Tag Archives: CA-GOV

Meg’s Values Aren’t California’s Values: eBay Founder Says No on Whitman

Even if you aren’t a fan of Meg Whitman’s management, you still have to admire eBay. It is a company that brought together people to buy and sell from across the country, then across the world. Any way you slice it, the big idea of an online auction, started by Pierre Omidyar was an idea that helped accelerate the digital economy.  Millions of small businesses, and all that we’ve been hearing Meg Whitman promote.

Thing is, Meg Whitman wasn’t the one who came up with that idea. She helped foster the idea from a small operation into an international collussus, and on the way certainly did a better job than CEO flame-outs like Carly Fiorina, but the ideas that she was building were never her own.

So, why not ask Pierre Omidyar what he thinks of Meg Whitman? Certainly there are few people that know her better than he. And they have each other to thank for their respective fortunes.  So, would Omidyar vote for Meg Whitman?  In a word, No.

“Now I have not endorsed her because we have some differences on some of the political issues,” Omidyar, who is now based in Hawaii, told Bloomberg TV in an interview that will air Wednesday on “InBusiness with Margaret Brennan.” “I was disappointed in her not-correct decision, in my view, to support Proposition 8 in California. I was disappointed in her alignment with former Governor Pete Wilson on immigration issues, who I think took some very extreme views years ago about denying benefits to illegal immigrants. And so because of those types of issues, I think we are a little bit apart, and I can’t quite support her because of that.” (LA Times)

Omidyar does well to call attention to Whitman’s new-found love affair with Wilson, the godfather of Proposition 187, the measure that stripped away benefits from immigrants that he rode to re-election in 1994.  Wilson is also the chair of Steve Cooley’s campaign for Attorney General.  Through these two, Wilson is attempting to extend his influence, with all the concurrent hard feelings that brings.

Whitman is wrong on immigration.  And she is wrong on Prop 8.  She’s just wrong for California.

The New Source of California Power: Meg Whitman’s Bank Account

You know the days of Hiram Johnson, when he hoped to create a system that wasn’t controlled by the railroads, or whatever interest was dominating at the time?  Well, we’re past that whole industry domination now, and have moved on directly to power of the person.  Not of the people, just the person.  In our current case, that person is Meg Whitman and her eBay warchest.

Republican gubernatorial nominee Meg Whitman  said Monday that she would place pension cutbacks on the ballot if negotiations with state workers fail and would consider using her personal fortune not only to win office but to advance her agenda if elected.

Taking the issue to voters is “not my first choice,” she told The Bee’s editorial board. “But if we have to … this is an issue we have got to take up.”(SacBee)

She went on to say that she opposes collective bargaining for state employees. Period. End of sentence.  Now, she’s not likely to make friends with the California Statewide Law Enforcement Association that just gave her its endorsement on the condition that she say that pension reform doesn’t apply to law enforcement.  But, that was painfully transparent in its say what you need to say attitude; this statement calls for the end to collective bargaining (and thus, all unions) in the public sector.  The CSLEA board is going to have a fun time explaining that one.

Returning to where we started, California politics hasn’t yet gotten to the point where it is completely owned by just one interest.  Part of that is the competing interest groups pushing back against each other, but that part can be easily overwhelmed by a new influx of cash, tipping the balance towards the corporate dollars.

Of course, there is one side of the political power equation that isn’t so vulnerable to Whitman’s money binges.  The people, if we found the time, could be an informed decision maker.  However, as of right now, we seem to wait back for what the TeeVee ads tell us/scare us/yell at us.  One can only hope that this is the year that we say no to the purchasing of our statehouse for good.

Meg Whitman Takes a Stand on Proposition…22

Meg Whitman has been under some pressure to take a position one way or the other on Prop 23. It would be nice to know what her take on one of the most major pieces of (anti-)environmental legislation in the nation is.  Yet she has persistently and consistently denied all efforts to get her to say yay or nay.  

But never you mind, she is very supportive of Prop 22:

The Republican gubernatorial nominee came out in support of Proposition 22, which would forbid the state from raiding county and city coffers at times of fiscal crises.

At an event in Culver City, a laid-off Long Beach teacher asked Whitman about her thoughts on decentralizing education spending. The state has cut billions in education spending in recent years, leading to widespread teacher layoffs, program cuts and the shortening of the school year in many cities.

