August 28, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

[video] Dissecting the Jewish vote & possible Lieberman or Cantor GOP VP pick

The NJDC, J Street and The Israel Project are mentioned within the speculation, commentary and analysis contained in this very informative news video. You can also see that the JTA’s Eric Fingerhut is not the Ohio Chancellor of Higher Education’s Eric Fingerhut.

Last night in The Chief Source live-blog, another live-blog attendee and I exchange thoughts on the Jewish vote this year. My opinion tracks with what’s presented in this JTA video, but to reiterate: you will find Jews all over the spectrum because first of all, Israel is not the one issue even for some American Jews who might be one-issue voters (although for sure it may be for others), and second of all, when Israel is the issue being discussed, ideas about what to do there and in relation to that country resemble a page in the Talmud, which is to say, many opinions around one framed statement.

by Jill Miller Zimon at6:15 PM under barack obama, campaigning, debates, democrats, elections, george bush, hillary clinton, israel, jewish, john mccain, media, politics, predictions, social issues, voting, wh2008 (Comments)


[text] Joe Biden’s convention speech, Bill Clinton’s convention speech

Here’s the text of U.S. Senator (DE) and Democratic nominee for Vice President Joe Biden’s convention speech.  Here’s the video of it.

Here’s the text of former President Bill Clinton’s convention speech.  Here’s the video.

I participated in this Akron-based live-blog of the convention activities last night - pretty interesting back and forth.

by Jill Miller Zimon at1:14 PM under barack obama, campaigning, democrats, joe biden, politics (Comments)

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Best Speech Of The Night


No offense to Bill's or Biden's efforts last night, but this was by far the best speech of the entire evening.

by Michael at10:10 AM under democrats, election 2008, john kerry


Plunderbund

Plunderbund

DNC Day 3: Building to History

This was by far the best night of the convention. I was of the mindset that it was going along too slowly and overall was weak, but the more I think about it the more I realize every day built upon the other. Every speaker played a part to build toward history. [...]

by Eric at5:21 AM under barack obama, democrats, dnc, hillary clinton, joe biden, plunderbund, ted kennedy (Comments)


August 27, 2008

King's Right Site

King's Right Site

Special Election set for late Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones

Rev. Ted Strickland has scheduled the special election to replace Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones for the remainder of her term will be held on October 14, if needed, depending on the number of candidates.

From the PD --

Tubbs Jones, who represented the 11th Congressional District, died Aug. 20. Her term was to expire at the end of the year. Strickland said earlier this week that he hoped to avoid filling her seat since Congress is not expected to be back in session before January. And, each election is expected to cost about $2.75 million.

However, the governor said in a statement issued Wednesday that a 2004 federal appeals court ruling made it clear he has a mandatory obligation to call an election whenever a congressional seat is vacated.

This will make things very interesting in Cuyahoga County during this years election season. It also opens up many questions on who may file to fulfill her term as the would most likely be the winner in the general election for the following term.

The Republican opponent in the general election is Thomas Pekarek.

by King at10:42 PM under cuyahoga county, cuyahoga county boe, democrats, election 08, general


Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

[audio] WLST on BBC: curious about voters’ allegiances, Obama’s chances

I love doing interviews with the BBC because they make my kids think I’m cool (something to do with someone speaking in a British accent to their mom).  The questions posed this time around reflect the loudest and most often emphasized media being produced and consumed, online and off. But you’ll have to listen to my responses to hear how I handled that impression.

You can listen to last night’s exchange here. And here’s some info about the gentleman who interviewed me, Julian Keane.

by Jill Miller Zimon at1:49 PM under barack obama, campaigning, democrats, elections, hillary clinton, john mccain, media, ohio, politics, voting (Comments)


[text] Hillary’s Convention Speech: There is no I in Obama

And Hillary Clinton tonight outlined in stark terms what this world risks if voters do not unite and elect Barack Obama.

I was in this live-blog and would encourage you to read the portion of chat around the time when she was speaking.  Here is the text of the speech.

Clinton’s speech included what she wanted to say and what they allowed her to say that had to do with her supporters, what they did for her and she did for them.

But then, she moved into describing all the people and crises and issues that are starving for attention that will be crushed further below the consciousness of the United States if John McCain and the GOP continue to govern this country from Washington, D.C.

She repeated several times, in several different ways, her support for Michelle Obama, Joe Biden, Jill Biden and, of course, Barack Obama, this country and the Democratic Party.

If those voters who have insisted that they want only Hillary Clinton and will not vote for Obama still feel that way, it’s up to Obama to convince them otherwise.

Even though I feel strongly that John McCain could do that all by himself.

by Jill Miller Zimon at4:29 AM under barack obama, campaigning, democrats, hillary clinton, media, politics, wh2008 (Comments)

August 26, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

WLST on the BBC: Analysis of Hillary’s speech, what’s next for her

I’ll be at the Chief Source live-blog later this evening to watch the Democratic Convention’s evening events tonight and wait for a call from the BBC for its show, The World Today, which will be broadcast sometime tomorrow.

Clinton is scheduled to speak after Mark Warner in the 8-9pm (MT; 10-11pm EST) tonight.

Want to weigh in? Leave comments here or visit the Chief Source’s live-blog and participate.  If you’ve never been in a live-blog, it’s a lot of fun and also very educational.

by Jill Miller Zimon at11:13 PM under announcements, blogging, democrats, hillary clinton, ohio, politics, wh2008, women (Comments)


[text, audio, video] Michelle Obama’s Democratic Convention Speech

Read Michelle Obama’s DNC Convention speech here.

See the comments we made on the live-blog at The Chief Source.

Listen to her speech here.

Or (and?!) watch it here or here:

Hattip to Professor Kim Pearson for the text and audio links.

by Jill Miller Zimon at3:18 PM under barack obama, democrats, michelle obama, wh2008 (Comments)

On the media-whipped PUMA phenom & a one-word directive: CHILL

I like Rebecca Traister’s piece on the Party Unity My Ass loyalists in Salon very much but I love this woman.

