How is Congress Doing?

It may not be high on everyone’s agenda but if Congress stays strong on FISA and retroactive immunity, I think it will go a long, long way towards boosting the approval rating of the House and Senate among progressive Democrats. Something I am more uncertain about is the upcoming testimony of Gen. Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker. I anticipate that they will testify before both the Armed Services Committee (Clinton is a member) and the Foreign Relations Committee (Obama is a member), as well as the respective House committees. Until recently the administration and the media had worked collaboratively to keep Iraq out of the news and paint the surge as a success. Obviously, recent events make that fairy tale an impossible sell to an increasingly restless Congress.

First of all, I spent all last year predicting that the Republicans would submit to a sense of self-preservation and turn on the president and his policy in Iraq. They never did, and the consequences have already been devastating. In many ways the Republicans have already lost the 2008 congressional elections due to the disparity between Democratic and Republican retainment, recruitment, and fundraising.

The Democrats are getting close to the point where they will be disappointed with anything less than 60 senators and another 30 seats in the House. A lot of those gains are already built in. In the Senate the Republicans did not recruit one candidate anywhere that can realistically hope to oust a Democrat (save Louisiana, where they recruited a Democrat). The list of possible House picks-ups is getting close to eighty. With no good news from Iraq and with an incredibly lame-duck administration, I can’t seen the Republicans maintaining the same kind of discipline this spring that they did last year.

On the other hand, the anti-war movement has gone into hibernation, and the Democrats have not articulated what they want in a new Iraq policy. Even Obama and Clinton are only talking about what they will do as president, not what they would like to see done for the rest of this year. I advise them to think about that now and coordinate it with party leaders before Petraeus and Crocker testify again.

Part of the problem is that things look so good for the Democrats that they have no incentive to do anything bold or controversial. Yet, their ability to defy the president is limited, and if they achieve a realigning election in the fall, that will be a gift that keeps on giving for a long, long time.

What’s on your wish list for this year (before November, of course)?

Little Clammyc

A miniature clammyc was born yesterday morning. His name is Peter and he’s doing well. Major congratulations to Mrs. and Mr. Clammyc.

Save the date: May 3 Mickey Z. event in NYC

“Myth America: War, elections, and our way of life”
Bluestockings presents:

Mickey Z.
http://www.mickeyz.net

Saturday, May 3
7 – 9 pm

“Myth America: War, elections, and our way of life”

Come join the author of “The Seven Deadly Spins,” “50 American Revolutions You’re Not Supposed to Know,” and the forthcoming novel, “CPR for Dummies,” to discuss the anti-war movement, the 2008 election, the state of activism in America, and MUCH more.

FREE

I very much hope you’ll consider joining me for a fun, provocative, free event at an excellent venue (including a café full of organic, vegan, fair trade goodness).

I also hope you’ll post a notice about this event on your website, mention it in forums, send out a mass e-mail, etc. If you’ve received this and you’re not in NYC, I hope you’ll tell any friends you have in this area.

Bluestockings
172 Allen Street
(between Stanton and Rivington)
212.777.6028
http://www.bluestockings.com

Directions
By train: We are 1 block south of the F train’s 2nd Avenue stop and just 5 blocks from the JMZ-line’s Essex / Delancey Street stop.

By car: If you take the Houston exit off of the FDR, then turn left onto Essex (aka Avenue A), then right on Rivington, and finally right on Allen, you will be very, very close.

McCain Appears Clueless

What are we to make of this?

Sen. John McCain, departing from his typically sunny assessment of the situation in Iraq, expressed surprise about Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s decision to try to take control of the southern city of Basra from Shiite militias.

“Malaki decided to take on this operation without consulting the Americans,” McCain told reporters traveling with him in Meridian, Miss. “I’m surprised he’d take it on himself to go down and take charge of a military offensive. I had not anticipated that he would do it.”

This wasn’t the plan, McCain said. “We have a battle going on in Mosul, which all of us agreed would take three or four more months to get Mosul under control. The generally accepted strategy was bring Mosul under control and then address the problem that all of us acknowledged existed in the southern part of the country.”

Is he serious?

Clinton Campaign Lies About Michigan-Florida Revotes

Hillary Clinton’s campaign is still spinning myths about the situation in Michigan and Florida. She’s blaming Barack Obama for opposing flawed revote plans and using the impasse to keep the illusion of her own viability alive.

Until mid-March, Senator Clinton was supremely uninterested in the idea of revotes in both states, insisting that the delegates “elected” in the disqualified primaries in those states should be seated as is. Only after it became too late for the practical planning needed to set up successful and legitimate revotes did she start enthusiastically backing them, using the opportunity to attack her opponent for “blocking” the revotes.

Let’s look at some facts, shall we?

Lie #1: The Obama campaign “blocked a revote in Michigan”

In fact, the Clinton campaign opposed plans for the caucuses that were Michigan’s back-up plan all along if it lost its game of chicken with the DNC (although state party officials were always dubious about how they could manage the logistics if it came down to such a revote).

