Archive for the ‘Races We're Watching’ Category

Peanut Butter PAC supported candidate Elaine Marshall wins her runoff in NC!


26 Jun

Well, this is a happy moment – last month, we gave $250 to Elaine Marshall, and she won her runoff primary vote against Cal Cunningham! See her victory lap here at DailyKos:

http://elaine-marshall.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/6/23/878610/-NC-Sen:-We-did-it!

Not only did she win the right to send Richard Burr to an early retirement, but she’s surging in the polls, the race is a virtual dead heat at this point, according to Rasmussen:

http://elaine-marshall.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/6/24/879005/-HUGE-SURGE:-Burr-44-Marshall-43-%5BNC-Sen%5D

Great news!!!

AR-Sen: Bill Halter and the Future of Democracy


02 Jun
From Bill Halter for Senate Flickr page

From Bill Halter for Senate Flickr page

One of the most crucial tests of who we are as Democrats is occurring now in Arkansas, as incumbent Senator Blanche Lincoln(DINO-BP) is facing the election that will end her career. Insurgent candidate Lieutenant Governor Bill Halter is her primary and now run-off opponent, who is supported by netroots and by Labor both on a national level and on a local level. Lincoln is of course, the Blue Dog who killed the Employee Free Choice Act(EFCA), which would have helped exploited workers organize with the help of a secret ballot. In full disclosure, Peanut Butter PAC endorses Halter for Senator and has awarded him $250, and Peanut Butter PAC wants EFCA to become law.   We also believe that if Bill Halter becomes the nominee, this will move things in the right direction, as I will discuss below

Among Lincoln’s many corporate backers is Big Oil and the League of Conservation Voters rightfully is making sure that voters know that BP is counting on Lincoln to squash any accountability measures or measures to move it into receivership.  After all, Lincoln is #1 in Oil and Gas industry money to a Senator for 2010 according to OpenSecrets(h/t to FireDogLake for bringing this to my attention).   Let’s not forget that Lincoln also wanted to stop the EPA from regulating carbon as a pollutant as her own press release says.   Lincoln’s own issues page makes it plain her support for more offshore drilling madness (emphasis and added quotation marks on responsible mine below).

In 2008, Senator Lincoln was one of 10 bipartisan Senators who developed legislation on a comprehensive and job-creating energy policy. The proposal included a historic investment in research and development in an effort to transition new vehicles to non-petroleum based fuels by 2020. The plan would expand “responsible” measures to increase offshore drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf and remain committed to expanding renewable sources such as wind, solar and geothermal.

So it should be clear that if we want to make sure BP is nationalized and to make them pay through the nose for what they have done, and to help make sure that something like Deepwater Horizon from never happens again, we ust help elect Bill Halter to the U.S Senate.

Blanche Lincoln has fought against real Democrats on almost every meaningful measure to enact the Change that we elected Barack Obama to carry out.  We at Peanut Butter PAC believe the President to be a good man, but also limited by false friends in the Senate like Lieberman, Ben Nelson and Lincoln.   Lincoln helped kill the Public Option, something that caused Democracy For America(DFA) to call her a “healthcare villian” .   Lincoln was the lone vote in the Democratic caucus that killed EFCA in 2009, which groups are running pro-Lincoln ads because of. Lincoln is an obstacle to any climate change bill, and she only drafted a tough bill on derivatives because Halter challenged her.  Any real Democrat thusly must support Bill Halter, a very electable candidate.

Organizing for America(OFA)’s unfortunate support and GOTV for Lincoln proves that it is an astroturf organization which is controlled by the Democratic National Committee(DNC), which under Tim Kaine has been a disaster. The DNC’s record on Deeds, Corzine, Coakley aka Chokeley and Specter proves that Howard Dean knew how to back the right candidates and Kaine does not. OFA’s support for Lincoln is a black mark on that organization and no amount of spin from OFA loyalists will convince me otherwise. At least, we don’t have to pretend OFA is progressive or grassroots anymore.

