Calitics as a platform

Hey there people.  I generally try to avoid substantial meta talk on the front page, but here goes.  In the future, I’d like to see Calitics turn into more of a platform with a series of “blogs” with their own RSS feed and their own diaries.  Right now, I’m thinking that they’d be regionally focused, but that could change. I’d like Calitics to become the one-stop shop for local and state politics in California.  I think it benefits everybody in the California blogosphere to have one place where anybody can come to blog about all of our politics.

So, now, pacified of SoapBlox has said that he can make an RSS feed come from any tag.  So, say you want to do a blog about California’s fourth Congressional district, you could tag it CA-04, and/or John Doolittle, and you have an instant blog.  You’ll be able to distribute the address of the CA-04 blog and the feed.  You’ll also be able to post items to the front page of Calitics.  Once we get the new code up, I’ll do a redesign of the site to highlight these new themed blogs.

There will be some details to work out.  However, if you are interested in having a Calitics blog for any particular subject, regional or otherwise, let me know.  Thanks for participating in Calitics and the development of the nascent California blogosphere!

Chuck DeVore: California’s Santorum

One of the first items of business for the California legislature upon being sworn in yesterday was to reintroduce the gay marriage legalization bill which passed through both houses last year, only to be vetoed by the Governor.  Writing on the OC Blog, Assemblyman Chuck DeVore decided to add a new argument to the gay marriage debate: it would embolden NAMBLA!

Mr. (Mark) Leno’s bill hopelessly blurs the line of traditional marriage to the point that under the equal protection provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied to the First Amendment, we might see a devout Saudi Arabian immigrant suing under religious discrimination reasons to allow him to have four wives in California.  Or, we could see NAMBLA (North American Man-Boy Love Association) suing to lower the age of consent to allow relationships between adult males and boys.  After all, if marriage is no longer marriage, then anything goes.  I do not dispute that two people can love each other and care for each other, but marriage has been defined by thousands of years of tradition and experience.  The Legislature ought not to take a step down this slippery slope.

This is the man-on-dog, man-on-box turtle, slippery-slope, “please save me from marrying my pet” argument made popular by noted maniac Rick Santorum.  The idea that homosexuals are essentially on the same side of the dividing line as child molestors is outrageous.  The only people who seem to think deeply about how “anything goes” if gay marriage were to be allowed are conservative legislators.  Exactly what is it in their makeup that makes them so afraid of their capacity to be perverse?  Hmm, maybe I’ve answered my own question.

more on the flip…

The truth is that the world is coming to an understanding that two people who love one another should be accorded all the abilities to publicly express that love, as well as the social and financial benefits therein.

Last month, South Africa joined the Netherlands, Belgium, Canada and Spain in opening civil marriage to same-sex couples, allowing them equal economic benefits, legal rights and social status as families. The law, passed by an astounding 230-41 margin in Parliament, was in response to an equally notable unanimous decision last year by the South African Constitutional Court. It ruled that the post-apartheid constitution ensures the dignity and equality of all people – and that includes lesbian and gay couples wishing to affirm their love and commitment through civil marriage.

Days afterward, when faced with five Israeli lesbian and gay couples who had married in Canada, Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that the government is required to officially register them as they would any other foreign marriage […]

Denmark in 1989 became the first nation to legally recognize same-sex relationships, and Norway, Sweden, Iceland and Finland swiftly followed that lead. Much of Europe, including France, Germany, Portugal and Hungary, now recognizes same-sex partnerships for a range of purposes, including inheritance, property and social-benefits rights. Countries in formerly communist blocs – the Czech Republic and Slovenia – recognize partnerships, and Croatia has extended some economic benefits to same-sex couples.

In September, the Senate in Uruguay voted 25 to 2 to pass a broad partnership law, positioning that country to be the first Latin American nation to extend legal rights when it is passed by the full legislature. New Zealand’s and Australia’s domestic partnership laws allow some of the most important benefits, such as immigration, inheritance and property rights. The government in Taiwan suggested a bill allowing same-sex marriage, though nothing has yet come of it. In Brazil, Argentina, Italy and Switzerland, some economic and legal rights have been extended by city and regional authorities. Just last month, Mexico City broke ground as the first government entity in that country to recognize same-sex civil unions.

Our Puritan heritage means that we’ll still have homophobes like Chuck DeVore trying to hold back the global tide of recognition for same-sex couples.  But, as Martin Luther King once said, the long arc of history bends toward justice.

Think the fundraising stops after the election? Think again.

Arnie, the man who said he didn’t need any money from special interests because he already has as much money as he could ever want, is still raising money from special interests, to fund his travel, a ridiculously lavish inaugural ball, etc.  Campaign’s over, he’s going to be termed out, but the fundraising machine has a life of its own.

