Category Archives: Democratic Party Chatter

CDP Final Update: The Sci Fi Convention Ends…

Thanks to a 10-day long internet outage at home, this got posted late. Earthlink sucks.
Well, it’s finally over. The 2006 Democratic Star Trek/Wars/Gate Convention is done, the myriad of tchotchkes, stickers, and campaign sundries are in the dustbin of history, and everyone’s going home…some happy, some sad, and some who were just happy to get all the free “stuff” at the convention.
But the unreality of the event was truly that of a Comi-Con or Star Trek convention, because for all the hype and shenanigans inside the convention, and all the fiercely passionate run ins between rival campaigns, the fact is very few actual voters know who most of the people on the June ballot are, much less who they’d actually like to see in office.
In the end, the passionate fights between the two titans of the Democratic ticket, Steve Westly and Phil Angelides, came off more like the never-ending debates of lore: Kirk Vs. Picard, Star Wars 77-82 vs Star Wars Prequels, or that big debate over Silver Surfer from a few years ago. Lots of noise and hype, but most people on the outside don’t really know what these folks are talking about. But if you dare say you’re not that interested in their cause or candidate, people look at you like you just committed a war crime.

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CDP Update 4 – Anglides Gets Convention Endorsement with 68%!

I was a bit tired after a long day of politiciking and spinning and what not, so I’m posting a bit late – but Phil Angelides won the vote for the CDP endorsement with 68% of the vote. So my little prediction earlier was entirely wrong. I’m not afraid to admit it.
The vote itself wasn’t revealed until late last night, but you heard about it when the loud whoops and yells of Angelides’ supporters late that night. It was truly a sight, along with the legions of orange-shirted Westly supporters (most of whom were not actual voting delegates, but rather volunteers) who had a long look on their faces, and quickly disappeared from the evening festivities.
It was a true moment where spin, and betting on spin, paid off. In this case, Angelides campaign, which has run into some trouble because of Westly’s incredibly large TV buy (and resulting name ID and poll momentum) was starting to feel the pressure from the echo chamber, the press and political insiders. So the campaign made a calculated risk to put it all on the convention, and Westly’s campaign put together a well funded effort to make their presence known at the convention to try and block the 60% vote.
But Phil rolled a hard six, and won, bigtime. Westly made the mistake of not playing down expectations for himself, and by Saturday morning at the press conference, was clearly convinced “momentum” was on his side, and was predicting a win for himself. Big mistake. He should have played it cool and not been sucked into the hype. Instead now the Angelides campaign has something they can spin as a big moment for them, and Westly just spent a ton of money on 65 lb. pieces of beef for nada.
Now obviously most voters in this state have no idea who they’ll support for the Democratic nominee, and still, most people either don’t care, or could change their mind at any time. But in the neverland that is the world of spin, the insiders, the funders, and the press, Angelides stopped a tailspin for his campaign, and is flying high. Whether that means anything to the rest of us remains to be seen.
But for now, a chapter of political theater is over. What a night!

CDP Update 3 – Throwing A Wrench In the Machine

See live, uninterrupted coverage of the circus right here!
Today has been a bit less weird. I can safely say that the comic-book convention metaphor is holding, and I don’t mean that in a good or bad way, just a way.
Anyway.
Today I ran into Assembly Candidate Janet Reilly as I stopped to say hello to our esteemed Senator, Dianne Feinstein. Tons of people were mobbing Sen. Feinstein and camera-phones were ablaze in getting a shared moment with the Senator recorded for posterity.
I also had a nice conversation with Frank Russo of the California Progress Report at his booth from whence he is live-blogging the entire convention.
But my favorite moment was watching the convetion speeches of Phil Angelides and Steve Westly, and it would seem that my previous entry about the Westly beef-fueled blocking of the endorsement vote might have been premature. I spoke with several actual voting delegates who told me how they were selected and how most of them were for Angelides, parties or not. It was most notable that when Steve Westly spoke, his legions of volunteers provided the bulk of his applause, not the delegates, something KTVU reporter Randy Shandobil queried Mr. Westly about at a press conference.
I watched Westly and while he seems like a truly nice person, he also comes off as over-rehearsed and evasive as he did in 1989 when he ran for chair. I chose to throw him a curve ball that was not on any “talking points memo” for the day when the press conference started.
My question? Well, I decided to ask him about his campaign’s use of Myspace.com, which the campaign had trumpeted early on as a sign of his tech-savviness and his outreach to young people.
I asked him if this was the case, why was it that after all the hype and hullaballo, his My Space Profile was linked to only 40 or so friends, while rival Phil Angelides’ profile was linked to over 1000 people.
Now, to be sure, a MySpace profile for a politco is not a big deal, but I wasn’t as interested in the answer as I was interested in seeing how he’d handle such a wacky question, wacky questions and situations being something you need to deal with as a candidate and as Governor. I’d hoped for a joke, or something.
Instead he looked at me in that frozen smile of his and for about a second telegraphed a glare that could only be described as “What the F*CK are you asking me this for?” and then gave a weird, rambling non-answer answer.
I was kinda hoping for a sign this guy could go off script and relax, since his speech was so totally rehearsed he went off speech on less than 10 words. More importantly I was hoping for a sign that we are not repeating the mistake of nominating a Gray Davis or a Mike Dukakis or an Al Gore.
Sadly , it didn’t happen. Oh well.
Next up: The vote showdown in the convention center!
UPDATE: It seems my mayhem was not confined to La Convencion…..this accounting of MySpace.com street cred seems to say it all..

