Tag Archives: Elections 2010

Progressives: Lead, Follow, or get the F*ck outta the Way (GOTV Part 2)

Progressives,

I wanted to use an old Marine Corps Adage to motivate us to GOTV for every swinging Progressive Candidate across California. We need the Governorship! We need the Senate! We need the Congress! And we definitely need the damn 2/3rds that Republicans have used to keep us from enacting Progressive Change in California. For these final 2 days we have to focus like a laser on electing candidates to help further our cause. Jerry Brown is ahead by 10 pts., so let us focus on the down ticket races that will indirectly help him. Let’s focus on Sen. Barbara Boxer who has fought tooth and nail for Progressives in California! Let’s focus on Gavin Newson or Kamala Harris who have taken bold strides in advancing a Progressive Agenda despite have themselves painted as a San Fransisco liberal or soft on crime. Finally, but not the least of all lets focus on electing memebers of Congress, State Senate, or Assembly who represent California’s interests. California Republicans will make up the some of the leadership positions in Congress, Assembly, and Senate. We have to bring these members down! We must face our fears and go boldly once more into the breach dear friends. Only our tenacity can ensure our victory. I will see you on the beach November 2.  

Poisonous Pals- Props 26 & 23

By Jakada Imani

Executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights

The California Ballot Measure process has become a roulette game for big corporations to gamble with the health of our citizens. Perfect examples of how this plays out are Proposition 26 and Proposition 23, deceptive initiatives bankrolled by major polluters, both would result in more pollution in our state, hurting all of us, but especially endangering low-income communities that suffer disproportionate exposure to toxins. High rates of pollution are to blame for the high rates of asthma, lung disease and cancer in Asian/Pacific Islander, Latino and African American communities.

It’s the duty of all Californians to say “No!” to big oil companies and other mega-corporations that seek to distort the truth, and abuse the ballot initiative system with their paid signature gatherers and advertising campaigns as slick and dirty as the oil coating beaches of Louisiana and Florida. It’s especially important to for voters from low-income communities to stand up for ourselves, for the lives we save may be our own children’s.

A long list of Californians- from politicians to CEOs to actors have come out against Prop 23, brought to you by Texas oil companies Tesoro and Valero. The measure, properly derided as the Dirty Energy Proposition, would repeal California’s landmark climate change law.

The quieter, but equally poisonous friend of the Dirty Energy Prop, is Prop 26 being driven forward by Chevron with help from Big Tobacco and Big Alcohol. Knowing that a team’s biggest cheerleaders are oil, tobacco, and alcohol should give anyone pause in wondering whose best interests are at the heart of the matter. It’s easy to see that profit, rather than people or our planet, would win should these propositions pass.

Proposition 26 is an-anti democratic measure that would protect polluters and purveyors of tobacco and alcohol from paying fees used to undo the harm caused by their products. These companies don’t want to pay to clean up their own messes–they expect you and me, the California taxpayer to eat the costs while they pocket the profit.  The independent nonpartisan Legislative Analysts Office has warned us that Prop 26 would blow another ONE BILLION DOLLAR hole in the state budget.

Prop 26 would require a costly election in advance of any local government action to impose an appropriate fee. Two-thirds of local voters would have to agree to a fee on a company to pay, for example, air pollution mitigation near a chemical plant.  The State Legislature would also be prohibited from imposing an appropriate fee, on say whiskey to help pay for alcohol checkpoints, unless 2/3rd of lawmakers in each house agree. Considering the influence of corporate lobbyists, Prop 26 would make a new fee on polluters, tobacco or booze, about as likely as my 5-foot tall grandmother joining the U.S. Olympic basketball team. The same 2/3rds threshold has already crippled the state budget process, leaving California’s communities, schools and workforce to suffer.

If big oil and big tobacco doesn’t pay–who does?  We do, the regular taxpayers.  The budget suffers another billions dollar hole in health, education and welfare services, just to protect the profits of the richest corporations in the world.