Our system is of course a representative democracy, and n order for that to work, our representatives must actually follow our views and this is something that has become a problem for Democrats. Electing Bill Halter as the Democratic Nominee will have far-reaching effects. It puts all DINOs on notice that we, the base, are not going to stand for politicians that forgot why they got elected in the first place, and it will prove that you cannot serve the corporations and keep your job. This will help the future of our democracy and a Bill Halter victory is a victory for Democracy. Early voting has started in Arkansas for the run-off on June 8th. If you live in or close to Arkansas, and are available, you can knock on doors to GOTV for Halter. You can also from anywhere make phone calls for Halter, which yours truly will do this weekend when not manning a table for Peanut Butter PAC at the Massachusetts Democratic State Convention. You can also contribute to his ActBlue page. You can also find Halter on our ActBlue page and contribute to him that way or even send us a working capital donation.

VA-05: Tom Perriello vs. Six Potential GOP Challengers and a possible NY-23 repeat.


26 May
Credit: Perrielloforcongress on flickr.  Copyrighted 2008

Credit: Perrielloforcongress on flickr. Copyrighted 2008

2008 was a year of change for America and for Virginia.   Moderate Democrat Mark Warner was elected to the U.S Senate, and Tom Perriello pulled off a huge electoral upset by unseating turncoat Democrat turned Republican Virgil Goode.   It was a very close race, Perriello won in the final tally after a recount by little over 700 votes. Since his election, Perriello has voted consistently as a loyal Democrat, some of those votes were tough since his district, Virginia 5th is rated by Cook as a PVI R+5, meaning it leans Republican.  The district did go for McCain over Obama 51% to 48% in 2008.  Perriello has six Republicans running against him and an independent challenger that is a pure teabagger.  As I’ll go into below, Virginia teabaggers are at odds with the national Republican establishment over the establishment’s choice in the primary.   This could mean more GOP Fail a ala NY-23.

Perriello has an interesting background.  Before he was elected to Congress, he worked to bring peace to the West African nations of Sierra Leona and Liberia.  He also worked to build faith-based organizations that fight for social justice.   Since taking office, Pereillo voted yes to ARRA(the “stimulus” bill), yes to ACES (cap and trade), yes to Health Insurance Reform(and voted for the much better bill the first time around).  His vote for Stupak was one of the few times he got it way wrong.  Pereillo also introduced H.R 4626, the Health Insurance Industry Fair Competition Act, which would repeal the health insurance industry’s anti-trust exemption.  It passed the House by over 400 votes.  Since he does represent a district that went to McCain, he would have to battle to get re-elected.  However, Perriello staying in office proves that the 50 state strategy works.

The conservatives, motivated by spite, racism and “purity” (we are not sure this extends to their precious bodily fluids), have at least six challengers to Congressman Perriello.   I will discuss each of the Republicans in running what should be a competitve and interesting primary, and I’ll discuss them one by one.  The first that I will talk about is Laurence Verga., a “real estate investor” from Albemarle County. Verga has been endorsed by such “intellectual heavyweights” as Laura Ingraham and Samuel Wurzelbacher aka “(Not) Joe the (Non-)Plumber”. Verga obviously would be a Tea Party politician with his support for lifting a ban on uranium mining in Southwest Virgina, as well a few health care related gems, where I added bold for emphasis

While I support and have signed The Club for Growth’s “Repeal It” pledge, this couldn’t realistically happen until we have a Republican president and Congress, which at the earliest is 2013. And while I support the State’s Attorneys General’s constitutional challenge to the bill, this can also take years and has no guarantee of success. There is a better and more immediate response to the bill: Stop the Funding!

Laurence personally suffers from polycystic kidney disease, a genetically-linked condition where cysts attack healthy kidneys. He is fortunate that his wife is the same blood type, allowing her to give him a kidney. However, over 4,000 people die every year waiting for a transplant. Laurence hopes his candidacy inspires more individuals to be organ donors and inspires those with physical challenges to never back down and to follow their dreams.

Gee, it sure must be nice to be a “real estate investor” rich enough to pay for an organ transplant when the uninsured would just die and private insurance plans would deny treatment before 2014.   His pledge to forego the Congressional health insurance in favor of his private plan shows that he doesn’t realize how bad the health insurance companies treat the middle class.

The second of the Circus of FAIL is Michael McPadden,  a pilot in North Garden.  Among the gems I found on his Issues page, he’s a goldbug.

Sound money is gold and silver. If you want a sound economy then you must demand sound money. Without sound money? Well, you get the economy that we have right now. The Constitution is very explicit about money. The Federal Government may only coin money and set the value thereof. They may not print paper money.

