2006 Progressive Congressional Challenger Memo

(Part 2 of the MyDD/Courage Campaign Survey – promoted by SFBrianCL)

Today The Courage Campaign and MyDD have released their candidate memo laying out recommendations to progressive challengers this fall based on the results of the two polls we conducted in CA-50 studying the reasons for Francine Busby’s loss on June 6.

Our results from those polls can be found below:
Why Francine Busby Lost
Republicans Divided On Iraq, Accountability.

What we’ve discovered is that the lessons learned in CA-50 should be able to travel from district to district throughout the nation.
In a nutshell:

– Promise to hold Bush accountable
– Pick fights, do not shirk from them, to demonstrate toughness and credibility on the accountability issue
– Do not run from the war, run TOWARD it, but make it about oversight, not withdrawal.
The candidate memo can be found in its entirety over the fold.

(cross-posted at The Courage Campaign and MyDD)

by Chris Bowers, Rick Jacobs, Matt Stoller and Joel Wright

To: Democratic Congressional Challengers

Re: CA-50 Post-Special Election (Busby-Bilbray) Polling Memo

Fall Election Environment Overview:

This fall, you will face a grotesque political environment, one that requires strategic knowledge, great courage and fortitude to successfully navigate. Facing low approval ratings, Republicans will introduce you to the voters as a flip-flopping, gay-loving, liberal terrorist coddler who wants to cut and run from Iraq, all at the behest of self-absorbed Hollywood moguls and liberal elites.

The establishment Democrats have proven ineffective at combating this positioning, introducing empty slogans like `Together we can do better' that no one repeats or remembers, and policy proposals that few voters believe Democrats are capable of enacting. Most of the polling and advice you'll get from DC insiders and journalists will largely rehash bad information, false choices and irrelevant answers to poorly framed questions. If you take their advice, you will not make significant headway in convincing voters you are best to represent them. And when you lose, it'll be you who ran a bad campaign, not "them." Just ask Francine Busby how that works.

Perhaps worst of all, you will probably face some form of October surprise from the Republicans and your opponent: a game-changing event or message stream. And you will be blind-sided because establishment Democrats will be caught off-guard. Again. And you and your campaign will pay the price of their failure.

Realistically, when it comes to developing a winning position and messaging, you are on your own. Or rather, you are on your own, except that the voters – Democrats, Republicans, and Independents alike – agree with the outrage that you feel towards the political system and agree that Republican leadership is the problem. Yet, voters will only vote for change if they know you can deliver on that change once elected.

So far, few believe that will happen, as our data in CA-50 show.

Why CA-50 matters to you and your campaign:

Francine Busby and the DCCC spent more than $5 million on a nationalized Congressional race in California's 50th District. As the Democratic contender in the only partisan federal race so far this year, she was the Petri dish for testing Beltway techniques and messages. She ran on the national party's first semester message of "the culture of corruption" against a former Congressman turned lobbyist in a district where her predecessor is in jail for taking millions of dollars in bribes from defense contractors. A conservative, heavily military district where Dianne Feinstein won in 2000 and where Barbara Boxer lost by less than one percentage point in 2004, she ran as a "bi-partisan Democrat who would go to Washington to clean house and accomplish a seven point policy plan." She dodged the Iraq war as if it were a bullet aimed directly at her. In short, she played by the national insider rules.

And Francine Busby lost. The national committees and insiders have moved on. Her campaign team has simply moved out, taking the blame for doing what they were told by the `experienced' Beltway consultants.

Focus on this: Francine Busby lost a race to Brian Bilbray, a Republican lobbyist and former member of Congress, someone about as "inside" as it gets. Even though Busby ran on the culture of corruption line and Cunningham sits in jail with a mere 6% favorability in the CA-50, and, further, even though few voters believed that Bilbray had credibility on standing up to Bush on immigration, she lost. We know this because we polled extensively in the district this summer to find out why an extremely well funded national campaign utterly failed. Given that this was the only Congressional election so far this year between a Republican and a Democrat, we wanted to learn some lessons. This is the only data set on the only Federal partisan election that has happened in 2006 so far. It is very much worth understanding.

What happened in California's 50th?

California 50th is a right-leaning district, though not overwhelmingly so (John Kerry got 44% of the vote in 2004). The seat was open because Duke Cunningham resigned and ultimately went to jail in the midst of a bribery scandal. Democrat Francine Busby's messaging was therefore focused on the then national message of "the culture of corruption." She ran a policy-heavy campaign, proposing what she asserted was the `toughest' ethics legislation out there, while at the same time attacking Bilbray for his lobbying work. Republican Brian Bilbray focused his campaign on a hard-right message of cracking down on illegal immigrants.

