All posts by jsw

[From NCP] Pombo Has Problems

[Originally posted by Chris Clarke on Norcal Politics, October 19, 2005]

Tracy’s congressional representative Richard Pombo is having a bad week. Today’s Stockton Record has a prominent story – echoed in a few other local dailies – about the House Resources Committee Chairman getting into hot water for not paying taxes on junkets to New Zealand and Japan given him by an anti-environmental front group, the International Foundation for the Conservation of Natural Resources.

This comes on the heels of speculation that he may have a formidable GOP challenger in the primaries. Pete McCloskey, a moderate GOP environmentalist and rancher in the Capay Valley west of Sacramento, is speculating that unless "someone better" pops up, he is likely to challenge Pombo for the Republican candidacy in 2006. McCloskey, who once represented Anna Eshoo’s district from a sort of Green Rockefeller Republican position, is probably best known for being the first Representative to call for Nixon’s impeachment over the Watergate scandal.

Pombo is currently pushing a "rewrite" of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) through Congress that would gut many important protections for wildlife, including the already-straightjacketed Critical Habitat provisions of the act. Though the ESA has long been a Pombo bete noire, a recent poll of his constituents indicates that his advocacy of gutting the landmark law may prove a liability in his increasingly urban district. The poll, commissioned by the environmental group Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund, found that nearly 60 percent of Pombo’s constituents support a strong ESA. A mere 31 percent of his constituents oppose the Endangered Species Act.

This support for the Endangered Species Act is so strong that even when respondents were read competing proposals for changing the act, a solid majority of 61 percent of constituents in Rep. Pombo’s district agreed with supporters of the Endangered Species Act. Pombo, the scion of a family that got rich buying ranches and subdividing them into bedroom communities for liberal-trending San Francisco Bay Area commuters, may yet find his family’s success has ensured his eventual political failure.

Action: SF Residents Call Nancy Pelosi

( – promoted by jsw)

Democratic Leader Pelosi is behaving in inexplicable ways for someone who wants to lead the Democratic Caucus:

1)  Congresswoman Pelosi is supporting the regulation of blogs (and by extension any form of online activism or reporting) under the campaign finance laws.  No other media outlet is regulated.  It’s astonishing that she would do this, given that blogs are one of the few places that there is a strong pro-Democrat pro-liberal message, and that the blogs have gone to bat for Pelosi over and over again.

2)  Congresswoman Pelosi is criticizing Senator Feingold’s proposal to censure George Bush for breaking the law by wiretapping American citizens without a warrant.  This is an issue which (a) has a tremendous amount of support from the Democratic base, (b) has a plurality of support from the American people in general, and (c) is simply not in her scope of responsibility.

If you live in SF, Nancy Pelosi answers to you.  Call her offices today.  (Try to be nice. The staffer is probably just as frustrated as you are.)

Nancy Pelosi

(415) 556-4862 (SF)
(202) 225-4965 (DC)

March 16, 2006 CA Blog Roundup

Californa Blog Roundup for March 16, 2006

All on the flip…

That’s it for today. Use the comments to let us know of other bloggy California goodness.

[From NCP] No on Proposition 77: Reason #1

[Originally posted at NorCal Politics on October 16, 2005]

I tried to write just one post about all of the reasons that Proposition 77 is such a bad idea. It got far too long, so I’ll be serializing it this week. The first installment is below.

Bottom Line #1: You can’t separate Arnold Schwarzenegger’s “neutral” redistricting plan from the larger Republican strategy of creating a permanent majority by changing the field of play. Schwarzenegger’s plan is part of a pure Republican power play, just as much as the Republican redistricting of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Florida and Tom Delay’s infamous redistricting of Texas.

Continue reading [From NCP] No on Proposition 77: Reason #1

[From NCP] Face to Face Lobbying

[Originally posted on October 11, 2005 at NorCal Politics]

I spent last Saturday at the Craigslist Foundation Non-Profit Boot Camp. As with most conferences / trade shows / large gatherings, the fare was mixed, but there was some useful information. Among the most practical advice was Larry Fahn‘s short, instructive lecture on lobbying one’s legislator (City, State, Federal). I’ve reproduced my notes below. Continue reading [From NCP] Face to Face Lobbying

March 15, 2006 CA Blog Roundup

I’m going to be trying to do California blog roundups every couple of days, probably more often as the elections near. Here’s today’s:

That’s it for today. Use the comments to let us know of other bloggy California goodness.

