Targeting Justice: Is California a Democracy?

As Shum-and-Mike wrote yesterday, several right-wingers have been rumbling about recalling any California Supreme Court Justice who votes to overturn Prop 8. For example, right-wing nut Jon Fleischman said:

If the court overturns 8, I think you will be able to count the days before a very organized and well-funded recall of the justices voting to do that will begin. Given the passion on this issue, and the financial resources available, a recall of these justices would be on the ballot lickety-split, and then the justices who didn't believe in the primacy of the voters can understand what it feels like to feel their wrath. … Remember Rose Bird?

Unfortunately, he is correct.  The California Constitution (Art. II, Sec. 13-16) allows for the removal of any “state officer.”  And Supreme Court Justices are “state officers.”  (See Government Code section11005).

If a recall petition is initiated, it must be signed by registered voters equal in number to 20 percent of the last vote for the office. The last vote of a Supreme Court Justice was 5,193,000.  Consequently, about 1 million signatures would be required to recall a Supreme Court Justice.  To put this in perspective, those behind the effort to recall Gray Davis gathered 1.6 million signatures, 1.3 million of which were valid.  They would have 160 days (less than 6 months) to gather the signatures.

In addition to a recall effort, another way the right-wingers can attack our Justices is through their re-election bids.  California requires every Justice to stand for election every 12 years.  In 2010, Ronald George, Carlos Moreno, and Ming Chin stand for election.  Both George and Moreno voted for the majority opinion in In Re Marriage Cases.  Ming Chin voted with the dissent.  It will be much easier for the right-wingers to target Moreno and George in their re-election bids as opposed to a recall campaign because they would not need to file a recall petition or gather signatures.

Follow me to the flip to see why allowing for the recall of a judge violates just about every tenet of a democracy. . .

The U.S. State Department publishes a document called the Principles of Democracy.  This document is used to teach other countries how to create a strong democracy for themselves.  One section is devoted to the Judiciary.  California's law that allows for the removal of a Supreme Court Justice violates just about every one of these principles.  For example:

The power of judges to review public laws and declare them in violation of the nation's constitution serves as a fundamental check on potential government abuse of power — even if the government is elected by a popular majority. This power, however, requires that the courts be seen as independent and able to rest their decisions upon the law, not political considerations.

 
Judges in a democracy cannot be removed for minor complaints, or in response to political criticism. Instead, they can be removed only for serious crimes or infractions through the lengthy and difficult procedure of impeachment (bringing charges) and trial — either in the legislature or before a separate court panel.

 

An independent judiciary assures people that court decisions will be based on the nation's laws and constitution, not on shifting political power or the pressures of a temporary majority. Endowed with this independence, the judicial system in a democracy serves as a safeguard of the people's rights and freedoms.

 

If California is going to resort to removing judges based on the political winds of the day, we do not deserve the title “democracy.”

Disclaimer: I handle product liability cases that could come before the Courts, including DePuy Hip Implant Lawsuits.

 

Democrats Work: Yes We Cans!

(Food banks all over the state are feeling the pinch. If you can, please consider helping out online or off. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

“This victory alone is not the change we seek. It is only the chance for us to make that change.”
President-elect Barack Obama

Across the country, food banks are struggling to keep up with increased demand.  And with the holidays approaching, Democrats Work is doing something about it.  We need your help.

Today, we are launching the Yes We Cans Virtual Food Drive to help you donate to the food bank in your community.

In California we are helping the FoodLink for Tulare County, Food Share, Inc., Butte County Gleaners, Inc., Community Resources Council, Inc., FIND, Inc., Second Harvest Food Bank serving Santa Cruz & San Benito Cos., Food Bank for Monterey County, Community Food Bank, Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano, San Francisco Food Bank, Foodbank of Santa Barbara County, Redwood Empire Food Bank, Second Harvest Food Bank serving Santa Clara & San Mateo Cos., Second Harvest Food Bank serving Riverside & San Bernardino Cos., Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County, Los Angeles Regional Foodbank, Alameda County Community Food Bank, San Diego Food Bank, San Joaquin Food Bank, and Senior Gleaners, Inc.!