Serious talk of revotes only began immediately after Senator Clinton’s wins in Texas and Ohio on March 4, as her only path to victory in the primaries:

March 6, 2008: BREAKING: MI Caucus Likely, Says DNC Rules Committee Member

A member of the DNC’s Rules And Bylaws Committee–the committee that stripped Florida and Michigan of its delegates for moving their primaries before February 5th–told me that Michigan plans to get out of its uncounted delegate problem by announcing a new caucus in the next few days.

“They want to play. They know how to do caucuses,” the DNC source said. “That was their plan all along, before they got cute with the primary.”

Michigan Democrats had originally planned on caucuses after the legally permissible Feb. 5 date, but then went along with top elected Democrats, including Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who pushed for an early primary.

But caucuses don’t tend to be advantageous to Senator Clinton. At this point she was still adamant there would be no re-do in Florida, and no caucuses in Michigan:

March 7, 2008: Clinton Says `No’ to a Caucus Do-Over

Hillary Clinton says the Democratic Party is stuck in a very tough spot as party leaders debate whether–and how–to seat delegates from Florida and Michigan at the nominating convention this August. And Clinton’s latest comments, in an interview with U.S. News yesterday, won’t make resolving the fuss any easier.

Many Democrats want a revote in both states, since the Democratic National Committee disqualified all their delegates because the states’ primaries were held too early in violation of party rules. Some party officials are suggesting caucuses as an option to get the delegates qualified–but that doesn’t pass muster with Clinton. “I would not accept a caucus,” she told us. “I think that would be a great disservice to the 2 million people who turned out and voted. I think that they want their votes counted.”

While Clinton nixed caucuses, the Obama campaign – and many local officials – rejected the idea proposed by Clinton surrogate Gov. Jennifer Granholm for “firehouse primaries.” “Firehouse primaries” are more complicated than caucuses, and state party officials feared they would be too expensive and logistically difficult for the state party to manage on its own within such a short time frame:

March 7, 2008: State Democratic chairman: Obama opposes Michigan `do-over’ plan

“This would be a much bigger operation than anything we’ve done in the past,” Brewer said. “Because of the stakes I could foresee a couple million people showing up to vote. We’d have to rent as many as 1,000 sites and we’d have to hire and train staff. We couldn’t do it with volunteers.”

Next came the idea of a mail-in ballot – for Michigan at least, since Clinton surrogates rejected it for Florida:

March 9, 2008: Party leaders weighing Michigan, Florida mail-in re-vote

(CNN) – Democratic leaders in Michigan and Florida suggested Sunday they might be moving toward a solution that would allow them to send voting delegates to the party’s presidential nominating convention this summer….

On CNN’s Late Edition, Sens. Robert Menendez of New Jersey and Claire McCaskill of Missouri — surrogates for Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, respectively — did not rule out the prospect. “We can’t change (party) rules in the middle of this process,” McCaskill told anchor Wolf Blitzer, but added that if party leaders “come up with a fair way to redo this, whatever they decide, the Obama campaign will respect” the new process.

Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Clinton supporter, weighed in against the idea. “I would resist a re-vote for a couple of major reasons,” she said on Fox News Sunday. “Number one, the re-vote that’s being talked about right now would be a mail-in ballot. And we have never conducted a mail-in ballot in Florida. And in an election that is this important, an experiment like that is — now is not the time to test that.”

Clinton surrogates Gov. Corzine of New Jersey and Gov. Rendell of Pennsylvania  offered to raise funding for the revotes, which some Obama supporters have objected to as potentially prejudicial for the outcome. That seems a non-issue to me, since the Obama camp was expected to raise the other half of the money.

What ended up derailing the Michigan revote was that either a firehouse primary or a mail-in primary would have meant excluding Democrats and independents who had asked for GOP ballots in the Jan. 15 primary:

One of the sticking points holding up a possible do-over election in Michigan is a rule that would ban anyone who voted in the Republican presidential primary from voting again in the Democratic one.

That ban would apply even to Democrats or independents who asked for a GOP ballot because Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton was the only major candidate left on the Jan. 15 Democratic ballot.

To cast a ballot in a do-over election, voters would have to sign a statement saying they hadn’t voted in the GOP primary.

That could hurt Obama more, since his supporters were more likely than Clinton’s to have crossed over to vote in the GOP primary. Obama has had more success than Clinton attracting the votes of independents and Republicans in states where they could vote in Democratic contests….

Seventeen Democratic state House members said Tuesday they have concerns about holding another election, including disenfranchising Democrats who voted in the Republican primary.

“These people that chose to vote in that Republican primary in January did so after being told by the DNC that the Democratic primary did not count. They weren’t told that if they participated in a Republican primary they wouldn’t be eligible to participate in a redo that was going to happen in June,” said state Rep. Matt Gillard, an Obama supporter.

