person to watch on the Democratic side for president is not Hillary Clinton, but [former Virginia governor] Mark Warner. He showed that not only could he win in Virginia, a Red State, but he had the coattails to help his successor win. He is one of the most popular governors in Virginia history-he has a 70 or 80 percent approval rating. He'll be the anti-Hillary. Hillary is at the top now because of name recognition.
June 2006: Daily Kos readers begin to ask why Warner, with all of his ties to the Kos archenemy of the Democratic Leadership Council, is getting such praise and warm welcome from Markos at Yearly Kos. Some recent headlines in Daily Kos diaries:
I seem to recall a kerfuffle between Kos and the DLC last year... something akin to Kos declaring war on the DLC. As I remember it, Kos said something about wanting to make the DLC "radioactive" and telling his readers to "stay tuned". After some searching, I found the following Kos posts:
Kos 8/22/2005 titled
"The calm before the storm":
"We need to make the DLC radioactive. And we will. With everyone's help, we really can. Stay tuned. "
more:
"Ultimately, this is the modern DLC -- an aider and abettor of Right-wing smear attacks against Democrats. They make the same arguments, use the same language, and revel in their attacks on those elements of the Democratic Party that seem to cause them no small embarrassment.
Two more weeks, folks, before we take them on, head on.
No calls for a truce will be brooked. The DLC has used those pauses in the past to bide their time between offensives. Appeals to party unity will fall on deaf ears (it's summer of a non-election year, the perfect time to sort out internal disagreements)."
As I recall, that 'deadline' came and passed without a peep.... Other bloggers were following this and wondered what happened to this all-out war on the DLC:
Wizbang,
Dean Esmay,
Michelle Malkin,
VikingPundit,
Hotline blogometer,
LGF.
Some started
asking questions and it even go mention in the
Washington Post.
It appears that shortly after Warner hired Armstrong in August 2005, Kos withdres his promise for all-out war against the DLC. The deadline came and passed. Some noticed and asked questions including
dailykos posters and
others.
Shortly thereafter, Kos, without much fanfare offered the following:
Kos 9/7/2005:
"Gotta go work on the book.
Update: Some people are asking about the DLC thing. Well, there are actually more important things right now than that. Katrina has center stage, and will for a while. "
It seems to fit the timeline of things that don't quite add up....
- Kos declares war on the DLC in (Aug05)
- Armstrong goes to work for Warner in (Aug05)
- Kos calls off his attack on the DLC (Sep05)
Katrina might have had center stage at the time but Kos not piling on??? Doesn't pass the smell test.
The January/February issue of Washington Monthly chronicled the events as well in a
profile of Kos:
"Still, Moulitsas wouldn't back down. "No calls for a truce will be brooked," he wrote. "Appeals to party unity will fall on deaf ear... We need to make the DLC radioactive. And we will. With everyone's help, we really can. Stay tuned." As the countdown continued, Moulitsas posted millennial-sounding attacks on the DLC that veered, like the writings of the Ayatollahs, between the merely portentous and the outright ludicrous. Some liberal websites, ecstatic, began speculating about what Moulitsas's plan might be; others posted count-down clocks. And then...nothing. Three days before the scheduled unveiling, Moulitsas wrote that he'd changed his mind. Hurricane Katrina, which had just struck, had made him realize, he said, that this was not the time for intra-party bickering. "We think someone got to him," a DLC staffer told me darkly. "
Someone like Benjamin Franklin or Andrew Jackson???