Here’s how it works:

1.    Click here to go to our Yes We Cans Virtual Food Drive website. 

2.    Put food or cash contributions in your shopping cart.

3.    When you check out, you will be able to designate one of over 200 food banks that will receive your donation.

No matter where you live, you can give to a food bank in your area.  Put turkey on the table in Colorado or fill a child’s bowl with mac and cheese in Atlanta.  Together, by making donations through Yes We Cans, we are giving food banks the power to buy in bulk and provide more food than each of us could donate individually. 

This election was about bringing positive change to our country.  We don’t have to wait for others to act: we can make a difference in our communities year-round.  Thanks to you, we are putting our values into action when they are needed the most. 

Yes We Cans!

Also! — If you want to volunteer or deliver goods directly to your local food bank, you can find the location of one near you by visiting Feeding America.  And please send an email to [email protected] so we can keep track of what the Democrats Work community is contributing this holiday season. 

Wildfires And The Urgency Of Combating Climate Change

While this recent spate of wildfires have been put relatively under control today, the devastation is pretty severe.  The number of houses destroyed in Yorba Linda shot up yesterday, the fire in Montecito claimed several dozen more homes, and the mobile home park in Sylmar is a near-total loss.

Even without getting back to his home, Mr. Grieb is fairly certain that all is lost.

He and his neighbors have seen aerial photos of the devastated development and, in stark black and white, a chalkboard at an evacuation center lists the homes, by lot numbers, that were spared. About 124 out of 600 homes are on the list, and Mr. Grieb’s home is not among them.

For the park’s residents, it was as if an entire village had vanished in the flames.

“I used to refer to it as our little Mayberry,” said Tracey Burns, 47. She and her partner, Wendy Dannenberg, 46, lived in Oakridge for 15 years. Ms. Burns’s parents lived nearby in a part of the complex that was spared by the fire.

“It was just a very nice community,” Ms. Burns said. “Someplace safe with a lot to offer from the pool to the tennis courts to bingo on Tuesday nights. It was a very nice way of living. People waved not because they had to but because they wanted to. We always took offense to people calling it a trailer park because you had a yard, a porch, a garage, a garden. It was a home, not a trailer.”

While some scientists are dismissing the idea that climate change has something to do with the increasing frequency of fires in the region, clearly the reduction of the snowpack in the Sierras, combined with the extended drought conditions, have extended the fire season to the point where it is year-round and unsustainable.  And that is expecteed to only worsen in the future.

The current drought in the Southwest may simply be part of the normal cycle of wet and dry spells. But looking over the next century, Cayan said, regions with a Mediterranean climate such as Southern California are expected to get drier.

“I have to believe that is going to make us more vulnerable to some of these more intense fire episodes.”

While the relief efforts of the local communities are admirable, it’s simply not sustainable to have major parts of the region go up in smoke at regular intervals.  We have barely enough money in the kitty to provide basic services, let alone a year-round fire season.

Through global warming, we have now fire season all year round. We used to have fire seasons only in the fall, but now the fire seasons start in February already, so this means that we have to really upgrade, have more resources, more fire engines, more manpower and all of this, which does cost extra money.

The scientists may want to be circumspect, but this is global boiling, a consequence of rising temperatures and a drier climate.  And while myopic conservatives like Dan Walters don’t realize it, a massive shift to green technologies is essential for financial reasons as well as environmental ones.  Fighting massive fires costs lots and lots of money that can be avoided if we reduce emissions and protect the planet.  Backwards-looking folks like Walters always examine the up-front costs while paying no attention to the externalities.  Burning the earth has severe monetary consequences, and on the flip side, creating greener ways to power our lives and transport our people is exportable technology that can make California a global economic leader.

Of course, it’s going to take more than one state, and fortunately we have a new President-elect who understands the need for immediate action.  Not only is he raising money for relief organizations helping with the current wildfires, but today he made a surprise appearance at the Bi-Partisan Governors Global Climate Summit in Los Angeles, calling for “a new chapter of American leadership on climate change.”  I’ve put the video and transcript below.  We finally have leadership to heal the planet, which is as beneficial for California as it is for anywhere in the country.