Proposition 26 is opposed by health and justice organizations including the American Lung Association, American Cancer Society, Latino Coalition for a Healthy California, Asian Pacific Environmental Network, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and NAACP. We are standing with unions representing teachers, cops, firefighters and nurses, who rightfully worry about adding billion dollars to the state deficit, and the crippling effect on local government services, including health, education, drug treatment, police and fire.

Low-income communities of color, including immigrant communities, are hurt first and worst by pollution, global warming, booze, tobacco and gun selling. Voting No on Prop 23 ensures that California continues its leadership in clean air, climate action and green job creation while a No on 26 protects our right to make companies pay for poisoning our people or our planet.

Please join me in saying “No” on Propositions 26 and 23. Our votes must be the antidote to these poisonous pals.

Obama USC Rally Liveblog

It’s almost trite to point it out by now, but if there’s an enthusiasm gap out there, it’s not evident in the early voting, and it’s not evident at rallies like this one today at USC, where an estimated crowd of 40,000 is thronging to hear the President talk about what’s at stake this election season.  Even though things are getting started more than a wee bit late and getting in through security was a hassle, this eclectic crowd of voters is eager in anticipation.  Sitting here on the media riser, the atmosphere is electric.

Liveblog is below the fold.



Our own Calitics alum and current FDL correspondent Dave Dayen in the press pool

EDIT BY BRIAN: I added the press release from OFA about the speakers at the rally below David’s wonderful commentary.

Antonio Villaraigosa up to speak, rallying the crowd.  Talking about the diversity of the crowd, encouraging everyone to get out and vote.  Talking about big Republican money people: “If they were part of the problem then, they’re part of the problem now.”  Hitting outsourcing and tax cuts of the rich.  “The choice is easy.”

“Democrats have a plan to put California to work, to fix our broken budget, and fix our broken infrastructure.”

The crowd is enthusiastic when he talks about the light rail line in Crenshaw, emphasizing that the previous administration wouldn’t even consider the proposal, but that the Obama Administration has helped make it happen.  That’s why it makes a difference who is in office.

“The pundits say young people like to demonstrate, but they don’t vote.  But you showed them wrong in 2008…We are the change, and yes we can.”  Crowd enthusiastically chants Yes.  We.  Can.  If there’s disappointment from this crowd about the issues that have troubled many of us progressive bloggers, it’s not evident here.

Now Antonio Villaraigosa introduces John Perez.  If there’s a more potent symbol of a changing nation than 40,000 young people cheering on a Latino mayor introduce a gay Latino Speaker of the House at a rally for our first African-American president on behalf of a stellar progressive female Senator who happens to be Caucasian, all under the banner of “MOVING AMERICA FORWARD”, I can’t think of one.  Republicans may or may not make big gains this election.  But unless there’s a drastic realignment, their gooses are simply cooked long-term.  Demography is destiny; Millennials will only become a bigger and bigger share of the electorate.  This crowd is an image of the future; Tea Party crowds are an image of a dying past.

Perez: “We want everyone in this country to succeed and live their own American dream…when all the votes are counted, we are going to shock the world.  The Speaker of the House will continue to be from California…President Obama will still be leading our country.  We’re going to send a message to the teabaggers, make sure they know: we love our country, we want our citizens to succeed.  We want everyone to have healthcare…We respect every part of our Constitution.  Hell, we’ve even read it.  We have better ideas, we have better candidates, and in Barack Obama, we have a better President.

Them’s fightin’ words.  Wish more Democrats spoke with that sort of clarity.  Easy to see why John Perez is the right choice for Speaker.

Rabbi Denise Eger now up to speak.  Begins with an invocation in Hebrew.  Mentions the deaths-by-bullying in the hope of creating safer schools with a respect for differences and diversity.  Just another reminder that for all the supposed Neocon support for Israel, the American Jewish community knows who their friends are–and it isn’t the American Taliban.

Next up: pledge of allegiance and national anthem.  National anthem sung by Cheryl Lee Ralph.  Sadly, it continues to be an unsingable tune.

