A few updates

As a general note, last night was of such mixed emotions for me.  I think at a macro level we failed to capitalize on a number of levels. I think we’ll look back on this election season with a lot of regrets.

Paul’s take on the No on 8 Campaign is insightful and painfully (very, very painfully) true.  The campaign was far too top-down, especially considering the muddled situation at the top. In the coming days, weeks, months, and years, I will be doing my best to rebuild a truly grassroots movement for the future of the LGBT community.  I’m sure I won’t be alone.

Don’t get me wrong, I know people were fighting this for a long, long time. But we went about this in a quixotic way that lacked direction. We need a movement that has been developed over years, not a few weeks.

• It looks good for Manuel Perez in Assembly District 80. This is a big, big district geographically, and there is still about 7% remaining. But, Perez is up by 5%, and I think that lead will only grow.  Perez holds huge hope for California, and for the Coachella and Imperial Valleys. This is a bright spot in a fairly disappointing California election.

• A few of these races will be going to the outstanding provisionals and absentees.  There may be as many as a few million, and these are generally Dem leaning.  A few that will be decided by these votes:

CA-04: Tom McClintock leads Charlie Brown by 451 Votes (155,771 – 155,320)

AD-10: Jack Sieglock leads Alyson Huber by 1,025 (70,161 – 69,136).

AD-30: Danny Gilmore leads Fran Florez by about 2,500 votes. (37,701 – 35,282). Thank you Nicole Parra.

SD-19: Hannah-Beth Jackson leads Tony Strickland by 108 votes. (153,106-152,998 )

2nd Class Citizen

Like many other Californians, I woke up this morning with bittersweet emotions.  Yesterday, we as a state, and a country, elected our country’s first African-American President.  Yet, at the same time, California wrote discrimination into its state Constitution.  

Discrimination in our Constitutions isn’t exactly something new.  Our much-praised US Constitution had recognition and toleration of Slavery written into its pages. It recognized slaves as only part of a person for the purpose of the census.  It took over a century, and a bloody Civil War to take that discrimination out of the Constitution.  

Until the data is finalized for this election it is pointless to try and figure out exactly how we lost the battle against Proposition 8.  I strongly suspect we will see certain communities in California voting against it in very high numbers (latino & African-American come immediately to mind, but we will see when the data is fully available).  We will also see the Central Valley and the Inland Empire voting against in large numbers, as well as San Diego and Imperial Counties.  

Expect to see me looking at that data when it is available, but for now, I offer these words below the fold.

Eight years ago our fellow Californians voted by around two-thirds to prevent us from marrying one another.  Yesterday, only little more than half voted for the same thing.  In eight years, we have made great strides towards equality.  

The fight is not over.  We have suffered a significant defeat, but we are by no means out of the fight.  If in eight years we have made such progress, there are many years, and many elections ahead for us to go the final distance and restore what has been taken away from us today.  

It took our African-American friends nearly two centuries to overcome the discrimination that was written into the United States Constitution.  Today we see the victory in that struggle with Barack Obama being elected to the office of President.  He did it with more than just the support of African-Americans, but with the support of Americans from all walks of life, and that is where we should place our hopes for the future.  

The fight to end discrimination is a fight that continues on over the years.  We will not give up, and eventually we will win.  The fight won’t be easy, but it will be victorious in the end.  

As this vote shows, we have lots of work ahead of us to win the hearts of our fellow citizens.  Yet, it is in the public arena that we will achieve final victory, not in the courts.  Let us spend the next few months, and years, preparing our arguments, reaching out to the Californians that voted against us, and let us prove to them why they should vote for our cause next time.  

It might be two years, or four years before we are ready to take the battle back to the public vote, but that is where we will need to win this fight once and for all.  As we saw last night with the victory of Barack Obama, it can be done.  Now it is up to us to make change happen here in California.  

Why We Lost Prop 8: When Reactive Politics Become Losing Politics

From today’s Beyond Chron.

Proposition 8 is still “too close to call,” but the initiative to ban marriage equality led all night – with the measure ahead 52-48 at 3:00 a.m.  It pains me to describe it this way, but “No on 8” – like Michael Dukakis – blew a seventeen-point lead.  Progressives were lulled into complacency by early poll numbers, and distracted by the Barack Obama campaign – even after it became apparent he would win.

