All posts by Lucas O'Connor

McCain Gets an ‘F’ from Schwarzenegger Climate Advisor

Think Progress went ahead and connected all these dots, but suffice it to say that despite his blustering pronouncements blasting Sens. Clinton and Obama, McCain’s environmental policy isn’t exactly a model among Governor Schwarzenegger’s climate staff:

Terry Tamminen, an adviser on energy and environmental policy to California Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, looked at what the presidential candidates have said they’d do and graded them: She gave Clinton and Obama B’s, but McCain got an F because he hasn’t put out a specific plan.

As you may recall, Governor 44% (pdf) rather dramatically endorsed Sen. McCain shortly before the Feb. 5 primaries, promptly barnburning all over the place including an election day swing through San Diego.  The crux of the endorsement and the stumping was that McCain was a maverick, no-nonsense, get-er-done moderate blah blah blah.  I guess maybe the environment isn’t included in McCain’s moderation- at least by the standards in Schwarzenegger’s own office.

Think Progress adds a bunch of other great points- like endorser Mel Martinez giving McCain an “incomplete” based on his lack of policy specifics.  And notes that McCain, as usual, talks a better game than he legislates, since both Clinton and Obama have better records on the environmental legislation that’s actually IN the Senate.  Remember when there was concern over Obama’s lack of specifics? Anybody want to hold their breath until the media starts hammering McCain for the same?  Remember in 2000 when we got a president that lacked policy specifics?

Republican rebelling against the Yacht Party Ad

Full disclosure: I work for the Courage Campaign

Cross posted at the Courage Campaign blog

Assemblymember Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo) is one of the co-stars of our Yacht Ad, and apparently he isn’t particularly excited about it.  Steve Wiegand notes a “bemused” Blakeslee claiming that the current $8 billion deficit is somehow related to him first voting for, then voting against, closing the sloophole.

Well unfortuantely for Asm. Blakeslee, when you vote for it before you voted against it, Rick Jacobs is right-“There’s a little John Kerry in there.”  It isn’t up to him to decide when votes are symbolic or substantive, and switching sides on the issue “in a sign of solidarity” with fellow GOPers doesn’t really signal a commitment to moving beyond partisanism for the good of the state.  In fact, it’s the “party solidarity” that’s been the problem all along.

Meaning well doesn’t go to far if the votes can’t stay in line with those good intentions.  And as a member of the budget committee through the past year of negotiations and general insanity, Blakeslee should know better than to throw around dumb lines like:

“The fact that the (Democrats) can’t even figure out who did and didn’t vote explains why the state of California has an $8 billion deficit right now,”

That sounds likely to be closer to the true Blakeslee.  Instead of taking responsibility for the budget mess or instead of offering new ways to generate revenue or re-examine with fresh eyes the budget process in general, Blakeslee falls back on good old solidarity.  Throw substance-less bombs across the aisle, try and fail to sound dismissive, and at the end of the day, be no closer to a budget that actually provides a reasonable level of service to the state of California.

So this is your 2008 Yacht Party at work: Even in a rare case where a member may oppose the sloophole, they can’t get past the petty partisanism to maintain the right vote.  Party first, people second.

Endorsements are now being considered

AD-40 is up first. Blumenfield got 65% yesterday, but the cards just went up and it’s gonna be tight.

[Update by Lucas] Endorsement fails, endorsement is vacated. Art Torres is noting that a substitute candidate can come from the floor, would need 75%.

SD-03 will be coming next.  The Leno signs are out in force, not seeing the Migden troops yet.

[Update by Lucas] Migden supporters are now swarming in as well.  UFW representative speaks in favor of Migden, pitching on her union connections and support for farmworkers.  Sen. Migden reels off the endorsements.

[Update by Lucas] Speaking for non-endorsement is Speaker-Elect Karen Bass (nice!). And Mark Leno speaks next with Kamala Harris doing her best to establish her star.

[Update by Lucas] Here come the cards. The voice vote was a deafening support for “no.”  Everyone has to get back to their seats before the vote can begin.

[Update by Lucas] “No” cards just went up, it’s a stomping. It looks like the whole room.