And now the volunteer coordinator for Organizing for America.  Reminds everyone of where they were on November 4th when Obama was elected.  Then reminds people about September 4th 2008, when the polls were looking bad, and the ubiquitous “it’s good for John McCain” line.  Tells the story of the hundreds of thousands of people who showed up to demand to know how they could help, sending Californians all over the country to help the cause.  “It’s 2010 and it’s time for you to stand up California once again.”  “Stand up for the people who put this country on their shoulders and saved it from a second Great Depression.”

“We’ve got 11 days left California.  It’s time to stop asking what change can do for you, and time to start asking what you can do to bring about change.”  Not sure that message will really sell–but if Democrats survive this election without a bloodbath, it will be without question be in part due to OFA turnout efforts.

“If you can’t make phones calls or knock on doors, bring food and water for the people who do.  Every little bit helps.”  Amen to that.  Getting volunteers to the local Democratic club offices has been a challenge in Ventura County.  The question is whether the enthusiasm for rallies and parties will turn into enough phone calls and boots on the ground.  In the end, field drives turnout, and turnout is what will make the difference in lots of these races–including Barbara Boxer’s.

A children’s chorus sings “All I want to do is shine.”  Crowd surprisingly gets pretty into it.  Now the famous Trojan marching band and cheer squad.  Cheers erupt.  But John Perez speaks first as they prepare, introducing Shobana Ramamurfi (sp?), a community organizer with OFA.  Significant accent, and I don’t think it’s an accident.  The diversity theme is huge at this rally.  Jewish, South Asian, Hispanic, African-American, White, Asian.  This is America.  This is the future.

Shobana mentions that she finally got her citizenship right before the November 4, 2008 election.  That she had been walking and phoning for Obama before she was even eligible to vote for him.

“I realized that I needed to make the change a reality.  In 2009, I became an Organizing for American community organizer.”  Mentions that the economy is growing, and that after healthcare reform, she doesn’t have to worry that health insurance companies will deny her coverage because she has diabetes.  It’s a pre-existing condition.

“This election in 2010 is just as important as the one in 2008.  So I’m asking you today, please get out and vote.  If you don’t, you’re letting somebody else decide for you.”

Now up comes Kuttner from House Kumar Kal Penn.  He apologizes for pranks he may or may not have committed on the USC campus while as a student at UCLA.  As a fellow Bruin alum, I applaud.

“Because you voted, the President was able to sign comprehensive healthcare reform into law…Because you voted, our friends are coming home from Iraq.  And because you voted, we now have a President who saved the country from a total economic collapse…That’s all because you guys voted.  But there’s a lot left to be done, and it won’t get done unless we vote again…I know if you turn on the TV recently or listen to the cynics, it’s easy to forget about the power that young people still have…We still have to pass comprehensive immigration reform…we still need comprehensive environmental legislation…we still need to act on Darfur…we still need to do something about DOMA and DADT…There’s way too much at stake to stop now.  Can you bring 10 friends with you to the polls?”

Kal Penn introduces the USC marching band.  Marching band plays the USC fight song.

Coming into today, I was wondering if the rally would come off more as an enthusiasm rally, or a desperate plea for volunteers from a crowd eager to just see the President.  From the sound of it, this crowd really does seem genuinely engaged and desirous of working to help get Dems elected to keep focusing on the issues that matter.  We’ll see if local Dem/OFA offices see an influx of volunteers this weekend.  One can only hope…

USC Marching Band is followed by Ozomatli.

Jamie Foxx comes up to huge applause.  Reminds crowds of the speaker who said she was exhausted defending Obama.  He gets the crowd to chant “We are not exhausted!”  Interesting take.  I understand that with 11 days to go before the election, the Obama Admin has to use this tack to rally volunteers.  But it comes off as grating to those who know that things could and should have been different–and that more folks would be motivated if they had been.

Next up comes Kamala Harris, who speaks briefly about the support behind this campaign.  Including netroots support, mentioned by name.  But oddly enough, never mentioned that she is running for Attorney General.

Jamie Foxx back up.  Jamie is nothing if not one heck of an entertainer.  He can move a crowd.  Gets everyone shouting “Vote!  Democrat!”  Impressive.