Michigan has open primaries, in which voters can cross over and vote in whichever party’s primary they wish. Aside from the software and logistical  problems involved with carrying out the revote within the time required was the problem with the proposed revote legislation itself (PDF). It excluded voters who had decided not to vote in the primary they were told was invalid and that didn’t have the majority of the candidates on the ballot. Anyone who hadn’t wanted to vote for Clinton and who wanted to vote for Obama back on Jan. 15 didn’t have a chance to at that time. Those voters were the ones with the most incentive to cross over and vote in the GOP primary instead. And those are precisely the people who would have been excluded by the proposed revote legislation.

Acknowledging the difficulties with the proposed Michigan revote plan, and its inherent unfairness, only 2 of 17 state senators agreed to support it, effectively finishing it off.

Then, as if that weren’t enough, a March 26 federal ruling blocked access to the voter lists the state Democratic Party needed to manage who could and could not participate in the revote:

DETROIT — A federal judge on Wednesday ruled Michigan’s presidential primary law unconstitutional and blocked the state from giving voter lists from the Jan. 15 election to the state’s major political parties.

Michigan Democratic Party Chairman Mark Brewer said the ruling may have ended any chances of a new Democratic election to resolve the ongoing dispute over the state’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention. The state party, he said, needs the list to ensure that no one who voted in the Republican primary in January votes in any new Democratic contest, as required under the national party’s rules.

“If the Michigan Democratic Party cannot get the lists, then our friends at the ACLU may have driven the final nail in the coffin of any re-vote in Michigan,” Brewer said.

So the truth is that Hillary Clinton blocked Michigan’s plan for caucuses because she doesn’t do well in caucuses, and Barack Obama resisted legislation for the Michigan revote that would have targeted his supporters for disenfranchisement. But in the end what blocked a revote was the logistical and legal difficulties of holding a new vote that would be accepted by all parties as legitimate.

Lie #2: The Obama campaign “blocked a revote in Florida”

Through early March, the Clinton campaign opposed a revote in Florida (“Our position is that the voters of Michigan and Florida have spoken.”). As late as March 7, Clinton campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe’s response to the idea then being raised in Michigan and Florida about a redo was “no revote“:

Well, what we have said is that these folks have already voted. I mean, people talk about a revote. But there is no appetite in Florida or Michigan by the state legislatures. I mean, there’s no money. Who is going to pay the tens of millions of dollars to do this?

I’ve been informed that the Florida legislature, under no circumstances, would pay to have the Democrats redo it. So I agree with what has been said. The governors of both states have kept saying that the state parties in these two states need to work with the national party and come to some resolution of this matter. We just can’t leave 2.3 million voters, 1.75 million in Florida, and over 600,000 in Michigan, who went in and voted. They’ve already voted. And we just need to count the votes….

They’ve already voted. No reason they have to go back and vote again… I’m saying that the state parties in those states need to work with the national party and figure out how we count the votes that have already been voted.

As late as March 14 the Clinton campaign was still refusing to fight for revotes and “sitting on the sidelines with empty press releases” (while the Obama camp was saying it would agree to whatever the DNC decided).

Quite simply, by that point Florida Democrats had neither the ability nor the time to come up with a fair and workable plan for a revote within the time frame they had available. The plan that was proposed, for a mail-in ballot, faced opposition by many Florida Democrats – supporters of both Obama and Clinton – because of serious reservations on a number of solidly pragmatic grounds. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (a Clinton backer) stated her concerns:

Wasserman Schultz said Wednesday one of her main concerns about a mail vote would be winter visitors and poor people, who change addresses often.

“The chances of their ballot finding them are much smaller,” she said, creating unfairness.

Rep. Wexler made clear some of the reasons he and other Florida  Democrats opposed it as well:

(Washington, DC) The Members of Florida’s Democratic Delegation in the U.S. House of Representatives met on Tuesday night and unanimously agreed to a statement in opposition to a new mail-in election or re-do election of any kind in Florida.  The Democratic Members from Florida include both those who have endorsed Senator Obama, Senator Clinton, as well as Members who remain uncommitted.

Wexler strongly opposes the mail-in election proposal that has been suggested to ensure that Florida’s delegates are seated at the Democratic convention.  “I am fully committed to ensuring that Florida’s delegates are fully represented in Denver.  However, the mail-in proposal is misguided at best, and would likely result in an unmitigated disaster in Florida,” Wexler said.

“A mail-in election has never tested or attempted in Florida.  It took Oregon over ten years to perfect their system.  A mail-in election would raise significant issues of fraud – especially in this short window – and such an election could disenfranchise many Floridians by disproportionately limiting voting access to seniors, minority voters, young voters, lower income voters, new voters, and new residents.  Also, a mail-in election pulled together at the last minute would surely lead to numerous lawsuits and controversy following the result.  Another election controversy in Florida is the last thing anybody wants.

