Tag Archives: 2008 Elections

Calitics: You can help me “pay it forward”…

(OK, sure! : ) – promoted by atdleft)

First off, I want to say that I am looking forward to meeting a lot of folks I’ve only heard about online at the “Blue House at the Brew House” blograiser at the California Democratic Convention next Friday.

Just a few days ago, I went to the YearlyKos fundraiser YearlyKos fundraiser in Washington, DC. You can see some of the pictures from that event, including a photo of me with Dengre, in NYBri’s recommended diary.

As you all know, I defeated Richard Pombo, a seven-term Republican incumbent, and was elected to Congress in 2006 on a wave of grassroots and netroots support. But, what some of you may not know is that I ran in 2004 and lost.

Sometimes, it takes more than one election cycle for voters to realize it’s time for a change. That’s why I am proud to post the following request on Calitics today.

Come over to the other side of this diary for the rest of the story.

When the pundits and power-brokers were telling us we could not defeat Richard Pombo, thousands of Democracy for America supporters pushed back, voting to give me DFA’s 2006 "Grassroots All-Star" endorsement, a crucial turning point that provided our campaign with a major financial boost.

Today, seven excellent grassroots candidates are competing to win DFA’s  first congressional endorsement of 2007. You can help me grow the Democratic majority in Congress in 2008 by voting for your next DFA Grassroots All-Star right now:

http://www.democracy…

DFA’s early endorsement helped me win a seat in Congress, showing that bottom-up, people-powered grassroots organizing works. Your Grassroots All-Star vote changed the race, helping us attract significant early support from the netroots and crucial media attention.

As Charles Chamberlain commented in a diary on Daily Kos yesterday, even the National Journal recognized the power of this endorsement:

Even after McNerney’s impressive primary upset, the DCCC was not sold on his viability. But over the summer, he began picking up extensive “netroots” support and captured the imagination of liberal Internet activists. He also won the “Grassroots All-Star” online voting contest run by Democracy for America, a political action committee inspired by Howard Dean. The group’s endorsement triggered campaign contributions for McNerney from around the country.

Now, you can make a difference again. Democracy for America has put together a list of candidates that came extremely close last year, ran an excellent grassroots campaign, and have already thrown their hat back in the ring. These candidates need your help to finish what they started in 2006. It’s up to you to decide who DFA will support next.

Please vote today for DFA’s 2007 Grassroots All-Star:

http://www.democracy…

Don’t stop there. We won the Grassroots All-Star competition in 2006 because our supporters spread the word about this important competition to their friends, family and neighbors — in the grassroots and the netroots. So, after you vote today, please recommend this diary on Daily Kos and ask your friends to support your candidate.

Getting out the vote is how you took back Congress in 2006 and it’s how we’ll grow our Democratic majority in 2008. You can get the ball rolling now by voting for your DFA Grassroots All-Star candidate today and telling your fellow Kossacks to do the same.

IMPORTANT: According to DFA, the first-round deadline is Sunday at midnight. So, you’ve got three days to GOTV!

Please use this diary to talk up your favorite candidate and why you think they should be the next DFA Grassroots All-Star!

Thank you for everything you do.

Jerry McNerney
Member of Congress
2006 DFA Grassroots All-Star

Clinton Has Strong Lead In First Oregon Poll

Sen. Hillary Clinton has a strong lead in one of the first polls that is out for 2008 from the Pacific Northwest. A new Riley Research poll shows Clinton with a 10 point lead over her nearest challenger Sen. Barack Obama. All other candidates finished in single digits behind Clinton and Obama with John Edwards in third, Al Gore in fourth, Bill Richardson in fifth, Randy Crow in sixth, and Chris Dodd in seventh.

http://bluesunbelt.c…

Hillary Clinton  31
Barack Obama  21
John Edwards  8
Al Gore  4
Bill Richardson  2
Randy Crow  1
Chris Dodd  0
Undecided  27
Misc.  2
Refused  2

Alice Toklas Club Endorses Leno for State Senate?

Just a moment ago, I came across this posting regarding an early endorsement for Mark Leno as he tries to unseat Carole Migden for the State Senate.

Last night the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club voted to move an early endorsement of Mark Leno in the State Senate race to their membership.

Only problem is, the incumbent Democrat and 30-year LGBT community leader Senator Carole Migden was given no notice of this, and was not even afforded an interview or chance to address the membership. And worst of all, her name will not even appear on the ballot for the endorsement vote. This is clearly undemocratic, and challenges the legitimacy of the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Club, and even more, the legitimacy of Mark Leno’s claim to be courteous, open and inclusive. How does that jibe with keeping Senator Migden’s name off the endorsement ballot?

If true, it’s a huge development, especially coming so early in the election cycle. Can anyone confirm this? Stay tuned!