Hilda Solis up now.  “Over the past two years, Democrats made progress toward delivering change…while Republicans have done everything possible to halt that process…Democrats overcame Republican obstructionism to enact Wall St. reform, laying a stable foundation for economic growth…Democrats overcame Republican obstruction to pass student aid reform to get subsidies from big banks, to make college more affordable for students like you.  And Democrats overcame Republican obstructionism to pass the Affordable Care Act, so that young people like you can stay on your parents’ insurance until the age of 26.”  “Recuerda: su voto es su voz…Vamos a luchar…que viva Obama, viva las Democratas!”

Back to Mr. Foxx.  Shouts of Yes We Can, Si Se Puede, and Yes We Will.  

And now…Jerry Brown.  “We don’t scapegoat anybody.  When I see the power of the Sun, we don’t need Saudi Arabian oil or Texas gas.  We have California sun.”

“We can create the green jobs of the future for everybody that’s here.  And California has a place for all of us, not just the ones at the top…Gandhi said we have enough for our need, but not enough for our greed…We’re going to win it for the least powerful, because we can empower them to the power of the future.”

Jerry Brown is really coming into his own.

Jamie Foxx back.  He’s an energetic MC, and doing a great job moving the crowd, but as Dave Dayen noted, he hasn’t announced what office any of the speakers are running for.  You can’t take for granted that everyone already knows…

Barbara Boxer at the podium: “I look at you, and I think: We.  Will.  Win.”  

“These are difficult times, and I don’t sugarcoat it…The other side, they want to take us back.  Back to the Bush policies.  They did not work, did they?  You know what the other side is doing?  And the president and I were talking about this?  They are trying to depress voter turnout.  They are hoping that you notice the choice in this election.  They even sent out an ad telling Latino voters to stay home.  Well, we are not staying home.  We will vote, and we will win, because we are the people of California…”

“The pollsters have already decided who will win.  But there’s one problem, we haven’t voted yet!”  Not sure I like this approach from Boxer.  She’s ahead in most polls–no need to act like she’s behind.  Also, a lot of us have already voted by mail…

“The other side has special interests with them.  They have Karl Rove with them.  They have Grover Norquist with them…And I know they have Dick Armey with them.  But we have our own army.”  Me, I cheered at Dick Armey.  He and his tea party crowd are a great asset for Democrats in Delaware, Kentucky and Alaska.  The stronger his influence, the better off we are.

And now…the President of the United States, Barack Obama.

“You know, Jamie Foxx is pretty good at this.  We have to recruit him!  Might have to make him shave his goatee though.”  Mentions all the speakers.  POTUS seems in good spirits.  Still has insane charisma at the podium.  He’s in his element here.  The more he appears like this, rather than in a stuffy press room, the better.

“In just eleven days, you have the chance to set the direction of this state and this country not just for the next 2 years, but for the next 5 years, 10 years, 20 years…You can defy the conventional wisdom that says that young people are apathetic, that you can’t beat the cynicism in politics, that all that matters is the big money and negative TV ads.  You have the chance to say Yes We Can.  Si se puede.

“I don’t want to fool anybody, even though this is a magnificent crowd, because this will be a tough election.  This has been a difficult election…Families saw their cincomes between 2001 and 2009 drop by 5%…Families couldn’t afford to send their kids to college…couldn’t afford to take their kids to the doctor…we lost 4 million jobs before I took office, 600,000 the month after that…we hadn’t seen anything like this since the 1930s…My hope was that in this moment of crisis, we could come together and both parties would put politics aside.  That we would come together to meet this once in a generation challenge, because while we are proud to be Democrats, we are prouder to be Americans.  And there are plenty of Republicans who feel the same way out there.  but the Republican leaders in Washington made a different calculation.  They took a look at the mess they had left me, and said, boy, this is a really big mess.  Unemployment will be high for a while, and people will be angry and frustrated.  So if we just sit on the sidelines, and point their finger at Obama and say it’s his fault.  And that you would forget who caused the mess, and ride the anger to election day…But you haven’t forgotten.  Their whole campaign strategy is amnesia.  So you need to remember that this election is a choice between the policies that got us into this mess, and the policies that will lead us out…I don’t know about you, but I want to move forward, Trojans.