The setting:

Whether they knew it or not, the PUMAs who had congregated next to the MSNBC stage were making the night of the man who has done everything in his power to destroy their purported heroine. They held aloft Clinton signs and hand-markered cards reading “Stop Delegate Intimidation!” and “South Jersey PUMA.” At one point, three women and three men holding “McCain” signs started a melodic chorus of “Clintons for McCain, sweetie, Clintons for McCain, sweetie,” in reference to Barack Obama’s bad habit of referring to women by that diminutive. Next to them, a man in an Obama hat shouted, “You’re all irrelevant! Jesus!”

But irrelevant is not how the protesters will be portrayed by a media that has been salivating over the possible disruption of the Democratic convention — by angry, broom-riding succubi! — for weeks. Never mind that there were probably no more than 50 shouting PUMAs. Never mind that every national political convention in modern history becomes a locus for vocal agitators. Never mind that over the weekend, antiwar protests had been larger. Never mind that in three days in Denver I had not spotted a single PUMA or Hillary protester until I found where Chris Matthews was broadcasting. Never mind the guy in the toilet outfit. To hear Matthews, and the talking heads at CNN tell it, these demonstrators were “ground zero” in a rift that could potentially destroy the Democratic Party and ruin its national convention.

And from the woman I love, Marie Wilson, founder of The White House Project:

“There is such a fear of women coming into power, that when they protest, they are given more weight,” said Marie Wilson, head of the White House Project, before speaking as part of the Unconventional Women’s programming, acknowledging the likelihood of protest. “Just the fact of women saying they support their candidate and want to make their voices heard sounds more scary than it would be if it were guys. That’s just part of backlash. But come on. When women gather around a water fountain, men get scared. People oughta just chill.”

Wilson acknowledges that there will be residual tension at the convention. But she sees the discord as a positive thing, a perhaps painful step in the right direction. “Putting issues on the table” — as opposed to keeping political frustrations pent up — “is what is going to bring people together.” Wilson believes that in the wake of Hillary’s run, “we are in the middle of a revolution. Women are stepping up and taking power.” She said her organization, which encourages women to seek elected office, has seen a 61 percent increase in participation in the past year. [emphasis mine]

Count 29 year old Hough resident, Stephanie Howse, Cleveland’s newest city council member, as part of that 61%.

Much of my online day yesterday was spent saying much of the same thing, which is that the number of voters who continue to act as though they can threaten the democracy that kept this country together in 2000 after Antonin Scalia made George Bush president is most likely statistically comparable to the usual number of voters in a presidential election year who don’t “get in line” - and maybe even smaller. We don’t know because no one is measuring that - hmm, why do you think that might be?

If you don’t believe me, you can hear Markos of Daily Kos and John Podesta, among others, say it on NPR. And although I can’t remember specifically, I know Dan Moulthrop and his guests went over this point too yesterday morning with at least one caller. (I have to add - neither of those shows had a single woman on the panel, but that’s another post.)

The difference this year, when it comes to those who don’t want to support the nominee?

Chris Matthews forgetting he is or ever was a journalist - and that men get scared thing Wilson references.  But Matthews is only the most obvious example of this media-ready explosion of expression, and the netroots have plenty of upshoots in the same vein.

The voters who are defiant in their depression and anger over Hillary Clinton not being on the ticket come by it organically, unquestionably.  These voters are unlikely to be the ones who are so much in the center that they can come to see John McCain as the moderate maverick he presented as in 2000 and vote for him now.  The problem is, they are being fed and used and portrayed by opportunists of all stripes, not only Carly Fiorina and John McCain, as if they are those voters who could be swayed (and Fiorina is a squirrel banging her head against the cage - these voters, especially the women, are never going to vote for McCain - he simply is not what they want - all they want it Clinton, end of story).

Yet, what confounds me most in the continuation and choice of actions determined by defiance is understanding how voters who are otherwise intelligent and rational in choosing an excellent candidate in Hillary Clinton can now become individuals who will ignore the illogic behind their continued push toward goals that are not, even in a Dennis Kucinich world, achievable.

And I’m someone who wrote, repeatedly, about letting these voters have their say, get it out, be listened to and learned from. Even as the reality became then and is now that Hillary Clinton is not going to be president this year.

Not.Gonna.Happen.

And now, disruption, protests and stunts, especially in the face of strong statements from Clinton herself, project nothing but pure narcissism. Listen to Clinton:

I consider Bill Clinton to be one of the most narcissistic people on the face of the Earth, but not Hillary.  Whatever inner glee voters (especially those who never before would have voted for McCain and insist that they will refuse to vote for Obama) think Clinton may find in the PUMA protests, how do you think she’s going to feel as a sitting senator who has to work under a McCain administration delivered to her by…her own supporters?

Again - if people were smart enough to vote for Clinton in the primary - and I did - then they should be smart enough now to realize that, as Marie Wilson says, they need to chill.

And go attend a White House Project Go Run! training so that they can be the next female presidential candidate.

by Jill Miller Zimon at2:22 PM under barack obama, democrats, elections, gender, hillary clinton, leadership, media, politics, predictions, sexism, voting, wh2008, women (Comments)

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

You Gotta Love Those Kids


Okay, you gotta love all kids, but as far as a teevee moment is concerned, you really just have to love the Obama's daughters.

Very, very cool family. Just keep those two away from the press (might stunt their growth).

Speaking of cool families...

Someone said/asked me during his speech "doesn't Ted look good?!". Yes, Teddy did look good last night, and he sounded even better.

I do expect we will hear that Lion roar on the Senate floor come January.

by Michael at8:35 AM under democrats, election 2008


Speaking of Easily Digestible Bites


Yeah, something like this maybe:
The GOP enacts, say, a dollar of tax cuts. Of that dollar, 95 cents may go to one person, and the remaining nickel is chopped into 100 million little parts. Yet, everyone thinks they got a “tax cut.”

by Michael at12:40 AM under democrats, economics, election 2008, fight dammit

August 25, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

[video] Obama’s McCain Don’t Know Much ‘Bout ad

Ayup.

