A Tribute to Paul Wellstone

Yesterday was the 5th anniversary of the tragic death of Paul Wellstone, his wife, daughter, and the others that perished on that plane. The Senate Democrats prepared a moving tribute video, which you can see above (video or YouTube). I'm not going to lie, I teared up a little bit just watching it.

If you missed it yesterday, there were a few wonderful tribute pieces to Wellstone in the blogosphere. Chris Bowers wrote a piece entitled "Paul Wellstone Was His Brother's and Sister's Keeper":

Wellstone had generated the energy of what many, myself included, often call the contemporary progressive movement before it had really coalesced on a national level or in many different localities. And he earned this energy, this support for his campaign, because he stood with his allies. He didn't throw the netroots, liberals, immigrants, the LGBT community, unions or other progressive constituencies under the bus in order to win. He stood with them. He kept his promises to them. He didn't use them as foils or strawmen to highlight his own centrist or difference with the American left. He stood with his allies. He was his brother's and his sister's keeper.

At the Minnesota Monitor, Eric Black, wrote the haunting "Paul Wellstone Spoke to Me from the Grave":

To the limited degree that I allowed myself to feel admiration for anyone about whom I wrote, I admired Wellstone as a conviction politician who seemed, more often than most, to vote his conscience rather than seek political safety. I never expressed this to him privately, and now I can't.

And Ezra Klein's weekly American Prospect column to write what I think captured his loss and its continuing echo so profoundly. "Remembering Paul Wellstone":

In retrospect, it was, in no small part his kindness, evident generosity of spirit, and commitment to public life, that made me start thinking differently about politics. My protective teenage cynicism was no match for his effortless conviction. He robbed me of my excuse for apathy.

Wellstone's populism was not an affectation, or a political posture. It was laced into the fabric of his personality. It's what made him different than other politicians. His measuring stick was not the poll numbers, not the editorial pages, not the political prognosticators, not the Sunday shows -- it was the farmers, the students, the seniors, the people. His fealty to them explains his frequent lonesomeness in the Senate. When the people are your judges, you can stand against the Iraq War in an election year, you can lose votes 99-1. You can fail to pass legislation, because you know the compromise would fail your constituents. "Politics is not about power," he would say. "Politics is not about money. Politics is not about winning for the sake of winning. Politics is about the improvement of people's lives. It's about advancing the cause of peace and justice in our country and the world. Politics is about doing well for the people."

Because of this, Wellstone had an immunity to the political trends that few politicians exhibit.
[. . .]
That they were politically inconvenient never deterred him. "If we don't fight hard enough for the things we stand for," he said, "at some point we have to recognize that we don't really stand for them."

I was a politically unaware freshman in college the day that Paul Wellstone died. I'll never forget being shocked by how one man's loss affect so many so profoundly. But Wellstone's true legacy, lives on in his supporters, like the wonderful people at Wellstone Action (in fact my Camp Wellstone campaign manual was loaned to a certain MyDD blogger last year).

I can't imagine how much less lonely the last five years would have been with Paul Wellstone in the US Senate. To have won in 2002, to have shown the world and the Democratic Party that an anti-war candidate could win without being scared might have shown us a different strategy in 2004. To have had him standing by Howard Dean when he spoke Wellstone's phrase "I represent the Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party" might have lead us out the wilderness sooner. But in his absence we can only hope to honor his memory by living up to it.



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God Damn it (none / 0)

How lame does Harry Reid look now?


by faithfull on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 07:18:05 PM EST

Re: A Tribute to Paul Wellstone (none / 0)

Thank You for the moving tribute to Paul Wellstone.  Paul was my hero, my mentor, and more than anyone in politics today, someone who I hope to base my life on.  Paul was a passionate progressive who was willing to fight and push on issues we cared about.  But he was also a genuine nice guy -- someone who was like a warm father who we could come to for guidance and solace.

I miss Paul every day.  Thanks for remembering.


by Paul Hogarth on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 07:36:14 PM EST

Re: A Tribute to Paul Wellstone (none / 0)

At least there is hope, when there are Feingold's out there.  If only we ever had someone like Wellstone run for President some day.  That would be something.


John McCain: Bush right to veto kids health insurance expansion
by Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 07:52:43 PM EST

You might have teared up..... (none / 0)

I just cried

To say that Paul Wellstone is missed doesn't really convey how much he is missed .....

I'm going vote for whomever most clearly matches Paul Wellstone's values and passion and committment to making this world a better place


by merbex on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 08:28:28 PM EST

I THOUGHT Klobuchar would be like him. (none / 0)

That as a fellow Minnesotan like Wellstone, she would be a true blue progressive and actually be one of us.  However, she votes against withdrawal and panders like all the rest.  Boy was I wrong.

Amy Klobuchar has revealed herself to be, like almost all other politicians, simply that - a politician.  Whereas Paul was a real person of the people.

I truly think he would have won the Democratic nomination someday if he'd have lived.


McCain is defining Obama, and Obama is neither defining himself, nor McCain. This is awful.
by jgarcia on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 10:40:33 PM EST

Thank You (none / 0)

I wrote my own diary yesterday because I was afraid the anniversary would be forgotten amidst all this presidential nonsense. I'm glad to see it got some front-page attention.

Paul Wellstone was simply an incredible man, who contributed so much to our country and our party. I can only imagine what he might have been able to accomplish today and in the future.


Walberg Watch - Following Radical Conservative Rep. Tim Walberg in MI-07
by Fitzy on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 11:11:27 PM EST

Re: Thank You (none / 0)

Too many air crashes for my comfort: Mel Carnahan, Paul Wellstone and Clair McCaskill's assistant. Was Paul Wellstone killed in an accident or did something else happen?


by Boilermaker on Fri Oct 26, 2007 at 11:21:44 PM EST
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Re: Thank You (none / 0)

I'm not a tinhat, but I often wonder about this as well.


McCain is defining Obama, and Obama is neither defining himself, nor McCain. This is awful.
by jgarcia on Sat Oct 27, 2007 at 12:16:29 AM EST
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Re: Thank You (none / 0)

Last I heard is Wellstone's children were having the accident investigated.  Then silence.  God bless Paul Wellstone -- he was the best of us.  I have wondered about all the plane crashes too.  


by changingroom on Sat Oct 27, 2007 at 03:14:55 AM EST
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Re: Thank You (none / 0)

Keep a close watch of the candidates in 2008 to see if there is a trend. That is all we can do for now.


by Boilermaker on Sat Oct 27, 2007 at 09:45:56 AM EST
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Re: A Tribute to Paul Wellstone (none / 0)

Wow, that was a powerful video. Wellstone passed away before I became politically active so this gave me a great opportunity to observe what he was like. I had heard about him, especially things from the Franken campaign (or Al before he was a candidate) so I had an idea how good he was, but I never had heard him speak outside of campaign commercial or two I found on youtube.

He was a wonderful Senator, I wish we had more of them. The only ones in the Senate right now that even resemble him, in my opinion, are Feingold and Brown. I hope that when we expand our majority we can have some more Senators (or reps) that embody his message, passion, and most importantly, heart.


by Trowaman on Sat Oct 27, 2007 at 08:26:37 AM EST

Re: A Tribute to Paul Wellstone (none / 0)

Paul Wellstone was a man of courage.

I wonder who he would support today for president?
I know it would not be Hillary.


by BDM on Sat Oct 27, 2007 at 10:03:57 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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