The Shape of the Schwarzenegger Campaign

Arnold Schwarzenegger is newly humble and bipartisan, so he says, after he took a beating for his hard-right politics and crass attempt at a power grab in last year’s special election.

Nobody with a pulse should believe that.

Schwarzenegger 2006 is shaping up to look like Bush 2000, complete with compassionate conservative rhetoric from the top of ticket for the general population, hardcore Republican fire-breathing from the #2 slot, and carefully targeted negative attacks on his opposition based on voter’s “anger points”. Don’t take my word for it. Schwarzenegger’s campaign preparation says so.

First, Schwarzenegger is teaming up with Movement Conservative Republican Tom McClintock:

Typically in California, candidates for governor and lieutenant governor don’t campaign as running mates — but you’d never guess it by watching Republicans Arnold Schwarzenegger and Tom McClintock lately.

The 2006 campaign is still young, but Schwarzenegger, the incumbent governor seeking an uncertain re-election, and McClintock, a state senator from Ventura County running for lieutenant governor, look very much like a tag team.

Personal friendship — and political necessity — have forged an alliance between the two that mirrors a presidential-vice presidential slate, with each shoring up the other’s weaknesses.

Schwarzenegger helps boost McClintock’s visibility and fundraising ability. McClintock, in turn, has recently rushed in to aid Schwarzenegger by tamping down trouble from his right flank.

Schwarzenegger is Bush, McClintock is Cheney. We all know exactly how compassionate the Bush brand of conservatism has been, and hopefully we will all remember how aggressively Schwarzenegger pushed the extremist Republican agenda in last year’s special election. If you want to know what another Schwarzenegger administration would look like, listen to McClintock, not Schwarzenegger.

Second, look at the team that Schwarzenegger is assembling for the 2006 Election.

  • Campaign Manager Steve Schmidt:

    Deputy assistant to President Bush and counselor to Vice President Dick Cheney who is responsible for Cheney’s press relations and communications …

    White House point man in charge of strategic communications for the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Samuel Alito …

    [H]eld the same post for the nomination of John Roberts, who was confirmed in September as the nation’s chief justice.

    [E]arned his reputation as a steely political strategist who ran the Bush 2004 war room and became a member of the exclusive Breakfast Club, the small group of top operatives who planned the campaign during regular meetings at the home of White House political strategist Karl Rove.

  • Chief Strategist Matthew Dowd:

    And what came from that analysis was a graph that I obviously gave Karl, which showed that independents or persuadable voters in the last 20 years had gone from 22 percent of the electorate to 7 percent of the electorate in 2000. And so 93 percent of the electorate in 2000, and what we anticipated, 93 or 94 in 2004, just looking forward and forecasting, was going to be already decided either for us or against us. You obviously had to do fairly well among the 6 or 7 [percent], but you could lose the 6 or 7 percent and win the election, which was fairly revolutionary, because everybody up until that time had said, “Swing voters, swing voters, swing voters, swing voters, swing voters.”

    And so when that graph and that first strategic imperative began to drive how we would think about 2004, nobody had ever approached an election that I’ve looked at over the last 50 years, where base motivation was important as swing, which is how we approached it. We didn’t say, “Base motivation is what we’re going to do, and that’s all we’re doing.” We said, “Both are important, but we shouldn’t be putting 80 percent of our resources into persuasion and 20 percent into base motivation,” which is basically what had been happening up until that point, because of — look at this graph. Look at the history. Look what’s happened in this country. And obviously that decision influenced everything that we did. It influenced how we targeted mail, how we targeted phones, how we targeted media, how we traveled, the travel that the president and the vice president did to certain areas, how we did organization, where we had staff. All of that was based off of that, and ultimately, thank goodness, it was the right decision.

  • Communications Director Katie Levinson:

    [D]irector of White House television operations … is viewed in GOP circles as a major recruit in the 2008 presidential staff sweepstakes, [and] handled television strategy and planning for the Republican National Committee in 2004.

  • Deputy Communications Director Matt David:

    “I’m deputy director of communications for Supreme Court nominees at the White House. I work with the media and make sure our supporters are briefed on our current message. This requires identifying potential issues in the media, drafting talking points, and talking to the press. Our objective is to convey the qualifications of our nominee and respond proportionally to attacks from his or her critics. I’ve worked on the nominations of Chief Justice John Roberts, White House Counsel Harriet Miers and Judge Samuel Alito.”

