$1.2 million for Dirty Tricks

They are getting closer to having enough money to pay for all of the signature gatherers.  The $600k they announced earlier would not get it done.  They have raised a total of $1.2 million.  They will need at least $2 million to pay for the signatures to be collected.  Politico is the only one with the story thus far, so regretfully I link:

Backers of a California ballot initiative that would drastically increase Republican chances of retaining the White House in 2008 have raised $1.2 million, including $316,000 in eight days this month – and supporters say they’re on pace to qualify for the vote in June.

The group, California Counts – Make Your Vote Count!, reported Tuesday it had raked in $855,000, mostly from a handful of huge contributions, according to a filing with the California Secretary of State’s office.

That doesn’t include $350,000 in contributions which are either below the reporting threshold of $5,000 or which arrived in the past week, campaign manager Dave Gilliard said.

Contributions above $5k have to be reported to the Secretary of State’s office within 10 days.

They are expected to turn in the signatures by the 29th.  Then the SoS will do a random test of the signatures to estimate how many are valid.  If they pass that test then it goes to the ballot.  If it fails, then they will do a manual count.

My state Democratic Party is afraid of its own shadow.

(from my DailyKos diary this morning–it’s important for me to try to bring CA issues to the national spotlight.)

And by that, I refer to the California Democratic Party.

As you may know by now, the resolution authored by progressive activists to censure Senator Dianne Feinstein was not heard by the CDP Resolutions Committee.  If you read my previous diary on the subject, you’ll realize just how contentious this issue was, and that the end result was exactly as expected.

There will be a lot of complaints about the result, and understandably so.  Nevertheless, an official censure is a huge step, and the end result is no surprise, given the momentous nature of the struggle in question.

But I’d like to share another story with you that might even better exemplify just how much change and reform we still need in the California Democratic Party, as well as give you some insight into how the party machinery works.

It all starts with a news item you may or may not be familiar with: the Speaker of the California State Assembly, Democrat Fabian Nunez, came under fire last month for reports of using campaign funds to pay for lavish expenses at luxurious destinations in Europe and California:

The spending, listed in mandatory filings with the state, includes $47,412 on United, Lufthansa and Air France airlines this year; $8,745 at the exclusive Hotel Arts in Barcelona, Spain; $5,149 for a “meeting” at Cave L’Avant Garde, a wine seller in the Bordeaux region of France; a total of $2,562 for two “office expenses” at Vuitton, two years apart; and $1,795 for a “meeting” at Le Grand Colbert, a venerable Parisian restaurant.

You know, the type of thing that it’s really, really hard to justify using a campaign account, even if you’re Steve Maviglio from Speaker Nunez’ office (whose previous foibles I have mentioned before).

I, and many other activists, were disturbed at these reports–though admittedly, even more disturbed by Speaker Nunez’ claims to be “middle-class”:

There’s not too big a difference,” he said, “between how I live and how most middle-class people live.”

Because I can tell you, I’m racking up those $10,000 hotel bills at luxury resorts in Europe all the time!  It’s just part of the middle-class lifestyle.

Regardless, I decided submit a resolution concerning transparency for travel expenses to the Resolutions Committee for consideration at the Executive Board meeting in Anaheim this weekend.  Now, originally, I wrote my resolution specifically calling for Speaker Nunez to fully account for the legislative or fact-finding purpose behind his travel expenses.  I was assured, however, that such a targeted resolution would have no chance of passing the Resolutions Committee, so I rewrote it to be more general, especially since there have been many, many Republicans who have been guilty of the same type of thing on perhaps a much worse scale in recent years (paging Tom Delay and Jack Abramoff, anyone?), and resolutions are supposed to be statements of “philosophical intent” regardless.  So here’s the text of my resolution:

RESOLUTION CALLING FOR GREATER TRANSPARENCY FOR CAMPAIGN-RELATED TRAVEL EXPENSES

WHEREAS, in recent years, officeholders of both major political parties at both the federal and state levels have been accused of using campaign-paid travel expenses to enrich their personal lifestyles;

And WHEREAS, travel expenses to more exclusive locales paid for by lobbyists or other special interests create the appearance of and possibility for conflicts of interest in the legislative process, especially for officeholders with higher stature in legislative bodies;

And WHEREAS, California law requires that travel expenses for members of the State legislature have a legislative purpose;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the California Democratic Party, in the interests of accountability, transparency and good governance, calls upon all federal and state legislators to fully disclose the legislative or fact-finding purpose behind all travel and accommodations expenses paid with campaign funds;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Party encourages all federal and state legislators to use campaign funds to pay only for travel and accommodations expenses regarding a transparent, easily understandable legislative or fact-finding purpose, and supports investigations into use of campaign funds that do not meet this criterion.