If it really feels lousy to vote for Obama because Hillary isn’t the nominee, I appreciate that - it really felt lousy to me to vote for Hillary in the primary, because I didn’t like either Clinton or Obama. But I did it because, well - watch that video again.

But, if you think you felt lousy when HRC suspended her campaign and are considering a protest vote for John McCain?

Just imagine how you’re going to feel on November 5 if John McCain wins, or, worse yet, is inaugurated in January 2009.

by Jill Miller Zimon at4:54 PM under barack obama, campaigning, democrats, elections, leadership, politics, predictions, sexism, social issues, voting, wh2008, women (Comments)


word of mouth

word of mouth blog

DEMS GO GREEN

In keeping with their “green” principles, and to showcase their stand against domestic oil and gas production, the VIPs at this week’s Democratic National Convention are replacing their usual gas guzzling fleet of Suburbans, Town Cars and Hummers with eco-friendly transportation: Coming soon to a dealership near you!   h/t:  Planet Gore

by Bruce Batista at3:17 PM under democrats, dnc, energy, machine gun, national politics, politics (Comments)


August 24, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

The Wisdom of Choosing Joe Biden

This post consolidates a number of prior comments I’ve made about the selection of Joe Biden as Barack Obama’s VP choice:

To read the swing state of Ohio, listen to its delegates in Denver on the choice of Joe Biden as Barack Obama’s running mate (h/t Ohio Daily Blog,):

Attorney Jan Roller of Cleveland, a Clinton delegate, said Biden “adds great strength for the experience he brings to the ticket, especially in foreign policy.” Justin Zollars, a college instructor from Bowling Green, said he’s happy with what he called “a smart pick” because Biden is experienced with foreign policy.

Sonny Nardi, a Teamsters leader and a superdelegate pledged to Obama, is also happy with Biden but more due to his appeal to workers and the middle class. Biden has middle class Irish Catholic roots in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Nardi believes Biden’s story and personality are a good fit in Ohio.

Leslye Huff, a probate attorney in East Cleveland pledged to Clinton, had an interesting philosophical take on the Obama-Biden pairing. “It’s very clear that the American public is asking for two things - change, the kind of change that supports and protects, and they are also asking for stability,” she said. She illustrated the desire for stability by pointing out that Americans “don’t want strange and odd debacles like Hurricane Katrina, where people certainly needed support and assistance and didn’t get it.” Given that the party’s platform calls for constructive change and the party has a “change agent” as a presidential candidate, “it was wise to make sure there was a complementary force for stability, a force based on tremendous knowledge and experience. The seasoned quality of Joe Biden I think is something that nobody can question.”

Steve Lieber of University Heights, also a Clinton delegate, was a shade more qualified in his praise:

Well, out of all the selections he had, Biden is probably a good pick. I think he has a lot of experience, he balances Obama well, he was a good choice out of all the people Obama had out there to pick. I’m a Hillary delegate, I like Hillary, but Biden was probably the best one he could pick. My personal feeling is Hillary probably wouldn’t have wanted to run for vice president.

Some of the delegates are public officals who issued public statements about Biden today. Sen. Sherrod Brown, an unpledged superdelegate, said:

Joe Biden is a dedicated public servant and a devoted family man. He has spent his career working to protect American families and will be invaluable in helping Senator Obama fight for the middle class. It has been my pleasure to call Joe a friend and colleague. I look forward to working with him as part of an Obama White House in charting a new course for middle class families and for our nation.

UPDATE: Here’s the statement from Gov. Ted Strickland:

Joe Biden is an outstanding choice for vice president. His foreign policy knowledge is unparalleled, and his humble Pennsylvania roots give him a deep understanding of the challenges facing Ohio families. Ohioans will have a clear choice this Fall —- four more years of failed Bush economic policies under John McCain, or a new direction that will bring the the real change we need to Washington with an Obama-Biden ticket.

Lesley Huff’s analysis nails what I’ve been writing at places like BlogHer (which has a fantastic back and forth with debate and opinion and analysis from all perspectives) and The Point and in person - I was at three different social events yesterday and at all three, people wanted to talk about the Joe Biden pick.

Here are the highlights of why I posted my support of Obama’s decision within minutes of learning about the selection:

1. I’ve met him, I’ve heard him live, I loved his debate performances. I’m not forgetting his gaffes or that he’s a white male, but I was never a Hillary supporter and I’ve had my issues with the Obama campaign (more than with Obama himself I should add). I analogize this pick to Ohio Governor Ted Strickland’s pick of Lee Fisher, who had run and lost in the Ohio governor race the previous election cycle against Bob Taft who went on to have even more dismal ratings than Bush: a balance of personalities and appeals.

2. I understand people’s complaints about Biden not being new, Biden not being a governor, Biden being male and white and from a small state. But if there are lessons we’ve learned already, that we might not have had the advantage of learning until Obama became the candidate he now is (think back to a year ago when he was sparkling, but how much more did we see beyond that sparkle compared to what we’ve seen in 12-15 mos?), those lessons include trusting the people Obama trusts. Not all of them, and not all of them on every decision. But there’s no doubt that the team he’s assembled and relied on, by and large, over the last two years have some serious mojo and instincts and smarts. He had a VP selection committee - most people liked the people Obama named to help him. If we can’t trust this pick, if anyone who supported Obama can’t trust this pick, you’re going to have serious problems with him as a president, no?