“Now, it would be one thing, if the Republicans who made this mess went into a summer retreat summer, said, you know we screwed up, and came up with some new ideas…But that’s not what happened.  The Republican…Chairman came up with exactly the same plan…The Republican plan is ‘you’re on your own’…I don’t bring this up because I want to reargue the past, it’s because I don’t want to relive it.  We tried what they’re selling, we didn’t like it, and we’re not going back to it.  Imagine that these folks drove a car into a ditch, and it was a really deep ditch, and they did nothing to get the car out of the ditch.  So I and Barbara and Antonio put on our boots and climbed down into that ditch, and it’s hot and there are flies down there, and even though Barbara Boxer is small she’s pushing too.  And Republicans are all standing at the top of the ditch, and we say, why don’t you help out.  They say, no, that’s alright, you’re not trying hard enough.  You’re not pushing the right way.  And we finally get the car out of the ditch and on level ground, and admittedly the car is banged up, fender’s bent, and it needs a tuneup.  But it’s on level ground.  And we get a tap on our shoulder.  It’s the Republicans, and they want the keys back.  And we tell ’em, you can’t have the keys back.  You don’t know how to drive.  You can be in the car, but you have to be in the backseat.  Because the middle class is in the front seat.

When you want to drive, what do you do?  You put it in D!  You don’t put it in R, you dont’ want to go backwards.  You want to go forwards.

“There’s a lot of families still hanging on by a thread, that’s what…keeps me fighting…We know that the government doesn’t have the answers to all our problems, we believe that government should be lean and efficient, and like the first Republican President Abraham Lincoln, who by the way could not get a nomination in today’s Republican Party, we believe that government should do for the people what the people cannot do better for themselves….

That is the America I know, that is the choice in this election.  This election is a choice, and if we give them the keys, which will happen if you don’t vote.  They’ll give tax breaks to companies that ship our jobs overseas.  We want to give tax breaks to companies that keep our jobs here in america…I don’t want companies that make solar panels and wind turbines making them in Asia…I want them made right here in the United States by American workers.”

“They want to cut education by 20%.  And this is a time when the future of our country depends almost entirely on the education of our people.  Do you think that China is cutting education by 20%?  That South Korea is cutting education by 20%?  Those countries aren’t playing for second place.

“So instead of giving unlimited subsidies to the banks, we want to give that to students like you so you can afford an college education…The other side has already promised to roll back health insurance reform and wall st. reform.  We want to make sure that health insurance companies can’t deny you coverage when you get sick.  That the law that syas you can stay on your parents’ health insurance, that that remians the law of the land…We want to make sure that taxpayers aren’t stuck with a Wall St. bailaout becdause somebody else took unwarranted rish.  We will oppose privatization of social security…so somebody else can take it and hand it over to Wall St…”

“Millions of dollars in special interest groups calling themselves Americans for Prosperity or Mothers for Motherhood.  I made that last one up.  But you don’t know.  Who’s financing those negative ads against Jerry Brown, and Barbara Brown.  And they’re doing it because of a supreme court decision Citizens United, which shows you how important it is who nominates Supreme Court Judges.  I’m proud that I nominated Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court!

That’s why it’s so important that all of you get out to vote.  If all of you who fought for change in 2008 get out to vote this time, we will win this election…You didn’t get involved just to elect a president…you got involved because the decision we make will shape the lives of our children and grandchildren for decades to come.”