“There is a proposition on the ballot in November that actually makes it illegal for the state to take money from cities and counties to balance the budget,” said Whitman, who is known for being disciplined in sticking to her talking points during campaign events and discussions with the press. “I think it’s the right thing to do. I’ll be supporting that initiative.” (LA Times)

Now, of course, this wasn’t really the question asked.  Prop 22 doesn’t really change the general structure of education funding.  Now, it does change the way the state can grab money that was destined to be allocated at the local level. However, education spending, which is heavily determined by Prop 98 formulas, will most assuredly not be given a boost by Prop 22.

It should also be noted that Prop 22 also has a nice little plug in there for redevelopment agencies, which are kind o f the scorn of the right-wing. They have some eminent domain powers, and folks like Chuck DeVore are not very big fans of Prop 22 for precisely this reason.  It will be great to see how those right-wingers take the news of Prop 22.

And then there is the fact that Whitman has still not taken a position on Prop 23 yet.  We’re still waiting on that…

Meg Whitman Doesn’t Like Meg Whitman’s Plans

Apparently Meg Whitman doesn’t like her own plans for California, or else why would she threaten to sue TV stations if they don’t hide her true ideas from the state:

Republican gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman is threatening to sue television stations that run a California Teachers Association ad attacking the candidate, calling the spot a lie.

The Whitman campaign today said some stations have pulled the ad. The CTA said it is trying to confirm that. … CTA spokeswoman Sandra Jackson said the ad’s claim relies on Whitman’s plan to cut $15 billion in state funding overall. She said cuts to education typically make up about half of total budget cuts. (SacBee

In the letter, Whitman’s attorney (and attorney for the proposed GOP Dirty Tricks) said that she hadn’t specifically cited education as a target for cuts.  But, you know what, there are pretty little magazines that you can control, and then there is the real world.  If Meg Whitman really wants to cut another $15 Billion, where does she think that is going to come from? She’s not doing anything about tax loopholes, heaven forbid.

Her pound of flesh is coming from California’s most vulnerable, and she will extract for the short-term from the promise that California holds for the long haul. She will slash and burn through the education budget and call herself some sort of champion of the people.

And it will probably work, because she has money, and these days the one with the money rules, right? Right?

As for this pathetic attempt, TV stations shouldn’t be bullied by flimsy claims. If Meg Whitman doesn’t like the truth, how about she explain what she means. For real this time, not the blather we’ve heard before.

Team Whitman: Campaign Spending is Imperative

On Meet the Press, Meg Whitman’s consultant, Mike Murphy, laid it out for all the Californians that are getting extremely annoyed with Whitman’s incessant ads:

MR. ASLAN:  My question, Mike, is, why does Meg what to be governor of California?  Why would anyone want to be governor of California?

MR. MURPHY:  Because…

MS. MYERS:  Let alone spend 140 million of their own money to get it.

MR. MURPHY:  Yeah, but the money is about getting–California is so expensive, $3 million a week for television, it’s about getting a message out against the entrenched public employee unions.

MR. GREGORY:  OK.

MR. MURPHY:  I’m mean, I’m…(unintelligible)…but I believe it.  I live there.  I care about it. (Meet the Press, h/t to LA Times)

So, the reason that she wants to buy the governor’s office? Well, we didn’t really get an answer to that one, now did we.  But what did we get an answer for?  Well, apparently Meg Whitman needs to spend 3 million per week to fight the unions that put up…a grand total of around $8 million this summer.  And there’s not going to be a lot more than that.

The truth is that Meg Whitman is using the state of California.  She wants to decimate the middle class by crushing the organization of labor in the state and to use the gig as a jumping off point for her further national political ambitions.  

But when you come down to it, there is no there there. Her plans, even according to her Republican “friend”, the current Governor, are nothing more than cheap campaign promises. And when she does come close to laying out a plan, she gets the facts wrong in her haste to make state employees the face of all that is wrong in California.

What is wrong is that we have stopped investing in our state. We have stopped building infrastructure, reduced our investments in K12 and higher education, and stopped planning for the future, instead coasting on the success of the master plan legacy.  That will not be sufficient if we are to compete in the 21st century. Maybe Meg Whitman knows that, maybe she doesn’t. But either way, her stated goals are just wrong for California.