CDP Update 2 – Recipe for Derailing 60%

Last night the Sacramento Convention Center was abuzz with all sorts of politicos vying for support from delegates and others, via the time honored tradition of the “hospitality suite.” With so many open races locally and statewide in the June primary, people were in overdrive to put on the best party possible.
On this, and this alone, there is no doubt that ex dot-commer Steve Westly, who has self-financed his campaign for Governor, had one of the best parties I’ve ever seen. They didn’t just have a big room, no they had a live band, a dance floor, a carving station with huge 65+ lb.. side of beef for sandwiches, discounts on the Convention Center’s overpriced drinks, and a lot of people in orange shirts, custom made for the weekend.
It was a bit much, but the stakes are high. Phil Angelides has to roll a hard six to jump start a campaign that’s fallen behind in the polls in the wake of Westly’s TV ads, and it’s in the form of an endorsement vote today.

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CDP Update 1 – The Scariest Star Trek/Wars/Gate Convention Ever?

Thanks to AMTRAK’s trusty Capitol Corridor service I made it up to Sacramento, for only $14! What a bargain. I even ran into the esteemed Marc Cooper of The Nation in the hotel lobby (he noticed my Gonzo T-shirt and we chatted briefly). I did a survey of the convention floor before posting my first update.
All I can say is, of the many Democratic conventions I’ve attended in Sacramento, this is easily one of the most bizarre, and Comic-Con-like experience I’ve ever had. There are mobs of Westly and Angelides supporters all eager to proclaim their candidate’s virtues and give you pieces of paper saying so. There are even more for the legions of term-limited officials who are jumping all over the ballot as well, and they are very very eager to tell you about their candidate.
Which is fine, but it can get a little scary sometimes. The elbowing, jostling, and jockeying between the candidates for governor are taking on Kafka-esque qualities, and they’re a bit much, even for me who usually finds these things kinda fun when I don’t have to work at them. Don’t get me wrong – they are both nice guys and their folks are nice folks. It’s just hard to describe the energy at this convention as anything but strange.
Mayor Gavin Newsom is a featured speaker tonight – I saw him earlier hanging around with various politicos and delegates over by the press office. I guess since he’s not one of the people playing musical political chairs, he’s a bit more relaxed and approachable. I’ll have more after tonight’s revelries…

Almost Ready to Go! CA Democratic Convention Coverage Coming Up!

After some technical mishaps, including the death of DSL at home (!) I’m almost done with the new look – just some color changes and a few more HTML/PHP/CSS changes and we’re done! I can’t wait.
This weekend I will be attending the California Democratic Party’s convention in Sacramento, and will blog live updates, much as I did in 2004, and had a lot of fun doing so.
With so many term-limited folks running for so many offices, most of whom are as unknown as the offices they seek, and being just over a month away from Election Day, you can bet that it’ll be a circus. And when a convention is more like a circus, it usually means campaigns do lots of weird stuff. Best of all, it usally means that there is also lots of free stuff to be had as well!
UPDATE Live webcasting of the convention can be found here if you’re just dying to see the circus without any commercial interruptions.