Yet another reason we need clean money.  When is the general public going to notice that its right to self-government has been subjected to competitive bidding?

We need a candidate for CA-41

(It’s true. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

I’m hearing rumors from two directions now that the recently-reelected Jerry Lewis from CA-41 will be stepping down soon and we need to prepare for a special election. Regardless of whether the rumors are true, we DO need to prepare a candidate to take this position. If he doesn’t resign, there is a good chance he will be indicted and the position will become open anyway.

Any ideas? A Draft (somebody) movement?

Sorry for the short “diary”, but I did want to get this started before we are caught unprepared.

Moving beyond the Democratic Blogs

I’ve gotten into chats with a few people here who are looking for other ways to reach beyond the “netroots” and into their local communities.  LTEs always come up, as do local protests and gatherings.  One thing that I (and I’m sure a lot of other people) are doing is using the small local media as your own megaphone via their blogs.  Someone recently asked me to write this up, so here goes…

Though I’m currently living in Oakland, CA, I hail from the no-longer-so-small-town of Bakersfield.  (In case anyone is worried about me being outed, my name is Tom Webster.  There.)  While it’s all well and good talking to you folks here in Oakland or on dKos, I’ve spent a considerable amount of time talking to my fellow Bako folk over the last six months on the local paper’s blog.  Your local paper probably has one of these as well.  You can check now.  I’ll wait for you on the other side of the break.

Hi there.  Did they have one?  Cool.  If so, sign up.  Start talking. And not just about politics.  Just as we have C&J, your local paper is going to have discussions on all sorts of things locally and nationally.  Enjoy it.  Sure you’ll have political discussions, but you’ll also talk about your family, your friends, your jobs, etc.  And you do it with people you’ll never meet here.  You’ll also be talking either directly or indirectly to everyone on the newspaper staff.  You’ll develop relationships with them.  They’ll read your take on the news and the stuff you link to because they know you.  This brings me to a very important point:

DON’T LIE.

Seriously, how quickly do we sniff out trolls here in a community of 100,000?  Most of these local papers will have 10-30 regular contributors.  Be honest.  Don’t pretend to live in your hometown if you don’t.  Don’t pretend to know about stuff you don’t.  Be honest and humble and introduce yourself. 

This brings me to my next point:

DON’T BE A TROLL.

Just as all ya’ll were not waiting for my ample wisdom here, they are not waiting for yours there.  You will be dealing with people who don’t follow politics all the time.  Certainly not in the way we do here.  Don’t be shocked when people aren’t sure about the possible ramifications of Dudley’s nomination.  Or the evils of the MCA.  Don’t try to wind it into every discussion.  If you’re up to the challenge, you’re building a nation-wide network of knowledgeable reporters who may fact check with you or may start to question their own assumptions before they go to press.

Last important point:

DON’T DO THIS JUST FOR THESE REASONS.

I feel like I’ve made some good friends in Bakersfield.  There are plenty of people I agree with and plenty more I don’t.  But I’m not there just to move the political debate.  If you are, more power to you.  But in order to build the kinds of relationships you’ll need to really make a go of working on the local media, you’ll need to commit to them in the way that you’ll be asking people to commit to the Democratic Party.

The No Party

Cross-posted from Ruck Pad

There are many structural reasons why the California legislature is dysfunctional. One of them is the 2/3rds requirement to pass the budget. While, the Democrats do have a strong majority in both houses, they must pull along a few Republicans every year. There were no seats that changed hands this year. The only notable balance change comes from the Republicans dumping their Assembly leader. They picked a legislator who is more likely to say the California Republicans’ favorite word “no” when it comes to the budget and other bills.

Villines, an articulate former owner of a PR firm, appealed to fellow Republicans because of his promise to stand up for them – not only to Democrats but also to the centrist GOP governor.

And that has both the governor’s office and Democratic leaders worried.

The Kumbaya bipartisanship that defined this year’s legislative session and resulted in the eye-popping enactment of hefty bills – a rare on-time budget, record infrastructure bonds, a minimum wage hike, the nation’s first attack on global warming – could fade into history, a very brief chapter.

Indeed, Villines did not vote for any of those bills.

“What concerns me,” says Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los Angeles), “is that [Villines] may have an ideological swerve that gets in the way of addressing things in a bipartisan fashion.

This is all fear of what might happen, but it is pretty clear that the legislators, not the Republican voters were unhappy with what transpired last cycle.

“The Republicans basically are defying the entire way the governor has done his bipartisanship,” one GOP insider says. “The way he got those bipartisan deals was to ignore or abuse Republicans. They’re not going to be taken advantage of next year. Plescia rolled too easy.