Let me begin by thanking the bipartisan group of U.S. governors who convened this meeting.

Few challenges facing America – and the world – are more urgent than combating climate change. The science is beyond dispute and the facts are clear. Sea levels are rising. Coastlines are shrinking. We’ve seen record drought, spreading famine, and storms that are growing stronger with each passing hurricane season.

Climate change and our dependence on foreign oil, if left unaddressed, will continue to weaken our economy and threaten our national security.

I know many of you are working to confront this challenge. In particular, I want to commend Governor Sebelius, Governor Doyle, Governor Crist, Governor Blagojevich and your host, Governor Schwarzenegger -all of you have shown true leadership in the fight to combat global warming. And we’ve also seen a number of businesses doing their part by investing in clean energy technologies.

But too often, Washington has failed to show the same kind of leadership. That will change when I take office. My presidency will mark a new chapter in America’s leadership on climate change that will strengthen our security and create millions of new jobs in the process.

That will start with a federal cap and trade system. We will establish strong annual targets that set us on a course to reduce emissions to their 1990 levels by 2020 and reduce them an additional 80% by 2050.

Further, we will invest $15 billion each year to catalyze private sector efforts to build a clean energy future. We will invest in solar power, wind power, and next generation biofuels. We will tap nuclear power, while making sure it’s safe. And we will develop clean coal technologies.

This investment will not only help us reduce our dependence on foreign oil, making the United States more secure. And it will not only help us bring about a clean energy future, saving our planet. It will also help us transform our industries and steer our country out of this economic crisis by generating five million new green jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced.

But the truth is, the United States cannot meet this challenge alone. Solving this problem will require all of us working together. I understand that your meeting is being attended by government officials from over a dozen countries, including the UK, Canada and Mexico, Brazil and Chile, Poland and Australia, India and Indonesia. And I look forward to working with all nations to meet this challenge in the coming years.

Let me also say a special word to the delegates from around the world who will gather at Poland next month: your work is vital to the planet. While I won’t be President at the time of your meeting and while the United States has only one President at a time, I’ve asked Members of Congress who are attending the conference as observers to report back to me on what they learn there.

And once I take office, you can be sure that the United States will once again engage vigorously in these negotiations, and help lead the world toward a new era of global cooperation on climate change.

Now is the time to confront this challenge once and for all. Delay is no longer an option. Denial is no longer an acceptable response. The stakes are too high. The consequences, too serious.

Stopping climate change won’t be easy. It won’t happen overnight. But I promise you this: When I am President, any governor who’s willing to promote clean energy will have a partner in the White House. Any company that’s willing to invest in clean energy will have an ally in Washington. And any nation that’s willing to join the cause of combating climate change will have an ally in the United States of America. Thank you.

Dear Speaker Pelosi, Can We Have $25 Billion?

For a while now, the federal government has been handing out money to private business. Mostly banks, but a few insurance companies and the possibility of the Big 3 Automakers.  It’s raining cash if you happen to be “too big to fail.”

Meanwhile, the state of California is bleeding red ink, laying off workers and cutting the services Californians count on in poor economic times. So, hat in hand, off we go to the feds:

Led by California with a $28 billion hole in its budget, 41 states are in financial trouble, and many of their leaders are looking to Congress to bail them out. State officials are hoping to join the ranks of the financial industry and auto manufacturers, who’ve found a sympathetic ear on Capitol Hill. They’ve found some key supporters: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other top Democrats are promoting aid to states as part of a broad stimulus package that could inject more than $300 billion into the ailing economy.

* * *

Speaking Wednesday before a Chamber of Commerce group in Fresno, Calif., Schwarzenegger said that “government is really at fault” and that Washington was obligated to “get us out of this mess.” (McClatchy 11/14/08)

The economy sucks, that much we all know.  Sure, we’re tossing everything up at the wall hoping it sticks. But, here is one simple statement of fact: money that comes in to the state goes out almost immediately in the form of services to those who most need it.  It gets recycled as state employees that would have otherwise been on the chopping block retain their jobs. And of course there is the fact that by spending a little money now to retain a decent level of services, we can save ourselves a lot of money on the back end on prison and other corrective, and expensive, services.