Some Straight Talk from San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom You May Have Missed

“Re-thinking” and “strategizin’ ” are popular topics amongst political types to the left of G. W. Bush. This past week members of the Young Democrats of America held their national convention in San Francisco, and the talk was punctuated with some hard realizations doing “business as usual” wasn’t going to cut it anymore. Good.
What struck me most, though was the coverage of the event in the local press barely made mention of their own mayor’s remarks, and those that did gave it short shrift, presumably because he’s not on the “politically orthodox” side of politics.
Which is unfortunate. That’s because in a time when you have so many Democratic politicians in Washington DC running around thinking they’re in charge of things, when they’re not, and you have lifetime political hacks from D.C. running around, grabbing corporate cash and attacking party chairman Howard Dean for daring to act like, well, a Democrat, Mayor Gavin Newsom’s remarks were a breath of fresh air.
Here’s a quote, from the San Francisco Bay Guardian, that’s worth a look:
“I am not popular in my party,” he said. “What’s the point of winning if you can’t advance your principles? You can’t talk in ideals unless you are willing to manifest them…We need more clarity in our party,” Newsom said. “It’s about integrity.”
You’d think a statement like that, coming from the guy who’s had to take crap from wealthy, psueudo-Democratic battle-axe Dianne Feinstein, and who decided to stand on principle on an issue that was not going to get him any points in a future political career would be applauded, if not by the supposedly progressive Bay Guardian, then at least by the allegedly powerful “liberal blogosphere.”
While I can forgive the latter for not reporting and amplifying Newsom’s remarks since there’s no way for them to know what’s up without being able to read it somewhere, I have to take issue with the Guardian, both for their burial of what would seem to be a bold, progressive statement, and for their coverage of the event in general.
It becomes obvious in a situation like this that no matter what Mayor Newsom says, because he was Not The Politically Correct Person saying said statement, they had to bury it in a half-assed piece about the YD’s.
You almost get the sense that there’s such a determination to slam Mayor Newsom as “Willie Brown, Part Deux” (even though he’s not), they can’t even concede one little piece of decent coverage.
News flash: Mayor Newsom is not perfect, lefty folks. We know that. But trying to demonize the guy and being unable to concede on principle when he’s done some great things ultimately kills La Causa a hell of a lot better than the Ghost of Satan Willie Brown could or will. It shows an inability to grasp today’s political terrain, and a desire to return to what I call the “Bad Good Old Days” – when it was easy to be on
But there’s a bigger issue. You’d think that they’d send someone to, oh I don’t know, try and cover the issues at hand at said convention, and perhaps engage in a little reporting, maybe even quoting some people and attaching names to quotes. Even better, send a young person who’se politically savvy to try and bring the perspective of the people these folks are tryin’ to reach.
Instead the Guardian sent an old college professor whose experience with the Young Democrats dates back to the 1950s. That’s great. But nowhere in this coverage does any real history of the group get told, to place anything that happened at the convention itself in context.
The author clearly went over there with a presupposed concept in mind: the tired old saw of “How the 1960s are Still The Best Years for Activism Ever” and the new hack, “Oh You Democrats Didn’t Talk About The War As Much as I Deem You Should (Even Though I Didn’t Bother to Cover Most of the Convention Anyway).”
Hmm. Sounds like a bad country song. Oh, but I digress.
But to wind it up: Not only did the Guardian make a mis-step in under-reporting their own elected officials’ statements at a natinoal convention in their home town, they also blew a chance to do some real research and come up with a story that might have told the reader a little more about the proceedings and asked some hard questions.
Instead, we got yet another iteration of the old “60’s Great/Today Bad” rhetoric that makes me literally ill every time I hear it. The 60s have been over for some time now, folks. Smokin’ pot and marching a lot may have been the way to go back then. But to make a difference today, one has to get with the times, not try and re-enact the 60s the way those Civil War buffs do so on battlefields in the South.
UPDATE: It seems in my haste to post something, I made the mistake of not noting Pat Murphy’s coverage of said convention at his local news website, SF Sentinel that included coverage of Mayor Newsom’s remarks.
Many people have opinions of Pat Murphy’s work – whatever they say, I still find it a good local resource for many events that don’t always get covered by the Big Papers In Town, and Pat’s never shy about his opinions, or labeling them as such. Kudos to Pat for covering more of the Mayor’s speech.
© 2003-2006 Greg Dewar | All Rights Reserved | Originally Published at www.schadelmann.com