“If the cost of sitting in the smoking tent and having a cigar with Arnold is selling out your caucus, it’s a cost not worth paying.”

In many ways the California Republicans are talking like progressive bloggers were when we were in the minority. They want them to take a stand and hold the line, using what ever tactics are available to them as the minority party. The difference being that the legislation that the governor and the legislature passed were pretty mainstream. That was not the case with much that the US Congress has done in recent years.

If the Republican Party wants to isolate themselves even more, they will stymie the legislature and Arnold. They can take former Assemblyman Dennis Mountjoy’s dead on crack to the extreme: “I’m not a lawmaker. I’m a Republican assemblyman.” Becoming the no party may make them feel good, but serious problems like the structural budget deficit will not get addressed. There would absolutely be no shot at redistricting (which they would love to have for the opportunity grab more power). Their support base will shrink along with their approval numbers.

California has a number of serious pressing problems and the Republicans have the power to keep the status quo. It is up to them. The Democratic legislature is not going to change. It seems like the 2005 version of Arnold is sticking around. They can lay at the base of a ruck, obstructing clean ball, but they may get raked. And let me tell you, getting stomped on with metal cleats hurts.

[Update] Check out the very smart media strategy that Nunez is using to describe potential obstructionist activities by Republicans.  He is framing it as out of the mainstream of the Republican party.  He has a point.  91% of Republicans voted for Schwarzenegger.  He has a high approval rating within his party.  They like what he is doing.

Núñez said he was committed to maintaining the bipartisan spirit he enjoyed with the governor last year and urged Republican lawmakers to join them. He noted that Schwarzenegger, despite agreeing with Democrats on a number of high-profile issues, still managed to win a huge share of the Republican vote on Nov. 7.

“Why? Because Republican like bipartisan cooperation.”

New Mathematical Dynamics for Next California Redistricting

At the California Progress Report, there is a back and forth on redistricting between Bill Cavala and Frank Russo that seems to be a good summary of the dynamics in the current redistricting debate in Sacramento. Even better might be a recent online poll at the CA Majority Report  which needed but one sentence to highlight the underlying assumptions made by the Democratic Party establishment, asking, “Should CA Democrats back redistricting, even if it means possibly losing majorities in the Capitol?”

But is this a false dichotomy construed from assumptions that have lost relevance, or at least primacy?

In the last redisticting, Democrats ratcheted back on the Phil Burton model with an incumbent protection plan that has resulted in the current stalemate in California, where a single district changing hands is seen as a major occurrence.

In 2006, this “truce” allowed the GOP to retain CA-04, CA-41, and CA-50 — despite outrageous corruption on the part of GOP incumbents. In 2008, for the first time with the current lines, there will be neither a gubernatorial nor senate race to drive GOTV. The lack of competitive congressional and legislative seats could force the Democratic Party presidential nominee to invest in California’s obscenely expensive political economy.

Politics in the next decade will be far different from the Davis/Schwarzenegger years and considering redistricting based on recent history could trap Democrats with a Maginot Line strategy, failing to prepare us for the ramifications of the political transition that has already taken place.

Technology, Geography, & Biological Systems

Our first glimpse of what we will see the next decade actually occurred prior to the last re-districting. In his 2000 presidential campaign, Senator John McCain raised a then-startling $4 million within 48 hours of announcing. While the internet was given the credit, it was primarily telephone contributions that made it an event. Still, technology had circumvented geographic distance.

Since then, the entry barriers to bridging distance have decreased dramatically. Cell phones (many with free evening and weekend long distance) have become ubiquitous. VOIP offers free long distance calls to anyone with a high speed internet connection. The daily use of email has become a social norm. And by the next election a majority of voters will have a minimum of SMS capability via cell phone, with many enjoying the full benefits of the interent — everywhere they go.

In a very important post, Stirling Newberry examines this transition from a mathematical perspective:

A Lévy flight is a random walk where the size of the steps has an infinite variation – they can be small, and tend to be, but there is no limit to how large they can become, and while large steps get smaller and smaller in frequency, they never die out – and where the amount of time between steps is not related to distance. This is the property known as having a heavy tail, and many mathematicians distinguish flights from walks by saying that walks have steps whose time taken is in proportion to the distance travelled. […]

My own interest in Levy flight behavior was sparked at the age of 9, when I noticed that in the north field, plants of a given kind were found in clusters. The pattern implied a mathematics, but mathematics implied something underneath. It would be a long time later that I would understand that there is a locative relationship involved in selection -closer clusters select for individuals with better intra-species competition, that is selfish and sexual signally behavior – while long jump individuals have better inter-species competition. When you are with neighbors of the same kind, holding off the others is easier, but your neighbors are also your competitors for everything including the attention of bees. Alone, you have the grasses and other competitors of other species. This implies that the balance of inter/intra species competition will be influenced by the long jump strategy a species has.[…]