But “No on 8” was also a reactive campaign that did not anticipate the opposition’s arguments to sway swing voters.  Bloggers were effective at pushing memes to define the opposition, but it failed to define much of the race.  And “No on 8” did not push a simple and compelling message – “Obama Opposes Prop 8” – to the African-American community until the other side beat them to it, forcing them to play catch-up.  This is no time for making excuses, or inspiring words that we’re part of a greater struggle.  Our right to marry just got taken away from us, and we’ve got to be smart if we’re going to get it back.

I’ll freely admit I was one of many progressives distracted by the presidential race and lulled into a false sense of security about Prop 8.  But in early October, after returning from a week in Wisconsin to help Obama, it became apparent that Barack was going to win by a landslide-and that Bay Area activists were wasting their time driving to Reno while there was important work to be done at home.  New poll numbers on Prop 8 jolted me out of complacency (one could say I “reacted” to bad news), but my pleas about the presidential race fell on deaf ears.  Somehow, progressives still shell-shocked from 2004 were afraid that simply believing Obama was going to win would “jinx” the outcome.

I heard a lot from marriage equality activists last night about “how far” we have come since the days of the Knight Initiative-Proposition 22, where 61% of California voters in March 2000 voted to add discrimination in the marriage code.  But we forget how incredibly conservative that particular election’s turnout was-and we simply don’t have the same excuse for Prop 8’s recent fate. California voters who narrowly supported Prop 8 also rejected the anti-choice Proposition 4 (despite it also being neck-and-neck in the polls), approved a bond for high-speed rail (Proposition 1A), and crushed Proposition 6 (the Runner Initiative) despite the state’s general “law and order” reputation.

We need to face the fact that Prop 8 passed because a lot of liberal people voted for it-swing voters who should have known better, if only they had the right message.

These swing voters like to think of themselves as “tolerant.”  They believe they support gay rights, but are not always comfortable thinking much about the issue.  They have a “live-and-let-live” approach, and don’t appreciate any group of people indoctrinating their worldview on the rest of society.  For a while, the “No on 8” message worked well with this crowd: it is morally wrong to have religious extremists impose their definition of marriage on the rest of society, singling out groups of people who don’t apply and depriving them of a basic right.  Telling them the Mormons were funneling $20 million into the Prop 8 campaign was an especially effective message for this group.

The problem happened when the Prop 8 campaign-through blatant lies and deceit-changed the subject into gays and lesbians imposing their agenda on our elementary school children.  Suddenly, the people who were “indoctrinating” people who have a “live and let live” attitude was the homosexual agenda.  It became apparent to me a few weeks ago when I was phone-banking for “No on 8.” I spoke to a black woman in San Francisco’s Western Addition who was dead-set against gay marriage now that she had been scared into believing we were imposing our lifestyle on her.  And when people are afraid, it’s hard to make them listen to facts-especially if they don’t know you.

One of the basic lessons in activism is to not react to a problem when it comes up, but to be pro-active and frame the agenda.  It’s not like right-wing extremists haven’t used the “gay marriage will be taught in our schools” line before, and the campaign should have been ready to anticipate such attacks.  As far back as 1998, the first ballot proposition to ban marriage equality in Hawaii had a TV spot with a small child reading a book about two fathers-and he then gets confused.  The message back then for swing voters was the same message California swing voters got now-“will my kids have to learn about it?”

Another basic rule is to anticipate what strategies the opposition will come up with to lure voters, and to preempt them with your own overtures.  Gay marriage supporters were not happy that Barack Obama said he believes marriage is “between a man and a woman,” but he rarely got credit for going further than any presidential candidate had gone before.  He supports fully repealing the Defense of Marriage Act, and – more importantly – he came out against California’s Proposition 8.  Knowing that Obama was going to win the state comfortably, “No on 8” should have stressed Obama’s opposition from Day One.

They did not, and it allowed the Prop 8 campaign to get African-American voters on their side by leading them to believe that Obama supports Prop 8.  As I’ve written before, the black vote was critical in this race.  Polls showing Prop 8 either ahead or behind hinged almost completely on whether African-Americans strongly supported it-or barely supported it.  Aggressive overtures needed to be made to that community, and there was no better messenger in this election for this group of voters than Barack Obama.

Instead, “No on 8” waited until the other side made their own hit piece that implied an Obama endorsement of Prop 8.  By then, we were being reactive.