  • Matt McDonald (apparently controls rapid response team): Ran rapid response for Bush/Cheney 2004 campaign, and for Bush Administration after 2004 election.
  • Sarah Simmons, former aide to Karl Rove in the White House political office, serving as strategist Matthew Dowd’s liaison in California.

    SARAH SIMMONS, a former Wisconsin GOP political operative, has moved from the polling firm Public Opinion Strategies to the White House. Simmons will be dealing with strategic reaction to polling data in her position as assistant director in the Office of Strategic Initiatives. (WISpolitics 5/13/05)

  • Deputy Campaign Manager Reed Galen: Best evidence is that he was Director of Scheduling for Bush/Cheney 2004.
  • Jon Berrier, Assistant to Steve Schmidt: Executive Assistant to Steve Schmidt in Schmidt’s role as Counselor to Vice President Cheney.

That team is custom-built to replicate the Bush campaign strategy in California. Schwarzenegger’s going to be a moderate front man for a classic Bush Republican campaign. Proxies for Schwarzenegger will attack Phil Angelides and Steve Westly with radical smears directed at what the Dems consider to be their strengths. Schwarzenegger will float above the fray, saying little of substance, while his hard men do their dirty work.

It’s not as if the Republicans have a lot of new tricks. They just hammer on the old ones with great vigor. I just hope the California Dems can learn from the National Dems.

Enormous California Blogroll

So, on the flip, one will find an enormous California liberal / progressive / lefty blogroll.

An OPML file with as many of the RSS feeds we could find, suitable for import into your feed reader of choice, is downloadable from here:

If you’re a liberal / progressive / lefty blogger in California, and you’re not on this list, believe me, it wasn’t for lack of trying on our part.

A Progressive
Alamedan

A Tiny
Revolution

Agitprop

All these wonderful
things

all things
global

An old soul…
Andrew’s Wild and
Wonderful Blog

Angry Bear
Ang’s Weird Ideas
Another
Green World

Ariel
Arms and
Influence

As seen
from Just Above Sunset

AXIS OF JUSTICE
Back
Fence, Palo Alto

Back
Fence, San Mateo

Back
Fence, Sunnyvale

Backup Brain
Bad Attitudes
BAGnewsNotes
Bajillion
Bay to the
Beltway

Be For Change
Bear
Bites

Bear Republic
Action Group

Beep’s
Blog

Berkeley Bubble
Best of the Blogs
Bitch Ph.D.

Black and
Blue

Blame India
Watch

BlogaBarbara
BlogBites
Blogging
LA

BlogLeft:
Critical Interventions

Blognonymous
Blue Bear
Republic

Blue Santa
Clarita

Bob
Williams

BobHarris.com

Boomer
Bytes

Bouphonia
Brad Delong
Brad Plumer
Brian
Dennert HERE

Burbank
Democratic Club

Busy, Busy, Busy
CA Dems
Party Line

CA-11 Blog

Cab Drollery
CaliBlogger

California
for Democracy

California for
Feingold ’08

California Greening
California Notes
California Observer
California
Progress Report

Cannablog
Captain Future’s
Dreaming Up Daily

Carries Bar
& Grill

Changing Places
Choosing
Democracy

Common Sense
Constantly Amazed,
Yet Never Surprised

Corrente : Leah
Corrente
: Shystee

Courage Campaign
Craigorian
Chant

Creek Running North
Crooks and Liars
Daddy, Papa
& Me

Daily Kos

Davenetics
DAVID E’S FABLOG
D-Day

Deb’s Web

Democracy
for California

Dogged Blog
DonBoy
Dons
Blog of California Politics

Down With
Tyranny

Dr. Forbush Thinks
Dr. Laniac
Drinking
Liberally: Oakland

Drinking
Liberally: Monterey

Drinking
Liberally: Palo Alto

Drinking
Liberally: Santa Barbara

Dump Doolittle

East Bay for
Democracy blog

Educational Justice
El Oso, El Moreno and
El Abogado

Election Fraud Blog

Eric Umansky
ESCHEW OBFUSCATION
excuse the mess…
that was just my head

Eye on Calvert
Ezra Klein

firedoglake
Fish Wars on Cars

From the
Fever Swamp

Gavin Watch
Get
Rid of the DLC

Get Your
Blog Up

Green Dog
Democrat

Greetings from
Downtown Huntington Beach

Greg Dewar
Gropinator
Happening-Here?
Heeeyah!
Hellblazer
Hoffmania!
Hollywood
Liberal