3. I fell for this choice immediately because Biden has what Obama lacks: the double-edged sword of entrenchment. For all the ways in which it was used as a negative against HRC, entrenchment also carries with it many goodies for people who are elected to be in D.C. One of my concerns with Obama has involved the length of time it takes to build connections that can help you get what you want done actually done. My concerns included confidence that Obama and his people, as new and fresh as many, though not all of them, are, could and would find the literally thousands of people they’ll need to get done what they and we want them to get done. These are the realities of governing a federal government. It’s not sexy, it’s not Utopian - it’s what we have. (more…)

by Jill Miller Zimon at2:17 PM under barack obama, democrats, elections, joe biden, ohio, politics, vice president, voting, wh2008, women (Comments)


August 23, 2008

The Boring Made Dull

The Borring Made Dull

The All-Gasbaggery Ticket

It’s Biden.

The official Obama strategy is now confirmed. The Democrats are going to talk us to death.

If nothing else, Biden will provide some entertainment value.

by TBMD at5:01 PM under campaign 2008, democrats, obama barak


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Grading the Ticket


I missed most of Obama's portion, catching maybe a minute somewhere in the middle. So no grade there.

Biden on the other hand, definitely an A. Maybe an A-, maybe an A+, but definitely a solid A. This is a good great ticket folks.

I think the GOP better get real worried... real soon.

by Michael at5:00 PM under democrats, election 2008, obama-biden


Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

Biden! Yes! Did the Happy Dance at 8:01am

Because I was in Shabbos mode throughout the late afternoon and evening and refused to turn on my computer even when I heard at 7:57am that NPR was going to profile the choice, who they didn’t name.  But when they did, at 8:00am, well - I went outside and did an end-zone dance in the driveway, then came back in and turned this on.

First thoughts: he’s great for Israel, he’s going to acceptable to a lot of Hillary Clinton supporters and he’s going to piss off the pro-Jim Webb guys.  He said some indelicate things during the primary that will have to be swatted away and he reminds me of Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland’s choice of Lee Fisher - which was damn smart.

Here are all the times I’ve mentioned Biden, and here’s why I felt confident in my choice of Biden as president (speaking on the failure of the Bush administration in the Middle East):

Obama simply does not have the gravitas to say that - yes, he can say the exact same words in the exact same tone, but it will not be heard or inferred by listeners the way it is when Biden says it.

But the bottom line of joy for me? I’ve been feeling lousy about not having been more active from the start in relation to my support for Biden from the beginning. Not just lousy, but guilty.  I still feel guilty and will work hard to be sure I don’t let that happen again.

But now - with Biden as the Democratic VP choice, I can whole-heartedly support this ticket - not just vote for it, and I can offer remuneration for the time and energy I didn’t put out for Biden as a prez choice by putting out time and energy for his ticket.

Very happy voter here.

Other voters? In Ohio? Let’s just say that I don’t see any evidence of any other Ohio blogs humming happy about this choice.  But it is only 8:24am.

UPDATE: Redhorse has a perfect pitch post about the wisdom of this choice.

Who is Joe Biden, for those who don’t know him? Start here.

by Jill Miller Zimon at1:31 PM under announcements, barack obama, campaigning, democrats, elections, joe biden, politics, vice president, voting, wh2008, women (Comments)


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

It's Truly Official Now


Obama/Biden '08 folks!

Has a nice ring to it, doesn't it?

by Michael at5:07 AM under democrats, election 2008, obama-biden


August 22, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

Memphis congressman wins primary ridden w/anti-Semitism

Even EMILY’s List, which had endorsed Democratic primary challenger Nikki Tinker against incumbent U.S. Congressman Steve Cohen, condemned one of Tinker’s anti-Semitic ads against Cohen (D, TN-9).  And in the end, Cohen won the primary earlier this month with nearly 80% of the vote in his majority black district.

This JTA article offers a good review of what’s gone on, including the context. Barack Obama abstained from involvement in the Democratic primary for the seat but on the day of the vote, spoke up:

The advertisements also led the party’s presumptive presidential nominee, U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), who had previously stayed out of the race, to speak out on the day of the primary against the smears.

“These incendiary and personal attacks [made by Tinker against Cohen] have no place in our politics and will do nothing to help the good people of Tennessee,” Obama said in a statement. “It’s time to turn the page on a politics driven by negativity and division so that we can come together to lift up our communities and our country.”

I wrote about this race previosuly here.

Cohen is unopposed.

by Jill Miller Zimon at7:52 PM under campaigning, democrats, elections, jewish, politics, primary, voting (Comments)


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

We Are the Change We've Been Waiting For


Did I not say just yesterday...
...there's a lot of quality advise not being made good use of.

I love it when the universe cooperates.

by Michael at5:30 AM under democrats, election 2008, fight dammit


August 10, 2008

Working-Class Perspectives

Working-Class Perspectives

Republicans and the Working Class?


Last week, Jack Metzgar considered how definitions of class are being used in political analysis, noting that the press and some political analysts have defined the working class either as those who don’t have a college education or as those earning less than $50,000. Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam use the first definition as the foundation for their new book, The Grand New Party: How the Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream.

Briefly, Douthat and Salam believe that both Democrats and Republicans have misunderstood the shift in working-class voting patterns - from Democratic to Republican - that Jack described. When Democrats argue that the working class has been distracted from class interests by the war and national security and symbolic and cultural issues, they fail to understand that those “symbolic” issues have been at the heart working-class insecurity. For example, crime, welfare policy, immigration, and especially family values are closely tied to financial security and social mobility. At the same time, Douthat and Salam contend that Republicans have overrated the working class’s philosophical shift to conservative Goldwater/Reagan values.

Rather, they argue, Republicans appeal most effectively to working-class voters when they engage in “limited government pragmatism rather than small government Puritanism.” This “applied neoconservatism” reflects the domestic policy-minded neo-conservative approach last seen in the 1970s. Based on this analysis, Douthat and Salam argue that Republicans should rethink social policy formulations to include more family-friendly policies such as changes in the tax code to encourage family building, tax credits for parents who care for children at home, more spending on highways (because suburbs are better than cities for raising children), job subsidies for entry level employment, summer enrichment programs for poor kids, more cops on the streets, new school funding formulations, more progressive income tax, and a national healthcare plan similar to that being offered by Democrats. No doubt, these policy ideas will resonate with many working-class and middle-class voters.