Now, to my mind, that’s just about as harmless as you can get for a resolution on this issue.  It’s bipartisan, mentions no names, and calls for the easily shared values of transparency, accountability, and good governance.

Apparently, however, the values of transparency, accountability and good governance aren’t shared by certain members of the Resolutions Committee.  Either that, or this resolution was still so dicey for the people at the highest echelons that they couldn’t even take this amount of heat.

Now, I originally got a call on Saturday from my friend Brian Leubitz, founded Calitics and who sits on the Resolutions Committee, that they wanted to insert language into the resolution concerning accountability for the fact that some of Schwarzenegger’s travel expenses were picked up by a nonprofit group.  I told Brian to assure the rest of the Resolutions Committee that I had no objection to inserting “accountability for Arnold” language into the resolution if the main thrust of my language remained unchanged.  But then later that afternoon, this was the text I got back from the Committee:

Whereas, in recent years candidates at the federal and state levels
have been accused of not fully disclosing how they raise and spend
funds and of misusing campaign funds; and

Whereas, in recent years some officeholders have paid for expenses
through the use of non-profit organizations, eliminating virtually all
disclosure of which individuals and interest groups are actually
paying for the expenses of the officeholders; and

Whereas, California and federal finance rules require that expenses
paid with campaign funds have a campaign, governmental, or political
purpose;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the California Democratic Party, in the
interests of accountability, transparency, and good governance,
supports modifications in state and federal law that would require
non-profit organizations who pay for officeholder expenses to fully
disclose the sources and amount of funds the organization has obtained
and the purpose behind all activity paid for by the organizations in a
manner similar to that required for campaign committees; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the California Democratic Party supports
state and federal legislative and regulatory changes to facilitate and
require that candidates and officeholders fully disclose in a
transparent manner the campaign, governmental or political purpose
behind all activity.

Notice a problem here?  Well, I certainly do: All references to travel expenses were excised from the resolution.  I called Brian to tell him that the Resolutions Committee had voided the entire point of my resolution and that I wanted to see the phrase “travel expenses” actually appear in my resolution about travel expenses.

But alas, it was not to be.  The Resolutions Committee took their new anti-Arnold resolution and moved it to the consent calendar.  Now, I wasn’t at the general session of the meeting on Sunday because of work obligations, but I could have still called one of the e-board members I know to have them pull it from the consent calendar for the purposes of amending it according to my specifications, but I decided not to bother, especially since everyone was so preoccupied with Feinstein and the amendments would have likely failed on a floor vote regardless.

The only thing it proves, though, is that when all is said and done, it’s the elected officials that control what the party does, rather than the party trying to keep the elected officials in line with party values.

And this doesn’t just manifest itself in a reticence to acquiesce to large-scale significant actions like censuring Dianne Feinstein.  The craven desire to kowtow to elected officials and not dare to acknowledge their wrongdoing is so pervasive that a resolution whose language focused primarily on a Republican can’t even be passed if it dares to mention an issue on which a prominent Democratic elected official has been lacking.

And that, my friends, is a sad situation that calls for action and reform.  Am I antagonized? Certainly.  But am I forlorn?  Not at all.  (Do I sound like Donald Rumsfeld when I ask rhetorical questions and provide the answers? Yes.  Is it fun? absolutely.)

You see, the worst possible thing we would do is give up and operate on the assumption that the system is impermeable–because it isn’t, and we’ve already made significant strides in California.  But there’s more work to be done.

And let me ask you something: do you know how your state party would act in a similar situation?  If you don’t, why not find out?

And most of all–keep fighting for good governance that’s accountable to the people.

Fighting inequality, starting at the top

(Welcome back Representative! – promoted by Bob Brigham)

We have a problem with our economy. The raw numbers say the economic pie is growing, but the larger pieces are all going to a small minority of Americans — meaning that for most Americans, wages are barely keeping pace with inflation.