Hoverbike
Hugo Schwyzer
Hullabaloo
I protest.
I remember when
I lost my mind…

Idiotarian Savant
If I Ran The Zoo
I’M NOT
ONE TO BLOG, BUT …

Intel Dump
ItLooksLikeThis
Jack*
jawfish

Jibber
Jabber

Joe Scott
3: Body Politic

John Gorenfeld

Journeys
with Jood

Kid Oakland

King of Zembla
LAist
LA Observed
Last
Left Before Hooterville

Left Coaster
left i on the news
Left in SF
Left is Right

Left Turn on Bird
Street

Left-Over
Lies.com
Life Goes Off
Live from the Nuke
Free Zone

Long Beach Politics
Los Angeles Express
Lying Media
Bastard

MacroMayheM
Marc Cooper
MARC PERKEL RANTZ
Margaret
Cho

Martini Republic

MercuryX23
Michael
Benjamin

Migra Matters
Mikes Thoughts on
the World

Miniver Cheevy
Monterey
County Dems

Mortal Jive
Moving Target
Ms. Geek
Needlenose
Negro
Please

Negrophile

News Corpse
Night Light
Nite Swimming
N Judah
Chronicles

North
Coast Curmudgeon

Northstate
Science

Oasis
California News Blog

OB
(Ocean Beach) Rag

OjaiBlog
Ojai Post
Old
Hickory’s Weblog

On Lisa Rein’s Radar

Pacific Views
Patterns
that Connect

Pax Nortona
Perspectives of
Schuyler

Pinko
Feminist Hellcat

Political Animal
Political Parrhesia
Political
Sapphire

Politics in the Zeros

POPULATION: ONE
Poverty Barn
PowerPAC
Progressive
11th

PST
PUEBLO
Punning Pundit
Random
Notes

Random Ravings
Reality Frame
rebecca’s pocket
Redwood
Dragon

RH
Reality Check – CA

RICHARDBELLIKOFF.COM
Robot Invasion
Roger Ailes
Rubicon
Ruck
Pad

salto
mortale

San
Diego Today

Santa
Barbara Progressive

Santa Clara Dems

Say No to Pombo
Scaramouche
Scoobie Davis
Online

Scott
Lewis on Politics (Voice of San Diego)

Scott Rosenberg’s
Wordyard

Seeing the Forest

SFist

Shouts
from the Balcony

ShrillBlog
skippy the bush
kangaroo

Smafty
Mac

SoCal
Grassroots

SoHum Parlance
SOTUblog
Speak Out California
Spocko’s Brain
Spot-On
SteveAudio
Surf Putah
Surfk9
Living in the Land of the SUV

Talking Donkeys
TBogg

TerryFacePlace
The Blue Voice
THE BRAD BLOG
The Broad View
The California
Majority Report

The Citizens
The Democratic Daily
The
Disgruntled Chemist

The Duck
Stream

The Generik Brand
The Good Human
The Hackenblog
The Heretik
The Liberal OC
The Mad Professah Lectures
The Mojowire
The Most Important
Blog… Ever

The People’s
Vanguard of Davis

The Political
Dogfight

The Poor Man
The Pragmatic
Progressive

The Reality-Based
Community

The Ruth Group
The Talent Show
There is no Blog
This
Is What Democracy Looks Like

Tiger Beat
TomDispatch
Too
Beautiful

Turn Tahoe Blue
uggabugga
Uneasy Rhetoric
Unspun

WHATEVER
IT IS, I’M AGAINST IT

Winograd Watchdog
Words Have Power
Working
Californians Blog

You forgot Poland!

Chris Clarke on Global Warming

One of my favorite web stops is Chris Clarke’s Creek Running North.  Chris is a great writer, with a finely honed sense of style, beauty and outrage.  He also lives in Northern California, not far from San Francisco.

Yesterday he put up a great post about global warming.  I’ve excerpted some of the California bit here, but you should go read the whole thing.

My totem animal, the Joshua tree, grows iin thick groves at the current northern limit of its range, and if climate changes slowly enough to permit migration of both trees and the moths that pollinate them, we may see Joshua tree forests in Elko. And most people seeing them wouldn’t think them out of place.

But some species are already trapped.  I’d better get into the Yosemite backcountry to commune with Harley’s relatives, the pikas. Already restricted to the high alpine country, intolerant of higher temperatures at lower elevations, they have nowhere to go if their redoubts get too warm.

The thing that galls me most? We could lose them, and the Joshua trees, and the red spruce.

Read the rest of the post, and bookmark Creek Running North.