“I understand the last two years haven’t been easy.  I know a lot of you are thinking back to election night, and beyonce was singing and jamie was there, and it felt like a big party, but I told you this was gonna be hard.  But I told you power concedes nothing without a fight.  We’ve been grinding it out day by day and inch by inch…change is harder than I expected, and we haven’t gotten everything done that I hoped for you.  Maybe someone you know is out of a job, or a neighbor has a foreclosure sign.  But don’t let anybody tell you that our fight isn’t important, that we haven’t made a difference.  Because of you…there are small businesses that can keep their doors open even in the midst of a recession, we have brough home thousands of brave men and women in Iraq, we are going to fight to end Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, because of you we are going to fight for an energy policy in America.  Don’t let them tell you that change isn’t possible.  Here’s what I know.  Change is always hard.  If our parents and great grandparents, if they had listened to the cynics 200 250 years ago, we wouldn’t be here today.  This country was founded by people doing what had never been done before, battling the biggest baddest empire on earth.  We’re going to found a new kind of country.  And we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal…The cynics didn’t believe it.  And then, when we had to perfect that union and fight a civil war, the cynics didn’t believe it, that we could free the slaves.  If our ancestors had given up and listened to the cynics, we couldn’t have gotten through the depression, and gotten civil rights and women’s rights.  The journey we began together wasn’t just about putting a President in the White House, it was about a movement for change…if we work for it, there’s nothing we can’t achieve.  If you knock on some doors and make some phone calls, we won’t just win this election, we will restore the American Dream, not just some, but for everybody.  God bluess you, god bless the United States of America.”

—-

You know, for all the pixels spilled about the mistakes and inadequacies of the Obama administration, there’s no question about the difference between the political parties.  And there’s no question Barack Obama is an extraordinary politician.

But again, the real measure of the success or failure of an event like this is whether the people here will actually get out and work to make a difference in the election.  Time will tell.

EDIT BY BRIAN: I added the press release from OFA about the speakers at the rally.

Background on Speakers Participating in the “Moving America Forward” Rally with President Obama in Los Angeles, CA

Organizing for America Rally Features Senator Barbara Boxer, Attorney General Jerry Brown, the Honorable Hilda Solis, Representative Diane Watson, California Assembly Speaker John Perez, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, District Attorney Kamala Harris, and Actor and Singer Jamie Foxx. Ozomatli performs live.

Los Angeles, CA- Today, Friday, October 22, 2010, at the latest “Moving America Forward” rally in Los Angeles, CA, President Barack Obama was joined by Senator Barbara Boxer, Attorney General Jerry Brown, the Honorable Hilda Solis, Representative Diane Watson, California Assembly Speaker John Perez, District Attorney Kamala Harris, and actor and singer Jamie Foxx. Ozomatli also performed. The following is a brief background on some of the speakers participating in the Los Angeles rally today:

Senator Barbara Boxer: Senator Barbara Boxer has been serving the people of California in Congress for nearly two decades. Throughout her career in public service she has been a strong advocate for California’s families, children, businesses, and environment. She currently serves as the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, and also serves on the Commerce, Science, Transportation, and Foreign Relations Committees.

Attorney General Jerry Brown: Attorney General Jerry Brown has been a public servant in California for most of his adult life. During his previous terms as Governor, Jerry Brown cut taxes and built up a large surplus for the state. He has always worked for good government, equal rights, and protecting the environment.

The Honorable Hilda Solis: Before joining President Obama’s Cabinet, Hilda Solis served the 32nd Congressional District in California. Throughout her career, her priorities have included expanding access to affordable health care, protecting the environment, and fighting for working families. She has also been a strong advocate for creating new “green collar” jobs.

Congresswoman Diane Watson: Diane Watson represents the 33rd Congressional District of California. Watson is a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and is the Chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Government Management, Organization, and Procurement. She also serves on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and is the Chair of the Congressional Entertainment Industries Caucus.

California Assembly Speaker John Perez: John Perez represents the 46th Assembly District of California and currently serves as the Speaker of the California Assembly. He has spent his life fighting for better wages, healthcare, and benefits for working families and continues to do so in the Assembly. He is also the first openly gay person of color elected to state office in California, and is a strong advocate for the LGBT community.

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa: Antonio Villaraigosa has been serving as the Mayor of Los Angeles since 2005. He is the first Latino Mayor of Los Angeles since 1872. Since taking office, he has worked to build coalitions to fight for the pressing needs of Los Angeles: education, transportation, public safety, and economic development.