Article one section eight and article 3 section one of the Constitution gives Congress the authority to establish the lower federal courts. I believe it is time for Congress to begin the process of abolishing certain lower courts with the purpose of clearing out the activist judges. They can then reestablish those courts with judges that will interpret the law and not redefine it. I believe we should start with the ninth circuit court in San Francisco and work our way up. It is time that “We the people” take back our country from out of touch men and women in black robes.

Proving that some are still “Drill Baby Drill” because we just don’t have enough ecological destruction, dagnabit.

We need to open up the Outer Continental Shelf for drilling.

And this one just takes the cake for FAIL

I will move in my first days in Congress to have the Health Care Bill, Cap and Trade, and the stimulus Bill repealed.

The third member of the Circus of FAIL is Albemarle County Supervisor Ken Boyd.  Boyd apparently failed at science because he said at a debate:

Boyd said, “There is nothing to prove we have man-made global warming,”

He also failed civics too or is clueless about the law.

Boyd urged everyone to support Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli who intends to sue the federal government if the current reform bill passes.

“Let’s get behind Ken Cuccinelli and get this thing thrown out in the courts,” Boyd said.

The fourth member of the circus of FAIL is Fluvanna County biology teacher Feda Morton.   The teabag of FAIL on this candidate is very full. A teacher ought to know better than to plagiarize like she did, and during the Danville debate, she was quoted as saying

Morton, a teacher, said, “the Department of Education is one of the worst mistakes we ever made to public education.”

I wonder about what her students are learning about empiricism and the scientific method when she says things like

Morton says she believes global climate change is a “socialist plan to level the wealth” and “a pack of lies based on data that wasn’t substantiated.”

“These people are out and determined to destroy America, destroy capitalism and destroy jobs,” she said. “I don’t believe that global warming is a crisis. I don’t believe that global warming exists. And I don’t believe that carbon dioxide needs to be regulated as a pollutant.”

However, the crazy seems to be paying off for her, as she was ranked number one in a straw poll of Republican activists.

The fifth member of the circus of FAIL is Jim McKelvey.   As Blue Virginia reported, he likes to regurgitate lies on immigration.  He also evotes almost a whole page on auditing the Federal Reserve and cyptically refers to returning to “sound money”.  So this makes me wonder, is McKelvey another Rand Paul with some Austrian Economics nonsense tossed in?  He is increasinly also being trotted out as the alternative for the Tea Party rather than the Republican Establishment candidate.  Also he could provide some comedy if he is the nominee as in this quote from a debate:

McKelvey, referring to himself in the third person, pledged to limit himself to four years if elected.

“If Jim McKelvey can’t get it done in four years, he doesn’t deserve to be there,” McKelvey said, adding that power corrupts.

He also as recently as March said that he might run as an independent.

He is threatening to run as an independent. In his own words, “I’m not looking to be electable.” On the possibility of splitting the conservative vote and keeping Perriello in Congress, “I stand on my principles. I do this because I am scared for the future of the country.”

The sixth and final member of the GOP circus of FAIL is State Senator Robert Hurt, who is Eric Cantor’s preferred candidate, but described by some teabaggers on various website as a RINO.   The RINO of course is nonexistent, as the Republican Party purged out ll the centrists from their party.   The Tea Partiers are upset over Hurt’s vote for a tax increase in 2004. Lookingat his voting record, he is a typical Republican.  This year, he voted against insurance coverage for children with autism. I am often struck at how “pro-life” people can deny medical treatment to young children.

The Republican Primary is on June 8th, and Virginia’s “sore loser law” makes it so that any Republican wanting to go third party would have to file as an independnt before the polls close on June 8th.  However, a Tea Partier named Jeffrey Clark has said that he will run as an independent if Hurt wins. Whatever the results of the Republican Primary, voters in Virginia 5th have a clear choice:  they can stay with the guy who will create jobs and expand medical treatment to millions or they can go with “drill, deny children and deregulation” that we endured for eight years under Bush and his cronies.

Peanut Butter PAC is ready for our first donation! And we need your help…


04 May

We don’t have enough members yet to make weekly donations worth very much, but we do have the means to make a $250 award for the month of April, and if anyone joins between now and the actual date we award the money, we’ll add it to the total.

Presently, we have 19 members donating $54 per week – not bad for a small effort by a few Kossacks, blogging and meeting by phone calls and email!  We ask members to make small weekly donations in amout of $2, $3 or $5, or any combination thereof.

Join me over the fold to see our candidate pool…

(more…)

OH-Sen: Jennifer Brunner, the Patriot Act and Courage.


