Tag Archives: CDP

CDP, Speaker Bass Pushing on the Budget

Today, in addition to the California Democratic Party, Speaker Bass and Asm. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) have begun pushing against the Governor’s proposals for the budget.

For her part, Speaker Bass said that her commitment was to ensure that California didn’t eliminate the social safety net and to fight back against the all-cuts budget.  While it isn’t completely clear if the Speaker and Sen. Steinberg are on exactly the same page, the Democratic Leadership seems like they won’t go down without a struggle.  

“Assembly Democrats will be fighting for families affected by the budget by pursuing a balanced approach that includes revenues and reforms as well as cuts,” Bass said. “Our responsible budget solutions will be aimed at minimizing hardship and maximizing opportunity for California’s economic recovery.”

Interestingly, the Speaker brought out the specter of some sort of court or federally appointed special master that would force some sort of reforms down our gut, IMF-style reforms, as California seems to be heading for a position to fit in well with that third world nation model these days. However, given the Constitutional requirements, both state and federal, it is not at all clear that such a system would be permissible. The reason why there is no provision for a state bankruptcy is that an Article III (or not, as Bankruptcy Judges do not enjoy Article III status) Judges cannot simply force states to do anything.  That federalism issue is central to how our nation works, and forsaking it would be a far bigger deal than one budget crisis.

For their part, the CDP is trying to (paraphrasing here) “show our Democratic legislators that there is support for basic Democratic principles to help the neediest in our society,” Chairman John Burton said on a conference call today.  “Right now our goal is to protect millions of Californians.”

The plan from the CDP is to press on traditional grassroots methods and combine them with some of the fancy new tech friendly means used so well by the Obama campaign. More details on that as they become available.  

Message from John Burton: We Are Getting to Work

Last week, John Burton (the new Chair of the California Democratic Party) sent an update to members of the CDP’s Executive Board about what the organization has been doing since he took the helm in late April.

Please see the message below in its entirety (edited slightly to make it easier to read).  

Congratulations on your election to the California Democratic Party Executive Board!  Our first meeting will take place in Burlingame on the weekend of July 17th through the 19th.  I am looking forward to seeing you there.

And I also wanted to thank you for making the April 09 CDP Convention such a positive and high-energy event.  Our team has hit the ground running. (See the update below)

During this transition time, we are looking for the best ways to address the needs activists expressed to us during the campaign, and putting the programs in place to answer the call.  

During my campaign, I promised I would focus on the basics: getting Democrats elected – from local races all the way up the ticket:  Push to move red areas to blue, in all 58 counties;  Increase Democratic voter registration; give activists the tools and assistance they need to be successful; support our young Democrats; and re-energize the state party.

 

(Letter continued over the flip)

We are already laying the groundwork so that, together, we can meet these goals.  Plans are in the works for very extensive training program, including:  field strategy, community and online organizing, voter registration, data management, messaging and press tips, and more.  And we are excited to announce our program will also include Controller Hilary Crosby’s Finance Boot Camp.  We will work together to give instructions on PAC reporting, building finance plans and effective small donor fundraising.  

And this is just for starters.  After our trainings, we will launch voter registration drives around the state, focusing on building a base for new farm teams in red areas.  

We have also met with Alissa Ko, President of the California Young Democrats, to review plans to work together to keep young voters involved for 2010.  

In order to communicate more effectively with party leaders, we have distributed a questionnaire to Caucus Chairs and Regional Directors so we can get their ideas on ways to improve our effectiveness in the field.  We also plan to talk with the Regional Directors once a month so we can hear what’s going on in their areas, identify best practices, share information and coordinate messaging around the state.

In our first steps to overhaul the messaging of the party, enhance our communications technology and place a priority on new media, we have hired the CDP’s first Communications Coordinator.  