Yet there are those who simply see the states as profligate dens of the mythical “waste, fraud, and abuse.”  Unsurprisingly, one such opinion, by the Manhattan City Institute’s Steve Malanga, appears at Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal:

Thus, when practically every day the federal government is defining downward the very notion of what constitutes fiscal responsibility, the states know they are hardly the most reckless supplicants in Washington. Unfortunately, more federal aid all but guarantees they won’t use the current crisis as an opportunity to put their fiscal houses in order — setting the stage for worse problems to come.

While it is true that California’s 2/3 system of governance has built a budgetary house of cards, simply letting that house of cards collapse is no better than letting GM and Ford simply disappear.  Apparently Mr. Malanga would like to see the states get taught a lesson just like some would have beaten into the banking system’s hide. But while conservatives are lining up to give money to AIG, perhaps they should take some of that time to consider just who they are teaching a lesson.

Are they teaching a lesson to the 6 year old who now has a first grade class of 45 kids and doesn’t have any actual contact with his teacher. I’m sure his not being able to read will really teach the Mike Villines of this world a huge lesson.

Are they teaching a lesson to the state’s seniors? To the disabled?  I’m sure Dave Cogdill will repent once he sees a few thousand more homeless mentally ill across our state.

Or perhaps not, but the lesson’s worth a shot, right Mr. Malanga?

UPDATE: Over the flip find the letter that the Democratic Leaders sent to Pelosi, Boxer & Feinstein. (h/t SacBee)

Dear Speaker Pelosi, Senator Feinstein and Senator Boxer:

We write to strongly encourage the prompt adoption of a federal economic stimulus plan that will provide direct assistance to the states. During this historically challenging economic time, the states–especially California–need the federal government’s help.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), twenty-seven states will begin the 2009 Fiscal Year with deficits well exceeding $100 billion collectively. A recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities concludes that states are facing “a great fiscal crisis,” with 41 of 50 states projected to be facing budget shortfalls over the next two fiscal years. In the midst of this crisis, states are forced to drastically cut essential services (services that more citizens rely on when economic times are tough), raise taxes, or do both.

The fiscal challenges for the state of California are great. According to our non-partisan Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO), California is facing a 20-month deficit of $28 billion. The Governor has called a Special Session in which lawmakers are contemplating a plan that would close the deficit by imposing tax increases on all Californians and slashing more than $10 billion in essential services in education, healthcare, aid to seniors, the blind and the elderly, public safety, and transportation. The impacts of such a plan are particularly harsh in an economic climate in which each month more than 13,000 Californians are suffering job loss.

California needs its federal partner to help its citizens weather this economic storm. A “States Economic Stimulus and Fiscal Relief Act,” akin to that recently passed to assist the nation’s banking system, is what California needs now. While federal aid will not solve California’s fiscal problems, an infusion of flexible federal funds would provide necessary relief to millions of Californians, by limiting the magnitude of tax increases and cuts to essential services otherwise required to balance our budget.

In addition to the infusion of federal funds, many provisions of the $60.8 billion economic stimulus bill, H.R. 7110, passed by the House of Representatives in September, 2008, are helpful to California. For example:

1. An increase in the Federal Medicaid Assistance Percentage (FMAP) match with the trigger points for state eligibility like those contained in the bill (i.e., home foreclosures, food stamp caseload level and unemployment level) means nearly $2 billion for California;

2. The extension of federal Unemployment Insurance benefits provides needed assistance to Californians suffering job loss. California’s unemployment rate now stands at 7.7% and is projected to rise well above 9% in 2009.

3. The investment of federal funds to improve public infrastructure is meaningful to California. In 2006, Californians passed a $42.3 billion bond package to invest state funds to improve our roads and bridges, expand public transit, strengthen levees and improve water quality, provide affordable housing, and build or modernize school facilities. Many of the projects and programs funded by the state bond package require federal matching funds to become fully funded.

While H.R. 7110 represents a good start, we agree with Speaker Pelosi’s assessment that as the nation’s economic crisis has worsened since September, so has the need for a greater magnitude of economic stimulus. Clearly, more is better.