Jonathan F. Kerry Will You Please SHUT UP?*

Today I’m gonna kill two birds with one stone: heaping praise on one of the few political blogs that isn’t exercise in wannabe megalomania, and tell Sen. John Kerry to shut up.
I can do this because one of the few blogs with anything original to say, The Gadflyer, did such a good job of telling it like it is regarding Sen. Longwind’s ponderous and long-winded op-ed piece in the New York Times, for which they should be issued a gold medal. Or a case of highbrow Liquor du Malt. Something.
Seriously. Sen. John Kerry doesn’t seem to get the fact that he lost the freakin’ election last year. His remaining overpaid staff still pump out press releases playing the “will he or won’t he” game regarding 2008, and of course, there’s the tons of email addresses he talks about, as if this is somehow a good thing.
John. Kids. Loser D.C. Consultants. Get a clue. You have 3 million addresses of people who are sick of hearing your long winded blather, and Yahoo Mail is tossing your crap into the “Bulk” file. In other words, give up. You had a golden opportunity to take out a mediocre president and yet instead decided to spend a record amount of money finding Yet Another Way to Screw Up instead. Take your pretentious BS, your stupid Massachusetts-bred “political knowledge,” and your arrogant, patrician ways and just SHUT THE HELL UP.
It’s bad enough we have so many sheep willing to worship of St. Hillary the (Alleged) Liberal (yet another “entitled to power” hack we will lose an election with) – we don’t need you mucking up the waters like you are right now. Just go back to Boston, sit in your mansions, and have a tall cool glass of Chardonnay from Chateau Mordez-Moi Perdant. (special bonus for those of you who know what that means.)
That’s why the Gadflyer is such a kick-ass kind of site. It cuts through the DC BS of Democrats and Republicans like a samurai sword through redneck hick in a pawn shop. It lacks the DC-Centric phoniness of corporate produced “blog” Wonkette, and the knee-jerk self congratulatory puffery of way too many lefty/Democraty/non-Bushie blogs out there, who still seem to think that typing haughty comments on a blog gets you somewhere. Or, of course, there’s the let’s attack people and get in the Times for attacking people with our sourball comments style blogs, which get lots of ink and generate lots of heat – but tend to wilt like a ‘roided out willy when confronted in person.
(Many of these are the people who still think that Dean had a winning campaign in California because he had ‘lots of bloggers’ and the infamous ‘Daily Kos’ blog on their side. Hint, kids: Howard Dean never ran a campaign in California – he dropped out and Kerry won by acclamation).
But I digress. The point is, I generally find most political blogs to be quite boring, or all about creating noise, not about expressing a point of view that’s any different than what I heard on TV or in the paper. Both left and right have “echo chambers” the size of the Grand Canyon, and frankly, that’s not a good thing. BS amplified, is still BS.
So it’s nice to find a well-written site that can cut throgh the crap, tell it like it is, and find out it can do this, despite being based in the nation’s capital. My two (small) gripes with these guys are that A) Being writers and scholars and whatnots paid to create content they beat me to the punch on things I’d like and B) the don’t have a very good mechanism for allowing comments or sending in feedback.
Those, however, are minor critiques, offered in the spirit of good faith so rare on the web these days. Overall, though I’d say we all owe a nice big thanks to Gadflyer for cutting the crap like a master sushi chef dices a fugu.
* PS: Did ANYONE get the reference to Marvin K. Mooney? Or is this just WAY to freakin’ obscure?
PS2: I want one of these little gadgets and I could care less what the 20th century dullards at the MPAA have to say about it.

© 2003-2006 Greg Dewar | All Rights Reserved | Originally Published at www.schadelmann.com

John Kerry’s Stealth Trip to the West Coast – Big Help, or “Big Deal”?