Surprisingly, neither message worked. In an open-ended question, less than 4% of voters cited Republican corruption as a reason for voting for Busby. Similarly, Bilbray voters did not believe that Bilbray had the ability to divert from the Bush agenda and crack down on illegal immigrants. In fact, both candidates were largely undefined to the electorate, despite a highly agitated voter pool seeking change. While there was high Democratic turnout, Busby lost because independent voters did not believe that she could deliver on her policy promises and did not believe she was substantially more ethical than Bilbray. So, in large numbers, they either stayed home or voted for third party candidates.

Busby's lack of definition as a candidate and lack of message credibility allowed Bilbray to solidify his voter base, even though that base evidenced a substantial amount of dissatisfaction with the Republican Party and President Bush.

Lessons for Candidates Around the Country

The obvious problem with Busby's messaging was that she dodged Iraq as though it were a bullet aimed at her head. According to all available polling information, Iraq is consistently the number one issue on voters' minds. The absence of Iraq as an issue in the campaign is one likely reason why turnout was so low in CA-50. This in contrast to record breaking turnout in the Connecticut primary, in which messaging strategy did focus on the war. To the extent Busby discussed the situation in Iraq, it was in the context of a vague withdrawal plan rather than as a challenge to Bush and Republican war strategy.

In our research, we asked respondents in California's 50th a series of questions about Iraq and the political impact of the war situation. The findings were stunning, and reveal a deep split in the Republican base vote.

– 63% of Republican voters believe that Bush has made some or a lot of mistakes in Iraq.

– 34% of Republican voters believe that Bush has definitely or probably not told the truth about the situation in Iraq.

– 34% of Republican voters believe that Bush should probably or definitely be held accountable for the situation in Iraq.

– 40% of Republican voters believe that the Democratic Party is more likely to hold Bush accountable for mistakes in Iraq.

While the country is open to the idea of partial or total troop withdrawal, according to our data in CA-50 existing withdrawal messaging loses badly to Republican `cut and run' counter-attack messaging. This suggests that voters are seeking a set of actors in Congress who will tell the truth about the war and hold Bush accountable for mistakes. This is in contrast to an immediate end to the conflict and /or yet another withdrawal plan that Congress cannot enact. Voters intuitively understand that Congress doesn't run the military, and that regardless of the outcome of the 2006 election, Bush will be in charge of the military until 2009. As such, framing the election as a choice between rival Congressional military plans sacrifices the credibility of Democratic candidates who can only legitimately promise to hold hearings, restore congressional oversight of military matters, locate and identify blame, and serve as a check on a widely disliked and distrusted President.

Recommendations

Candidates should run aggressively on accountability and the war in Iraq. Here are six specific `rules of thumb' we recommend you use for planning purposes.

Iraq must be central in your campaign and you must blame Republicans for it Ignoring Iraq, downplaying its significance, or accepting Bush's framework by not blaming leaders is a sign to voters that you are weak, unlikely to bring change, and not addressing the main issue of the day. Regardless of how you approach the policy going forward in Iraq, the key trait that voters seek is a willingness to hold failed leaders accountable for the debacle. Be willing to uncover the truth, place blame, and demand consequences.

1. The debate on whether Bush is a competent, trustworthy President is over. He is considered among Republicans, Democrats, and Independents a leader who makes mistakes and then won't tell the truth about those mistakes. This is not about competence. This is about massive failure of leadership with no end in sight.

2. Republicans cannot run against Bush and Iraq. Voters do not think that Republicans are willing to hold Bush or other administration figures accountable for those mistakes, so Republican Congressional dissent on the war is unlikely to help Republicans. But dissent will, in fact, work to Democratic candidates' advantage. It shows strength and, most importantly, principle and personal values.

3. `Terrorism' scares only work in the absence of strong accountability messaging, since Republicans are no longer trustworthy on issues of war and peace. Voters know Republicans will let mistakes slide and they want accountability in the face of that.

4. Oversight beats withdrawal. Journalists or other messengers who frame politics in terms of a need to have an alternative plan in contrast to Bush are insulting voters, and should be taken to task aggressively for framing false choices and misrepresenting the role of Congress. Congress primarily serves as military oversight, not military policy. Voters know that.

5. Pick a fight, any fight. Voters need to be convinced that Democrats can credibly challenge Bush. Whether the fight is over de-funding Cheney's personal staff, attacking John Bolton's confirmation, impeachment hearings, or stopping war profiteering with a new `Truman Commission', Democratic candidates must demonstrate strength through aggressive confrontation where the term "accountability" is more than just an abstraction or corporate lingo. It must be made real through a fight you plan to pick.