In order to elect a Democratic Governor, protect Senator Boxer and our legislative and congressional Democrats, as well as elect more local Democrats – we came away from the convention with a pretty ambitious agenda.  We are already hard at work developing the necessary programs.   These programs will give us the foundation to pass a Majority Vote Budget, defeat the Top Two Louisiana Primary and fight for real marriage equality.

There is a lot to do, and we want to do all of it well.  So at the Executive Board Meeting in July, you will see a complete roll out of our plan to elect more Democrats around our state, give the grassroots the tools they have been asking for, and build the foundation for big gains for next year and the years after that.

This is exciting, and I really think it’s going to be a lot of fun.  Onward to 2010!

Chairman’s Update:

1. Eboard Save the Date!:  The Executive Board will take place July 17th through 19th in Burlingame at the Crowne Plaza Hotel.  Please save the date!

2. Tell us your ideas!   Please tell us about your convention experience, and let us know your suggestions on how to improve by filling out this survey.

3. Staff Communication: In order to enhance communication with our staff, please find a new staff roster online.  The CDP staff stands ready to respond quickly to inquiries from local party leaders and volunteers.

4. Training Programs: We are currently developing a comprehensive training program to begin in Summer 2009 and continue through mid 2010.  In the interim, we compiled a list of current trainings sponsored by other Democratic organizations to help activists obtain access to new tools now.

5. Meet the new staff: There are a few new faces at the CDP.  You can find out who joined our team by clicking here.

6. Special Election Activity: Continuing our fight for Democratic values, the CDP recently sent a mailer in support of the party’s position on Proposition 1C.  If passed, 1C would mean an immediate $5 billion dollars to protect social services.  In addition, at the request of the LA County Committee, the CDP got involved in support of Democrat Jack Weiss for LA City Attorney.    His opponent, Carmen Trutanich, has defended polluters and is supported by The California Rifle and Pistol Association, a right-wing affiliate of the NRA..

 

Anybody can do this

I wanted to share a couple of thoughts with Calitics readers about my experience running for chair of the California Democratic Party.

First, I really did mean it in my speech on Saturday when I said most of the good ideas were on the floor of the convention. Of the 12 points I presented in that speech, a couple were mine. A few came from things I heard at central committee meetings or regional events I attended across the state during the campaign. In some cases, they were things political friends of mine suggested, or even stuff I read on blogs and listservs. One friend of mine at the convention called it crowdsourscing, another fellow said it was the essence of democracy, and a third observed that that’s what representatives are supposed to do–listen to their constituents. Of course they’re all right. But the point is, all you have to do is show up and listen. We have a lot of bright, experienced people in the Democratic Party in California. They have a lot to teach us.

The other thing people kept telling me is that I was so brave to do this. Anybody who knows me can tell you I’m not an inherently brave person. Foolhardy on occasion perhaps. But I was so nervous on Saturday that my son had to type the changes to my speech because my hands were shaking. What motivated me was the belief that what I was doing was important, and that’s not much different than most of the people who do extraordinary things in our party every day.

I told a bunch of people on Sunday that I expect them to run for something at the next convention. And, if they did, they’d have my vote.

I meant that too. I believe that anybody can do it. It helped that I work for myself and so have flexible hours. But that also means I have no steady income and an inherently erratic workload. So I still maintain anybody can do this.

And a lot of people should.

It would shake things up. Get more ideas out on the floor. And open up the Party.

I was talking to a new regional director on Sunday. She’d been honored on Saturday night for setting up a paid voter-registration program in her county. She and a friend decided to do it she told me. So they put together a plan, raised money, hired staff, and registered a lot of voters. When I said “Wow!” she shrugged and said, “We thought it needed to be done. Nobody else was doing it. So we did.”

She didn’t let people tell her she needed more experience, should leave it to the professionals, or that it was too big a job for her. She saw something that needed to be done, and she did it. I tried to do much the same thing. If we can do it, so can you. And I hope you do.

Reflections on my first CDP convention

Coming into this weekend, I had lots of expectations for the convention, some of which have proved to be correct and others of which turned out to be pretty far off base from reality. But these past couple of days have certainly been incredible.