As we continue our work to develop a comprehensive plan to close this state’s staggering budget deficit, we hope we can count on our federal partners to provide needed relief to millions of Californians suffering through an economic crisis of historic magnitude. Working together, federal and state policymakers can help the country and the state get through this difficult period.

Your prompt attention to this request is certainly appreciated.

Respectfully,

Don Perata

President Pro Tem

California State Senate

Karen Bass

Speaker

California State Assembly

Darrell Steinberg

President Pro Tempore-elect

California State Senate

Monday Open Thread

Here is some linky goodness:

• Alan Keyes, who kind of plays the Washington Generals to Barack Obama’s Harlem Globetrotters, has filed suit in Superior Court in Sacramento to stop California from awarding its electoral votes to Obama because he doesn’t fulfill the necessary citizenship requirements.  Discussion item: Keyes used to have a talk show on MSNBC.

• Assemblyman Mike Davis has filed as a candidate in the special election to replace State Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas, who is now an LA County Supervisor.  Assemblyman Curren Price is also rumored to be seeking the seat, but he hasn’t filed yet.

• One of the most interesting news items from this weekend’s Join The Impact rallies was the coming out of comedian Wanda Sykes at an event in Las Vegas.  Sykes, who was married to her partner last month, had this to say:

“Everybody that knows me personally they know I’m gay,” she continued. “But that’s the way people should be able to live their lives.”

The motivation behind the revelation: the Nov. 4 passage of a same-sex marriage ban in California that has taken the nation by storm.

Sykes said the ban (also known as California’s Proposition 8) made her feel like she was “attacked.”

“Now, I gotta get in their face,” she said. “I’m proud to be a woman. I’m proud to be a black woman, and I’m proud to be gay.”

• President-Elect Obama is raising money for the victims of the SoCal Fires on his website. The BarackObama.com landing page is now a message that links back to the Governor’s California Volunteers Page.

Jackie Speier remembers her Jonestown nightmare. It is 30 years ago today that Congressman Leo Ryan was killed in Guyana.

• In the close races yet to be decided in California, the news remains not so great.  Hannah-Beth Jackson and Alyson Huber are now behind by more than the .5% needed for a partial recount.  Charlie Brown is within 622 votes of Tom McClintock but there aren’t a lot of ballots left in his stronghold of Nevada County. Interestingly, both Brown and McClintock showed up for the freshman orientation.

Prop. 8 Homophobes Threaten Supreme Court with “Revolution,” Scream “Terrorism”

Another nasty trend is emerging from the homophobes behind the Yes on 8 campaign.

Apparently shocked by the national uprising in support of full equality under the law for gay/lesbian families, leaders of the Prop. H8 campaign have rolled out a new tactic: threatening the Supreme Court.

Andrew Pugno, their attorney  turned up their dangerous rhetoric this weekend:

 What could get opponents of same-sex marriage in the street, however, would be the state Supreme Court tossing out the vote, he said. San Francisco city officials, joined by the city of Los Angeles and Santa Clara and Los Angeles counties, have petitioned the court to do just that.

“I think you’ll have a revolution on your hands at that point,” Pugno said.

His partner in H8 crime, Frank Schubert, the Republican lobbyist who managed the campaign, went str8 to the Karl Rove playbook and equated civil rights activism with the “T” word:

But Prop 8 supporter Frank Schubert said, “Cowardly acts are intended to terrorize people they mean to frighten and to intimidate the people who supported proposition 8 and those who have stood up for traditional marriage. This is the very definition of terrorism and that’s what’s occurring in California today.”

And uber-Repbulican nutjob Jon Fleishcman takes it one step further:

Writing in Sacramento’s Capitol Weekly, Jon Fleischman, former executive director of the state Republican Party, growled: “If the court overturns 8, I think you will be able to count the days before a very organized and well-funded recall of the justices voting to do that will begin. Given the passion on this issue, and the financial resources available, a recall of these justices would be on the ballot lickety-split, and then the justices who didn’t believe in the primacy of the voters can understand what it feels like to feel their wrath. … Remember Rose Bird?”