Queen Meg, eMeg, Nutmeg: A Summer Romance (Part 3 of 3)

Read “Part 1: A lesson from cephalopods”

Read “Part 2: The message isn’t medium”

Part 3: The many (actually just two) faces of Meg Whitman

Thanks in no small part to the 2/3 vote requirement for passing a state budget, this year’s is now the second latest in history — 10 weeks and counting — with no resolution in sight. But just a few weeks ago, the Sacramento Bee reported:

“About one of every 11 residents in the Sacramento region smoked pot during the last month, a usage rate roughly 30 percent higher than the statewide average, according to a new federal study. Local residents were more likely than the rest of the state to have a casual attitude toward pot use.”

This must be why passing a budget takes so long: the contact high from all that pot smoke (in and) around the Capitol just slows everything down.

The bright side to this stoner’s pace of progress is not just that slow readers like me can keep up with the news, but that I’ve been able to catch up on all the great cable TV series I don’t have time for during the rest of the year.

For instance, I got through all four seasons (so far) of “Dexter,” the grisly yet oddly touching story of a serial killer who works for the police by day and chops up the “deserving” by night. Normally, the story of a mass murderer with a government job would make me think of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, except that:

a) Dexter, unlike Arnold, is a sympathetic and principled character, living by a code that forbids killing the innocent; and

b) Michael C. Hall is a way better actor than Arnold ever was (at least before he got into office).

Then I watched both seasons of “Rome” and couldn’t help but think how the scheming, duplicitous Atia of the Julii (Polly Walker) reminded me of Meg Whitman. In their own ways, both selectively say opposite things to opposing camps, depending on which script most advances their personal power grab. That’s not new in political races, of course; the difference is that Whitman got called out all over the media this summer — and by critics both right and left — for flip-flopping her positions on immigration and the environment after the June primaries.

An open-or-shut case

Against attack-dog Republican Steve Poizner, who called her “soft” on the issue, Whitman swore to be “tough as nails” on illegal immigration; against Democrat Jerry Brown, however, she’s apparently gone soft and now claims there’s really no substantive difference in their positions (a claim Brown disputes). She conveniently forgets to mention in public that her campaign is run by former governor Pete Wilson, best known among California’s Latinos for tying his 1994 re-election bid to passage of Prop. 187, which would have banned illegal immigrants from receiving public services if a federal judge hadn’t found the proposition itself illegal.

Now she just wants to ban illegal immigrant children from receiving publicly funded higher education — the only kind they could ever possibly hope to get. Up against Brown, Meg says she opposes Arizona’s law targeting immigrants; against Poizner, she called it “right for Arizona.”

In a bruising half hour interview with Los Angeles talk show hosts John Kobylt & Ken Chiampou [on August 4], the Republican gubernatorial nominee said she’s against any path to citizenship for those who are in the country illegally, even though she seemed to be for such a path 10 months ago

reported KQED’s Capitol Notes. A spokesperson explained it away by saying Whitman hadn’t been talking about a path to citizenship back then, but a guest worker program, even though Whitman never mentioned any such program at the time.

Going for the green

Speaking to a small green-tech firm the day before the interview, Whitman called herself an environmentalist but in the very next sentence said she wants to do away with some of the environmental regulations that are “strangling” business (preferring, apparently, to let children strangle slowly from toxic emissions; at least Dexter kills quickly). She’s been wishy-washy on Prop. 23, a ballot measure to repeal California’s widely popular anti-global warming law (AB32), but said that if elected, she’d try to suspend the law anyway, just in case it might kill some jobs, a claim that only conservative Republicans and big business apologists are making.

(Brown opposes Prop. 23, and a recent PPIC poll found most Californians believe AB32 actually creates jobs, the opposite of what Whitman claims.)

“If Meg Whitman is an environmentalist, then BP is the socially responsible company of the year,” concluded the director of the Sierra Club California.

The more things change, the more they stay the same

The same day as her radio interview, union members staged a protest at the opening of Whitman’s campaign office in the largely Latino-populated East Los Angeles. Given the state’s record unemployment, cataclysmic deficit and chronically dysfunctional government, immigration is important but should not be the defining issue of the governor’s race. Meg Whitman’s two-faced politics, however, should be central. We’ll be stuck with it for four years.

That’s what’s so scary — because to be fair, there’s one issue on which Whitman has never wavered one iota: her intent to destroy public services and eviscerate, disembowel and break the backs of public employee unions. It’s why unions like mine [see my profile] are going all-out to bring back Jerry Brown as governor.