Just in case you thought that John Kerry and his campaign apparatus might have learned something about logistics, communication, or timeliness during the last election fiasco, well, think again. This latest “stealth” trip to the West Coast is just bearing it out.
What’s that you say? You’ve not heard of Kerry’s West Coast trip to boost his presidential aspirations for 2008? Well don’t feel bad. Most people haven’t either. Or, at least they weren’t given much warning.
Political events usually require some lead time if they are to be successful. Even if you have a gaggle of celebrities, a promise of free drinks (well maybe not at a Democratic event!) and whatnot, you still need time to make it a success.
That’s why I’m eyeing Kerry’s supposed generosity and “power” with some suspicion. It sounds more like the Kerry Hype Machine is pushing stories to the press about his supposed “power” while of course, he isn’t doing much. Remember that little case of the $15 million+ “surplus” the losing Kerry campaign ended with?
Today’s LA mediasphere noted that Councilman Antonio Villaraigosa will be having an event with Sen. Kerry, and as usual, I got the obligatory email from the Esteemed Senator. The event is on Saturday. I got the invite today. Now, I’m sure the event will do OK, but it would seem that if Kerry really wanted to help Antonio, he’d have spent less time planting stories about his mythical “network of donors” helping Antonio “win” the election, and might have put the word out about this sooner. Let’s give them some credit – at least they listed the event on Kerry’s site.
This is not the only event, though. On April 15th, I received an email from the Washington State Democratic Party inviting me to an event with John Kerry on May 1st in Seattle, to raise money for Gov. Gregoire’s legal fund.
Nice, sure, but again, if the invites are going out on the 25th for an event on the 1st, that isn’t giving the folks on the ground a lot of time to get things ready. I hate to break it to Kerry & Co., but he’s just not such a big draw that people are going to delay the credit card payments, move their schedule around, and cough up the money just to touch the hand of the man who blew the Presidential race.
Ironically, the only event that had a decent amount lead time and preparation was a fundraiser for Janet Reilly, who is running for the State Assembly in San Francisco. I’d heard about this event several weeks ago, and I have no doubt it will be a success. However, when I went to find the event on John Kerry’s official website, it said that there were no events in San Francisco.
Likewise, Kerry’s media machine isn’t doing nearly as much work ginning up the PR mill as it was for Antonio. To me, that’s cheap and thoughtless. Janet, and her husband Clint were early supporters of Kerry’s campaign and did a lot of work to help his campaign in California – the least Kerry’s crew could do was give her some free PR in advance of the event.
I’m sure there are other events on the Kerry Resurrection Tour, but I will probably not hear about them until just a few days before they happen. After all, this isn’t really about helping Mr. Villaraigosa, Mrs. Reilly, or Mrs. Gregoire. This is about helping John Kerry keep his lifeless presidential ambitions hooked up to political life support.
And frankly, given his mistakes and that darn Presidential campaign surplus, I’d say it’s time to pull the plug. I’m sure that’s something even my most conservative Christian pals can agree with me on.
PS: On an unrelated note: someone has been posting all sorts of nutty comments on blogs, both here at JS and elsewhere, signing other people’s names but using my URL. Whoever it is, please cut it out, willya? It’s lame, and childish, and you’re pissing me off.
© 2003-2006 Greg Dewar | All Rights Reserved | Originally Published at www.schadelmann.com

On the Road to Resurgence or Ruin? – the DNC Meeting in Sacramento!