We see this rising income inequality clearly in recent IRS data, which show that the share of income going to the wealthiest Americans is the highest it has been since before the Great Depression. To pick but one example of this disturbing trend, last year the average CEO made more in one day than the average worker made over the entire year.

Clearly, it's time to reconnect the economic fortunes of front-line workers to those of their CEO's — who are commonly making making tens of millions of dollars annually — by cutting off tax subsidies for these enormous compensation packages if they are more than 25 times the salary of the lowest paid worker in the company.

When the economy is growing and the only people who are benefiting are the wealthiest among us, we have a problem with our priorities.

When the share of income going to the wealthiest Americans is growing, and the number of people living in poverty is rising as well, we have a problem with our priorities.

When issues like income inequality and poverty are not part of our national political debate, we have a problem with our priorities.

It is time to finally put to rest the ridiculous idea that if we just take care of the wealthy then the rest of the economy will take care of itself. The evidence is overwhelming: it is just not true.

That's why I have introduced new legislation designed to fight income inequality in America starting at the top: by reconnecting the economic fortunes of those in the executive suite with those of their frontline employees.

My bill, the Income Equity Act of 2007, is a simple, common sense piece of legislation that would limit the amount of executive compensation corporations can deduct as a legitimate business expense to 25 times the pay of a company's lowest paid worker.

It's not the government's job to tell corporations what they can pay their executives, but American taxpayers have the right to choose whether or not to subsidize these out of control executive salaries. If a corporation chooses to provide compensation packages that are disconnected from the wages of average workers, then I believe we should have a say over how much of that compensation is tax deductible.

If you'd like to help us build support for this legislation in Congress, you can click here to email your Representative today.

While this particular driver of income inequality can be slowed through specific legislation, it speaks to a larger trend that will require comprehensive changes to fully address. In short, the basic assumptions of the Bush “ownership society” have been shown to be bankrupt: the culture of individualism; the conviction that people who aren't getting ahead “just aren't trying”; the belief that government's only responsibility is to protect business and the wealthy, and the rest will magically take care of itself — these ideas are not just unsustainable, but fundamentally at odds with the sense of collective responsibility that is a core part of who we are as a nation.

On a very basic level, we understand that our fates — rich and poor alike — are ultimately connected.  I believe that we should aspire as a nation to be judged not by how well we do by the wealthy, but rather, in the words of gospel, by how we treat “the least of these.”

I hope that this legislation is something that will start a conversation about the best way to address widening inequality here at home, and best wishes to everyone for a wonderful Thanksgiving!

Initiative News

I have a bunch of things that might have been more appropriate for Quick Hits, but rather than flooding the Quick Hits Section, I’ll do it here. So, here we go:

  • Ted Gullickson of the SF Tenants’ Union, along with similar groups from across the state, has started a new blog, Oppose the Landlord Scheme, to, um, oppose the landlord scheme. Go check it out. Ted and the SFTU are always hard at work to protect and further the rights and interests of tenants.
  • You will soon be seeing signature gatherers for, yet another, parental notification measure.  The last two went down, with Prop 85 (45.8% Yes) garnering an even lower share than Prop 73 (47.2%) did before it. Each version has its own slightly different kicker. This one would require doctors to notify the authorities of children who can’t, for whatever reason, tell their parents of the pregnancy. If they don’t, they can be prosecuted.  Can you imagine the consequences of that? Apparently the drafters of the initiative didn’t bother to think about the actual effects of this law from within their bubble (Great Prop 85 ad).
  • The referenda on the Indian Gaming Compacts have qualified. They will be Props 94 (Pechanga), 95 (Morongo), 96 (Sycuan), and 97 (Agua Caliente). There was a little bit of a debate about these during the E-Board in Anaheim. UNITE-HERE is gearing up to fight these.
  • Asm. Chuck DeVore of Orange County has withdrawn his initiative to relax the rules for building nuclear power plants. Shockingly enough, he couldn’t get the signatures. This initiative would have gone down in flames, so I imagine even power companies wouldn’t want to touch it with a ten-foot pole.
  • Open letter to Chairman Art Torres, Regarding consultant Bob Mulholland’s published insults

    (From the diaries–hekebolos. This is the original letter from Michael Jay, co-author of the censure resolution, to CDP Chairman Art Torres. This was the letter Bob Mulholland was responding to. – promoted by Dante Atkins (hekebolos))

    Here’s the letter that led Bob Mulholland to write me, regarding Feinstein’s censure:

    An open letter to Chairman Art Torres, Regarding Party consultant Bob Mulholland’s published insults

    Dear Chairman Torres,

    I am writing out of deep concern over public comments made by a consultant to the California Democratic Party.