“Finally, fifteen of Florida’s largest counties are actively transitioning away from touch screens into an optical scan system with a voter verified paper trail.  Any re-do election will jeopardize efforts to have this transition finished by the November Presidential election,” Wexler said on Wednesday.

The Statement by the entire Democratic House Delegation is printed in full below.  Reps. Boyd, Brown, Castor, Mahoney, Meek, Wexler, Wasserman Schultz, Klein, and Hastings released the following joint statement.

“We are committed to working with the DNC, the Florida State Democratic party, our Democratic leaders in Florida, and our two candidates to reach an expedited solution that ensures our 210 delegates are seated.

“Our House delegation is opposed to a mail-in campaign or any redo of any kind.”

So the truth is that Hillary Clinton opposed a Florida revote until the very last minute, then provided tepid support for it. Florida Democrats had grave concerns about the legitimacy of any primary revote they could then provide before the cutoff date for the primary season, and for that reason declined to pursue a revote in Florida further, in favor of a negotiated solution between the campaigns, Democratic leaders in Florida, and the DNC.

* * * * *

And if anyone needs a refresher as to why the Michigan-Florida delegate mess exists, it’s because Senator Clinton broke the four-state pledge she signed by participating in state primaries that defied the DNC’s scheduling rules when she had promised not to (Clinton campaign memo here):

Four State Pledge Letter 2008
Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina
August 31, 2007

WHEREAS, over a year ago, the Democratic National Committee established a 2008 nominating calendar;

WHEREAS, this calendar honors the racial, ethnic, economic and geographic diversity of our party and our country;

WHEREAS, the DNC also honored the traditional role of retail politics early in the nominating process, to ensure that money alone will not determine our presidential nominee;

WHEREAS, it is the desire of Presidential campaigns, the DNC, the states and the American people to bring finality, predictability and common sense to the nominating calendar.

THEREFORE, I ____, Democratic Candidate for President, pledge I shall not campaign or participate in any state which schedules a presidential election primary or caucus  before Feb. 5, 2008, except for the states of Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire and South Carolina, as “campaigning” is defined by the rules and regulations of the DNC.  It does not include activities specifically related to raising campaign resources such as fundraising events or the hiring of fundraising staff.
_
_________            ____
Democratic Candidate for President            DATE

She is claiming delegates from primaries in which she promised not to participate. How you can win delegates and popular vote totals from elections you are “not participating in” is quite a mystery, but it’s apparently not beyond the ability of Senator Clinton and her supporters to shamelessly clamor for her entitlement to them anyway.

* * * * *

So when Clinton supporters make the claim that Barack Obama “blocked revotes in Michigan and Florida” they’re trying to sell you spin. To be blunt, they’re lying.

The Race Chasm

I hope that the links below work.  They lead to David Sirota’s article explaining Clinton’s racial “Firewall” strategy, written for In These Times Magazine’s online edition.

The second link is his interview with Jay Marvin on the subject.  Absolutely eye-opening stuff. Please take a few minutes to

http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3597/the_clinton_firewall/

http://a1135.g.akamai.net/f/1135/18227/1h/cchannel.download.akamai.com/18227/podcast/DENVER-CO/KKZN-
AM/Monday%203-31%20Hour%203.mp3?CPROG=PCAST&MARKET=DENVER-CO&NG_FORMAT=talk&SITE_ID=650&
amp;STATION_ID=KKZN-AM&PCAST_AUTHOR=Jay_Marvin&PCAST_CAT=Spoken_Word&PCAST_TITLE=THE_JAY
_MARVIN_SHOW

Open Thread

If this Politico article is correct, and I’m not saying that it is, then my analysis on this race will turn out to even more accurate than I give myself a right to expect.

Tom Perriello for a Obamajority

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Last Monday I launched the Obamajority to give Barack Obama a strong progressive Congress that will enact his bold agenda. I started it out with three canidates, Rick Noriega, Darcy Burner and Patrick Murphy. I also asked for suggestions for who to endorse next.

The canidate that received the most support by far was Tom Perriello. I had already heard about his impressive run for Congress and so I am exited to announce that Tom is the latest canidate to be added to the Obamajority. So go and give him some change for change. In this essay I take a look at Tom and his campaign to bring much needed leadership to Virgina’s 5th Congressional District.
First let’s take a look at the current representative for the Virgina’s 5th Congressional District. His name is Virgil Goode, Jr. I’ve known about Goode for a little bit over a year because he is a national prominent bigot. On December 7th Goode sent this letter out to a constituent. Take a look at that bigotry.

You see that “Muslim Representative from Minnesota” is Keith Ellison the great representative elected to my neighboring district. That is a perfect example of the hate and fear that is too powerful today. Many times people have attempted to defeat Goode but again and again they have lost. But this time we have a chance to change that.

Why? Because we have a great canidate running. Tom Perriello. Tom was called to serve at a early age.