[Update by Lucas] Final Tally: Yes 298, No 742. Wow. That’s 71.3% for No. Motion from the floor to endorse Leno- he’d need 75%. Quick speech now.

[Update by Lucas] Voting now on Leno- cards are up.

[Update by Lucas] Final Tally: 979 total votes. 591 Yes, 388 No. 60.3%, motion fails. No endorsement.

What a difference a DAY makes

Perhaps not surprising, but certainly striking nonetheless, is the explosion of press and outside-the-center activity now that Bill Clinton’s arrival is near at hand.  Where once the blogger riser was empty, now there’s no room for everyone.  Leno/Migden and Blumenfield/Healey/Waldman will apparently be kicking things off this morning- presumably catching everyone while they’re half asleep and/or hungover from last night.  Frank Russo kinda stole my headline before I could write it, but it’s a good one- Migden-Leno Endorsement Fight May Overshadow Bill Clinton Speech at California Democratic Party Convention Today.  As a few of us were discussing earlier, it’ll be a story for the ages if Carole Migden manages to steal the spotlight from Bill Clinton.

…and we’re off.

[Update by Lucas] To clarify how this vote is going down, a “Yes” vote would be for the initial winner of yesterday’s endorsement (Migden and Blumenfield) while a “No” vote would mean no endorsement of anyone.

[Update by Dave] …the Hillary visibility extras are massing on the floor.  Incidentally, I heard that Phil Donahue’s movie, which screened here last night, is uncompromising on Hillary’s war vote, and during the time when she talks about it in the film she was booed.  The reaction from the audience here to the Big Dog should be interesting.

Picture 12[Update by Dave] …Christine Pelosi is talking about the party platform.  Marriage equality is in there, which is awesome, as well as the party’s commitment to a safe and orderly withdrawal from Iraq and single payer healthcare.  That’s a good platform.  And it passed without any incident.  Fantastic.

[Update by Dave] …Inola Henry on the Resolutions Committee reports that the party endorses a no vote on 98 and yes on 99 for the June election, and endorses the recall of Jeff Denham in SD-12.  That’s great, though I hope that the party will put some muscle behind the racall.  Prop. 98 would end rent control throughout the state, and it must be stopped.  Art Torres says “that’s the easiest resolutions report we’ve ever had.”

[Update by Lucas] San Francisco DA Kamala Harris is taking the stage now, speaking on behalf of Obama.  Suddenly people have energy in the room.

[Update by Dante]Debra Bowen is talking about her review of the state’s voting systems.  Meanwhile, both Robert and Brian are looking at Debra Bowen’s Facebook page.

[Update by Lucas] Video montage of the Convention just ended. Clips of Willie Brown being awesome, candidates, Pelosi, activists, on and on. Pretty cool, if with a bit of an ‘end of summer camp’ vibe.

[Update by Brian]: And we’re killing time. This has got to be the longest secretary’s report EVER.

[Update by Lucas] Well, here comes Bill. And everyone’s gettin excited. Also, I could do without ever getting shushed by Art Torres again.

Busby for CDP Chair?

So Francine Busby has been working the convention for the past two days passing out literature to announce her campaign for CDP Chair in 2009.  I don’t have a horse in this race, but that also of course means that the other rumored candidates haven’t exactly lit me on fire just yet.  Speaking to San Diego delegates earlier, there was notable support for the idea.  The candidacy at the very least would be a nice break from the traditional Bay/LA power structure.

We’ll try to catch up with her for a few minutes tomorrow and find out what she has to say.

Updated: Leno, Nation, Migden and a sign

Everyone has been going on and on about the SD-03 race here, and I’m about as far removed from a vested interest as one could be while still living in California, but it’s been good for horserace fun- it’s definitely the hot race in the halls here, with mountains of lit from all three sides.  It actually reminds me of all the presidential buzz last year, and seems to be overshadowing the Clinton/Obama business so far (at least among the unscientific sample of folks I’m talking to). Joe Nation and Mark Leno have been working the crowds in their way, and Migden, well…she’s being herself as well, which from what I hear is at least pretty entertaining.  On the flip is the banner she’s been running around the CC with, which turned a few heads for using the official seal of the State Senate while campaigning.  That’s a little sketchy, but then what isn’t these days?