One might ask if this is just another version of the Republican’s bait and switch and campaign-based Democratic-lite politics used to entice working-class voters. We all remember Bush’s promises of “compassionate conservatism.” That may have been persuasive in the past, but not this time. Deep divisions split the Republican party between the small government “moneycons” who run the party and younger big government social conservatives and Sam’s Club Republicans (aka the working class) who think the Goldwater/Reagan wing of the party has run out of ideas and that a political massacre is on the horizon. After all, Republicans have already lost three special elections in solid Republican districts in the last year, and over 80% of the population now believes that the country is on the wrong track.

If Douthat and Salam are correct, John McCain will have difficult task navigating between his larger donors and more progressive social conservatives within the Republican Party. This is going to be particularly true in swing states like Ohio. In the past, shrinking Northeast Ohio – long a Democratic stronghold — has been balanced by socially conservative, Republican-dominated and growing Southwest Ohio. Yet, in 2006, Republicans were largely swept out of state offices as result of job losses, a “culture of corruption,” and growing discontent among the working-class and social conservatives over economic and social policy. Job losses have continued, especially in automotive manufacturing and particularly in the largely conservative Dayton/Cincinnati area. Furthermore, as we found when we conducted focus groups with the Wall Street Journal earlier this year, working-class discontent with the war had grown significantly. Support for the war and security issues were central to the Bush victory in Ohio in 2004, but this year the key will be economics. Both candidates, but especially McCain, need to provide specific plans that economically support working-class Ohioans, if they are to win their support in 2008.

John Russo

by workingclassstudies at1:29 PM under 2008 election, democrats, republicans, working-class politics, working-class voters (Comments)


August 20, 2008

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Obamanomics In Detail


Pick and parse at your own convenience.

It's a long one...

Most telling is this one paragraph:
The new Democratic consensus isn’t complete, obviously. Labor unions, in particular, would prefer more trade barriers than many other Democrats. During the primaries Obama nodded, and at times pandered, in this direction. Since then, he has disavowed that rhetoric, to almost no one’s surprise. Yet his zig-zagging on the issue did highlight the biggest weak spot in his, and his party’s, economic agenda. He still hasn’t quite figured out how to sell it. For all his skills as a storyteller and a speaker, he has not settled on a compelling message about how to put the economy on the right path.

Someday, someone will run for President, and listen to the voices of reason.

I'm not entirely sure that we have anyone like that this year.

by Michael at5:01 PM under democrats, economics, election 2008, obama


August 19, 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

Cleveland’s newest city council member to address Ward 7 (and opponents) tonight

The Plain Dealer published a lengthy and chattier article today (with emotional photos) on Stephanie Howse, the appointed replacement for the late Cleveland City Council Fannie Lewis.  Everything positive that they write about Howse echoes what I know about Howse and why I expect that Howse will be able to establish herself as a unique and informed voice for the residents in her ward. The thumbnail sketch:

Stephanie Howse

Age: Turns 29 Thursday.

Residence: Hough neighborhood of Cleveland.

Education: Bachelor’s degree, civil engineering, Florida A&M University. Master’s degree, environmental studies, Cleveland State University.

Occupation: Cleveland City Council member for Ward 7.

Work history: Executive director/co-founder of Footprints, a nonprofit youth development organization. Cleveland region field director for the Ohio Democratic Party.

Family: Single. Her mother, Annie Key, is a former state representative.

Background: She grew up in the Hough neighborhood and played the harp in high school.

Early career goals: She wanted to become an engineer, but caught the political bug from her mother. She ran unsuccessfully for the Ward 7 council seat in 2005.

On being Fannie Lewis’ successor: “I was shocked and in awe.”

The article quotes ODP executive director Doug Kelly stating that Howse will resign from her ODP role and states that Howse will address the ward’s democratic club at an already scheduled meeting for tonight.

by Jill Miller Zimon at3:19 PM under cleveland+, democrats, leadership, ohio, politics, women (Comments)


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

It's the #@!&%$ Economy Stupid


I'm really inclined to dislike Paul Krugman, just generally, but especially as he can't seem to restrain himself from taking a swipe at Senator Obama while make a valid series of points.

Let's start with the backhandedness first:
All this makes a stark contrast with the campaign of the last Democrat to make it to the White House, who had no trouble conveying passion over matters economic.

Why doesn't he just tell us how he really feels?

Now to the heart of the problem - which I and others have mentioned before:
I was astonished at the flatness of the big economy speech he gave in St. Petersburg at the beginning of this month — a speech that was billed as the start of a new campaign focus on economic issues. Mr. Obama is a great orator, yet he began that speech with a litany of statistics that were probably meaningless to most listeners.

...

Obama surrogates have shown a similar inclination to go for the capillaries rather than the jugular. A recent Wall Street Journal op-ed by two Obama advisers offered another blizzard of statistics almost burying the key point — that most Americans would pay lower taxes under the Obama tax plan than under the McCain plan.

And the results:
...Mr. McCain would seem to offer a target a mile wide: a die-hard supporter of failed economic policies who takes his advice from people completely out of touch with the lives of working Americans.

But while polls continue to show that the public, by a large margin, trusts Democrats more than Republicans to handle the economy, recent polling shows that Barack Obama has at best a small edge over Mr. McCain on the issue — four points in a recent Time magazine poll, and he is one point behind according to Rasmussen Reports, which does automated polling. And Mr. Obama’s failure to achieve a decisive edge on economic policy is central to his failure to open up a big lead in overall polling.

The problem isn't the candidate - Hillary would have likely done no better.

The problem is this candidate's open-ended admiration for all points of view. While I'm not someone to say you shouldn't listen to all sides of a debate, this isn't a debate. The facts are already in.