23 States May Hold Primaries On February 5

A total of 23 states may hold primaries on February 5, 2008. By the end of the day as many as 50% of the delegates will have been chosen. The end of the long primary season is changing the game plans of all candidates as they figure out how to put their resources into the larger delegate rich states and to assess if Iowa and New Hampshire will have as much impact as they had in the past.

The presidential primary system as we have known it for 35 years is dead. History books will record that the era that began with the Democratic National Committee’s post-1968 reforms ended Aug. 19, 2006 at the hands of the very same DNC.

http://bluesunbelt.c…

Obama is Coming to Oakland

( – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Barack Obama is coming back to the Bay Area, and this time it’s on behalf of himself as he seeks votes in the City of Oakland. According to an email just sent to me:

Senator Barack Obama will be in Oakland next Saturday, March 17 for his very first presidential campaign rally in the Bay Area. It’s a rally we hope will build on the tremendous grassroots strength we’ve seen during the course of this young campaign. Senator Obama was met by thousands of supporters from Los Angeles to New Hampshire and we’re expecting similar results in Oakland. That is why we need your help as a volunteer to organize this historic event.


When: Saturday March 17 — Gates open at 3:00 PM

Where: Oakland City Hall Plaza, One Frank Ogawa Plaza, Oakland, California

How: The event is free and open to the public.  Please RSVP below to obtain your ticket.


Please join us at one of two organizational meetings for the Oakland Rally.

Oakland Obama Organizational Meeting
Sunday, March 11 – 12:30 PM

Oakland Marriott Hotel
Calvin Simmons Room
1001 Broadway
Oakland, CA
Cross street: 10th and 11th Street
Note: 11th/12th Street Bart Station is closest

http://my.barackobam…

San Francisco Obama Organizational Meeting
Sunday, March 11 – 4:00 PM

Delancey Street Foundation
Town Hall
600 Embarcadero Street
San Francisco, CA
Cross street: Brannon

http://my.barackobam…

In announcing his candidacy, Senator Obama said this campaign can’t only be about him. He said, “It must be about us – it must be about what we can do together.” That is why we’re asking you to take this campaign into your own hands and help make the upcoming Oakland rally a memorable one.

Hope to see you there!

Obama for America

This is what moving the California Primary to Feb. 5 is all about!

Is Al Franken Worthy to Take Wellstone’s Seat?

(I think “worthy” sets far too high of a standard, I mean we’re talking about Paul Wellstone’s seat. Hopefully we’ll have a primary so these issues are discussed and DFL activists can get fired up (I hope it has more than one radio host running). – promoted by blogswarm)

I wrote this today for Beyond Chron, San Francisco’s Alternative Online Daily.

Yesterday, comedian Al Franken made it official that he will run in 2008 against Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman. There is no Republican who I want to see defeated more than Norm Coleman – who challenged the late Senator Paul Wellstone in 2002, and only won after Wellstone tragically died in a plane crash. Franken formally announced by video on his campaign website, and acknowledged that voters should be skeptical about whether a comedian could be a serious politician. He spoke from the heart about growing up in Minnesota, what issues he passionately believes in, and that Paul Wellstone was his “political hero.” But it’s still unclear if Franken really deserves to get Paul’s Senate seat. Is it reasonable to have a media celebrity “rescue” Democrats from Norm Coleman, and is Al Franken really that progressive anyway?

Paul Wellstone was the most outspoken progressive in the U.S. Senate, an incredible grass-roots organizer and a relentless critic of the Bush Administration. Norm Coleman is a cynical opportunist who switched parties from Democrat to Republican out of expediency – a “hollow man,” said Garrison Keillor, who “sold his soul for a Senate seat.” In 2002, the White House wanted to get rid of Paul so badly that Dick Cheney personally called other Republican candidates and told them to drop out – they were clearing the field for Coleman, he said, because it was too important to “defeat Paul Wellstone.”

Coleman ran a vicious slash-and-burn campaign against Paul Wellstone, calling him a “joke” of a Senator. On October 25, 2002 – with just eleven days to go — Paul died in a plane crash with his wife, daughter, three campaign staffers and two pilots. Minnesota progressives were devastated, and no one could be blamed for suspecting sabotage. The Democrats picked Walter Mondale as a last-minute replacement, and more than 20,000 people attended a Service six days before the Election. Of course they got angry and emotional, as the Memorial Service became a rousing call for passionate progressives to fight for Paul Wellstone’s legacy and get out the vote on Election Day.

I will never forgive Republicans for how they attacked the Memorial Service. Through lies, hypocrisy and fabrication, they went on the offensive the next day and accused Democrats of “politicizing” Paul Wellstone’s death. They were “shocked” that Paul’s sons had asked the Vice President not to attend – but if you died in a tragic plane crash, would you want Dick Cheney to attend your funeral? They raised such a media frenzy that it worked — on Election Day, Coleman was elected. Five months later, Norm Coleman had the nerve to tell a Capitol Hill reporter that he was a “99% improvement” over Paul Wellstone because he got along better with President Bush.