[Update by Julia] Sweet Melissa brings us the scene from the Women’s Caucus and it is jaw dropping.

We walked in and who was at the podium in front of hundreds of people? Carole Migden! And Mark Leno was standing in the back of the room! I looked around and saw lots of women holding Leno signs and gay men holding Migden signs. And the supporters were heckling each other! Hilarious!

I later learned that this was a meeting of the California Democratic Party Women’s Caucus. Migden launched into her speech, which fell pretty flat until she got to the part about how “women should vote for women” and pointed to a group of women in the corner of the room (some of whom were, um…not-petite) who were holding Leno signs and said:

   “I mean, are those women or heavy guys?”

I shit you not.

Allow me to repeat that:

   “I mean, are those women or heavy guys?”

The room was silent for a second while we all thought the same thing: “Did she just effing say that?” Then the place erupted with boos and curses that did not stop.

Sweet Melissa sums it all up by saying:

To recap: I wasn’t here two hours and I saw Migden get booed off the stage at the Women’s Caucus. This is going to be good.

Today at 4:30 there will be a potential endorsement vote for Midgen.  The rules are different for incumbents then those running for an open seat.  She only needs 50%+1 rather than 60%.

[Update by Lucas] Word is that Migden was hammering the same “women need to stick together” line at the Progressive Caucus last night.  Always good when we can have an honest debate about the issues…

Art Torres wants Michigan and Florida Seated

Torres is speaking now, waxing poetic about the proper behavior for a spirited primary- no personal attacks, etc. etc.  But in the process mentioned that Michigan and Florida delegates should be seated at the DNC convention.  Not exactly sure where all this is coming from, but there it is.

And now we’re on to McCain and the S&L scandal.  (Update: As Dave mentioned next to me, Torres clearly has the full oppo research on McCain.  It would be nice if this was the beginning of a larger movement to target McCain- anyone want to lay odds?)

Didn’t anyone pass him the memo that this year’s convention is ONLY about Leno/Midgen? 🙂

What a difference a year makes

Last year, the convention was down the hill from my front door, and it was the first or second time I had met many of the bloggers and activists from around the state.  This year, in my first hour in the Convention Center I was happy to see again dozens of fellow bloggers, candidates, activists and friends from every corner of the state.

The growing community is fantastic, but I’m sure that the growing list of disclaimers raises some questions.  Workings within the system has long been established as the preferred tactic, and I’m energized by the possibilities.  The growth and nuance and personal relationships are encouraging as we head into today’s activities.

Apparently, Some People “don’t know exactly what they are doing”

I have to run but there isn’t a lot that needs to be added here.  I want you to start by taking these two quotes from today from the Governor

“Now even though I was criticized by Sen. Perata, who said, ‘Boy, he should not mind our business. We know exactly what we are doing.’ Well, obviously they don’t know exactly what they are doing because otherwise we wouldn’t have a $14 billion deficit. If everyone knows exactly what they are doing, we wouldn’t have the budget mess in 2003 which created the recall election.”

and

“Sometimes you see schools protesting out there or sending me letters,” Schwarzenegger said. “I’m with them. I wish I could stand there protesting, too. Because we have to protest the budget system. Not this year’s budget. The budget system is the failure. That is what has to be corrected as quickly as possible.”

Now, try to pick just one direction to run with in those brief words.  Will you talk about the Governor throwing stones from his glass budgetary house?  Will you talk about how this is the perfect summation to your thesis on how the Governor talks like a moderate reformer but acts like a through-and-through (occasionally insane) fiscal conservative?  Will you talk about how productive it usually is when resolving disputes to point fingers and call people names?  Will you talk about the absurd, both-sides-of-the-mouth, ‘I support education above everything except that it’s the first to go’ rhetoric?

Those are just a few conversation starters for you.  Reflect on them, offer your own, whatever.

“It’s a paradigm shifting election.” An interview with Nick Leibham

I shared breakfast with Nick Leibham last week and discussed where he stands on a number of issues.  I mostly just lobbed topics and let him talk; this is the relevant transcript edited to be a remotely reasonable length and minus fun stuff like us chatting with the waitress and our occasional divergence into non-relevant shop talk.  Some parts I liked, some parts less so. But here it is.  Note this is a contested primary.

