I was upset that my local Democracy for America chapter, Philly for Change didn’t endorse Chuck Pennacchio for the US Democratic Senate primary here in PA [the group did not endorse anyone], but other DfAs across the state have picked up the ball in my group’s stead and we’ll keep on trucking with the momentum. I learned via the Pennacchio blog that DfA Lancaster endorsed Pennacchio [who says that his message doesn’t do well in the middle of the state!] and I learned from the Pittsburgh based 2 Political Junkies that DfA Pittsburgh endorsed Pennacchio.
At the meetup during the month prior my local DfA branch’s endorsement vote, there was much discussion as to whether or not a group of our size, about forty or fifty active members, should be making an endorsement. As the group organizers spoke of the process of endorsement [nominee, committee meeting, questionnaire, 75% majority for endorsement, who’s allowed to vote…] one woman got up to oppose a vote. I immediately thought she was a Casey backer. Why would anyone oppose a vote in this Progressive/Liberal group in a Democratic city which spawned from a Presidential candidate with a rabidly Progressive base? Because she was scared that her candidate would lose I thought.
She said that a group our size will have no impact on the bigger picture. That the Democratic nominee was already chosen and that coming out potentially against the anointed one would make the group look bad. She was quite vehemently opposed to a vote. I wanted to walk over her and punch her in her fucking face. But, well… I didn’t. She was essentially saying We don’t count, we don’t matter! And that pissed me off. This is the kind of opposition Progressives could/will face if we try to take our party back to the Left as Booman suggests. People who are too scared to take a stand. People who don’t want to cause a stir.
It’s been some forty years here in PA of Democratic candidates who have failed to excite people. And after forty some odd years, who does the party leadership throw down? A candidate for the Democratic nomination who is anti choice, anti universal healthcare, pro Patriot Act with no revisions, anti expansion of research in embryonic stem cells, pro Iraq war, anti troop withdrawal with a timeline and pro the SCOTUS nominations for Roberts and Alito. I can’t think of a single Democrat currently in the Senate who believes in all of that. Seems out of the mainstream to me.
And it is groups like Philly for Change who can start from the roots to form a presence for the simple Democratic values [if this party really has any defined core values anymore] let alone the really Progressive ones. What are we telling each other when we say that we don’t matter and we’ll look like fools if we back a Progressive choice in the fucking primary let alone the general? What are we telling the leadership if we roll over and die when they send in an anointed candidate to lead us to the Right? What are we telling our leadership when we accept the shutting down of primaries? Candidate Casey in a 2002 Philadelphia City Paper [one of two alt-weeklies in town] interview said when asked if he thought competitive primaries were hurtful to a general election campaign:
Some people have made that argument. I don’t think that that’s going to happen. I really don’t. I base that upon a lot of history. This is really my fourth statewide race. I had a very rough primary in 1996 for auditor general, then I had two general elections on top of that. I worked very hard in the ’86 campaign for governor. My father ran against Ed Rendell. It was a very tough primary. In many ways, the ads were tougher that year. People don’t remember, but they were real tough ads. But that was a tough primary, which ended up being a big deficit at the end, at the end of the race. But it was a very tough primary, both sides spent over two-and-a-half-million dollars, which doesn’t sound like much now but was a record then for a combined primary. And the party came together that year and beat a candidate who, you could make a strong argument, was a lot tougher than Mike Fisher. Someone –[Bill] Scranton, who had a lot more name identification; he was a statewide name. He was coming off a very popular administration. He was a very hard guy to beat and the party came together. There are plenty of examples where this state has had a lot of tough primaries and then come together. In fact, the history shows, if you look at it, that the party with the tough primary usually wins.
So it looks like he’s all for a contested primary. He says so little, I’m going to have to rely on this 2002 interview as a basis for him wanting a contested primary.
But the party leadership doesn’t want it that way, they want to clear the tables for a race against one of the biggest Republicans out there, Sen. Man on Dog. Yes, he is vulnerable, but he’s one hell of a campaigner. He’s charismatic. He’s a good public speaker. He’s engaging. He’s got a hardcore stance on his issues and he energizes his wingnut base like a motherfucker. And so who should we be putting up against such an opponent? To quote from the Pennacchio campaign website:
Every six years, the Democratic Party seeks the perfect Senate candidate – a combination of name recognition, ideology and fundraising skill. In 44 years this formula has produced 14 consecutive full-term election defeats.