Now there’s a nifty bit of intimidation masquerading as a defense of popular sovereignty.

They’re freaking out.  Good.  It’s clear that the backlash to the vote has energized and strengthened the gay/lesbian rights movement in a nearly unprecedented way…and tarred the image of the Mormon Church and of anti-marriage activists.

Let’s recall that is was the Yes on 8 folks who invented the camapaign tactic of intimidating and demonizing No on 8 donors.

Clearly the people voting with their feet-and with their pocketbooks and picket signs-have had an impact.  

Despite this, the lgbt community gatekeepers, who were so ineffective during the campaign], are criticizing the protest and boycott movement.   But given this description of the online and offline activists who have been leading this movement, I don’t expect the gay gatekeepers to be too successful:

“They are not connected to the supposed leaders. All they know is that their rights have been taken away and that the majority has successfully curtailed the freedoms of the minority.”

My response, of course, is what else are we supposed to do?  Let hateful attacks go unanswered?  Count on the Supremes to save our bacon?

That’s why I will personally be boycotting Cinemark H8 theaters this Holiday Season…and leading a picket on Jan. 15 at their Park City screen that will be hosting Sundance.  Will you join me? (While Blogger decides if I’m a spammer, you can join the movement to boycott Cinemark on Facebook.)  

AG Asks Court To Enforce Prop 8

California Attorney General Jerry Brown's office today filed briefs in response to the three lawsuits that have been filed to challenge Proposition 8. You can read the briefs in their entirety here here and here.

In short, the AG's office asks the Supreme Court to: (1) hear the lawsuits, (2) deny petitioner's request to stay Prop 8 pending the Court's decision, and (3) expedite review of the cases.

Three lawsuits have been filed with the California Supreme Court that challenge Proposition 8.  The first was brought by six couples along with Equality California.  The second was brought by two couples.  The third was brought by the City and County of San Francisco, the County of Santa Clara, and the City of Los Angeles. 

All three lawsuit are variations on the same theme: that Proposition 8 is a “revision” to the California Constitution and a valid revision must be submitted to the voters by the Legislature.  Since Proposition 8 did not originate in the Legislature, it is not a valid revision and it should be struck.

Several groups have weighed in on the argument.  Those arguing that Prop 8 should be invalidated by the Court include a group of 44 state lawmakers, the bar associations of several major cities, and the Anti-Defamation League.  Those arguing that Prop 8 should be enforced include Kingdom of Heaven, the Pacific Justice Institute (a religious “legal defense group”), and the American Center for Law and Justice (Pat Robertson's group).

Jerry Brown's office has appointed Senior Assistant Attorney General Christopher K. Krueger to defend Prop 8.  This is the same attorney who argued (unsuccessfully) in favor of Prop 22 and against marriage equality in the In Re: Marriage cases.

In the response that was filed today, the AG's office agrees that it's appropriate and preferable for the Supreme Court to address the lawsuits in the first instance (as opposed to requiring that the plaintiffs file in a trial court and the cases work themselves up to the Supreme Court.)  At the same time, the AG's office opposes the plaintiffs' request that Proposition 8 be stayed pending the outcome of these cases.  It argues that “a stay would change the status quo, allowing marriages that might later be invalidated, and would engender uncertainty about the legal status of same-sex marriages in California.” The AG's office does not (because it does not need to at this juncture) oppose the petitions on the merits.  The court, should it agree to hear the cases, will set a schedule for the AG to file its opposition papers.  

Also today, the Yes on 8 campaign filed a request to intervene in the cases and to file an opposition. Essentially they argue that they have a substantial interest in the lawsuit because they spent over $37 million to campaign for Prop 8's passage.  It's opposition was written by Andrew Pugno, a solo lawyer in Folsom who specializes in wills and trusts.

The Supreme Court will now make its decision about: (1) whether it wants to hear this case or if it is going to require that the plaintiff's first file in the Superior Court and (2) whether it will stay Proposition 8 pending the outcome of these cases.  If the Court agrees to hear the cases, it will set a briefing schedule.  