Iraq

Each and every day we remain in Iraq we’re compromising our national security further. It’s a blood feud that goes back 1400 years between the Sunnis and Shiites. American military forces are not going to be able to sort this out for them and at the end of the day they’ve got to want peace; they’ve got to want their own stable form of government; they’ve got to want democracy more than the American Marine Corps wants it for them

The longer that we’re there, the more strain it puts on our own men and women in uniform. They’re going out on third, fourth, fifth tours of duty, and you read about it all the time of course because we’re just miles away from Camp Pendleton

We need to come out and we need to set a date certain for when we are going to redeploy out of Iraq.

Military and Security

There’s one…threshold question that needs to be answered whenever even the thought of American military use is involved, and that is ‘Is it in the interests of the United States of America; Is it in the national security interest?’  Obviously the United States military has a role to play in ferreting out al Qaeda, in ferreting out terrorist organizations, in…making sure that our own interests abroad are taken care of.

But the United States military has no business in trying to create whole cloth [or] molding different societies.  It’s kind of antithetical- democracy can’t be imposed at gunpoint.  

They’ve got to figure it out for themselves. It can’t be the United States government doing it for them.

Immigration

The most fundamental job of a nation is to protect its sovereignty, and when you can’t secure your borders and ports you can’t protect your sovereignty…As a nation we need to recognize that we are going to have to put a significant amount of money, time and effort into suring up our southern border.

As a former prosecutor…if you really want to dry up illegal immigration, you hold employers accountable, and I’ll be the only one up on stage that has ever prosecuted an employer for hiring illegal immigrants. After that’s done, you get to other questions.

Health Care and SCHIP

We should be providing health care to kids and Brian Bilbray has staked out a position of essentially rabid ideology at the expense of some 10 million American kids…I think that it’s a disgrace that he decided to stand on ideology and stand with the President as opposed to providing these kids with proper medical care.  I think it’s just very mean-spirited and worse, it’s bad public policy.

My endpoint [on health care] is that every family should be able to see a family doctor of their choosing. The way in which we get there I think is going to be a battle royale come January 2009. And what is being pitched today out on the campaign trail- there isn’t going to be even a shade of resemblance once this thing actually gets done.

There is a little bit of overlap between Democrats and Republicans on a few issues. One, I think all parties agree that you’re going to have to see rapid and massive adoption of information technology and digital patient files.  That will cut down on everything from medical errors to back office expense.  And the estimates on what that would shave off- I’ve seen 10-12% of the total healthcare dollars. Secondly, another overlapping area is preventative care.  There are certain areas of medicine where this makes a lot of sense. This makes a lot of sense in the area of inoculations…it makes a lot of sense as it concerns preventative screening for certain diseases.  From a cost benefit analysis and a quality of years lived analysis.

You’ve got to have a very serious debate on how else you get there. we’re the only westernized country in the world that tells the pres drug companies that they can charge anything they want and it doesn’t matter…I think that’s something that needs to be addressed.

What that final product is going to look like, I’m not exactly sure.  But I know that…we need to look at that end goal…and say let’s try to get there.

FISA

we spoke briefly about the general nature of modern privacy before FISA

What’s much MUCH more disconcerting to me is the entire FISA bill…As somebody who has been a prosecutor and dealt with the 4th Amendment, I can tell you that this happened to have been the one amendment in the Bill of Rights that all the Founding Fathers could agree upon; that in order for the government intrusion there had to be probable cause signed off on by an independent magistrate that says you may have committed a crime. I find the entire FISA process to be constitutionally dubious. That doesn’t mean that it couldn’t be made constitutionally valid but I think that anytime you have wiretaps involved…that deals with an American citizen, you’ve gotta have a court sign off on it.  The only question in my mind is whether or not that has to be done prior to there warrant being executed or whether or not there is some grace period.  There is no doubt in my mind that the executive branch itself cannot act as both overseer and executioner (of warrants or wiretaps). That, I think, is constitutionally impermissible; I think it’s a violation of the judiciary’s proper role of interpreting laws.