…
Everyone agrees that defeating Rick Santorum is a top priority for 2006, but to win we must provide a sharp contrast to his right wing agenda.
There’s an interesting discussion going on on MyDD at this diary and one comment sticks out in particular:
I completely understand the “vote for a Dem you don’t like in order to promote the party” theory of voting. I have even advocated it. But the only problem with that approach is that, in the last twenty years or so, it hasn’t resulted in Democratic Party victories.
On the contrary, it has helped to promote the image of the Democratic Party as a collection of unprincipled politicians who stand for nothing in particular and who will do anything to get elected.
This helps the Republicans win in two ways. The bad image is backed up by the facts and a significant portion of the electorate that might vote Democratic remains disaffected.
Why not try it the other way for a while and see what happens?
[Thanks Lady for the heads up]
So when do we say enough’s enough? After twenty years? After thirty years? After forty years? How about forty-four? Chuck Pennacchio is the only candidate who can do it and that’s why he’s got my vote.
Conviction wins.
Excellent decision not to punch that woman in the face. Tempting as it may have been.
I obviously don’t know your DFA group but I do think its odd that they would not make an endorsement. What were the rest of the group dynamics like? Why did the group as a whole choose not to make an endorsement? Did that one woman have such a strong personality that she dragged everyone else along?
There was a 75% margin and 35% voted for no endorsement. Chuck did get the plurality with 37.5%, but there were too many who were too scared and the Casey apologists who outnumbered us. Blech. I don’t know if that lady dragged the others along or if she simply spoke for the rest of the apologists/scared ones in the group. The group has a good number of stong minded individuals who don’t tend to get swayed with scare tactics like that, but who the hell knows.
The reason I asked is to be prepared when/if this type of thing happened in one of my DFA meetings. Would it have helped if those against Casey have caucused before hand with each other? Or not?
It was quite unorganized the day of the vote. You just showed up and were given a blank ballot with four check boxes next to three names and one ‘no endorsement’ line. There was no time provided to caucus nor discuss the pros/cons of each candidate. It was up to the voters to educate themselves. I wasn’t about to stand up in the room of about sixty people [there were a disproportionate number of newcomers that night due to factors unrelated to the vote] and yell out the pros/cons.
I had no idea how it would be organized and thought they’d do a better job of it.
My suggestion to you would be to make sure your steering committee is organized and to somehow make sure the voters are aware of the issues each candidate brings to the table.
Including getting candidate questionnaires out to the membership via e-mail. So the info was available and the vote was on the agenda. That said there are important substantive and procedural reforms whose need was quite apparent and are being put in to place. Please contact the steering C’tee with any suggestions, they’ll be taken seriously. I personally guarantee that. (Yep, disclosure time, I’m on the steering c’tee.)
(BTW, the steering c’tee as individuals were more pro-endorsement of P. than the group as a whole.)
The considerations that might explain the outcome were, IIRC:
3 Sadly, P. has not raised enough money to be taken seriously, even to run a new model insurgent campaign. If he was just able to bank a couple hundred thousand he would have been credible to a lot more people.
Well this vote happened after he came out strongly in favor of Alito’s nomination – that’s the kind of judge he wants on the bench, a judge who is supposed to be pretty anti-labor. That’s enough for me to not consider him an advocate of labor although I will say that I haven’t lived here all my life and there are people who say Casey is so pro-labor, I don’t know how so. What the rest of the group thought on the support of the nomination or whether they were aware, I have no idea.
I thought that the vote was indicative of the group, as a whole, accepting of politics as usual on the national level from the top down and not caring to get involved which I found disturbing. Yes, the focus of the group is Philly and they’ve done good/great things, but this Senate race has a lot to do with us and will have an effect on us as well both in the process and in the outcome.
Sad also that people couldn’t understand that the money will come nationwide after Pennacchio wins the primary. They couldn’t look at the race on an issue by issue basis and choose the candidate they believed in in this primary endorsement.