    You are likely aware that I co-authored and submitted the resolution to censure Senator Dianne Feinstein. Just after the close of this weekend’s Executive Board General Assembly, I was made aware of an article regarding this resolution, which appeared in the November 16 issue of the newspaper The Guardian. It contained the following reference to Bob Mulholland, identifying him as “a campaign adviser to California Democrats.”:

    Mulholland blasted the bloggers and activists supporting the censure resolution as “fringe” and “pre-nursing home”. “The Democratic party’s purpose is to remind armchair activists that the duty is to elect a Democrat to the White House so we can end the Iraq mess”, he said. “Nothing should get in the way of that.” (Emphasis mine)

    I hope you observed enough of my actions this weekend, speaking seriously and politely on issues of life and death (including my successful effort on a resolution to return the California National Guard from Iraq), to know that reports that I am ready for the “nursing home” are greatly exaggerated. More importantly, while you and I might have different opinions on the value of the censure resolution, you must agree that I was given a great responsibility in being asked to advance and represent this weighty topic. In fact, I felt honored to be selected as point person for this by the Co-Chairs of the Progressive Caucus (The Party’s second largest caucus, its more than 1,000 members alone represent a major fraction of the Party’s 3,000 delegates- decidedly not “fringe”.) The resolution of censure was endorsed by that caucus, as well as by the Women’s Caucus, the Irish-American Caucus, and by the members or executive boards of dozens of chartered Democratic clubs, County Central Committees and activist groups- not to mention over 30,000 citizens who took the trouble to individually sign on for censure.
    It’s one thing for Mr. Mulholland to wishfully dismiss such numbers as fringe; it’s quite another for him to so grievously insult the loyal Party Executive Board representatives and delegates who were exercising their rights within our bylaws.

    I’ve worked closely with many of these Party members- at phone banks, on bus trips to get out the vote in Arizona, etc. We’ve organized major efforts to protect the vote and the environment. I doubt that the featured speakers of the Election Protection forum that I initiated, including Rep. Maxine Waters, now-Secretary of State Debra Bowen, and Stephen Rohde (past President of the ACLU of Southern California), would call me an “armchair activist”. Nor would the other volunteers at Ohio Democratic HQ in 2004. You also saw Dr. Jo Olson address the Assembly on her successful resolution for single payer health care; Susie Shannon, who spoke of her tireless efforts as an advocate against poverty; and Marcy Winograd, who authored the language of the Party’s new resolution on voting systems. These three were all early endorsers of the resolution to make Senator Feinstein adhere to core Party principles; they are not armchair activists.

    I shouldn’t have to prove the bona fides of these Party members. But even if Mr. Mulholland’s comments referred only to unaffiliated activists and bloggers, our Party consultant has ridiculed and insulted the national leaders and all the members of MoveOn, Progressive Democrats of America, the Courage Campaign, and the many other groups who endorsed this censure of Senator Feinstein. As if that wasn’t enough, Mr. Mulholland also managed to insult the elderly.

    The situation begs the question, why did Bob Mulholland say this? Was he ordered to say such things? Or was this just his usual M.O., as profiled in another Guardian article, which began: “Bob Mulholland is the US Democrats’ leading dirty trickster.” Regardless, I wish to state, on behalf of all the good people I may claim to represent, that his language is unacceptable. Given the Party’s recent resolution on decorum, these inappropriate, insulting comments from a Party mouthpiece are especially ironic, and should have the Party leading the charge to rectify this situation.

    Allow me to note that, besides believing that our elected (and endorsed) Democrats should be held accountable to Party principles, I believe their frequent failure to represent public and constituent sentiment is our Party’s greatest problem. I’ve been asked, Wouldn’t censure give the Republicans ammunition to use against us? I reply that no one could do more to lower our Congressional ratings than the Party has already done itself, by its failure to stand up to Bush- especially on civil liberties and Iraq. Chairman, if you want to get out the vote, start with the fact that we give people very little reason to register or vote Democratic; that factor trumps a million phone banks. Perhaps you’ve never seen emails from those saying that votes such as Senator Feinstein’s vote for Mukasey have forever sundered them from the Democrats.