The features of Lévy flight distribution show up with a vengeance with the advent social networking software, because the internet and personal telecom facilitate the “long jumps” needed to create a Levy flight distribution. thus allowing insurgencies to metastasize whether cultural or military – the long jumps radically reduce the distance between two nodes, and the cost of a long jump determines the cohesiveness of the clusters. The cheaper the jump, the greater the cohesion. A random “walk” means that the amount of time for a given move is proportional to distance, a “flight” on the other hand means that all steps take the same amount of time. A “random flight” down Wall Street comes to different conclusions than a random walk – something which Bouchard and Potters detail in their useful text on financial risk and drivative pricing.

As political moves lose proportionality to distance, a geographic emphasis on political campaigning loses efficiency. In other words, the most effective path of influencing a single voter can’t be assumed to be contained within the confines of the district.

Take for instance Charlie Brown’s campaign against Congressman John Doolittle in California’s fourth congressional district. In addition to driving the narrative and volunteers, bloggers raised over $60,000 for Brown via ActBlue. One of the primary sources bloggers relied upon for daily information on the race was a blog named Turn Tahoe Blue. This critical blog is written by a gentleman who lives in….Mannheim, Germany.

Sven chose Tahoe because — I’m not making this up — he was a high school exchange student near Tahoe a decade ago. His introductory post declared:

Since I am not a U.S. citizen and I do not live in the United States I won’t be able to contribute to the efforts of Democrats in the Lake Tahoe area running for office this year. All I have is my laptop and this blog and I will do my best to Turn Tahoe Blue this election year.

Understanding this dynamic is critical to realizing why the 50 State Strategy increases Democratic performance in crucial districts by exciting and inspiring Democrats everywhere.

While most consultants agree that the most effective way to turn out a low-propensity voter is via somebody they know and respect asking them to vote, many still cling to the mistaken assumption that the conduit will live in the same district, or at least another targeted district.

But browse through the “Recent Call” list on your cell phone and I doubt that you will only see people who reside in your assembly district.

While history should be used as a guide, the last half century of redistricting history are less illustrative of what lies ahead than looking at similar periods of transition. Stirling suggests:

Recognizing this – that we are moving from a “random walk” world to a “random flight” world – leads us to look back at other times when there were similar transitions. The printing press in Europe is a well worn example, as is the age of discovery. The late Roman Republic failed to deal with the shift from walk driven Italy politics, to flight driven military and political dynamics that came from being masters of the inland sea.

The expectation of random walk versus the reality of random flight which often causes mismatches and anomalies. Random flights often can send cascades of letters to a congressmen where only a few were expected. Mistaking random flight behavior for random walk behavior leads people to look for conspiracies, because a random flight move is so far out of their normal expectations, that it seems to be produced by design.

That is where disaster lies for the California Democratic Party establishment, a continued inability to diagnose non-geographically bound dynamics prevents a 58 County Strategy despite the fact that such an approach would benefit Democrats no matter how the next lines are drawn.

Moreover, the lack of competitiveness in California provides a severe disincentive to innovate. This has resulted in California no longer leading the nation in campaign tactics.

The lessons the internet has provided in the last few years demonstrate the dynamics that Democrats will face during the next decade:

Internet politics is in the business of joining tight clusters of activity with long leaps that join them – getting people upset with Lieberman and people upset with Conrad Burns to see themselves as part of the same moment – and moving resources rapidly to the point where they will do the most good. “Top Down” and “Bottom Up” structures both want to restrict most people to normal and slow distributions, where, like sheep, they stay in the same places. Lévy flight distribution overturns the entire random walk of equal steps paradigm of social normalcy and organization, whether the space traversed is physical or political.

So, in summary, Paul Pierre Lévy gave us many tools to think about the world, he, and those tools, are only now becoming known, but once an individual has a feel for their signature, they look at the world differently. Suddenly patterns which seem random or coincidental become joined by how the long jump and short cluster relate to each other, finding a game theory matrix where the two forms are joined by some common trade off – the choice that the jumpers make is the opposite of the choice the clusterers make. Since Lévy flights are “natural” in the sense that natural processes result in Lévy distrubtions, and human beings participate in this because we too, are natural, there is no reason to be biased against them in our social organization or legal system, except, of course, that some interests benefit from having people bound all up in close clusters, or by walks rather than taking flight on distributive wings.

Until Democrats realize that progress is in our interests, the incumbency protection paradigm will dominate Sacramento. Redistricting offers an opportunity to force the Democratic Establishment to begin running 21st century campaigns. In fact, it may be the best hope.