After receiving his law degree from Yale University, Tom accepted an assignment working to end atrocities in the West African countries of Liberia and Sierra Leone, which had suffered long civil wars fueled by blood diamonds. Tom’s work with child soldiers, amputees, and local pro-democracy groups in Sierra Leone played a significant role in the peace and reconciliation process that ended twelve years of violence in that country.

Tom then became Special Advisor and spokesperson for the International Prosecutor during the showdown that forced Liberian dictator Charles Taylor from power without firing a shot. After this success, Tom served as a national security analyst for the Century Foundation. He has worked inside Darfur and twice in Afghanistan.

Since 2004 he has been a leader in building a faith-based movement dedicated to working toward the common good instead of spewing hate.

Since 2004, Tom has helped to launch a political and social movement in this country that is credited with shifting the national debate about America’s moral priorities. He helped found FaithfulAmerica.org and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good, which bring together faith communities to fight for children’s health care, supporting a higher minimum wage, environmental stewardship, and responsible solutions in Iraq. Inspired by the prophetic vision of Dr. King, Wilberforce, and Micah, Tom believes that America must reverse the erosion of our commitment to the common good and restore our understanding that our nation rises or falls together.

Tom also helped found Avaaz.org a great group that I am a part of. It tackles some of the toughest issues of our day by working with it’s millions of members from every country in the world.

Tom sat down for a great interview with Lowell of the great Virgina blog Raising Kaine. In it he explains why he is running, how he thinks he can win, his strengths and passions. Let’s look at some highlights from that interview.

First of all the big question. Why? Why run for Congress?

Like so many in my generation, I felt called from an early age to devote my life to community service, because it felt so much more real than trying to change things through government. For over a decade, I have felt inspired to work on economic fairness in our communities and on ending atrocities from inside Darfur and Sierra Leone.  

But I could only work in a broken system for so long before I began to understand how important it was to fix the system itself. In Darfur and West Africa, I saw how much of a difference a single Congressperson could make if s/he were willing to speak out and hold the Administration and State Department accountable. And the last few elections have made it clear how important it is for Democrats to reclaim the values debate and restore America’s commitment to justice and the common good.

I believe we stand at a unique point in history. Our challenges are large enough that our only pragmatism is the idealism to think big and expand our sense of what’s possible. I am running because I believe that politics should be seen as community service by other means. It can, and should, be a place to make people’s lives better.  

And how will he win in this traditionally Republican district?

We are going to win because we have a stronger movement on our side and better ideas for how to secure our country, our jobs, and our environment. Beating Rep. Goode will not be easy, but all the pieces are coming together:

  1. Energy and Resources – We tripled Rep. Goode in fourth quarter fundraising, and raised more money inside Virginia in four months than he did all year. When we are outpacing an incumbent from the Appropriations Committee, you know that people are hungry for a new generation of leadership. Also the DCCC has put our race “in play,” and if we hit our fundraising target this quarter, we will move into the top tier of their targeted races.  
  2. Grassroots – Our campaign has already logged over 1300 volunteer hours, and we are working hard to build the largest and most sophisticated grassroots network this district has ever seen. We are investing heavily in field, already have offices in Franklin County and Charlottesville, and will have an office in Danville by the end of this quarter. In a district the size of New Jersey, this race will be won on the ground.
  3. Blue-mentum – Like much of America, our district is a swing district that is now trending blue. The wildly popular Mark Warner is on the ticket, Gov. Kaine is tirelessly devoted to building the party, and Obama just got more primary votes in the Fifth than all the Republicans combined. Meanwhile, Rep. Goode has gone from being a populist maverick to marching lockstep with President Bush and out of step with our independent district.  

As for being a “faith-based progressive,” I can tell you that voters respond to authenticity. My faith is a big part of who I am and why I’ve dedicated my life to justice, and most voters just want to know what I am all about. It also provides a common experience and language that resonates with voters in my district, especially in areas where Democrats have struggled in the past.    

And finally his answer on one of the most pressing issues of our day. Climate change.  

We need to commit to independence from fossil fuels within a generation, and that will require major investments, a substantial shift in incentives, and a culture change as consumers. A revenue-neutral tax shift is one way to do this, but so are cap-and-trade systems that have worked to address problems such as acid rain.  

As for the target, I most often hear from experts that we must draw the line at no more than a 2-degree Celsius temperature increase. Our goal must be set not by what seems politically possible but what will actually produce the end result we need.  

That brings me to a excellent series that Tom wrote for TPMCafe’s Table for One. You can read it all here (under latest posts) but I want to focus on what I think is the most important one. It is entitled “Conviction Politics… in Practice.” In it Tom breaks from the notion that only DLC-poll driven campaigns can win. Instead he shows that conviction politics both makes it more likely for him to be elected and will also make him more effective if he is elected. I strongly recomend you read it all but here is part of it.