Kamala Harris: Currently serving as the District Attorney for San Francisco, Kamala Harris has been a prosecutor for over 20 years. In office, she has focused on cracking down on violent crime. She has increased conviction rates for serious and violent offenses; expanded services to victims of crime and their families; created new prosecution divisions focused on child assault, public integrity, and environmental crimes; and launched innovative re-entry initiatives to prevent recidivism.

Jamie Foxx: Jamie Foxx is a talented actor, musician, and comedian. He has won both a Grammy Award and an Academy Award for Best Actor. He supported Barack Obama during the 2008 campaign.

Ozomatli: Ozomatli is a Grammy Award-winning band formed in Los Angeles. They are known for their blend of musical sounds ranging from hip hop and salsa to Jamaican ragga and jazz. In September of 2009 they performed at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute’s Awards Gala with President Obama and the First Lady as the guests of honor.

Ashlie Chan: Ashlie Chan is a senior majoring in Communication, minoring in Spanish, and simultaneously pursuing her master’s degree in Communication Management at the University of Southern California. Born and raised in Arcadia, CA, she is the current president of the USC Helenes, the official hostesses of USC; is a former Undergraduate Student Government Vice President; and is senior advisor for the Alpha Lambda Delta honor society.

Marquis Olison: Marquis Olison is a writer and actor from Chicago and a graduate of Northwestern University. He worked tirelessly in the Los Angeles headquarters for Obama for America during the 2008 Presidential campaign and currently organizes volunteers across Southern California to reach out to voters for the midterm elections.

Shobana Ramamurthi: Shobana Ramamurthi is a Community Organizer for Organizing for America, volunteering up to 30 hours per week to support issues like health insurance reform and to turn out voters in the midterm elections. Shobana voted for the first time in 2008 after becoming a citizen because she was inspired by Barack Obama’s candidacy. Originally from India, Shobana is a dentist and lives with her husband and two sons in Fremont, California.

Since taking office in January 2009, President Obama has made major strides in pulling the economy from the brink of a depression, reforming the health insurance industry to give power back to consumers, and reforming Wall Street practices so that Americans are never again left footing the bill for the mistakes of bankers. The President is rallying support for Democratic allies who will continue to support his agenda to strengthen the middle class, rebuild our economy, and improve the American education system so that our children can compete in a global economy.

The Los Angeles, CA rally will be the fifth in a series of “Moving America Forward” events with the President. The President has held events in Madison, WI; Philadelphia, PA; Washington, DC; and Columbus, OH.

###

Organizing for America (OFA) is a grassroots project of the Democratic National Committee. OFA’s network of volunteers and staff is actively working in all 50 states to promote the President’s agenda for improving the country. Since 2009, OFA supporters have played a key role in helping strengthen America’s middle class by creating jobs, passing health insurance reform, building a clean energy economy, improving education, and reining in the excesses of Wall Street.

We’re getting the word out: Carly is bad for women, bad for California

by EMILY’s List President Stephanie Schriock

Fasten your seatbelts: EMILY’s List is going all out in these last two weeks before the election for Sen. Barbara Boxer, one of our strongest progressive advocates. Our WOMEN VOTE! project in California is hitting the airwaves and reaching out to women voters to spread the truth about Carly Fiorina: she’d be disastrous for women and for California.

This race is a dead heat for one reason and one reason alone: women voters don’t have the information they need about Carly Fiorina. From her courtship of the Tea Party and Sarah Palin to her catastrophic tenure at HP – and her unwillingness to make job creation a priority – Carly Fiorina’s real agenda would be devastating to women and their families in California and throughout the country.

Team EMILY, our new volunteer program, will have over 400 women making calls to potential drop-off women voters throughout California. Why? Our research makes it clear: these women voters need trusted information and explanation of why their votes matter. They need to know about Carly’s extreme agenda: repealing health care reform and taking away women’s rights to make their own health care choices.

Our effort, talking to voters and getting on TV, highlights Carly’s long record of failure: axing 33,000 jobs while at HP; shipping nearly 10,000 jobs overseas; and floating away with a $42 million golden parachute after getting fired and leaving her company in tatters. “Opera,” our hard-hitting ad that shows voters Carly’s true colors, will be airing largely in LA, including shows like Good Morning America, Access Hollywood, Judge Judy, Dancing With the Stars, Dr. Phil, Letterman, and evening news programs. Watch our spot for yourself:

Back to the future: Will Jerry Brown be the next Democratic nominee for California governor?