It was infuriating to see so many Democrats apologize for the Memorial Service, as it drove the media narrative that Wellstone supporters were “out-of-line.” But in his book, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, Al Franken wrote the most eloquent and powerful chapter I have ever read about what transpired. In 29 pages, Franken shared the anger and outrage that so many of us felt about how we were never really given the chance to properly mourn Paul’s death. Calling it a “Case Study in Right-Wing Lies,” Franken rebutted every fabrication that was sent out through the right-wing noise machine in the days after the Service that tragically changed the Election’s outcome. On a gut level, there’s a certain poetic justice about having Al Franken be the candidate in 2008 who defeats Norm Coleman.

Most people know Franken through his decades of being on “Saturday Night Live.” But he left the show ten years ago, and has been increasingly vocal about his Democratic politics since. Armed with a sense of humor that gives his political commentary a biting potency, Franken has written four books and helped launch “Air America” — a liberal talk-radio station. Despite living in New York for years, Franken was raised in Minnesota and moved back two years ago. He started a political action committee called the Midwest Values PAC (which raises money for Democratic candidates), and now says that he’s ready to represent Minnesota in the U.S. Senate.

For a state that elected Jesse Ventura, having a comedian doesn’t sound off-the-wall. With Franken’s home-state credentials and Minnesota roots, the “carpetbagger” label doesn’t stick. But I have two issues with a Franken candidacy that make me reluctant to support him, and whether having him be the Democratic nominee is really a good idea.

One is the concept of the celebrity candidacy, and whether that’s a healthy thing for progressives. In recent years, progressives who were anxious to defeat a despicable politician resorted to getting a larger-than-life figure to overshadow the competition and deliver an electoral victory. We’ve seen this happen here in the Bay Area – where Willie Brown, Jerry Brown, Tom Bates and Ron Dellums all came back home to “save” their city. In the worst-case scenario, they have backstabbed progressives and done nothing to promote a new generation of local talent.

Minnesota is a blue state with a strong Democratic Party, and there is no doubt in my mind that lesser-known candidates can step up to the plate. In 2000, when Hillary Clinton decided to run for the Senate, many New York Democrats who had thought about running tragically dropped out to clear the field for her. Paul Wellstone was not a celebrity when progressives recruited him to run for the Senate, and it makes more sense to get a new candidate to run from the “grass-roots.” The celebrity candidate is tempting, but is it really a wise move?

Despite rhetoric that would make him a “liberal” Democrat, along with his hilarious jabs at Republicans that keep us amused, it is clear that Al Franken is no Wellstone when it comes to the issues. Franken supports universal health care and is “warming” to the idea of single payer, but he also says that he would have voted for NAFTA. He says that in retrospect he would work to “fix [NAFTA] and get more environmental and labor standards put into it,” but that’s hardly a comforting thought for many progressives who fear globalization.

But doesn’t refusing to support Franken because he is less progressive than Paul reek of self-righteous purist liberalism? I personally disagreed with Howard Dean on a variety of issues, but I strongly supported his presidential campaign because of what it meant for pushing the Democratic Party. In 2006, progressives wanted to see Senator Rick Santorum lose more than any other Republican that they rallied behind his Democratic opponent, despite his less-than-stellar politics. In some cases, the ends justify the means.

However, Franken’s bigger problem is where he stands on the War in Iraq. He supported the invasion in 2002, and even attended a pro-war rally by Clear Channel (although he admits in one of his books that it was a mistake.) As recently as June 2006, he said that he “agreed with Bush” on the issue of withdrawal – long after Congressman Jack Murtha had come out in favor of leaving Iraq. Franken attacks Bush for lying about the War, but as far as I can tell, his position on Iraq is not that different from Hillary Clinton.

Not only will Franken’s position on Iraq depress anti-war progressives, it is really bad politics as the War continues to get more unpopular. We might forgive Franken for not matching Paul’s progressive record on other issues, but the defining issue in 2008 will be the question of Withdrawal. Unless Franken unequivocally renounces his earlier position on the War, and begins to take a strong stand on withdrawal, he won’t deserve progressive support. After all, Paul’s last act in the Senate before he died was to vote against the Iraq War Resolution.

I’m withholding my judgment on Al Franken, and whether he should be the candidate to take on Norm Coleman in 2008. It would be nice to have a home-grown candidate like Wellstone who came from the grass-roots, but Franken’s celebrity status may be what it takes to get rid of Coleman. While Franken is no Wellstone when it comes to the issues, progressives could still get behind him if he offers enough of a bold progressive vision to deserve support. And right now, he’s got work to do on where he stands on Iraq.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Paul Hogarth ran a “Paul Wellstone for President” website when Senator Wellstone was considering a run. Send feedback to [email protected]