As if that weren’t enough, I’m facing another, arguably more daunting, personal task for the election season: With marijuana legalization on the ballot (Prop. 19), I’ve still got six seasons of “Weeds” to catch up on.

About me: I work for SEIU Local 1021 as (among other things) editor of its weekly e-newsletter, the 1021 NewsWire, and its political blog, the Live Wire (www.1021votes.org). I am also a vice president of the International Labor Communications Association (www.ilcaonline.org).

[The series “Queen Meg, eMeg, Nutmeg: A Summer Romance” is cross-posted on the Daily Kos.]

All Tied Up

There is a lot of work to do between now and November 2, but right now we are pretty much looking at an even  race:

 It's too close to call in California's Senate and gubernatorial battles, according to a new poll.

A CNN/Time/Opinion Research Corporation survey released Wednesday indicates that Sen. Barbara Boxer holds a 48 percent to 44 percent margin over her Republican challenger, Carly Fiorina, but Boxer's 4-point advantage is within the poll's sampling error. Five percent of people questioned say if the general election were held today they'd vote for neither candidate and three percent were undecided. (CNN) Full results (pdf)

 Care to see a 1990s style witch hunt against the administration? Well, you are set for a fun ride.  Otherwise, it's time to get in gear and work for the Democratic ticket.

Whitman’s California: Of, By, and For the Corporations

Robert mentioned Jerry Brown’s new TV ad. It’s likely not going to make the crowds go wild or anything like that, but it shows the formation of an economic plan and a campaign strategy.

As for Whitman’s plan, it looks like she has some champions for her in the ring: Wall Street.

At a fundraiser she held in New York,  Whitman said she met with people who “have suffered the financial reforms that are going to crimp our ability to raise capital, and they want California to turn the corner.” … Now the financial industry has lined up behind her gubernatorial campaign.

According to a Bee estimate, investment banks and firms, private investors, financial advisers, venture capitalists and even the chairman of the Federal Reserve in San Francisco have poured $4.7 million into her effort, more than a fifth of total outside contributions she’s received. Whitman has also given her campaign $104 million of her own money.(SacBee)

Her plan to rally California is to, umm, let Wall Street run amok? Turn back the clock on the reforms in the financial markets?  Under Whitman, governance will apparently be done by the best hedge fund managers that money can buy.

It is no small fact that of the little money she has raised, much of it has been from Wall Street interests.  Her campaign is geared towards the long-term benefit of those who have been made rich by the excesses of the last decade, and to continuing the false expectations of bubble economies.  The end result can hardly be a surprise for anybody: continuing and growing disparities between the ultra wealthy and the middle class.

Wall Street Whitman indeed.

Queen Meg, eMeg, Nutmeg: A Summer Romance (Part 2 of 3)

Read “Part 1: A lesson from cephalopods”

Part 2: The message isn’t medium

Marshal McLuhan famously said the medium is the message, and that was certainly true in late August as the release of a Hollywood blockbuster and two campaign ads drew attention to a central issue of the governor’s race, one of Meg Whitman’s favorite targets: public employees.

At theaters everywhere, state workers rallied in protest at the opening of “The Expendables,” a routine but top-grossing summer action flick made exceptional in California by the appearance of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in a cameo role. Playing on the movie’s title, state workers wanted the governor to know that expendable is what they are not.

Unlike his brief cameo, Arnold has made a long-running play out of hammering state workers in his increasingly desperate and aggressive budget gambits, smiting them with furlough after furlough like it were the only way to raise the annual tribute of a billion-dollar tax break the corporate gods demand and receive each year from the state’s Republican lawmakers. Whitman pledged long ago to sacrifice 40,000 state workers outright on the stone of actual layoffs — in a state whose unemployment rate could best described as vertiginous, a nosebleed-inducing 12.3 percent, three points above the nationwide rate. [Source: CA Employment Development Department]

It doesn’t ad up

The week “The Expendables” came out, a new Whitman radio ad tried to link Brown to the City of Bell scandal. The ad claimed that Brown’s “mismanagement” of Oakland while mayor differed not at all from the plundering of public monies by top Bell administrators.

The lameness of the comparison was almost palpable, but for all its targeting of Brown, the language and sneering tone of the ad made it sound like an attack on public employees too, despite the fact that all its horror stories concerned non-union city officials, not unionized city workers. In this regard, the ad is entirely typical in how the moniker “public employee” turns the abuses of “public employee managers” into the fault of “public employee workers.”