While some strategists focus on positioning candidates on issue after issue, I believe most voters focus more on whether the candidate integrity and character on the whole, demonstrated by the conviction to take a stand. These lines from Toby Keith probably strike pretty close to how many people, including me, feel about this:

“I’m a man of my convictions. Call me wrong. Call me right.
But I bring my better angels, to every fight.
You may not like where I’m going. But you sure know where I stand.
Hate me if you want to, love me if you can.”

For the rest of the week, I will be talking about my struggle to apply these simple principles to the issues of the day (Iraq War, culture war) and my experience putting conviction politics into practice. The successes of conviction candidates in 2006 inspired me to run for Congress. I am still very early in the process, but am hopeful that this campaign will be part of building on those lessons for a better democracy.

The more I learn about Tom the more exited I am about this campaign. I hope you will take the time to read his great interview with Raising Kaine, teacherken’s excellent case for him and Tom’s postings on TPM. Hopefully then you will be as exited by Tom’s campaign as I am.

Electing Barack Obama isn’t enough to bring real change. We will also need to send a strong message to Congress that more of the same won’t cut it. Electing someone like Tom would do just that. Tom wouldn’t just be another vote. He would be someone who lead by example. He will use his power as 1 of 435 to do good in the world not get sweet deals from lobbyists. He will lead by conviction and indeed he already is leading. He helped develop the Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq and appeared in this video promoting it:

If you want that kind of leadership. If you want to send a strong message that conviction politics is the right kind of politics then consider making a donation to Tom via the Obamajority page. Tom has set a goal of raising $500,000 in this quarter and he is very close to reaching that. If he does this will become a top-tier race nationally. He is running a grassroots campaign and we have a good shot at replacing one of the worst congressmen with one of the best. Right now is a critical time in the campaign though so donate and together we can bring about some real change. But only it you help make it.

Donate to Tom Perriello and together we will build a Obamajority.

We need to restore the founding American ethic that we are better off when we are in this together. Since the original thirteen colonies joined together as the United States, through Civil War and the Great Depression, we have risen or fallen according to this simple rule: America thrives when we are united in a common purpose for the common good.- Tom Perriello

P.S. We are always open to adding new canidates. Keep the suggestions coming to obamathon (AT) gmail (DOT) com. Thanks!

A Response to Some Critics

One of the things that bothers me is that I get email from people that think I am part of some network of boys that are unfairly trying to push Clinton out of the race and that there is some kind of misogyny involved in this conspiracy. I know some people make obnoxious, even misogynistic, comments in the blogosphere. Whenever I have noticed them on this site I have asked people to stop. To be truthful, there have been very few examples here. Certainly no one has posted anything even remotely critical of Clinton’s gender on the front-page of this site. I can’t say I have the time to read every diary, so I can’t vouch for them.

Throughout this campaign I have always said that Clinton’s gender was, for me, her most attractive feature as a candidate. I have argued that she is so talented that she might well have become a senator and run for president even without being married to Bill Clinton. I have never argued that being First Lady isn’t excellent experience for a would-be president. I haven’t nitpicked her on every little negative story that comes down the pike. I have generally (but not always) ignored stories that might hurt her in the general, but not in the primary. Today there are two stories that are perfect examples of what I have not criticized Clinton on.

It turns out that the little girl that read a poem to Hillary on the tarmac in Tuzla is shocked that Clinton would lie about her trip there. And it turns out that Clinton isn’t paying the health insurance premiums for her employees. Both stories make Clinton look terrible (and less electable in the general), but I don’t really give a crap about stories like that. I would oppose any serious DLC candidate for the presidency with the same vigor as I oppose Clinton. If Lieberman or Roemer or Carper or Vilsack or Bayh were the last candidate in the race against Obama, I would fight the same way. It is possible to oppose a faction within the Democratic Party without it being personal.

I am aware, even if I have trouble understanding, that some women are personally invested in the candidacy of Hillary Clinton. It seems to me that there is a certain lack of the ‘personal’ involved in this, too. The investment seems to be less in Hillary Clinton as an individual and more in her as a symbol. I get reactions from friends as if I have insulted them personally by being dismissive of Clinton’s campaign. They tell me that I am acting as if they are stupid, or that I set up moral absolutes that they can’t live up to, or that cut only one way.

It’s baffling, although I am trying to listen to these objections rather than simply dismiss them. But that effort isn’t helped when I get lumped in with misogynists or told that I am just trying to push the woman out.

It’s my political analysis that Clinton can’t win the nomination without going really negative and splintering the party. Obama is an acceptable nominee to me. I do not want to see him damaged by Democrats; I want to see him defended. It’s true that I oppose Clinton politically, but I also want what is best for the party. And at this point, I think the interests of Obama and the interests of the party dovetail.