As a former prosecutor [and] law clerk in the US Attorney’s office in the Major Frauds and Economic Crimes section…I’ve never heard of anybody being given immunity when you don’t know what they’ve done. It’s not how the immunity process works.  You don’t say to somebody ‘Whatever you’ve done, don’t worry about it.’…It’s unthinkable to me as a lawyer and as somebody who will have…sworn to uphold the Constitution that I could ever support that.

California Emissions and the Environment

I’m not a scientist, but from what I have read…the EPA seems to have made their decision to deny California its waiver based on faith based science. That’s not good enough. If it’s warranted by the facts and the evidence, it should be granted.  During the next administration, if it’s a Democrat, I think we’ll get a fair hearing. And if we don’t, that’s ripe for congressional action to clarify the rule. Because it’s the congress that makes the laws, the executive branch simply carries out those laws.

The debate on the science (of global warming) is over. There is no doubt in any serious scientist’s mind that global warming is happening. There is virtually no doubt that mankind is directly causing global warming. The only question at this point is ‘What is the causal relationship and what are the consequences going forward?’

The role of government as it concerns energy and the environment I think is going to be crucial in the next 5, 10, 20 years. One of the things I very much hope to work on as a member of Congress…is pursuing and advocating for alternative energy in the areas of wind, solar, some biomass, hydrogen. And the role of the government here is to set high standards, it’s to help foster innovation- especially in the very early stages of research and development- and then I think it’s to turn it over to the market who does a great job of packaging this up…and if people can make a…fortune doing it, great. It makes good public policy, it’s good politics, I think it’s a good way to return some manufacturing to…the Americas.

It’s also an issue of national security. We send hundreds of billions of dollars each year to…Middle Eastern regimes many of them hostile to our interests. We know…that some of that money ends up with Hezbollah; that it ends up with Hamas; some of it filters down and ends up with al Qaeda. We’re funding both sides of the war in this particular time.

Then there is the great moral calling of our time which is addressing the global warming problem itself…There is no doubt that our kids will bear the full brunt of this, and we need to figure out now a way to mitigate it because to do anything other than that is nothing short of…long-term child abuse.

Economy

Two prime reasons (for the current economic situation).  One, it has been fiscal insanity on the part of the Bush administration…We see that in everything from the weakness of the dollar which hits you…at the pump and in the grocery aisle, to being able to sure up many of those social programs which we know have a pending disaster: Medicare, Social Security, our infrastructure, etc.  Secondly, the war. You cannot talk about anything else in this campaign until you address the war.

We are spending- the estimates are- $10-12 billion a month.  We have direct outlays to Iraq…upwards and including $500 billion.  For one single solitary day of war making in Iraq, we could have sent 160,000 low-income students to college for a year.  For 3 1/2 months of war in Iraq we could have provided healthcare coverage to those 10 million…American kids for 5 years under SCHIP.  Until we end that, again, we are committing long term fiscal child abuse.  Because we’re not paying for it…we’re borrowing money from…foreign creditors to finance this thing. It’s completely and totally irresponsible and it must end.

There’s some middle class tax cuts that…we should retain. We should retain the 15% capital gains rate as opposed to seeing it revert back to 20%. More than 50 million Americans at this point have 401Ks; hat benefits them greatly.  We need to once and for all end the AMT.  These last couple years it has snagged a whole cross section of our population that it was never meant to hit, and the doubling of the child tax credit is a positive thing. It’s a positive thing for San Diego families and San Diego parents.  Of course, the recklessness as it concerns the Bush giveaways in terms of the top 1%- no. That’s fiscal insanity and I will be a voice to end it.

Most interesting for me was an interlude about halfway through the interview where we lapsed into discussing this year’s election in an historical context:

We win this fight because their platform is old and it’s worn out…The Reagan Revolution…which started really in 1964 with Goldwater’s defeat…it culminated in 1980 and 1994 and the end of the Bush years are a bookend. It’s tired, it’s played out, and it no longer offers up a positive agenda for America. This isn’t just a change election in the sense of Democrats or Republicans.  This is a paradigm shifting election and Democrats can capture that…they’ve got a lot of work to do but we can capture it and I think the pendulum is swinging our way.