Whitman and Brown could hardly be farther apart on the issue of public employees and unions, but this conflation of “public employees” is one of the most confounding (for unions) part of the debate.

When voters hear that “public employees” in Bell basically got away with grand larceny at taxpayer expense, or others elsewhere by spiking their pensions, they blame the “public employees” who belong to “greedy” unions instead of the real culprits: greedy managers. It’s not so much guilt by association as guilt by wordplay, and it’s become endemic in political discourse; not just in California, of course, but in a state with powerful public employee unions, the attacks are especially virulent.

The result everywhere is that working people get pilloried in the town square for the crimes of their bosses. What goes reported and then forgotten, however, is that it’s usually people in the community (often union members) who first call it out. The Bell scandal was exposed by do-gooder local muckrakers, not the mainstream media or state legislators, who are finally looking into it.

For instance, members of the SEIU local I work for [Disclosure: See my statement below] have called out overpaid and intransigent CAO’s and human resources directors in counties like Marin and Sonoma; abusive hospital executives who endangered staff and patients at the Alameda County Medical Center; discrimination in big cities like Oakland and pension spiking in small ones like Lathrop, and many other places where we work and live; most of these led to the dismissal or resignation of top officials under public pressure that we helped to raise. Our members have received praise from local elected leaders for saving thousands of jobs and public services. As we see it, that’s part of a public employee union’s role in the community.

The last laugh

Long before the Bell ad, Whitman got nailed for another fabrication when the FAIL Blog castigated her for using a screen shot of the popular humor site in a video:

In fact, the screenshot portrayed in the video never existed because the Whitman campaign faked the content within the screenshot. … We demand a written apology from the Whitman campaign and the removal of the video.

Sincerely,

Ben Huh, Founder of the Cheezburger Network

P.S. Jerry Brown, you better not be thinking of using this image or post in your political ad either.

No worries on that score. By Labor Day, Brown had not aired a single ad of his own. It’s been like a huge, mismatched snowball fight of ads, with Whitman’s fort throwing its huge stockpile over snow-packed walls against a handful lobbed by the unions from behind a bush. Against Brown’s paltry spending, the cost of Whitman’s ad war only drew attention to the vast sums of her own money she seemed willing to throw at her campaign with complete abandon. By mid-summer, Brown had spent barely $600,000 on his entire campaign; the unions, about $6 million; Whitman, $104 million of her own, plus tens of millions from corporations.

Unlike Whitman’s corporate sponsors, however, at least the unions are willing to show their faces. Just days after Meg’s radio ad, days after California’s Fair Political Practices Commission said it would wait until after the November elections to crack down on political ads skirting disclosure requirements through carefully crafted issue advocacy, the Sacramento Bee reported:

…a business group took aim at Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown with a blistering example of such ads.

But because the advertisement does not explicitly mention Brown’s gubernatorial candidacy, the group does not have to identify who donated to pay for the effort.

By the end of August, the big news was not just the size of Whitman’s pocketbook, but the fact that after spending something like $3 million dollars a week for months, she had still barely broken even in the polls, even with former Republican rival Steve Poizner no longer a distraction. And Brown had barely even launched his own campaign yet. Speculation is that Whitman may have peaked early; perhaps too early.

Money where her mouth is

Even against Brown’s paltry war chest, all the money pouring into Whitman’s ad blizzard would make at least a little sense were it for a candidate who’s demonstrated a commitment to public service by actually voting during her lifetime.

On August 26, nurses, firefighters, truck drivers and other union members marked the 90th anniversary of women’s right to vote (the 19th Amendment) by calling out the hypocrisy of Whitman’s own voting record. After nearly 30 years living in California, Whitman has almost never voted in its elections, although she seems to recall voting for US President back in the 1980s.

“She is just almost precisely the opposite of the leaders of the suffragist movement,” said one union leader: The whole time she’s lived here, Whitman couldn’t be bothered to vote, but now that she wants to be governor, she thinks she can just buy the office with TV advertising.

Some of the signs the union members carried read “Women Vote for Women Who Vote.” The very wording captures that beat of bouncing a basketball, of bouncing between walls, of echoing inside your head, that’s mostly what California politics sounds like these days. It’s in the airwaves, and what it mostly says is: Meg Whitman doesn’t know how to be governor, just how to play one on TV.