I’ve been in contact with members of the steering committee in the past [albeit not since this vote] and was asked to sit on the committee during the month leading up to the vote. I’m not saying a lot of work wasn’t put into it. But I am saying that it seemed very unorganized on vote day.
The definition of insanity is to do the same thing over and over again even though the result is always an abysmal failure. Maybe in an insane system, what you’re suggesting is “sane.” To an outsider, it just seems nuts. That begs the question of why one would remain in such a system.
I’d certainly be happy to see the level of dysfunction in the Dem party go down a notch or two. Getting over the notion that only the most bland, corporate person is “electable” would help. I wish Pennacchio and his supporters in PA all the best.
I’m cutting and pasting a bit, so let me revise (in bold):
The definition of insanity is to do the same thing over and over again even though the result is always an abysmal failure. Maybe in an insane system, supporting “electable” candidates like Casey is “sane.” To an outsider, it just seems nuts. That begs the question of why one would remain in such a system.
I’d certainly be happy to see the level of dysfunction in the Dem party go down a notch or two. Getting over the notion that only the most bland, corporate person is “electable” would help. I wish Pennacchio and his supporters in PA all the best.
Excellent analysis albert, especially important as an overview of the situation developing in the party which does not want to allow contested primaries.
As for a D Senator who supports nearly all of the issues you need look no farther than Ken Salazar. His no vote on Alito was nothing but a sop to those of us who were bugging the hell out of him. Posturing, nothing more. His aye vote for cloture was the final straw for many here in Co. In nearly all cases his voting record is identical to our hard right BushCo™ Sen. Allard. I would also add that he benefited from a concerted effort from the D party to keep a very competent and viable challenger, Mike Miles, off the ballot.
It would not surprise me at all to see Salazar switch parties, esp. if the D’s fail to make substantial inroads in the midterms. We have had a history of that here, see Ben Nighthorse Campbell.
peace
I am a member of Democracy for Lancaster, and yes we did endorse Pennacchio. I am also a member of a grass roots group called Lancaster County for Pennacchio, and our efforts helped bring about a decision by the Lancaster County Democratic Committee at yesterday’s convention to endorse an open primary instead of following Governor Rendell’s endorsement of Casey. We also collected dozens of signatures for Pennacchio at the convention while Casey’s petition only got a handful of signatures.
The Casey forces are very nervous. They know a lot of Dems will not vote for Casey if he gets the nomination. I find it interesting that the only reason they seem to offer for voting for Casey is that he is not Santorum. Personally I am not so sure.
I am the organizer of Upper Bucks for Democracy and we fearlessly endorsed Chuck Pennacchio months ago. Buck for Democracy works for Chuck. Berks DFA is Chuck’s too, so is Lehigh Valley.
Philly DFA may have a lot of members on DFA link but
40 active members don’t rule our world.
If you put together all the Pa. DFA groups that support Chuck Pennacchio and add up the numbers you might be pleasantly suprised.
So maybe Burlington should recognize that Pennsylvania
consists of more than one DFA group and start paying attention to the rest of us out here.
Like for instance–when a date is set for DFA training
if the groups around Philly had been consulted Burlington would realise that we have petition drives going on for candidates and we a lot of very active, good members and candidates who can’t attend because of this.
That sucks IMHO!
Just my two cents.
JD
upperbucksfordemocracy.com
Indeed, the Philly DfA group may very well much not be representative of all the state’s DfA groups, that’s what I meant by saying that the campaing would keep on truckin with the momentum we already have.
What was the lady thinking.
If they don’t endorse anyone then Casey won’t take away their secret decoder ring.
I find that machine politicos don’t give a shit about anyone who they feel can’t hurt them and give little care to people who give them money after they have given it.
The only way you get respect is to extract something for your endorsement and embarrass them if they break their agreements.
Just my $0.02
Is there a group working for Pennacchio in Northampton County? In Easton?
I’m not sure. I’d say the best thing to do is to send an email into infoATchuck2006DOTcom and ask away.
Sorry, but I’m Blogpimping for Justice today: Chuck Pennacchio has a guest blog today at VichyDems — link to his specific post here — and I’d love to get that post some traffic, for Chuck’s sake. Thanks!
Thersites