Rubinomics was a failure. Rubinomics was not what Bill Clinton ran on in 1992. Riechonomics was what Bill Clinton ran on in 1992. In 1993, Bubba stabbed a lot of people in the back, yet before the next election he got lucky and the economy "recovered" (if by recovered you mean an investment bubble caused by too much money laying the hands too few).

If I wanted more of the failed Clintonian economic policies of the 1990's, or someone who appeals more to Republicans than Democrats and Independents, I would have supported another Clinton... or a senile Republican!

But this lack of passion Krugman speaks of is one more sign of a candidate listening to too many voices, most of which are diametrically opposed to each other, and more than half of which are struggling to find a way to remain as relevant as supply-side economics (which contains no differences apart from the deficit-busting aspects).

Passion isn't all that's required, Sherrod Brown didn't have gobs of passion carry him to victory two years ago. A consistent message to be - or get - passionate about might help.

by Michael at2:45 PM under democrats, economics, election 2008, observations


I'm Not the Only One


I know how campaigns are run, so in one sense, you can say my disgust with not only Obama's campaign - but Barack Obama himself - is unjustified.

And it is until you understand something else.

This was supposed to be a different type of campaign and - again - it is. I expected leadership from the man at the top right from the start. What I see (and what I hear) doesn't tell me I was led to believe wrongly.

What we all see (and all hear) tells me the lack of a focused strategy of attack by surrogates while the head honcho plays the positive "different kind of campaign" is the result of Senator Barack Obama's own choices.

What worked against a total nutcase in his Senate race (c. 2004) is not going to work against the entire national GOP apparatus (c. 2008).

That also goes for the normally tight-lipped Obama campaign's many embarrassing failures on the economic issues front, which along with some damned effective tactics by St. John made more effective by those failures, are likely to blame for the current lead Mr. POW has in a state like Ohio - that should be a washout for the Democrats.

Oh, and Josh Marshall has a word for this entire situation. Palpable. I have another word for it... several other words for it.

by Michael at12:05 PM under democrats, election 2008

Writes Like She Talks

WritesLikeSheTalks

Go Run! grad Stephanie Howse to replace Fannie Lewis

[Plain Dealer Photo of the Day for 8/19/08 - read more here]

Heard it in the post office while picking up two weeks of mail, found it online here at Openers and with a much more accurate photo of Stephanie here in this evening’s post about the swearing in.

The Plain Dealer states that the formal Democratic structure in Ward 7 opposes Howse’s appointment even though Fannie Lewis, who died last week (read more about her on Brewed Fresh Daily in a piece by Roldo Bartimole) and whose seat will be filled for the remainder of its term by a special election on November 18, requested that Howse be her successor.  From the earlier Openers item:

Lewis had kept her choice of successor secret even from Howse, who said she learned of the anointing only last week, when [Cleveland City Council president Martin] Sweeney told her.

“I’m humbled,” she said Sunday night. “I’m definitely humbled and honored that she even considered me to lead our community and to build on her legacy.”

Howse, the daughter of former State Rep. Annie Key, ran against Lewis in 2005 and said she has been active in the ward since.

She works for the Ohio Democratic Party as the Cleveland field director.

She said she intends to compete in the special election to finish Lewis’ term, which runs through 2009. Judging by the mood Sunday night, she might have some hard feelings to overcome.

Ward 7 resident Mansfield Frazier said he, like many of his neighbors, had hoped the interim council person would not be a candidate for the office. Leaving the meeting, he said Howse’s appointment came as a rude surprise.

“She’s bright. I like her. But I want fairness,” he said. “We wanted to appoint somebody who would not run, so everyone comes out of the gate at the same time.”

Ward leaders were discussing recommending their own choice Sunday night, but Sweeney said Howse will be presented to council today at a special meeting at 10:30 a.m. at City Hall.

“It’s a tradition in council. A council member in good standing recommends her successor,” he said.

Sweeney noted that Howse faces a primary election Oct. 14 and then a general election in fewer than 90 days.

“The people of Ward 7 have the ultimate decision,” he said.

I have had the pleasure of getting to know Stephanie first when she called me in her role as Ohio Democratic Party Cleveland field director.  Then, in June, I spent two and a half days with her and 90+ other women who had congregated in Columbus for the White House Project’s Go Run! training session - a program specifically geared to fill the pipeline with quality candidates for political office who are women.

Stephanie impressed me positively during all our sessions and gatherings, as someone with intelligence, drive, poise, experience and a capacity to learn as well as lead.  Although I don’t live in Ward 7 or the Cleveland city boundaries, if I did, I would vote for Stephanie because of those qualities and her passion to lead and change an area she’s lived in and lives in.

It’s up to her now Go Lead! and meet the challenges in her role on council and in campaigning. I hope that the fulfills what Ward 7 residents need and that they get to see and know and like the person I’ve been lucky to get to know even just a little bit.

Like the t-shirt says:

by Jill Miller Zimon at1:51 AM under campaigning, cleveland+, democrats, elections, leadership, ohio, politics, predictions, primary, rip, women (Comments)


August 18, 2008

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

One Simple Sentence


I could title this "How Obama Lost The Election", but it's nice sunny day, so why bum anyone out so quickly.

Before I go on, I would consider myself a "McGovern Democrat" in the sense of being incensed by the trampling of my civil rights. Then again, I'm also incensed by other things that - taken with those now nonexistent civil rights - might make me a libertarian instead. I'll leave that to others to determine...

Otherwise, here's how the junior Senator from the state of Illinois blew it in one simple sentence:
"The public wants the middle-class welfare state to be rounded out by a few major additions — chiefly, healthcare and childcare — and the public also wants the government to grow the economy by investing in public works and favoring companies that locate their production facilities inside the U.S."

Instead we got Furman, Goolsbee, Rubin, and a whole shitload of Heckuva Job Bushies who have economic ideals opposed at an angle of one hundred and eighty degrees from the requirements of average Americans.