Finally, I did go to the “No on 8” campaign office in the Castro as often as I could-but quickly became frustrated at what they were asking volunteers to do.  I was happy talking on the phone with swing voters-which was useful and effective-but they seemed more interested in having us do visibility in San Francisco, going to strongly liberal (even gay) parts of town to make sure our base knew they had to vote “no.”  Rather than preaching to the choir, we were told this was useful because much of our base was confused-that some supporters think they’re supposed to vote “yes” on Prop 8 to affirm gay marriage.

I don’t doubt there were a few cases of gay people in San Francisco who were confused, and accidentally voted for Prop 8.  But this appeared excessively anecdotal and reactive, when I was far more interested in being pro-active and effective in getting work done.  Ironically, it turns out that a percentage of our opposition was equally confused-if not more so, which made the issue a wash.  When I dropped “No on 8” literature in East Oakland, I ran into an African-American woman-who said she would vote “no” on Prop 8 because she “really didn’t want” gay marriage being taught in public schools.

It is now 4:22 a.m. on Wednesday morning, and Prop 8 is still up 52-48 with 90% of precincts reporting.  Now that discrimination has been enshrined in our Constitution, it will require another vote of the people to have it repealed.  I don’t doubt that with the state getting younger, future efforts at marriage equality will be successful.  But I can’t help believing we have seriously blown an opportunity in this election to give the right wing a stunning defeat-one that would forever leave them on the ash heap of history.

We need to start now to organize … and this time, let’s do it right.

The Undervote

I’ll have a much larger roundup later.  But it looks to me like there was a significant undervote in the election.  So far, 10.04 million votes have been counted in the Presidential race.  Yet on Prop. 8 we have about 9.9 million votes counted.  The difference there is 79,000 votes.  But that’s the smallest discrepancy.  Most of the other statewide ballot measures had undervotes of around 600,000-800,000 votes.  And there are maybe 1 million votes yet to be counted, so this spread could be much higher.

And if you look at the Congressional and state legislature ballots, the spread is just as high.

A lot of people stopped at the top, probably because they didn’t have enough information and didn’t feel comfortable about voting.

SD-19 ridiculously close

with only 12 precincts in Ventura County left to count, Hannah-Beth Jackson has a lead on Tony Strickland of just 386 votes out of over 300,000 cast.

Ventura County has gone for Strickland very slightly, but which way those 12 precincts lean is a crapshoot.  This one will go to a recount and to provisionals.

Voters say YES to transit

Among the few bright spots for California races tonight is the fact that tonight, voters said yes to more public transportation.  It was close, but it seems likely.

With 86.4% reporting statewide, Proposition 1A appears headed for passage, with 52.3% in favor.  While the vast bulk of the uncounted areas of the state are in the Inland Empire, which is currently opposing 1A, it just doesn’t seem like there are enough votes out there to reverse the 400,000+ vote advantage that 1A currently enjoys.  Congratulations, California, on taking the next big step toward a high-speed, high-tech transportation future.

Meanwhile, in Los Angeles County, voters seem to have barely approved Measure R, which would raise the sales tax in my county by .5% (one dollar out of every 200 spent) to fund transportation projects, including a subway to the sea and a whole host of other projects.  With 97% reporting, Measure R has 67.35%.  A two-thirds majority is required to pass any tax increase, so R has a cushion of less than one percent.

Eventually, I’ll be able to get from my neighborhood to downtown San Francisco using just two trains: the Purple Line to Union Station, and the HSR.  That’s what I would call pretty cool.

Last Update Of The Night

I’m tired and happy and sad all at once.  Let’s blow through this.

• Here’s all the State Senate races.  Hannah-Beth Jackson has opened up a bit of a lead in SD-19 with 74% reporting.  She’s up over 7,000 votes.  The rest of the races have been called (Congratulations, Sen. Leno).  If this holds, we’ll go +1 in the State Senate and have a 26-14 split.