24 Mar

This was a post that I had intended to start writing last week. Since last week was dominated by health care discussions though, this might get more attention. Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner is in my opinion the best candidate for the Senate in Ohio, and I have previously laid out her views on Jobs, Afghanistan and Choice as well as her strong support in Ohio’s African-American communities. Her website is pretty through on the important issues facing this country now, but I saw an area that she didn’t cover and so I contacted her campaign and they somewhat promptly gave me an answer. Now, I will share her statement on the Patriot Act in its entirety and I’ll give my thoughts on it. I will also talk about Brunner’s courageous stands for the people of Ohio and why I am pledging $25.00 of my own money to her this Friday.

I received the following statement just as I posted my last Brunner diary to Daily Kos.

(more…)

CA-36: Jane Harman vs. Marcy Winograd, a closer look


19 Mar

Back in 2006, when the head of the Democratic National Committee Dr. Howard Dean was putting the 50 State Strategy into use, the co-founder of the Los Angeles chapter of the Progressive Democrats of America decided to take out “a Republican” of her own.  Only it was a Bush Democrat that she decided to run against, and so with only three months of campaigning, Marcy Winograd got 38%% percent of the vote and her opponent, Congresswoman Jane Harman was re-elected in the fall as the Democrats regained the House.  Four years later, Winograd is once again running against the Blue Dog Harman in an election cycle that promises to be one that is anti-incumbent.  The two Democrats differ on a number of issues including foreign policy concerning Israel and have differed in the past on civil liberties.

Jane Harman was first elected to Congress in the 36th district in 1992 and served until 1999 when she did not run for re-election in 1998.   She then regained her old seat in 2000 election and has been in Congress ever since.   The 36th District has a Cook PVI score of D+12 making it a solid Democrat district.   Obama carried the district which includes areas of West and Southwest Los Angeles by 64% in the 2008 general election.

(more…)

OH-Sen: Brunner, Fisher and Portman on Choice & Afghanistan and More on Fisher..


12 Mar

Although I haven’t gotten an answer from the Brunner campaign yet on the Patriot Act, I did have a conversation where I made sure that they were aware of my presence on Daily Kos.   While I was doing some searching to complete my opposition research concerning Afghanistan, I came across some interesting and ultimately telling items concerning Lt. Governor Lee Fisher and the front page of Daily Kos also shows why former Congressman and Bush Trade Representative Rob Portman cannot be seriously considered a good candidate for Senate.  I will save the those bits for last.

Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner if elected would be Ohio’s first female Senator and she has expressed her view that women are very underrepresented in the Senate and seeing just how Ben Nelson(DINO-NE) held out as the 60th vote on health care because he wanted the Senate to have its own Coathanger Amendment, Brunner has a very valid point.  We are also seeing thanks to the muckraking work of MinistryofTruth and StrandedWind that the movement to fire Bart Stupak and Joe Pitts is gaining momentum as Connie Saltonstall(MI-01) and Lois Herr(PA-16 candidate) are garnering netroots support in their candidacies.  Herr is already in Peanut Butter PAC’s candidate pool and Saltonstall will be added very shortly.   So yes, we want women to have a larger voice in Congress and to make sure that their medical decisions are upheld by the law and that no one can block access to them exercising their own choices with their bodies.   Brunner from her campaign site is very clear on her position on women’s reproducitve rights:

I support a woman’s right to choose and to make her own health care decisions. I support each individual’s right to make informed, independent decisions about sex, health, and family planning.

She also issued a press release when the Stupak Amendment passed the House.  This quote says it all about how strongly Brunner feels that Stupak is wrong and the policy is misogynistic, and I appauld how she just frames it.

“By voting yesterday to block women from essential reproductive health care services, the anti-choice obstructionists in Congress have abandoned Ohio women and would legislate a woman’s constitutional right to choose ineffective at best,” Brunner said. “The final health care bill must not only guarantee each Ohioan’s right to the health care they need when they need it, it also must also provide access to reproductive health services for all, regardless of income level and regardless of whether or not they receive government subsidized care,” Brunner added. “Universal health care is based on the principle that health care should be equally accessible to all citizens. Universal health care does not allow income to determine who gets care and services, and who does not. The Stupak-Pitts amendment violates this basic tenet.”

Fisher is also pro-choice according to his statement on his campaign site.