It's been great to spend time with people I know well, those who I just met, and friends who I've only known online up until now.

It's odd, because though I've been a Democrat since long before I could vote, I didn't start getting involved with the party until a few years ago, and didn't become intimately involved until several months ago. Yet I still sense that so much has changed, and that feeling has been echoed by others who have been involved for much longer than I.

At caucus after caucus that I attended, the “change” candidates were elected. Jenn Pae, a young Dem from the Bay Area, was elected as Northern California Chair to the API caucus, over an opponent who was nominated by Board of Equalization member Betty Yee. The vote was done by a raise of hands, and it was clear that young Dems carried this vote for Jenn. Karen Bernal, a Bay Area progressive activist, was elected as Chair of the Progressive caucus by a landslide. And on Saturday morning, hundreds of Democrats lined up at 7:30am to vote for Karen Weinstein and her change slate to lead the Women’s caucus.

Then the huge win came last night. As I was eating dinner with fellow Caliticians Robert and Julia, and several others, we got word that Hilary Crosby had won the race for CDP Controller. Why is this so great? I’ll steal the words of Edie Irons:

Hilary is exactly the change our party needs. She’s a CPA and auditor of nonprofits with a long history of Democratic activism. She’ll shine a light on the party’s finances and spending habits and raise big money from the grassroots and other untapped sources, so the party will be more accountable to voters and activists. She’ll train county committee treasurers to raise more money and keep good records, and she’ll take the Finance Committee out from behind closed doors. This strikes me as the only party office race where we have a stark choice between the status quo and a new direction.

It hasn’t just been the election results that have left me feeling like the Party could be headed in a new direction. Young Democrats have been very visible at the convention, and many of us for the first time served as delegates. I don’t think it’s a jump to conclude that young Dems were instrumental in securing Crosby’s win, as it was a close race.

Bloggers have also been recognized. Many statewide electeds and candidates held meetings with bloggers, including SF Mayor Gavin Newsom and Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi.

I’ve felt incredibly welcomed here, especially by fellow young Dems and Caliticians. Though I’ve been kicking myself a bit for not getting more involved in the Party earlier, I feel like I might have picked the perfect time to get active. We’ll have to see what happens today with the endorsement votes for the ballot initiatives, but regardless of what happens, I’m looking forward to the future of the Party and hope to stay involved for a long time to come.

Groundswell of support for reform in the California Democratic Party

The California Democratic Party elected statewide officers today, and the results showed a seismic shift away from insider politics in Sacramento.

The party has been roiled by internal controversy over the diversion of funds for campaigns by the former speaker of the state Assembly, Fabian Nunez.  Many Central Committee members in swing districts have also been disgruntled at the lack of state contributions to funding for regional campaign infrastructure, including campaign offices and staff.

As a result, two grassroots candidates stepped up to run for statewide officer positions.   Hilary Crosby, a CPA and activist from the East Bay, ran on a platform of financial transparency and accountability of the party to its elected delegates and executive board representatives.      

In a major upset, Crosby defeated the incumbent controller, Eric Bradley, by 54% to 46%.    

In a move seen by many as hopelessly Quixotic, Chris Finnie, a CDP standing committee member and party activist from Santa Cruz, stepped up to challenge former state Senate leader John Burton  for the position of chair after Los Angeles Democratic Party chair Eric Bauman and CDP Vice Chair Alex Rooker withdrew from the race.  

Finnie ran on a platform of reform of the state party.   Her platform included twelve auggested bylaws revisions.  The new bylaws would mandate that the party write a statewide strategic plan in consultation with the executive board, and then develop a fundraising plan and tactical campaign plan in consultation with the appropriate executive board committees.  

Finnie received 24% of the vote, which was a strong showing considering that Burton had swept the endorsements by elected officials and labor unions.

Burton has promised to work with Finnie on implementing her draft bylaws changes.