This Saturday, the Democratic National Committee held a conference for the Western States in Sacramento, California. Normally, such meetings are a dull, quiet affair, attended by a small number of people who are actual members of the DNC, and perhaps a few others.
This was not one of those types of meetings.
The day was sure to be one full of something (action not necessarily being one of them) due to the fact that the California Democratic Council, the historic alliance of local Democratic Clubs across California founded by the late Sen. Alan Cranston, held a breakfast event in the morning, in the same hotel the DNC was holding its afternoon session.
The highlight of this morning was, of course, a speech by the the Rev. Al Sharpton. Now, I know that Rev. Sharpton is considered by some to be a “bad guy,” or at the very least, someone who oughta be shown the door, not the stage.
I disagree. While I know of many arguments as to why Rev. Sharpton may not be the best Party spokesman, the fact remains that when it comes to putting into basic, easy to understand terms, why the Democratic Party, in its ideal form, can be a good thing, Rev. Sharpton knows how to say what needs to be said in ways a stumbling doofus like John Kerry could only dream of. (Sorry, Kerry fans, but the Centrist Corporate Senator from Eliteville can’t give a speech. Deal.)
Think about it this way: the Other Side has their Non Stop Quote Machines who can be loud an shrill and get the word out. Why can’t we have a guy who can say what needs to be said, in a way Most Americans can understand too? Every time I see this guy talk, he says what needs to be said in less words than it takes John Kerry to say what his f****ing position is on whether he needs to have coffee in the morning. (Again, deal with it, Kerry true believers. Jon Stewart can call BS on this guy so well. But hey! He wasn’t Howard Dean, right? Yeah. Whatever.)
Jolly Buddah at MyDD.com did a great job transcribing the speech, and I want to give him a link for his efforts. I spoke with Rev. Sharpton after the speech and said to him straight up  that after his famous “Condi is my color but Barbara Boxer is my kind” line, I wanted to get out my lighter and say “Right on, brother!” He smiled and shook my hand.
What a nice guy. I swear, if this guy ever moved to Los Angeles and ran for Mayor, given the enthusiasm he gets from so many people here, he might just be the guy to blow the dwarves and Hahn out of the water and be an elected official some day.
Ok, maybe not. But I digress.
It also turns out that a candidate for Brooklyn District Attorney I’ve been helping, state Senator John Sampson, has been a Sharpton endorsee for many years, and is now running a cutting-edge campaign for DA based on reforming the laws and criminal justice to put more bad guys in prison, and avoid putting people in jail who don’t belong. Right on!
There was no question that the “rock star” of the day was Gov. Howard Dean, former Presidential candidate and party activist. When he came in to a pre-DNC meeting rally with the CDC and other folks, he was swarmed with admirers.
Interestingly enough, Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante, whose failed bid for Governor in the recall campaign in 2003 made him the butt of many jokes on Saturday Night Live by comedian Horatio Sanz, tried to ride the “Dean Wave” when he arrived in the ballroom with the Governor, only to get booed once he was announced he was there.
He soon left for greener pastures, wherever Dem cratic LG’s with a primary challenge from popular Democratic State Senators go. No one cared.
Dean, and to a lesser extent, former Congressman Tim Roemer seem to be running for DNC chair with an emphasis on themselves as an agent of change. Now, in Dean’s case I don’t know that is 100% the case, but clearly, in former Rep. Tim Roemer’s case, he’s more about talking about himself, and his personal knowldege, semi-good looks, and himself, more than he is about the party. It would not surprise me if that if Mr. Roemer got the DNC chair’s job, we’d see this clown running for office in his home state of Indiana soon enough.
By the way, every time this anti-abortion, pro-Bush “Democrat” talked, there was that hissing and booing that usually accompanies enemies of the Party Faithful. Despite looks that come out of Central Casting, and a LOT of talk about himself, it wasn’t enough to sway most folks.
Simon Rosenberg (who consistently seemed to receive the second loudest applause throughout the day) and Donnie Fowler however, seemed to be more about letting elected officials take the lead on policy, and on issues, and instead spend their time as DNC chair helping local, state and national parties and grassroots organizations get things done to win actual elections.
From my perspective, as someone who has been working in political campaigns for over ten years, Simon and Donnie are people I like best. I like Dean too, and from what it looks like so far, the college of cardinals might just elect him, and I like the ‘tude that Dean himself can exude. But at the same time,  given how the media like to tar this guy as some sort of wild-eyed Communist provocateur, despite his record, it’s hard to know if he can overcome that, and get the party up and running again.
As for the other candidates, while I am sure they are well meaning, they have about as much of a chance of winning as say, a hippie in Dallas, winning a seat on the city council.
Now, here’s one of those situations where my role as an active political consultant and that of informative blogger collide. While I do not mean to harsh on anyone for the sake of hashing on them, there was one comment by one certain candidate that pissed me off, simply because of the pure hypocrisy of it.
That would be former Congressman Martin Frost, who lost his seat in Congress due in large part to the mid-term gerrymandering of Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas. That said, it was very insulting of ex-Congressman Frost when he decried the “consultant culture” of Washington, D.C. in his remarks.