The Senator thought no one would notice, or those who did would just be screaming liberal bloggers, with a handful of readers.

The Senator miscalculated badly the extent of the reach of the basis for the social networking he used to his advantage before. Key constituencies pay attention through more than their babble-boxes and mailers.

No matter how carefully leaders in various movements tried to couch their criticisms of his advisers, it all came back down to the man at the top who made these neo-liberals his advisers.

Considering everything as a whole, I have much better things to do than piss around with another useless piece of shit Democrat who has fucked up too many times in the span of only two months for me to generate much more than a half-hearted defense of.

Wake me when Obama wants to win this thing - or on November 5th - whichever comes first... I'm going to be busy preparing for the impossible, improbable, quite likely third Bush term.

by Michael at6:05 PM under democrats, economics, election 2008


King's Right Site

King's Right Site

North Randall - The Death of a Village


The Plain Dealer has a story about the slowly dying Village of North Randall and the problem of what to do with it.

At one time Randall Mall & Thistledown was pretty much the main attractions in this town. With their slow death, the village appears to be following that same path...

From the PD --
Now most of the big-box stores have shuttered, Thistledown race track struggles to compete with out-of-state tracks, and the once-mighty Randall Park Mall is moribund. A fifth of its area remains a parking lot wasteland.

Now, the village can't afford to police itself and its 850 residents at night.

Its very survival seems to hinge on redeveloping the mall -- or anything.

Without reinvigoration, without taxes to pay off its debt and for its services, the village could cease to exist, Cuyahoga County Commissioner Peter Lawson Jones said.

"If things don't happen within the next several months . . . then you have a bigger problem," Jones said. "You have a question of whether North Randall can sustain itself." More...

The surrounding cities are already facing budget crunches, so annexing North Randall into them would obviously increase their current woes. The $50,000 a year, part-time Mayor of North Randall, David Smith, says they will not give up and will continue fighting to stay alive.

The village is already cut down to a bare minimum in staffing, has cut many routine benefits for employees and is being patrolled by the Cuyahoga County Sherrif Dept at night due to a lock of policemen.

Earlier this year the village made the Cuyahoga County Commissioners aware of their poor finances and requested the County Sherrif patrol the village at night. Sheriff McFaul felt as head law enforcement officer for the county, and for the safety of residents, that they were duty bound and morally bound to fullfill this request on a temporary basis.

Many of the elected talking heads can cite this as a reason for regionalism. I would say it is the exact resaon why shared services is good, but the "regionalism concept" is an empty idea that earns sound bytes and will not work. The Village of North Randall has seen this day coming - they did not prepare. That is not the fault of other cities! This exemplifies one of the main problems of regionalism.... how will cities with better finances and services feel when they have to pony up for cities with poor finances and lack of city services.

This shows that while regionalism sounds good - the reality of it doesn't feel so good. You doubt me? Well, lets use the mutant headed Cuyahoga County Commisioner for example --

Hagan the loud-mouth of the push for reform can usually be heard giving the cue card talking points on the so-called benefits of regionalism. When asked to put his money where his mouth is and back it up with action by helping North Randall patrol their streets - Hagan proved to be nothing more than a talking head...
"I have a legal and moral obligation to protect those residents," McFaul said.

Commissioner Tim Hagan said the county is in a financial crisis because of declining revenues and foreclosures and may not be able to increase McFaul's budget. Doing so might spur more cities to seek help, Hagan added."If we open it up to discussion, it could snowball," he said.

So the man who shouts the loudest for reform, Hagan, does nothing when he has a chance too. Lawson-Jones, though not happy, is at least looking for answers and temporarily keeping North Randall residents safe by allowing the Sheriff patrol the streets at night.

And again - why isn't somebody running against Hagan this year?

by King at4:38 PM under cuyahoga county, democrats, general


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Don't Blame Hillary


I'm all for Hillary bashing - as most of the three people who read me regularly know full well - but this isn't cause for it.

The real problem here are those Clinton supporters who cannot let go, and in the process of not letting go, are still rather actively seeking to damage the Democratic nominee in a pique of vengeance.

Which I'd say he's done a pretty damn good job of himself...

by Michael at3:25 PM under clinton's, democrats, election 2008, observations


August 17, 2008

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Can We Have Another Speaker Pelosi?


I believe this would be called the result of capitulation to the most unpopular President in history:
The Justice Department has proposed a new domestic spying measure that would make it easier for state and local police to collect intelligence about Americans, share the sensitive data with federal agencies and retain it for at least 10 years.

The proposed changes would revise the federal government's rules for police intelligence-gathering for the first time since 1993 and would apply to any of the nation's 18,000 state and local police agencies that receive roughly $1.6 billion each year in federal grants.

Quietly unveiled late last month, the proposal is part of a flurry of domestic intelligence changes issued and planned by the Bush administration in its waning months. They include a recent executive order that guides the reorganization of federal spy agencies and a pending Justice Department overhaul of FBI procedures for gathering intelligence and investigating terrorism cases within U.S. borders.

Taken together, critics in Congress and elsewhere say, the moves are intended to lock in policies for Bush's successor and to enshrine controversial post-Sept. 11 approaches that some say have fed the greatest expansion of executive authority since the Watergate era.

And of course, we're asked to trust the Administration that failed during Katrina, before and during 9/11, before and during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression - and lied the nation into a war with Iraq - much less any future Administration that must be considered equally capable of being so incompetent (or dishonest).
Supporters say the measures simply codify existing counterterrorism practices and policies that are endorsed by lawmakers and independent experts such as the 9/11 Commission. They say the measures preserve civil liberties and are subject to internal oversight.

The Politburo has spoken. I'm sure our Democratic Leaders will quietly obey (or the Stasi will come for them too).

by Michael at7:30 AM under constitutional rights, democrats, domestic spying, ethics (or lack thereof), terrorism


August 16, 2008

King's Right Site

King's Right Site

Mayfield Mayor Bruce Rinker gets the Boot from Cuyahoga County Democrat Party

For supporting Republican candidate for County Commisioner, Debbie Sutherland, the Cuyahoga County Democrat Party has told Mayfield Mayor Bruce Rinker - See Ya' don't let the door hit you in the ass!