Hilary Crosby Will Be YOUR Next CDP Controller

We have the results of the CDP Elections.  While most of the races were nearly preordained, with John Burton and Alex Rooker easily winning.  The race for controller was far closer. Hilary Crosby won with about 54% of the vote. Congratulations to John Burton, Alex Rooker, Eric Bauman, Hilary Crosby, and Reginald Jones-Sawyer.

Tomorrow will be the showdown on the propositions. I’m not sure how to read the tea leaves on this taking the election results in to the equation. Be there or be square, every vote will count.

Let’s fix more of what’s broken

Recently, the first Vice Chair and Controller of the California Democratic Party joined a California Assemblymember to call for delegates to “help us rewrite the rules and make common-sense reforms….” They have proposed to change to one rule of the California Democratic Party.

I applaud their call for reforms. I support their call for rules changes to accomplish that reform. But, though the change they propose is an important one, it is hardly enough. Here are some other ideas that would actually bring the greater accountability these reformers call for:

1. A new Statewide Strategy Committee would work with the CDP Political Director, the Vice Chairs, representatives from Democratic elected officials, and county central committees to develop a statewide strategic plan to win upcoming races. It would also target swing races based on competitive criteria, including vote history and voter demographics. The Party would perform polling in selected districts to further refine our targets.

2. The Chair and Executive Director develop the coordinated campaign plan in conjunction with Regional Directors and a new Campaign standing committee. This Committee will also work with Regional Directors to develop candidate training programs statewide. Training will include how to develop a campaign plan, a website, and a fundraising plan

3. The Voter Services Committee will be tasked with developing a tactical voter-registration and volunteer-building plan, based on the strategic plan. The committee will develop specific targets for each region in the state, with particular emphasis on swing areas targeted by the statewide strategic plan.

The committee will work with the staff Political Director and the Regional Directors to implement the plan statewide, and will make detailed quarterly reports to the Executive Board.

4.  The mission of the Organizational Development Committee will be expanded to include training and support for chartered organizations so they can more effectively participate in campaigns, with an emphasis on areas targeted by the strategic plan. This training will also be a vehicle to acquaint local organizations with the strategic plan and state Party resources, and to disseminate best practices throughout the state.

Organizational Development will also collect information about resources available and needed by local Party organizations through an annual survey that evaluates existing tools and programs. Chartered organizations and county central committees will complete this survey.

5.  A new Fundraising Committee will work with a staff Fundraising Director to develop a fundraising plan, do major donor outreach-and small donor development. The staff Finance Director will work with the committee to implement the plan, with numerical goals for each donor base. The Finance director will hire experienced staff to support development of each category of donor outreach. The committee will make quarterly reports to the Executive Board on fundraising targets and results.

6.  Regional Directors will appoint members of state party standing committees for a term of two years. Each region will be able to appoint one member to each committee. Members will then elect a Chair and two Vice Chairs for each two-year term.

7.  To encourage attendance at regional events, statewide party officers such as Vice Chairs, Secretary, and Controller will be reimbursed for mileage and hotel costs when attending events outside of their own region. Committee Chairs and Vice Chairs may also be reimbursed for attending  events  in support of one of the tasks assigned to their committee.

8.  The California Democratic Party will establish and maintain an accurate database of email addresses for all delegates, regional directors, and central committee chairs to facilitate two-way communication between them.

9.  The Party will establish a password-protected section of the website where it will post training documents, videos, and podcasts. It will also establish a section to enable various Democratic organizations and counties to share best practices. Strategic plans, coordinated campaign plans, financial reports, and other documents that facilitate statewide coordination will be posted online in this password-protected section of the Party website for easy dissemination to relevant organizations and officers.

10.  The California Democratic Party will institute a new standing committee, called the Special Technology and Campaign Infrastructure Committee. With members from the Computer and Internet Caucus, Executive Board members, the Campaign Committee, and members of the community with expertise in evaluating campaign technology-this committee will recommend effective technology tools and report these to the Vice Chairs and the Regional Directors for review and approval. The committee will also take into account feedback from the annual Organizational Development assessment results. Volunteers from the Disability Caucus will evaluate any tools and technologies for accessibility.