For those of you who don’t work in politics day-to-day, here’s a primer on the sheer amount of bullshit that “political parties” ram down the throats of hapless campaigns and candidates for office.
For the love of God, bear with Schadelmann.com as we explain the tortured logic of this sad state of affairs, and why, despite being seemingly irrelevant, actually affects you, the voter, in the end.
You see, once upon a time, the wise, and kind Rep. Frost was the head of a group called the the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. He headed this committee, based in good ol’ Washington D.C. In other words, the center of all that is wise and good in America. Their job was to get the Democratic candidates elected to Congress in 1996 and 1998, to regain the “majority.”
Yeah, that’s my reaction too. Great job, guys!
Anyway, Mr. Frost’s little Mafia used to play a cute little game with aspiring politicos running for Congress. They’d play the game of “hire our hit men or be denied protection money in the future.”
Confused? Ok, let me spell it out a different way.
Candidate Shmoe wants to run for Congress as a Democrat. Candidate Shm e hires Local Non-DC Political Consultant Schadelmann, because, well Consultant Schadelmann has spent some time West of the Potomac (and in fact is from the West Coast!). Then, when Candidate Shmoe talks to the Party Big Wigs (i.e. Rep. Frost), he hears the following:
“Well if you don’t hire Consultant Jerkface from Washington D.C., and fire Consultant Schadelmann from your little campaign,  the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee won’t pay for your campaign in the future. Figure it out.”
Now, here’s the rub: The threat is an empty threat made by party hacks in DC who know full well that if Candidate Shmoe actually shows some promise, he or she will get the support they need, since it would mean moving the Democrats from back of the short-bus to front of the line. In the end, who gets the poor candidate over the finish line is irrelevant. If enough of these clowns win, the leadership would go from “Ranking Minority Member” (AKA Loser) to “Chair of the Committee” (AKA “NOT a loser!”)
Does Candidate Shmoe know that? No. Instead, they get scared. They see some guy like Martin Frost, with his big office, and his smart, slick boys in charge, and they capitulate. They let go the people who know what the hell they’re doing. They buckle under, and hire the twits the DCCC tells them to hire and the cycle of of inbred political thought continues.
The point of this fable? To point out what a fucking hypocrite a guy like fucking Martin Frost is to decry “Washington, D.C. political consultants” when he in fact was one of the people screwing over anyone west of the Potomac River in favor of his homeboys in D.C.
So, while I very much liked the people backing Frost, who were among the kindest, and most hospitable people I’ve met in politics, and were genuinue kind to me as a person, I have to say when I hear him say this, my first reaction was to stand up, give a one-finger salute to Mr. Frost, and tell the guy off.
Now, political decorum suggested otherwise, but there were way too many people who said “right on” when I suggested said course of action. I still kept quiet, preferring the cozy rant on a somewhat-read blog.
So it kinda sucks. The Texas people were so cool too. But their candidate was a two-faced guy on this issue. One that just happens to affect my bottom line.
Ok, end of rant….
Donnie Fowler, to his credit, didn’t’ engage in such bogus “consultant bashing,” instead recognizing the very “aristocracy” of consultants that makes it hard for younger people, with good ideas, to get work and make a difference in the long run. Which is why, in the end, it’s hard for me to say who I like.
I like Simon Rosenberg because it was clear in the way he runs his own campaign, he “gets it” when it comes to how campaigns work. I like Donnie Fowler, because he also has a “mechanics sense of campaigns,” lives in San Francisco, and attracts a great bunch of folks on his side (and believe me, that says a lot about someone). I like Gov. Dean because he can give a great speech, and I don’t doubt his commitment to folks outside of D.C., since it was those D.C. folks who did their best to stick it to him (like they have the Party).
So what is my verdict? If you’re a Democrat who cares, learn more and support one of the three I’ve mentioned here, and make your choice accordingly. If you’re a Republican Party Operative, piss off, and go trash the country over some more with deficits, lies, and BS.
If you’re a normal human being who just wants this country to be by, of and for the people and not some freaking corporation, then pay attention and get involved. No matter what happens, you’ll be better off for it.
The country can’t afford a one-party state. Just ask the Soviet Union!
UPDATE: Read coverage in the LA Times of the proceedings. The Associated Press has coverage as well. Adriel Hampton of the San Francisco Examiner has some interesting thoughts at his blog as well. Chris Nolan posts an article at PersonalDemocracy.com and at her own site as well.
You have to give Frost’s people credit – he got his anti-consultant quote in there in almost every report of the meeting. regardless of his background. Too bad that no one in the mainstream media (with the exception of the Times) questioned his assertion But perhaps that’s what “blogs” are for?
UPDATE 2:: You can watch the video of the meeting at the California Democratic Party Website and see the proceedings for yourself.
UPDATE 3: And now we see where the Great Martin has landed hanging out with the hippies and leftists at FOX News.
It’s just as well. The DC insider wrecking crew is being shown the door anyway – let’s just hope they don’t get ass prints on the door as it hits them on the way out.