My prediction is that the Court's order will mirror the AG's request exactly.  It will agree to hear the case, it will deny the stay, and it will set a relatively quick briefing schedule.  I predict we have a hearing on the cases before Valentine's Day.  

Georgia On Our Mind

Jim Martin’s Georgia Senate campaign has reached out to former Obama phone bank groups all over the country, but has made a special effort to reach out to California.

I’m happy to report we’re answering the call here in Southern California. Read on if you want to learn how you can help.

As you might have heard in the news, neither Democratic challenger Jim Martin nor Republican incumbent Saxby Chambliss received 50% of the vote November 4th, so Georgia will be holding a runoff election December 2nd, with early voting starting tomorrow, November 17th.

As it stands now, the Democrats are within spitting distance of reaching a 60-seat filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. As of today, it looks like Republican Ted Stevens of Alaska will lose his seat as the last absentee ballots are counted in that state, and Al Franken is within a couple of hundred votes in Minnesota, pending a mandatory recount. If both those seats stay in the Democratic column, it will bring our majority to 59; a successful Georgia runoff bringing us up to the magic number 60.

Republicans are pouring resources into the state, John McCain is campaigning for Chambliss, and the RNC is plastering the airwaves with negative ads.

But Jim Martin has a secret weapon. Us.

Martin’s campaign has reached out to the “Fightin’ 36th” (CD 36)  and other California Obama phone bank groups, knowing we were the engine that drove the GOTV effort for states all over the country.

Missing the old gang? Pining away for call lists and vote builder log-ins?

Have we got the phone banks for you!

Saturday, November 22

Pot Luck Phone Bank

1pm-4pm

913 Marco Place, Venice, CA 90291

Bring your cell phones, your chargers, and a dish!

We’ll provide the drinks!

Sunday, November 23

BBQ Phone Bank and Hot Tub Extravaganza

1pm-4pm

758 Palms Blvd., Venice, CA 90291

Bring your cell phones, chargers, bathing suit and a side dish. We’ll supply the drinks, burgers and hot water!

Please RSVP to [email protected] so we’ll know how much food to prepare. D-day claims he’ll bring Snickerdoodles!

A Few Good Women

(Cross-posted at DKos)

Although we have had one woman running for President and one female vice-presidential candidate, the 2008 election was not a complete success for women. We elected ten new women to the House and two to the Senate, but also suffered bitter defeats in House races where incredibly qualified challengers like former Microsoft executive Darcy Burner and Huntington Beach mayor Debbie Cook lost hard fought races against lackluster Republican incumbents. Furthermore, the pipeline of women elected on the local and state level (especially here in California) has flat-lined.

As President-Elect Obama outlines his presidency, his immediate significant act is to appoint his team – this would include new Cabinet secretaries and agency heads. In recent weeks there has been a lot of news about who will serve in those positions, but with the exception of the Hillary Clinton/Secretary of State rumors, there does not seem to be too much chatter about women serving in the administration. It would be a mistake to pass over women like Tammy Duckworth, who knows first hand the experience and needs of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, for consideration for Secretary of the VA, or Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano for Attorney General.

However, don’t forget that in addition to appointing the Cabinet, Secretaries and Under-Secretaries, when the president takes office his Presidential appointees will include between 6,000 to 7,000 positions. These appointments are the best preparation for the next generation of women leaders, serving both as experience on a national stage and to mentor a fresh flow of women into the pipeline for higher offices in the future.

Here alone, in California, there are so many women who could serve – women like former Superintendent of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin who would be ideal for a position in the Department of Education.  Or how about former Congresswoman and Chief of Staff for former Governor Gray Davis – Lynn Schenk? The Los Angeles Times on Friday reported the possibility of a great pick: Mary Nichols, the chair of the State Air Resources Board, to lead the EPA.

With such a diverse and rich talent pool of women in California and the rest of the country, there is no reason for Barack Obama to not have his cabinet and appointments reflect the gender makeup of the country he will lead.

For the comments: What women do you think should serve in the offices of the new President’s administration?

Bettina Duval is the founder of CALIFORNIA LIST, a network to elect Democratic women to California state government.