I do know that some people are feeling a sense of loss and sadness or even frustration with the failure of Clinton’s campaign, and I do not mean to disrespect those feelings. I find them odd in people that otherwise agree with me politically. They have fought against the DLC appeaseniks, railed against the Peter Beinerts and Michael O’Hanlons, blasted the anti-50 staters Emanuel, Carville, and Begala, etc. They would normally cry foul at race-baiting or wedge politics. Yet, they don’t see Clinton as the leader of a pro-war, pro-corporate, pro-triangulation, anti-progressive, anti-netroots faction. They seem disconcertingly incapable of seeing (or, in some cases, able to rationalize) racial attacks. Instead, they see her as a woman, and a woman whose success or failure is somehow a success or failure for them personally.

I hear you. But I am so far from thinking that way that any offense is purely inadvertent. I want Obama because I oppose Clintonism, not women. I am being harsh in my criticisms because I am extremely sensitive to racial politics. I’d love to see a woman president, or vice-president. I just want one that I agree with politically. And I want to get behind our nominee now and start the fight. I don’t want our nominee weakened and I don’t want his time and resources diverted from the main event.

It’s not personal. It never was.

Some Things I’ve Had to Accept (Or: Today I Agreed with Peggy Noonan)

Appearing at The Jaundiced Eye, the Independent Bloggers’ Alliance, and My Left Wing.

It’s a bitter pill, but I have to admit that Nooner has offered some pretty stunning insight into the psyche and motivations of one Hillary Rodham Clinton.

I think we’ve reached a signal point in the campaign. This is the point where, with Hillary Clinton, either you get it or you don’t. There’s no dodging now. You either understand the problem with her candidacy, or you don’t. You either understand who she is, or not. And if you don’t, after 16 years of watching Clintonian dramas, you probably never will.

. . .

What, really, is Mrs. Clinton doing? She is having the worst case of cognitive dissonance in the history of modern politics. She cannot come up with a credible, realistic path to the nomination. She can’t trace the line from “this moment’s difficulties” to “my triumphant end.” But she cannot admit to herself that she can lose. Because Clintons don’t lose. She can’t figure out how to win, and she can’t accept the idea of not winning. She cannot accept that this nobody from nowhere could have beaten her, quietly and silently, every day. (She cannot accept that she still doesn’t know how he did it!)

She is concussed. But she is a scrapper, a fighter, and she’s doing what she knows how to do: scrap and fight. Only harder. So that she ups the ante every day. She helped Ireland achieve peace. She tried to stop Nafta. She’s been a leader for 35 years. She landed in Bosnia under siege and bravely dodged bullets. It was as if she’d watched the movie “Wag the Dog,” with its fake footage of a terrified refugee woman running frantically from mortar fire, and found it not a cautionary tale about manipulation and politics, but an inspiration.

So what is it that I am struggling to accept? (Sigh) That the Clintons are a lot more like George W. Bush than I am comfortable considering.
Recently,  I read a piece by Andrew Sullivan, that felt a little like a blast from the past; the Clinton years, I mean. But, his over-the-top comparison of the Clintons to a horror movie seems less like vicious hyperbole to me now. Well no more than the average lefty rant about Bushco.

The Clintons have always had a touch of the zombies about them: unkillable, they move relentlessly forward, propelled by a bloodlust for Republicans or uppity Democrats who dare to question their supremacy. You can’t escape; you can’t hide; and you can’t win. And these days, in the kinetic pace of the YouTube campaign, they are like the new 28 Days Later zombies. They come at you really quickly, like bats out of hell. Or Ohio, anyway.

Now all this may seem a little melodramatic. Perhaps it is. Objectively, an accomplished senator won a couple of races – one by a mere 3% – against another senator in a presidential campaign. One senator is still mathematically unbeatable. But that will never capture the emotional toll that the Clintons continue to take on some of us. I’m not kidding. I woke up in a cold sweat early last Wednesday. There have been moments this past week when I have felt physically ill at the thought of that pair returning to power.

And, I kid you not: So have I.  My colleague in blogtopia,* Arthur Gilroy, no doubt counts me among the “kneejerk Hillary bashers,” but there was nothing kneejerk about it. My loathing of Hillary took years to develop and was cultivated by one assault on small “d” democracy, and any semblance of good taste, after another. Even her odious vote to authorize war in Iraq was not enough. She was, after all, in the good company of most of the Democrats in Congress. Sure it made me leave the party, but it did not make me single out our Hillary for special contempt. No, that was the death of a thousand cuts. So how did this two-time voter for President Clinton and one time “Hillary for Senate” enthusiast come to find common ground with the “vast right wing conspiracy,” in unabashed loathing for this potential first woman President of these United States? As Arthur would say, read on, if you dare.

My first inkling that there was something distinctly “wrong” with Hillary, above and beyond the rank and file Dem sell-out, came when I learned of a nasty maneuver in her Senate re-election bid.

If you doubt that the US is devolving into an oligarchy where powerful corporations and other moneyed interests control the political process, look no further than New York state. There, an unholy alliance between Hillary Clinton and TimeWarner has seized control of the electoral process by taking away the microphone of her opposition.

. . .