6. When presented with squeals from journalists and Republicans over your fight, a resolute willingness to not back off in the face of criticism is key. Your willingness to hold Bush accountable must be made real. For example, demand that the president and the party in power come to account for having squandered lives, security and treasure while enriching CEOs of major corporations such as Halliburton.

Here's a real-world example of this dynamic from US history: Harry Truman became vice president because as a US Senator, he had the backbone to demand that major figures in the American economy either give back money stolen in the provision of shoddy materiel for World War II, or go to jail for treason. In sum, whatever fights you pick, whether specific local issues or national ones, our poll shows that accountability regarding Bush, Congressional Republicans and your opponent is crucial to building the credibility you need in order to break through with a majority vote in November. Democrats, Independents and even many Republicans want this to occur. Do it.

Thinking outside the box on Proposition 13.

I have an idea that I’ve been kicking around for years — I don’t think it was entirely my idea, originally, but I’ve honestly forgotten where I first got it from — that perhaps could cut the Gordian knot of the California budget process.  I suspect it would have to be passed through an initiative process (because of the supermajority thing in the leg), and the actual numbers to balance the budget would need to be filled in by some very talented finance folks.

If you’re curious, read the full post.  And let me know what you think.

I posted about this in comments on a (somewhat wingnutty) diary about Prop 86.  I am probably going to vote for the tobacco tax, but I have to admit that I dislike our habit, in California, of tying specific revenue streams to specific programs.

JSW points out (rightly) that the reason we do this (and indeed, the reason I’ll vote for 86) is that we can’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.  A sane tax structure is not on the table, in California, because of Prop 13 and the huge supermajority requirement to do anything serious to reform the tax code.

So.  How about we abolish property taxes entirely?  That would make Prop 13 a dead letter.  We can replace the revenue stream with a zoning-based land tax (a low per-sqft rate on residences, a small credit for maintaining inspected public green space, and a higher rate for commercial and industrial space) plus a fairly steep real-estate capital-gains tax (to discourage speculation and capture the state’s share of the increase in value of the state’s land — land increases in value because of the society around it, not because of anything inherent to the soil! — which previously was captured through periodic assessment for property taxes).

This change would need to be phased in (having the property tax base rate continuing to rise at the Prop 13 rate, but with a falling multiplier discounting it away, while the new taxes were phased in at the same linear rate, and with the multipliers for the two tax systems always adding up to 100%).  This perhaps should be done over as much as 30 years (the life of a typical mortgage).  The point is to avoid creating windfall profits and losses, like Prop 13 did — it gave a huge benefit to older people who already owned homes, and disadvantaged younger people who wanted to buy later.  It continues to operate as a punishment to families that want to move, or that are first-time home-buyers.  If you’ve bought a house in CA since the early ’80s, you’re a victim of Prop 13, not a beneficiary.  Possibly you could do the phase-in somewhat faster, maybe as little as ten years.  In any ten-year period, there’s very likely to be a period where advantageous refinancing is available (due to standard cycles in interest rates), and that probably will help people deal with any change in expectations about the cash flows associated with real estate ownership.  In any case, as I said to begin with, there are details to nail down.

I haven’t ever applied any sort of rigorous legal or financial analysis to this.  But I figure, maybe it’s time I try to get it in front of people who actually know more about the tax code.  Any takers?

One Great CA Assembly Candidate Keeping It Rural

I just love talking about Rob Haswell cause here is one candidate who has never run before and who’s running one of the most energized and smartest campaigns in the Lake Tahoe area.

In case you haven’t heard about Rob Haswell yet, and considering we’re mostly talking about congressional and gubernatorial campaigns you probably haven’t, he’s running in California’s open (!) 4th Assembly district which ranges from the suburbs of Sacramento up to Lake Tahoe. The district mostly overlapses with the 4th Congressional district represented by Abramoff buddy John Doolittle. Running against Doolittle is fighting Dem Charlie Brown.

A couple of days ago I also talked about Rob in my post The Modern Campaign.

Rob Haswell’s Republican opponent Ted Gaines is proud of his connection with Abramoff buddy John Doolittle as becomes apparent from his endorsement list and his photo page.

