


ROB STEIN
June 20, 2011
The Following article originated at and
is taken from DiscoverTheNetworks.com
Rob Stein is an attorney who
served
as a senior strategic advisor to then-Democratic
National Committee chairman Ron Brown from 1989-92. Stein was
subsequently appointed as chief of staff at the Washington office of
the “Clinton-Gore
Transition” team in 1992-93, and then as chief of staff at the U.S.
Commerce Department during the first term of the Clinton
administration. He has founded and led several non-profit groups,
most notably
Democracy Alliance (DA), which he established in 2005.
DA’s earliest roots can be traced back to a particular morning
shortly after the 2002 mid-term elections, when, according to Stein,
he awakened to the realization that he was “living in a one-party
country” -- a reference to the fact that Republicans were in control
of the White House and both Houses of Congress. At that moment,
Stein resolved to study the history and tactics of the conservative
movement in order to determine why it was winning the political
battle. After a year of analysis, he compiled his conclusions into a
comprehensive
PowerPoint presentation titled “The Conservative Message Machine
Money Matrix,” which he set out to show to prospective big-money
leftist donors.
Using graphs, charts, diagrams, and bullet points, Stein
demonstrated how the conservative movement had become successful
by funding an intricate network of
legal, academic, and political organizations (such as the
Heritage Foundation and the Federalist Society) dedicated to shaping
public opinion on a variety of important social and political
issues. He claimed that a few well-connected, wealthy clans --
including the Scaife, Bradley, Olin, and Coors families -- had
founded a $300-million network of groups that now dominated American
policy.
As of August 2005, Stein had shown his PowerPoint presentation to
more than 700 key people in private and small-group meetings. Many
of them elected to join his fledgling initiative. Thus in 2005,
Democracy Alliance was born — a loose collection of ultra-wealthy
donors committed to building organizations that would drag
America leftward politically.
Stein served as DA’s first managing director.
Early in 2006, however, the DA board offered that position -- at
an annual salary of $400,000 -- to Robert Dunn, a former president
of Business for Social
Responsibility. When Dunn declined it, the board appointed Judy
Wade, a management consultant at
McKinsey & Company.
Major donors to Stein’s group include such luminaries as George
Soros, Peter
Lewis, and
Rob Reiner.
PREVIOUS ARTICLES:
Introducing The
Spider, George Soros (1/10/2011)
The Spider: George
Soros Since 2004 (1/13/2011)
The George Soros Web
(1/17/2011)
Soros' Open Society
Institute (1/20/2011)
The Center For
American Progress (CAP) (1/24/2011)
MoveOn.org
(1/27/2011)
The Tides Foundation and Tides Center (1/31/2011)
The Shared Agendas of
George Soros and Barack Obama (2/3/2011)
The Apollo Alliance
(2/8/2011)
ACORN
(2/11/2011)
Project Vote
(2/15/2011)
Media Matters For America (2/18/2011)
Service Employees International Union
(2/22/2011)
The Democratic Party
(2/25/2011)
America Coming
Together (ACT) (3/1/2011)
National Public Radio
(NPR) (3/5/2011)
Secretary Of State
Project (3/9/2011)
Democracy Alliance
(3/12/2011)
Arab-American
Institute (3/16/2011)
Democracy For America
(3/19/2011)
Immigration Policy
Center (3/23/2011)
American Immigration
Council (3/26/2011)
National Council of
La Raza (3/30/2011)
The "Shadow Party"
(3/31/2011)
Hillary Rodham
Clinton (4/4/2011)
Barack Hussein Obama, Part 1 (4/5/2011)
Barack Hussein Obama, Part 2 (4/6/2011)
Barack Hussein Obama,
Part 3 (4/7/2011)
Bill Clinton
(4/8/2011)
Harold Ickes
(4/9/2011)
Eric Holder
(4/11/2011)
Nancy Pelosi
(4/12/2011)
Van Jones
(4/13/2011)
Morton Halperin
(4/14/2011)
John Podesta
(4/15/2011)
John Kerry (4/16/2011)
Edward (Ted) Kennedy
(4/18/2011)
Bill Moyers
(4/19/2011)
Jim Wallace and
Sojourners Magazine (4/20/2011)
Richard Trumka
(4/21/2011)
Andrew Stern
(4/22/2011)
Wade Rathke
(4/27/2011)
The Progressive Change Campaign Committee (4/30/2011)
Progressive Democrats
Of America (5/5/2011)
The Nation Institute (5/6//2011)
The Ella Baker Center
For Human Rights (5/7/2011)
Alliance For Justice
(5/9/2011)
American Institute
For Social Justice (5/10/2011)
Code Pink: Women For
Justice (5/11/2011)
The Brennan Center
For Justice (5/12/2011)
J Street (5/13/2011)
Center For Economic And Policy Research (5/16/2011)
People For The American Way (5/17/2011)
Institute for Policy Studies (5/18/2011)
Human Rights Watch (5/19/2011)
Students for a Democratic Society (5/20/2011)
The Weather Underground (5/23/2011)
Democratic Socialists of America (5/24/2011)
The Communist Party USA (5/25/2011)
Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement (STORM)
(5/26/2011)
Working Families Party (5/27/2011)
The Congressional Progressive Caucus (5/28/2011)
National Association
For The Advancement Of Colored People (NAACP) (5/30/2011)
The Congressional Black Caucus (5/31/2011)
Health Care For America Now (6/4/2011)
The United Nations (6/8/2011)
American Federation of Teachers (6/9/2011)
National Education Association (6/10/2011)
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (6/11/2011)
Campaign For America's Future (6/13/2011)
Planned Parenthood Federation of America (6/14/2011)
Amnesty International (6/15/2011)
American Constitution
Society for Law and Policy (6/16/2011)
America Votes (6/17/2011)
Alliance For Justice (6/18/2011)
FUTURE ARTICLES:
George Wiley (6/21/2011)
Eric Altman (6/22/2011)
David Brock (6/23/2011)
Noam Chomsky (6/24/2011)
Greenpeace (6/25/2011)
American Friends Service Committee (6/27/2011)
The Sierra Club (6/28/2011)
The Thunder Road Group (6/29/2011)
Americans United For Change (6/30/2011)
Change America Now (7/1/2011)
New Organizing Institute (7/2/2011)
WE'LL CONTINUE THE SERIES IN MID-AUGUST
ADDING MORE-FAR LEFT
INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF GEORGE SOROS