    The Party’s strategy of supporting Democrats – no matter what – is killing us. Likewise, the demonization of those who disagree with the Party line, as exhibited by Bob Mulholland, is counterproductive. I believe the CDP should seriously reconsider the face it presents to the public, and its policy of paying Bob Mulholland to be our advisor and frequent spokesperson. His vision, and the Party’s reflex action to circle the wagons, may win individual election battles, but it’s losing the wider war. At the least, he – and the Party – owe a lot of good people a very serious public apology.

      Respectfully yours,

        Michael Jay
      Delegate, 42nd AD

    Dear Bob – Here’s another story

    Dear Bob,  Thanks for the apology.  Now I’d like you to listen to me for a bit (since you walked away, calling me “worse than Bush” when I tried to talk to you in Anaheim).

    My great grandmother was a nurse, and also a Democratic Committee woman in Astoria New York from 1917 – 1920 on behalf of getting the vote for women. 

    My grandmother was a single mom, supporting her two daughters, mother & father during the Great Depression making lampshades as a seamstress.  She lived in the Bronx and worked at this job in Manhattan until she was 73 years old.  She was a proud member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. 

    My mother was a union member (as a nurse and as a postal worker) as well as an activist for fair housing in the 1950’s and 1960’s. 

    I come from a line of hard working women, be it for survival or principle. Without making my mother rise from the grave in protest, the last thing I could ever be is an “armchair activist.” 

    My dad managed to survive WWII as a B-25 bomber pilot with just a little shrapnel in his leg as a souvenir.  He was also a smart, hard drinking, friendly, jazz musician. If he was alive today to hear all the stuff about “the greatest generation” he would have laughed and seen the hype for what it is.  Every generation faces it’s own challenges, and different individuals handle those challenges differently, depending on their background, life experiences and personal human nature. 

    For the past four and a half years plus, I have spent nearly every waking hour finding ways to bring more people to the movement, and nurturing the social network we need to keep at it – to take our country back from the Republican scum who are running it and (sad to say) the clueless Democrats who think the political landscape hasn’t actually changed.  I work full time at my day job, and another 20 – 30 hours a week for my country. 

    When George Bush stole the 2000 election I waited in vain for Democrats in Congress to object.  When he began marching us to war in 2002 (we now know he began much earlier than that) I waited for the Democrats to hold up the Stop sign.  When Howard Dean spoke up, I heard the call and began the hard work of reclaiming my country for sensibility and decency. 

    As far as I’m concerned, nothing is the same since November 7, 2000. 

    Also, I learned that I can’t ask what my Party will do for me, I have to ask myself what I can do for my Party. 

    I’m not the only one to have come to this conclusion. 

    Briefly:  We want veto-proof Democratic majorities in both The US Congress and the California legislature.  We want universal, single payer health care.  We want free and fair elections.  We want a political system in which officeholders are beholden to voters instead of donors.  We want a competent government to take care of the tasks that are properly the responsibility of the commons.  We want our taxes to pay for useful infrastructure.  We want an economic system that provides opportunities for all to live decently, and an end to our tax dollars subsidizing war profiteering.  We insist on the protection of our earth.  We want a government that earns the respect of the world and provides leadership to other nations and peoples for their common benefit. 

    We are here to work in partnership on this mission.  There are 10s of thousands of others like me in California.  I’m pretty sure we speak for millions of voters.

    If you can work with us (and really it ought to be clear by now it’s a good idea to do that) that would be super.  If you can’t, well, we’ll see what happens. 

    caligal
    aka Janet Stromberg
    Chair East Bay for Democracy Democratic Club
    14th AD Executive Board Representative
    Co-Chair Berkeley Albany Emeryville United Democratic Campaign

    A public response to Bob Mulholland

    ( – promoted by Dante Atkins (hekebolos))

    First and foremost, I appreciate Mr. Mulholland’s words of regret for his dismissive characterizations of bloggers and activists.  And secondly, I appreciate his and his family’s service to this country, as well as his sincere commitment to ending the occupation of Iraq.