The Political Director of the party will be responsible for working with the Technology Committee to oversee implementation of the plan, with competitive bids from contractors. The CDP will not award any contract without a competitive bid process, and approval by the committee. Nor will any funds be disbursed until tools are deemed accessible.

The Party will implement a “search” function on the CDP website to facilitate easy access to information and tools online.

11.  The party will initiate a survey of skills and experience and establish a database of volunteers who are willing to use these in the service of candidates and issues campaigns. Volunteers will specify how many hours they are available, geographic or other limitations, and what types of activities they are willing to work on. This database will be maintained by CDP staff and available to campaigns and organizations that have been chartered or endorsed by the CDP.

12.  An addition to Section 4 of the existing bylaws, AGENDA:

c. A detailed agenda shall be available to members of the state Party in a password-protected section of the Party website at least sixty (60) days before a statewide convention or Executive Board meeting and will include agenda for caucuses and committees. Members may request additions or changes to the agenda in writing until thirty (30) days before the scheduled meeting. Changes will be submitted to the Executive Director either by mail, or by email.

It is time for all of us to look at the rules and bylaws of the California Democratic Party. We need to find ways to open up the decision-making process, to facilitate information and skills sharing, to ensure transparency and accountability, and to make this truly a state party–rather than one that is run by a Chair and Executive Director with little oversight by the rest of the Party. Delegates, Executive Board Members, Regional Directors, and other statewide officers are duly elected members of the Party who must have rights and who must assume responsibilities. As chair, this is much of the work I hope to do.

Chris Finnie, candidate for chair of the CDP

Asm. Hector De La Torre: No More Large Cash Payments to Candidate Coffers

This post was written by Asm. Hector De La Torre (D-South Gate) and is being promoted pursuant to our policy to bump post from candidates and electeds.

Democratic Party activists have complained to me for years about the Party’s finances.  Alex Rooker and Eric Bradley have also been concerned, and shared  their frustration with me.

If we agree there is a problem, then we need a solution.  That is why I decided to introduce a Resolution at the upcoming Democratic Party Convention and asked Alex and Eric to join as co-sponsors:  to fix our Party so we can get more Democrats elected!

But we can’t do it alone.  This common sense CDP finance reform resolution is the beginning of coming together for reform.  I strongly believe that when delegates come together in support of this resolution, it will send a loud message for positive change throughout the Party.

The companion measure to our resolution is a bylaw amendment that will block cash payments to politicians’ campaign accounts (especially those that are termed-out).  I am confident that broad delegate support will build momentum to make this long-overdue change happen–to stop spending that does not meet our main goal of electing more Democrats at the federal, state, and local level and supporting worthy ballot measures.

I encourage every delegate, and every Democrat, to visit our website: www.LetsFixCDP.com and sign up for our reform effort.  As we saw in November, we can accomplish amazing things when we unite for change as Democrats.

CDP going back to the future?

In Sunday’s San Francisco Chronicle, Sr. Political Reporter Carla Marinucci writes about the race for chair of the California Democratic Party:

“Even as the Democratic Party rides an Obama-fueled wave of youth, enthusiasm and “change,” the Democrats of California look to be bucking the trend: They’re preparing to elect former state Senate President Pro Tem John Burton, 77, the iconic, battle-scarred veteran of state politics, as their party leader.

It’s a move not without controversy: The powerful former legislator, who first held the job of party chairman 36 years ago, is to his fans a colorful idol of progressive politics and to his critics the very symbol of old school, insider machine politics.”

The article goes on to paint Senator Burton’s election as nearly inevitable. But the comments are fascinating. In 6 pages of comments I read this morning, two supported Senator Burton. The rest were pretty consistent–the CDP needs to stop recycling retired politicians to lead the party. One poster wanted to know if this meant disco was coming back too. As hilarious as they were, they pointed to a pretty disturbing perception among California voters–that the CDP is resistant to, and even actively hostile to change.