Because at another outpost of the Time Warner empire, decisions have been made that help ensure Sen. Clinton will have “virtually nonexistent opposition.” Time Warner’s NY1 TV news channel (“the CNN of New York”)adamantly refuses to host a Democratic New York Senate debate. Despite protests over its decision, NY1 says it is giving incumbent Clinton a no-debate free pass because her antiwar challenger, union leader Jonathan Tasini, has not raised enough money; the channel arbitrarily set the bar at a half-million dollars. This despite the fact that Tasini has reached 13% in polls.

. . .

And there you have it. Hillary is the TimeWarner candidate, not the people’s. And, in a bout of unintentional honesty, TimeWarner has admitted what it thinks elections are about: Money.

Yes, it was a stomach-turningly Rovian maneuver; one of Hillary’s major donors cutting the mic on her only competition.

So, I was less than surprised when she moved to silence other presidential candidates this election season. And today, I find myself unable to gaff off Peggy Noonan’s assertion that the Clintons bully the press, in a manner that must surely do the micro-managing press-Nazi Karen Hughes proud.

Over the last couple of years, I have written more than a little on Hillary’s image-by-committee, her palpable disingenuousness, her bullying; cataloging my growing dislike. But her tactics in what has turned out to be a very competitive primary have pushed me over the edge into vehement disgust.

Even more disheartening I am being forced to reassess a former President I quite liked; her husband Bill. I always thought Bill was treated unfairly by the press… and by the vast right wing conspiracy. I stand by that assessment. If I had been forced to endure one more special news report on the President’s penis, during his term in office, I probably would have stroked out. A witch hunt it was. But as “the first black President” has lapsed into subtle race-baiting and McCarthyesque insinuations about Obama’s patriotism, I have had to consider the possibility that he did a little more than indulge sexual compulsions to earn the extreme ire of some of his detractors.

While I have never had any illusions about the wages of triangulation, and other tilts to the right, we endured during the Clinton years, I always gave him props for ameliorating some of the damage that could have been caused by the Gingrich Revolution. (Goodness knows, we have had a good, hard look at how bad free market fundamentalism run amok is for the country, under the current misadministration.) So even if Clinton’s domestic policy was somewhere to the right of Nixon, he was to the left of Bush… and that’s not nothin.’  Bottom line: I found him likable; thought him earnest; considered him, overall, a good President. But his adventures in slime politics during his wife’s run, have soured me but good. I’ve had a glimpse, seen a tiny glimmer, of the man the right wing  hated with such passion. Good googly moogly, there really is “a character issue.” Whoda thunk it?

I can simply no longer consider the Clintons the hapless victims of a cabal of right wing loons. Loons, though they may be, I now understand a bit of the disgust and frustration that arises from witnessing their relentless battle against reality. I must even consider the possibility that  Sully is not blowing smoke when he says that the Clintons dragged out the Whitewater investigation by being secretive and evasive. I say this not because I had then or have now the stomach to rifle through the arcane details of a land deal gone awry, but because I’ve witnessed, in her run for the presidency, the stunning contortions Hillary goes through to avoid acknowledging error and telling simple truths. I’ve had a little glimpse of the woman behind the curtain, and a bungling, but affable wizard, she is not.

Hence, I was not surprised, though I was aghast, at the most recent eruptions of ugliness from the Hillary campaign. I speak of the Sopranosesque threat from her donors to Nancy Pelosi and her blatant lying about her adventures in Bosnia. Yes, Bosnia; a fish tale told by yet another chicken-hawk wannabe whose lack of military cred she tried to parlay into feats of daring do. Can a flight suit and “Mission Accomplished” banner be far behind? And even faced with incontrovertible, videotape evidence, she refuses to shrink that fish back down to its actual size.

So, yes, Ms. Noonan, I get it. The Clintons are almost as polarizing as the Bush regime that followed them into the White House. I have now spent seven plus years on the other side of that funhouse mirror. Not for the first time, I’ve had to address the curious parallel between my rabid disgust for an Administration trafficking in epic distortions of reality and my counterparts on the right side of the aisle, who experienced similar angst during the previous eight. There is far greater symmetry than I ever wanted to admit. As a matter of degree, the Bush years have been far worse. The toll on the economy, the military, the country as a whole,  has been far greater than those endured by the worst Clintonian excesses. But, I admit to my chagrin, the Clinton presidency also greased the wheels but good.

As I look forward, the thought of enduring still more Bush Republican-lite, is almost as unbearable of the 4 more years of Bush reign a McCain presidency would almost certainly ensure. That politicians lie is not news. That they disappoint is a near certainty. But what we have endured for nearly 16 years borders on the surreal. Not one, but two, administrations fraught with the worst kind of lies and vitriol, volleying back and forth across a political and ideological divide. And as Hillary marshals on, against the blatant reality of delegate math, threatening to upend the will of the voter, if need be, to ensure her ambition, the déjà vu is simply more than I can stand.

* Yes, skippy coined the phrase.