    I agree sincerely with Bob’s desire to end the war in Iraq–it is a goal that we all share as Democrats and progressive activists.

    Where we disagree is on princples of scope and methodology.

    More below.

    To begin with, I must take issue with the fact that Bob Mulholland’s seemingly sole focus for both the Congressional election and the Presidency is the occupation of Iraq.  At the California Young Democrats retreat in South Lake Tahoe, Bob Mulholland expressed the opinion that no other issue mattered to voters besides Iraq; that the economy did not matter, that global warming and environmental concerns did not matter, that the energy crisis did not matter.

    I disagree with this in the strongest possible terms.  Iraq–as well as Aghanistan and a potential impending strike against Iran–are obviously enormous issues, and voters are judging our Congress by its effectiveness in reining in the Bush Administration on issues of military foreign policy.  But I think it goes without saying that we ignore all the other areas of failed Republican domestic and foreign policy at our own peril.

    But even when it comes to the objective of ending the occupation of Iraq, I completely disagree with the idea that standing up for Democratic values and encouraging our politicians to support the values the Democratic Party stands for–such as obeying the Constitution, for instance–hinders our ability to win back the White House in 2008.  This could have been a legitimate argument back in 2002 and 2003 when the traditional media was comfortable with calling Democrats who had concerns about the policies of the Bush Administration traitors or other such inflammatory terms, but I strongly believe that standing up for our values can only help our chances of winning back the Presidency in 2008 now that the public trusts the Democrats on just about every single issue around, including national security and taxes.


    Even if it were true, however, that standing up for our values could potentially harm our chances in 2008, the things at issue are far bigger than just the Iraq occupation.  The fight we’re waging here–and the reason that we as grassroots and netroots activists put so much effort into the resolution to censure Senator Feinstein–is a fight for the future of our democracy, and what the values of the country will be.  Try to picture, if you will, an Attorney General being confirmed by the U.S. Senate who publicly professed that torture was legal and that the President is above the law before 9/11.  What we’re fighting for is to restore our country’s respect for the constitution, for equal rights, and for equal representation before the law.  We’re fighting to make sure that the the co-equal branches of government are actually co-equal, which will go a long way to making sure not only that we can end this occupation, but also that no president will have the executive poewr to singlehandedly start such a war ever again.


    And when America sees a Democrat being a prime enabler of torture and of executive power, it has the effect of normalizing these concepts in the minds of the American public, and blurring the distinction between Democrats and Republicans that will be essential to the chances of Democratic victory in 2008.


    And that is precisely why it is so important for us, as the Democratic base, to oppose those who, like Senator Feinstein, grant an air of acceptability to these notions put forth by the Republicans that are, in fact, in complete opposition to traditional American values.  It’s nothing personal, really.  But if our Democratic politicians will not draw a contrast with Republicans, then we as Democrats must draw a contrast with them.

    A Message From Bob Mulholland

    So, as long as we are in the Bob Mulholland phase, here’s an email that he sent to at least one activist, Michael Jay, who is featured in the Courage Campaign video regarding the Guardian story about DiFi. So without ado, over the flip you’ll find that email.

    Michael– and others-  my father due to economic needs in the Depression made it thru only the 10th grade. But he and mother’s generation became the Greatest Generation by winning WW 11. He made it thru the Battle of Bulge ( General Patton’s Army) then his outfit was the first to get to the Mauthausen concentration camp (Austria)  and saw the  horrow of what the Nazis had been doing for years but were able to save hundreds of people including  Simon Wiesenthal. I became proud of my father but knew little of it growing up since most of the WW 11 veterans did not talk about it to their kids.

    While I was drafted into the US Army I volunteered for the paratroopers and for Vietnam. I was there during one of the most difficult times ( 1967-68)- the Tel Offensive( over 2,000 Amereicans killed in Feb 1968 alone- 70 a day), LBJ announcing he would not run again, then the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr, followed by riots in over 100 American cities, then the assassination of Bobby Kennedy with more and more American youth being sent to Vietnam. Most of whom were either high school graduates like me or like my father- finishing 10th or 11th grade.  While I was seroiusly wounded it was the loss of  friends and so many Vietnamese who paid the ultimate price that made me disillusioned with that Vietnam Folly.

