The New York Times
reported yesterday that a group of Republican leaders, led by
Norm Coleman and McCain campaign policy adviser Douglas
Holtz-Eakin, is founding a new conservative organization modeled
after the left-wing Center for American Progress (CAP). The think
tank, to be called the American Action Network, will comprise
both a 501(c)3 research arm and a 501(c)4 advocacy arm. The CAP
was founded in 2003 by former Clinton chief of staff John Podesta
and quickly rose to prominence in part by capitalizing on
left-wing anger at the Bush administration. The CAP is widely
considered the think tank most influential in the Obama
administration: Podesta was the co-chair of Obama’s transition
team, and CAP facilitates
a pro-administration left-wing messaging network.
At first glance an institution with similar political cachet
among conservatives would clearly be advantageous to Republicans.
But Steve Benen of the Washington Journal
noted that a right-wing attempt to imitate CAP’s success is a
bit odd in historical context:
When the idea for the Center for American Progress was first
coming together, it was widely apparent to progressive leaders
that the left lacked the intellectual infrastructure of the
right. Conservatives already had plenty of think tanks —
Heritage Foundation, AEI, Cato, and to a lesser extent, the
Family Research Council — churning out right-wing ideas and
serving as something of a farm team for Republican
administrations and congressional leaders. The left decided it
needed to keep up and create some parallel entities.
And now the right looks at CAP and thinks, “Hey, we need one of
those.”
One key development, which Benen also references, is the
Citizens United ruling on corporate funding of political
advocacy groups, which the Times reports “potentially
will allow the organization to take unlimited contributions from
corporations and individuals to use to advertise for or against
political candidates.” Having a 501(c)4 arm that can accept those
contributions provides an advantage that the traditional research
institutions like Heritage and AEI don’t have.
Another feature that sets CAP apart from the right-wing
organizations is its messaging operation. It was a leader in
sending out a daily briefing and using blogs to disseminate
research, which are both now common practices among think tanks.
But it also took the unusual step of hiring professional bloggers
to spread its ideas. Joseph Romm, a giant among environmental
experts, blogs for their climateprogess.org. And CAP
hired Matt Yglesias, a prominent young liberal blogger, away from
the Atlantic to blog under their umbrella.
So far CAP’s strategies seem to be paying enormous dividends. The
question, though, is whether those strategies can also work for
the right.