From the PD --
Mayfield Mayor Bruce Rinker, a Democrat, will be thrown off the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party Executive Committee once the party confirms his support of Republican Deborah Sutherland, who is a candidate for county commissioner. Colleen Corrigan Day, the party's executive director, said bylaws dictate that committee members must support the party's endorsed candidates.

Well look at that... a political party demanding the members follow the rules! A very novel idea, indeed! The Cuyahoga Democrat party throws out members who do not support their endorsed candidate - on the other hand the RPCC praises members when they support democrats over our endorsed candidates.

As we can see the RINO patrol at RPCC HQ is willing to abduct any warm body for candidates - Rinker will be the next democrap trolling for a new home. I am sure if he is interested the RINO Party of Cuyahoga County will take him.

And the sheep of our party can't figure out why we always lose! And again, can someone PLEASE tell me why Hagan is unopposed?!?!?

by King at4:53 PM under cuyahoga county, democrats, general, rpcc


August 15, 2008

De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

FBI Gets Freer Reign to Spy on You


Thank you Speaker Pelosi. Thank you for everything...
Attorney General Michael Mukasey confirmed plans Wednesday to loosen post-Watergate restrictions on the FBI's national security and criminal investigations, saying the changes were necessary to improve the bureau's ability to detect terrorists.

Mukasey said he expected criticism of the new rules because "they expressly authorize the FBI to engage in intelligence collection inside the United States." However, he said the criticism would be misplaced because the bureau has long had authority to do so.

Which begs the question. If the Bureau has had the authority for so long, why the need for new rules to expand upon what already existed?

by Michael at6:05 AM under congress, democrats, domestic spying


The Boring Made Dull

The Borring Made Dull

The Last Guy Obama Wants to See in Denver

Is Kwame Kilpatrick. Today, he joins the gathering throng under the wheels of the Obama Bus.

This is the guy Central Casting sends over when you need someone to play the part of a Corrupt Democratic Big City Mayor.

Torrid love affair with an aide? Check. Fire the police investigating another scandal? Check. Use the taxpayer’s money to settle the resulting lawsuit for your wrongful firing? Check. Lie under oath? Check. Assault some cops serving a subpoena? Check. Violate your bond? Check.

Fortunately, another Judge has had Kwame re-tethered, so he won’t be going to Denver after all.

by TBMD at1:26 AM under campaign 2008, culture of corruption, democrats, obama barak


August 14, 2008

Plunderbund

Plunderbund

Arkansas Man Snaps, Shoots and Kills Democratic Party Chairman

The story about the Arkansas man who flipped out at his job at Target and proceeded to shoot and kill the Arkansas Democratic Party Chair may be yet another indication of the severe psychosis and hate filled rhetoric of the right. It’s unclear the motivation that Timothy Dale Johnson had for committing his crime, [...]

by Eric at7:51 PM under arkansas, democrats, plunderbund, rightwing, wingnut (Comments)


De Magno Opere

De Magno Opere

Clearing the Way




I know this won't placate the PUMA's - not unless Clinton wins the nomination by some vastly outrageous surprise - but there's no reason not to do this the old-fashioned way.

Hell, sometimes the old-fashioned way is the best way to go (as I'm sitting here eating a dozen freshly imported Tim Horton's glazed donuts screaming "to hell with that Krispy Kreme Krap!").

And catharsis isn't quite the right word. Enema might be more appropriately descriptive... depending on which Clintonista needs cleaned out of this year's nomination process.

by Michael at7:17 PM under clinton's, democrats, election 2008


There Ya Go!


Very close to what I was looking for...



Now if Move On and the DNC would get some worthy ad-writers to do something like this, you'd mysteriously see the anti-Obama smear campaign cut off in mid-sentence.

And a real discussion of St. John's qualifications begin.

by Michael at11:45 AM under democrats, election 2008, fight dammit, mccain

King's Right Site

King's Right Site

Reason # 90, 756 to have a CCW Permit

A senseless tragedy that could have been stopped... if Gwatney or someone else in the office was armed.

From Yahoo News --
Police and neighbors are struggling to explain why a man described as a loner drove more than 30 miles to Arkansas' Democratic Party headquarters and fatally shot its chairman hours after getting fired from his job.

Police said Timothy Dale Johnson, 50, of Searcy, barged into Bill Gwatney's office on Wednesday and shot him multiple times. There were no signs that Gwatney and Johnson, who was later shot dead by officers, knew each other.

A Target retail store in Conway had fired Johnson early Wednesday because he had written graffiti on a wall, police said. Before noon, Johnson was in Gwatney's office in Little Rock with a handgun.

"They introduced themselves, and at that time he pulled out a handgun and shot Chairman Gwatney several times," he said. More...

by King at7:24 AM under 2nd amendment, democrats, general


August 12, 2008

King's Right Site

King's Right Site

Rev. Ted's Judicial Appointments a Sham!

Fellow SOB member Right Runner Blog hits a home run on exposing Rev. Ted Strickland for the hypocrite and democrat hack he really is!

Noting Rev. Ted's promise that judicial selections would be fair, transparent and unbiased - Right Runner points out the appoinments and the Rev. Ted appointed OJARP are anything but...

From Right Runner --
Back in January of 2007 Ted Strickland promised to establish a process for selecting judicial appointments that relied less on the recommendations of county party chairmen and more on the recommendations of the Ohio Judicial Appointment Recommendations Panels (OJARP). This was supposed to make the process more transparent and inclusive of all parties involved.

Well, not so fast folks. Sure, the governor created OJARP but then he lined it with appointments that are all Democrats!
Take a look at this....

by King at11:26 PM under democrats, general, ohio


August 13, 2008