    Today there are over 58,200 names on the Wall in DC. I try to stop by the Wall when I am in DC, sometimes at  midnight. I don’t stop asking-why?  Now in 2007 it was the American people who  gave Bush Jr a second term and the Iraq Folly continues and it will until America elects a Democrat to the White House. Everyday I think of our troops in Iraq and their families. I have a sense of what they are going thru- there is no light at the end of the tunnel except for a locomotive coming at us. In 1968 Nixon told the American people he had a secret plan to end the war. Four years later George McGovern said he would end it- McGovern lost 49 states. 

    My top priority is to help elect a Democrat to the White House on Nov 4,2008. I know that if our Democrat wins the White House big we will add Democrats to the US House and the US Senate and then we can end the war in Iraq. So I have little patience for any  issues other than the presidency.  I regret the use of my words in the Guardian. I want all Democrats to focus on electing Democrats on Nov 4,2008. While in Vietnam I don”t think any of us talked about what was going on in Congress.

    Bob Mulholland

    “Big Picture” Bob says you are “pre-nursing home fringe”

    Cross-posted from my diary on DailyKos about this issue.

    At this point, I dare say I’ve given you a good introduction to the cancerous infestation upon the California Democratic Party that is Bob Mulholland.  He was the insider consultant who accosted me and dday at the e-board meeting previous to this one.  He’s the supreme strategist who told us that we just don’t get the big picture regarding the censure of Senator Feinstein.

    And now, he has just another one in a long line of hatchet jobs against you, the activist base of the progressive movement.  According to Big Picture Bob, you are “fringe” and “pre-nursing home.”

    “Fringe” we’ve heard before. “Pre-nursing home”?  I have absolutely no idea what that means.  But I’ll try to examine it below the fold.

    Rick Jacobs of the Courage Campaign has a piece up on the Huffington Post describing in good detail the process of killing the censure resolution.  In that essay, Rick incorporates Bob Mulholland’s quotes to the UK’s Guardian sharing his opinion of those who pushed the censure resolution:

    Obviously, we still have a lot of work to do. Friday’s Guardian (UK), reporting on the censure movement said, “(CDP senior advisor and long time spokesman Bob Mulholland) blasted the bloggers and activists supporting the censure resolution as “fringe” and “pre-nursing home.”

    “The Democratic party’s purpose is to remind armchair activists that the duty is to elect a Democrat to the White House so we can end the Iraq mess”, he said. “Nothing should get in the way of that.”

    Now, I’m used to being called “fringe.”  True, I’m used to hearing it from Republicans, as well as Joe Lieberman and Dan Gerstein.  But “pre-nursing home?”  I think what Big Picture Bob meant to say by that is that we’re infants who haven’t gotten through nursing yet–but instead, he said “nursing home”, meaning that we’re old, but not quite senile enough to be forced into assisted living.

    I can think of someone that the phrase “pre-nursing home” describes, but it certainly isn’t me–in fact, that description pretty much fits Bob Mulholland.

    And excuse me, but who the hell is Bob Mulholland calling an “armchair activist”??  I don’t need to fully delineate all the ways in which bloggers have done both armchair-work and the actual, physical legwork to help change the direction of America, and Bob Mulholland received and example of it with 33,000 signatures being presented to the Resolutions Committee supporting the censure of Dianne Feinstein, as well as a Committee meeting absolutely packed with activists who made their way to Anaheim to watch what the committee would do.

    But Bob Mulholland’s dismissive opinions about netroots and grassroots activists aren’t only source of concern; no, another significant reason that Bob Mulholland needs not to have power in the party any more is his opinion of what the party is.  Here’s what he had to say to the L.A. Daily News, Los Angeles’ more conservative newspaper:

    “It’s silly,” Mulholland said. “This is a huge mistake by people who are trying to make a name for themselves. It’s absolutely idiotic. Dianne Feinstein has been the Democratic Party for years and they are ignoring all the votes she has made against the Bush administration.”

    Get a load of that: Dianne Feinstein has been the Democratic Party.  Bob Mulholland’s main problem is that he has a totally wrong idea about what the Democratic Party is.  The Democratic Party isn’t the entrenched leadership; rather, the Democratic Party is comprised of all the voters and the party activists who push the Democratic Party agenda, write its platform, and hold the officials we help elected accountable to the values of the party.