• Your Assembly races are right here.  Some interesting stuff.  Alyson Huber has made up almost all of the difference and is 1,670 votes down, but with 98% in.  That’s going to late absentee ballots and provisionals.  I’m surprised the AP hasn’t called AD-15 yet, it’s 53-47 Buchanan with 65% in.  John Eisenhut still trails in AD-26 by 3,500 votes with 91% in.  Danny Gilmore still has a lead in AD-30 but it’s slooow going, only 42% of the vote counted and Fran Florez is making up the difference (turnout there looks bad).  The AP just called AD-36 for Steve Knight over Linda Jones, which is very disappointing.  AD-37 and AD-38 have not been called, nor has AD-59 or AD-63.    In a race on nobody’s radar screen, Van Tran is having a tough time putting away Ken Arnold in AD-68.  

And in the two Southern California races, Marty Block is up 52-48 in AD-78 with 43% in, and Gary Jeandron is just 900 votes up on Manuel Perez, with only 42% in.  Imperial looks to be out.

• Charlie Brown and Tom McClintock are now separated by 52 votes.  FIFTY-TWO.  Part of Placer County is pretty much all that’s out.

• Jerry McNerney returns to the US Congress.  Dean Andal is FAIL.

• CA-44 has oddly yet to be called.  Bill Hedrick is down 55-45 to Ken Calvert.  He’s running pretty darn well.

• Prop. 1A has expanded its lead.  Prop. 11 is tightening.  Prop. 8 is not.

Some More Results

Prop. 5 went down, as expected.  The entire political establishment of the state protected their own failure by coming out against it en masse.  

Props. 7 and 10 went down as well.  Voters saw through T. Boone Pickens’ smokescreen, which is good to see.  But I was surprised how easily these two were defeated.  I guess when you split liberals and lose all conservatives, this is what happens.

Look, 1A, 3, 4, 8, 9 and 11 aren’t going to be decided tonight.  Not only is LA not in, but Alameda County is coming in pretty late.  Obama is up 58-39 and I expect that to grow as these late counties come in.  But his coattails were short, and his overwhelming of the political attention gave little oxygen for other candidates and initiatives on the ballot.

AD-10: Huber behind 5,000 votes.

AD-15: Joan Buchanan up 5,000 votes.  This would mean that Republicans control not a single seat in the Bay Area.

AD-26: Eisenhut down 3,600 votes.

AD-30: Gilmore (R) is up but there are almost no votes counted in this race so far.

AD-36: doesn’t look good but it’s early.

AD-78: Marty Block is up 1,600 votes.

AD-80: Manuel Perez is down less than 1,000 votes but it’s very early.

SD-19: Hannah-Beth Jackson is up 6,100 votes with 35% of the vote in.

CA-04 is extremely tight, within 1,600 votes with 55% in.  CA-03 has Lungren hovering at 50%, but Durston 6 points behind.  This is a great improvement on 2006 and sets this up as a key seat in 2010.  CA-46 only has 39% in, but Rohrabacher is winning fairly solidly right now.  CA-50 shows Bilbray up 7,000 votes on Nick Leibham, but not much is in yet.

UPDATE: CNN has called CA-46 for Rohrabacher and CA-03 for Durston.  CA-03 reminds me of CA-04 last year, Lungren will end up under 50%.  Bill Durston put on a very good showing despite having pretty much zero help from anybody.  He has nothing to be ashamed of.

Debbie Cook just couldn’t get it done in a tough district.  But she put the fear of God into Crazy Dana.

There are only 2 House races outstanding.  CA-50 only has 34% in but Leibham is starting to close a bit (he’s within 7,800 votes).  CA-04 is about a 2,200 vote spread for McClintock, but a lot more of that race is in (84%).  Yikes.

UPDATE II: Mark Ridley-Thomas kicked Bernard Parks’ buns tonight in the race for 2nd District Supervisor in LA County.  Good for him, he’s a solid progressive.

Called Races

Yes on 2 passes, according to the Chronicle.  Prop. 6 fails.  So far, so good.  Calitics is 2 for 2.

CNN has called David Dreier, Duncan Hunter and Mary Bono Mack.  There are four races still up for grabs in the Congress.

Right now I see Jack Sieglock up early in AD-10, Joan Buchanan ahead in AD-15, Bill Berryhill up in AD-26, Danny Gilmore actually way up in AD-30, Linda Jones behind in AD-36, Marty Block up in AD-78, and Gary Jeandron up slightly in AD-80.  These are very early numbers.

…if you’re looking at the statewide propositions, I should remind everyone that LA County has not reported anything yet.  And we were hearing 80% turnout in the largest county by population in the country.

UPDATE LA Times calls Prop 7 defeated.