Recently, Carlos Alcala of the Sacramento Bee has also taken notice:

Placer-grown rivalry: Assembly candidate Rob Haswell scheduled some recent events with the theme of preserving open space and boosting local agriculture. Promoting his Loomis “Keep it Rural” rally, Haswell backers noted his family has been in Placer for five generations. It started with great-great-grandfather Frederick Birdsall, who came to Auburn in the 1870s and started an olive oil company that was family-run until the 1970s. (Street Whys mentioned this stuff in June, because some Auburn streets are named for Birdsalls.) We like Haswell’s rural and ag focus, but we have to point out that his opponent in the race has deep Placer ag roots, too. County Supervisor Ted Gaines’ great-great-grandfather was James William Kaseberg, who showed up in these parts in the 1850s or 1860s. He amassed up to 50,000 acres stretching from Roseville to the Sacramento River, and raised wheat, among other products. Roseville has a school, drive and park named Kaseberg. … One could see the Assembly race as a Wild West duel of farm histories, but we prefer a more peaceful scenario: Imagine that at some point in Placer’s past, someone sat down to eat and dipped bread made from Kaseberg wheat into Birdsall’s Aeolia Olive Oil.

That olive oil story is great and here is what Rob has to say about the “rural” background of Ted Haines:

My opponent, developer-backed Ted Gaines, also comes from deep agricultural roots in the county. Although we are both 5th Generation, we have come to very different conclusions about what the future of our region should look like. This race will be about those competing visions.

It’s fantastic to see a candidate take real interest in local issues and think about what’s best for the future. Rob Haswell’s support of PlacerGROWN is a great example. Encouraging people to buy local produce has several advantages: it’s good for the environment, it safes energy resources, it supports and creates employment in the area and of course the produce is always fresh.

Help Turn Tahoe Blue by contributing to Assembly candidate Rob Haswell!

This is an edited version of a post on my local blog Turn Tahoe Blue.

CA-Gov: Phil’s economic policy speech

I’ve posted an edited version of the speech he gave in SF yesterday.  It’s not well edited and jumps at random points.  I ttried to catch the best points, but frequently missed some good stuff.  So, if you have a better video of the speech either in SF or LA, let me know.  We’ll post that and take this one down. You can get a lot more information on his Middle Class Tax Cut plan and other fiscal policy details at his site here.

Angelides News Digest, Wednesday August 16, 2006

Some excellent news: Dan Weintraub at the Bee thinks we’re starting to get traction with the message that after running as a moderate, then pushing the Bush agenda, Arnie can’t be trusted.

But today’s top news, clearly, is the new detailed economic plan.  It looks like Phil may have caught Arnie’s team off-guard, because their reactive, same-old same-old response pretty much just recycled their talking points, with the dishonest, ever-inflating estimate of the cost of Phil’s plans.  (First $5B, then $10B, now $18B…  It’s sort of like McCarthy’s ever-shifting number of confirmed communists in the State Department.)  Combined with the other structural factors in play, the news coverage is beginning to get the message that no, Arnie is not a sure winner.  And despite his bully pulpit as incumbent, he’s lost control of the narrative.

More on the tax plan, global warming, special-interest hypocrisy, and other news, after the jump…

Phil’s plan on taxes resembles, I think, the successful progressive tax package that was pushed through in Virginia under Mark Warner (who presided over a shift from deficit to surplus, and left office with a 70% to 80% approval rating, depending on which poll you pick), and of course to Bill Clinton’s federal package.  I still think the question Republicans need to answer is:  Why would paying ’90s era taxes somehow cause businesses to flee California, when they flocked here in the ’90s, trying to get rich (many quite successfully)?

Phil has continued to promote AB 32, the sensible, economically viable plan for addressing global warming, and the bill is making headlines.  The LA Times provides an excellent write-up on the state of play, and has weighed in against Arnie’s attempts to water down the bill by shifting power over enforcement to his own appointees, and adding a loophole that basically allows businesses to ignore the problem right up until the bill’s deadline, and then get the deadline extended because (surprise, surprise!) the standards can’t be met.  As the Times editorial board puts it, the strong version of AB 32 (supported by Angelides) isn’t a worrisome “job killer” like Arnie’s camp says.  The impact of global warming would cost us far more, in losses to our agriculture industry, the health of our citizens, and strain on our already-fragile water infrastructure.  Furthermore, forcing a shift to cleaner energy will probably create jobs due to the new technologies that will be developed, and the new companies that will be founded to commercialize them.

Industries always fight new regulations, no matter how reasonable.  If our representatives in the government stick to their guns, the industries meet the standards, and make money doing so.  This has happened with auto milage standards, with all kinds of emissions standards, with the banning of CFCs…  So why do people buy this nonsense from lobbyists working for companies too lazy to innovate?