    That’s the main difference between me and Bob Mulholland: Bob Mulholland thinks that the leadership gets to tell the party and activists what to do, and I think–and I’m sure you agree with me–that it’s our job to hold the leadership accountable to the values of our party.

    But the ultimate hypocrisy of Big Picture Bob’s quote about needing to “focus on Iraq” is precisely that his timid, base-throttling, don’t-appear-too-radical, never-challenge-the-party-leadership approach is part of the reason we’re still in Iraq in the first place.

    It’s exactly like kos noted this morning.  The same approach that Bob Mulholland forces upon us–namely, that calling for the impeachment of Gonzales is too radical, even if it appears in the New York Times the next week; the approach of never actually standing up for our beliefs in case someone thinks you’re too extreme; that approach is exactly why our Senate keeps on backing down on Bush’s funding bills.  That is exactly why for so long, we sat back and took it while Republicans accused us of being unAmerican, unpatriotic and capitulatory.  And we just sat back and took it, because challenging the Republicans on our own patriotism might have made us look too radical.  And expressing disappointment with our party leadership for capitulating to the Republicans?  Well, that certainly was too radical.

    If Big Picture Bob really wants the occupation of Iraq to end, he needs to understand that the only way it is actually going to end is if the fringe pre-nursing home armchair activists he describes challenge our leadedership for capitulating repeatedly on this issue–just like we did with Dianne Feinstein, which he hates us for.

    Also, please take a look at this video from the Courage Campaign, which shows video of the process at the Executive Board meeting, and further shows just how little Bob Mulholland cares for the actual activists in the Democratic Party base.

    And from the comments: See also the post on Crooks and Liars about this issue by Julia Rosen, Online Political Director for the Courage Campaign.  And also, the Courage Campaign has a page set up where you can leave your feedback for Senator Feinstein and CDP Chairman Art Torres (who has actually been very responsive to grassroots and netroots pressure) about what it means to be a Democrat.

    California Young Democrats- the face of Prop 92

    (CYD is one of the larges Dem. organizations and regularly works in the trenches for progressive change. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

    I am the VP of Membership for the California Young Democrats

    This weekend in Anaheim, CYD President Tim Steed addressed the California Democratic Executive Board delegation in Anaheim and was the strongest voice addressing the general session in support of Proposition 92 – the Community College Initiative (on the February 5th ballot), taking a public stand for young people in California.

    Last week at our biennial Lake Tahoe retreat and Executive Board meeting the California Young Democrats overwhelmingly endorsed Proposition 92. This initiative is the most progressive expansion of public education in a generation and the first chance our state has had to roll back the regressive and unjust fee hikes of the last several years.

    In his address to the CDP board in Anaheim, President Steed said, “I come from a family where four of us got our start in the community college system. It was our gateway to the American Dream, we must do all we can to ensure millions of other Young Californians have the same access to the American Dream as me and my family had”.

    ( join us on the flip side…..)

    CYD had a strong presence at every caucus meeting, bringing the message of college students and community college graduates (yours truly included) to the CDP.

    During the Resolutions Committee Meeting; Andrew Acosta, the campaign manager for the Yes on 92 campaign in his address to the committee identified Christopher McDonald, the California College Democrats Political Director as, “the face of Proposition 92”.
    Chris (the face) is a student at Sierra College outside of Sacramento and hopes to transfer to a UC next year. “Proposition 92 will end the rollercoaster ride of college tuition in our community college system and create stability for the 2.5 million students who attend annually.” said McDonald.

    The California Young Democrats are working to ensure that young people are heard on this important issue.

    CALL TO ACTION–go to www.Prop92Yes.com and personally endorse the initiative, write a letter to the editor or plan a voter registration drive in support of Prop. 92.

    CYD will fight hard against all tuition increases, especially when UC Regents and CSU trustees are so out of touch with reality…UC chancellors’ pay could increase up to 17% in 2008 (11/10/07 By Eleanor Yang Su, San Diego Union-Tribune) “UC’s proposal comes on the heels of California State University’s decision in September to raise campus presidents’ salaries by an average of 12 percent.”

    CYD, the largest caucus in the California Democratic Party- needs your support for a sustainable future. Go here to donate today!