California may soon experience a deja vu all over again of sorts. The 2010 election cycle may take us back to more than just bellbottoms, platform shoes, and disco. Jerry Brown, former governor of California (1975-1983), has established a 2010 Exploratory Committee for a run for governor.

For those living underneath a rock for the last 40 years, it is worth underscoring that Brown has developed a lengthy political resume. He’s served terms on the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees (1969-1971), as California Secretary of State (1971-1975), as Governor of California (1975-1983), as chair of the California Democratic Party (1989-1991), the Mayor of Oakland (1998-2006), and the Attorney General of California (2007-present). He unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nominations for president in 1976, 1980, and 1992, and was an unsuccessful Democratic nominee for the United States Senate in 1982. Since Brown’s terms in office are not covered by the term limits that came into effect in 1990, he is not barred from running for Governor again, and has indicated that he plans to run for the office again in 2010.

What was 1970s Governor Brown about? He was opposed to the Vietnam War, supported environmental protection (repealed a tax break for the state’s big oil companies while passing tax-breaks for homeowner installation of solar panels), and appointed more women and minorities to office than any other previous California governor. As Governor, he passed landmark legislation to force full disclosure of finance and interest charges by credit card companies, allowed consumers to purchase generic drugs and created the nation’s first affordable “life-line” utility rates for seniors and needy residential customers. Brown signed landmark legislation adding public members to regulatory boards that previously had been controlled by industry representatives.

What might the Governor Brown of today be about?

  • Brown may be a supporter of marriage equality: The State Attorney General normally argues in support of laws that have been passed by the electorate. Brown took an unusual step by declining to defend Proposition 8, a voter-approved amendment to the state constitution that banned same-sex marriage.
  • He will continue to protect the environment: As Attorney General, Brown has led the fight against George Bush’s EPA, defended California’s landmark tailpipe emission laws and actively promoted local land use policies that reduce oil dependency and global warming.
  • Brown will fight mortgage fraud and real estate scams: As Attorney General, Brown has pursued companies and individuals who perpetrated massive mortgage fraud, including an $8.6 Billion settlement with Countrywide, and claims that he will also go after those who would further exploit the mortgage crisis by offering fraudulent “rescue” services.
  • He will support labor: As Attorney General, Brown has sued unscrupulous employers for denying workers wages and benefits required by state law, shut down companies that have jeopardized worker safety and prosecuted businesses that have bilked California’s workers’ compensation system or otherwise circumvented state tax and employment laws.
  • Brown will continue protecting consumers: As Attorney General, Brown has made consumer fraud prevention a top priority. In addition to vigorous pursuit of the mortgage scam artists, he has gone after price gouging, false advertising, and contaminated and unsafe products.
  • He will fight fraud and abuse in California’s health care system: As Attorney General, Brown has sued medical laboratories for massive overcharges, stopped rip-offs in the Medi-Cal Program, cracked down on unlawful abuse of prescription drugs, fought misleading ad campaigns by major drug companies and arrested nursing home operators for forcibly drugging elderly patients.

Progressive Pushback

Despite Brown’s Progressive past, on a recent campaign stop in Orange County, he left a bad aftertaste in the mouths of Los Angeles Progressive Democrats who attended:

Brown refused to endorse any changes to Prop 13, saying he did not think it was “needed” and that “we’ve got to downsize government to the maximum degree.” He also voiced support for the three-strikes law, and would not take a stance on a “public option” for health care. He did support scrapping the “two-thirds” rule for passing a state budget (but not taxes), and endorsed a path to legalization for undocumented immigrants – but with no candidate running to his left, this was the best that progressives can hope from Jerry Brown. Given California’s mammoth problems that need immediate attention, that’s depressing.

It will be interesting to see what the new year brings as Brown faces formidable Republican candidates Meg Whitman, Steve Poizner, and Tom Campbell.