Marinucci also points to a possibility that others have noted, saying “Republicans watching the show say Burton’s election would provide them with plenty of material for attack.

“It’s the party of clogged arteries,” says GOP consultant Kevin Spillane, who advises GOP gubernatorial candidate Steve Poizner. “They’re going to be led by survivors of the 1960s and 1970s, when people are looking for 21st century solutions.”

But Barbara O’Connor, professor of political communication at Cal State Sacramento, says “I think it is an homage to long years of public service and friendship. Many people owe him their careers, their electability … and it’s payback time,” she said.

While “his demographics are not similar to Obama’s,” he has a constituency that is key, she said: “He brings labor solidly behind him – and the old party guard.'”

And she is exactly right. That’s who will be in charge of the CDP–labor and the old party guard. As Marinucci points out, that’s an unusual choice when the desire for change was obviously so high. In a year when Barack Obama won California by 24%. When the grassroots activists we depend on all over the state to do the Party’s business all year–between elections and during them–are clamoring for more accountability, transparency, and control.

Is that what California Democrats want? Homage? Or do we want a Party that can be effective? That can support the issues and candidates that matter to us? And a chair that can actually lead our party into this century and the next.

Before I heard about the column, I sent out a second email to CDP delegates about my campaign last night. I’ve been fairly stunned at the response. At the number of people who have taken the trouble to email back to say they’ve heard of me, or heard me, and are going to vote for me.

Like many others, Marinucci doesn’t give my campaign much of a chance. But most people didn’t think Americans were ready to elect a black man as president. Few people believed Jerry McNerney could win a seat in Congress. But I worked in Jerry’s campaign, and he never doubted it.

One lady today asked me if I would appoint her to the state standing committee she currently serves on after I was elected chair. Maybe she’s just being nice. But maybe in an era where a wind engineer can go to Congress and a black man to the White House, the CDP can stop electing members of the old guard as chair.

One commenter to Marinucci’s story said he nearly snorted his corn flakes when the story painted me as the defender of California’s youth. At 59 myself, I am a pretty unlikely champion for the future. But my vision for the CDP is vastly different than John Burton’s. My dedication to change is what has kept me going through a physically and financially taxing campaign. And my commitment to the California Democrats who answer my emails and come up to talk to me after central committee meetings is what keeps me going.

Change is possible. If only enough state central committee members believe in and vote for it on April 25.  

Democratic Values

A man asked me at the region 6 meeting on Saturday what I thought Democratic values are. I didn’t give him a very good answer, but I keep thinking about the question and would like to attempt a better one–because it is something I’ve thought about, because it’s the reason I’m working with the party.

It’s pretty obvious who the Republicans represent: the rich and the religious right. The rest of us are irrelevant to them. In fact, I think they’d be pretty happy if we just all fell off the edge of the flat Earth some of them still believe in.

That leaves the rest of us two options: the Democratic Party or a third party. Since our system is structured to make it difficult for a third party, that leaves us with the current two. Since I’m clearly not part of the GOP demographic, the Democrats seemed like my best option. But I can’t say the party was exactly representing the values I wanted it to. So here’s what I think Democratic Party values should be:

Equality: Of opportunity, in education, to healthcare, to be heard, to justice.

Fairness: In the application of the law, in access to services, in the level of reward for work and creativity.

Liberty: Civil liberties, the rule of law, the sorts of legal protections the Constitution and the Bill of Rights give us.

Democracy: The rule of the people, responsiveness of elected officials to their constituents; regulation of corporations and other special-interest groups that tend to damage our health, liberty, and environment.

There are probably others. But these are some of the big ones I’d like to see the Democratic Party stand for. I apologize to the questioner in Oakland, and hope someday I can tell him this.

More than that, I hope someday the party I work for will stand for all of this and more.