Read “Part 3: The many (actually just two) faces of Meg Whitman”

About me: I work for SEIU Local 1021 as (among other things) editor of its weekly e-newsletter, the 1021 NewsWire, and its political blog, the Live Wire (www.1021votes.org). I am also a vice president of the International Labor Communications Association (www.ilcaonline.org).

Queen Meg, eMeg, Nutmeg: A Summer Romance (Part 1 of 3)

[Cross-posted on The Daily Kos]

Part 1: A lesson from cephalopods

If you followed the World Cup at all, then you heard about Paul, the amazing octopus who, amazingly, picked the winner of all eight matches Germany played, including its final loss to Spain. Octopuses are considered the most intelligent of invertebrates, and yet, Paul’s astonishing knack for picking winners seems almost unimportant next to the mystery of why anyone was asking an octopus in the first place.

Maybe it’s because humans are the stupidest of mammals. Still, despite the vast gap in mental acuity and animal taxonomy, the common octopus closely resembles one human subspecies in particular — the common politician — in that both respond to threats by spilling a lot of ink to cover themselves while they flee. Indeed, politicians appear to mimic the eight-legged mollusk: Among animals with backbones, only politicians prefer to act like they don’t have one. Appearing to walk upright, their good posturing can be maintained without any backbone at all.

We see this a lot in the octopus called California politics: The many-tentacled budget crisis. Meg Whitman’s wriggling attacks on Jerry Brown and public employees. Choose your own.

Now that Labor Day is behind us, Jerry Brown has released his first TV ad, and the campaign has “really” started, I wanted to recap, from a union perspective, some observations on the governor’s race this summer — a time dominated in California politics by the state budget crisis and Meg Whitman. Dubbed “Queen Meg” by nurses, “eMeg” by the press and “Nutmeg” by a pair of crazed Los Angeles deejays, the Republican candidate filled California’s airwaves and bandwidth with an acid rain of ads and public statements against both Democratic opponent Brown and the unions supporting him. [Disclosure: I work for SEIU, a member of the labor coalition backing Brown; my full statement is below and will appear on my profile once I can add it.]

With the latest polls at roughly even, an octopus is at least as likely to guess California’s next governor as any pollster. But with Brown — a lifelong public servant — and Whitman — a flash-in-the-pan executive — promising very different futures for the people of California, voters can’t afford to leave the outcome to guesswork or luck. Or an octopus.

Officer Meg places nurses under cardiac arrest

Back in 2005, it was nurses who led the way by dogging Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s every step; and then they, along with firefighters, teachers, government workers and other public employees, who turned the tide of public opinion against his special election agenda, one aimed largely at breaking the power of public employee unions. Five years later, Whitman apparently decided the nurses had to be neutralized at the outset. (Just a few days ago, she renewed her attack on nurses in the Daily Kos.)

She began with a politely worded “request” that the California Nurses Association simply hand over its 85,000-member mailing list so she could send them all campaign fliers. The nurses rightly instructed her on how to use an enema tube and said, “If you really want to talk with nurses, come meet us at an open forum with Jerry Brown.”

It quickly escalated from there. Whitman responded by declining the invitation but inviting nurses instead to join her advisory board, a cover to make it seem like she’s on their side. Her campaign bombarded the nurses with mailers anyway, called them with a rigged phone survey, and launched a website devoted to attacking CNA. Lots of ink.

Put another way, the candidate who a month earlier had accused CNA of being “far more interested in partisan theatrics … than a civil discussion of the issues” resorted herself to partisan theatrics rather than engage in that very discussion.

Around the same time, Whitman launched her first attack on the labor coalition backing Brown, California Working Families, with a TV/Web ad attacking the CWF ad for attacking her previous ad attacking Brown for the labor ad attacking her record, which made the coalition release another ad ….

It was starting to look like a set of nested Chinese boxes, except it felt more like one of those Chinese finger traps — the harder you try to pull your fingers out, the tighter the trap closes — only for your head. I’d rather be hugged by an octopus.

Read “Part 2: The message isn’t medium”

Read “Part 3: The many (actually just two) faces of Meg Whitman””

About me: I work for SEIU Local 1021 as (among other things) editor of its weekly e-newsletter, the 1021 NewsWire, and its political blog, the Live Wire (www.1021votes.org). I am also a vice president of the International Labor Communications Association (www.ilcaonline.org).