Changing topics entirely: So, we all pretty much know that the Bush call to deploy the National Guard to the border, at a time when they’re already stretched thin (many personnel are in Iraq or Afghanistan, and what equipment is left has gotten run down thanks to Rummy trying to run a war on the cheap), is merely a sop to the right-wing base.  And we all know Arnie has flip-flopped on his attitude towards all this, first praising anything that keeps out the plague of illegals (including vigilantes), then reversing course when he realized he couldn’t win if he riled up the legal immigrants who vote (especially Latinos).  In order to make sure the Guard continues to have any personnel at all to respond to state crises, we’re now having to offer enticements and signing bonuses, just as the Army is doing.  I found this bit just too rich:

Angelides, if elected governor, vows to support waiving college fees for Guard members, ensuring that members have health insurance, allowing up to 12 weeks of unpaid family leave to spouses of activated members, and offering tax credits of up to $2,500 to small businesses that pay their Guard employees while on active duty. His published plan does not estimate costs for such proposals or suggest a financing plan.

Schwarzenegger also has been currying favor with soldiers.

On Thursday, the Republican governor announced creation of a Governors Advisory Council on Military Affairs to help coordinate policy and form partnerships or programs to serve military personnel.

So, let’s see…  We’re drawing an equivalence between actual, detailed proposals for education and financial benefits for men and women who offer their service to California and the USA, and an “advisory council” that will “help coordinate policy and form partnerships or programs”.  Is anyone reminded of “weapons of mass destruction program related activities”?  And how is offering education and financing — in the spirit of the G.I. bill — “currying favor”, as opposed to “good policy based on historical precedent”?

We also got yet another reminder this week that Arnie’s attacks on special intersts in ’03 were hypocritical.  The money rolls in, the favors roll out, just like said.  Strangely, though, most of the people receiving the money, and giving the favors, have an “R” after their name.  And one of them sits in the Governor’s office.

Tossing out yet another issue that is going unaddressed while an Actor plays governor on TV, the SF online alternative news source BeyondChron points out that, while Gavin Newsom has been making some progress with the Care Not Cash program (which builds on some of the more successful ideas from the Clinton-Gingrich welfare reform compromise), homelessness has completely dropped off the radar of the state and federal government.  What was that about compassionate conservatism?

Lastly, just for the heck of it, here’s a picture-heavy writeup of last Friday’s rally.  Yes, we had as much fun as it looks like.

Late-breaking addition: Equal-Opportunity Offender Arnie Insults LA Muslim Community.  Ah, the wonders of that GOP big tent

CA-Gov: DiFi’s speech introducing Phil

DiFi gave a great speech here in SF.  She talked about all the great things that Phil’s done for the state both while he was CDP Chair, as Treasurer and as a businessman.  She gave the crowd a lot of reason to be excited for the main course of Phil’s speech.  She discussed Phil’s help in getting both her and Barbara Boxer elected.  She also discussed his commitment to the State and the hard-working people in it.  But don’t trust me, watch the video!

New Commercials on AB 32, global warming emissions

Environmental Defense and the NRDC have released a website and new ad on AB 32 and SB 1368.  The ad directly attacks an earlier ad by the “Competitive Enterprise Institute” that alleges that CO2 is merely a byproduct of life and or our Wonderful technology.  “Imagine if they succeed in labelling CO2 a pollutant.” 

Both ads are in the extended.

First the NRDC/ED ad:

Now the CEI’s patently absurd ad:

California Blog Roundup for August 16, 2006

Today’s California Blog Roundup is on the flip. Teasers: Phil Angelides, Arnold Schwarzenegger, CA-11, CA-04, John Doolittle, Richard Pombo, Republican corruption, Proposition 87, Proposition 89, redistricting, term limits, health care.

Governor’s Race

Jerry McNerney / Paid-For Pombo / CA-11

Charlie Brown / 15% Doolittle / CA-04

Other Republican Paragons

Health Care

Propositions

Goo-Goo Stuff

  • OK, here’s the deal. Redistricting lives for now, but won’t be combined with term limit reform.
  • The Mad Professah on the 2001 redistricting deal and reforming it. Have a read, but remind yourself that anything involving spending requires a 2/3 majority, so a gerrymander into a simple majority is nice, but not ideal.
  • Cathy Feng from Common Cause on redistricting. If people want to redistrict the state in some nonpartisan way, that’s fine (subject to endless caveats about the way it’s done), but for California to redistrict Congressional districts that way when Texas doesn’t is just stupid unilateral disarmament.
  • Oh, and term limits? Basically useless for anything except putting control of government in the hands of staff and lobbyists.

The Rest