In November 2009, Lee called the anti-choice amendment to the health care reform bill before the U.S. House “discriminatory language far beyond existing law in restricting a woman’s right to choose,” and urged the U.S. Senate to reject similar language in its health care reform legislation.

His statement and others show that he is in agreement with Brunner on this issue, but since he also has received money from Harry Reid’s PAC and Blanche Lincoln’s PAC, how much he would stick to this principle if elected is questionable.

Portman is definately anti-choice.  On his Issues page which I won’t link to this time, but you can see it for yourself.   He brags about his 100% rating from a Right To Life group and I have no doubt that if elected, Portman would work to roll back women’s rights to the ’50s…the  1850s.

Seeing how some Kossacks are very passionate about Afghanistan, I looked at that too, and there is a decided difference between all three on that issue.

Brunner is for a withdrawal from Afghanistan and reversed an earlier policy position from 2009.  In her HuffPo article, Brunner articulates that the Bush policy of private contractors in Afghanistan makes the Afghan corruption problem worse rather than better and she says that the key of Afghanistan’s future is its own people.  At the end of the article,, which is a great read, she states:

Eight years and nearly a trillion dollars of our tax money-gone. More than 5,200 American lives-also gone. It’s time to say, “Enough.” It’s time to employ more than military and mercantile strategies in Afghanistan and set a timetable to bring our troops home from Afghanistan.

Brunner also has stated that she wants the money that has gone towards our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan to be put towards building infrastructure here in America.  She can clearly see where our national priorities ought to be.

Fisher in a press release said that he opposed “the surge” but thought fighting Al Queda was still important and there is no mention of his thoughts on withdrawal making that conspicuous by its absence.  One Ohio Blog thought he was just pandering and I see no evidence that contradicts this.

Portman issued a statement that he supported the surge in Afghanistan and said he had one disagreement.

However, I disagree with an exit strategy that includes arbitrary withdrawal dates that will embolden our enemies.

In short, Mr. Portman like John McCain supports infinite war and running large deficits to protect corrupt governments that will support us taking natural resources from that country.  How typically Republican: deficit peacocks that were silent during the Bush years where Bush ran it up like Paris Hilton’s credit card.

In searching for policy positions to put in this article, I have learned two new things about Fisher.  One is big problem, the other is something that regretfully few will care about.  The first is that Fisher is woefully out of touch with the African-American community in Ohio,  and has shown in his home county, Cuyahoga County, that he takes their support for granted.  He shouldn’t.   A telling moment for his out of touch-ness is that he supported a ballot measure that many African-American community leaders opposed: Issue 6.   From what I can gather, Issue 6 was a referendum in Cuyahoga County that changed its county government from 3 elected county commissioners plus a few other appointed positions to where there is only one elected county official and several other appointed positions that Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason would have control over. Where I come from that’s called a power grab.  Issue 6 passed and it will be interesting to see how black voters respond in May to how they will likely not have much of a voice in the governance of Cuyahoga County once the new governing structure is put into place.   Brunner on the other hand, has significant support among the African-American community.  She did after all eliminate the long lines that plagued Ohio during the 2004 elections when 2008 had its election cycles.  Brunner also attended the re-opening of the Lancer, a restaurant that is a symbol for Cleveland’s African-American community.  Fisher, despite it being in his home turf didn’t show.  Brunner has also been endorsed by groups like the Youngstown Warren Black Caucus.  Based on this, I wouldn’t be surprised if African-Americans turned out in large numbers for Brunner in May and if she is the nominee, they would turn out in large numbers in November.  I have my doubts if Fisher would get that kind of turnout if he was the nominee.

Fisher in his search for job ideas from Ohioans stated that he doesn’t consider marijuana reform a viable solution to the jobs issue, according to an Ohio blog. I know this isn’t a big issue with Kossacks and I know we have more pressing matters right now, but Fisher should know that he isn’t the type of guy that NORML members(I was a member for a whle) would support.

And fianlly, the Cleveland Plain Dealer is reporting that Portman is apparently a Birther.  Yes, even conservative Senate nominees can be wingnuts.  If Portman cannot honestly articulate that Barack Obama is an American citizen, then he is obviously unfit for any office.  Common sense dictates that when Hawaii authenticated his birth in Honolulu, that is definite proof that our President is not a Kenyan citizen.

I look forward to examining more candidates very soon and your comments are always welcome.

The Ohio Senate Candidates on Jobs.


10 Mar

To Be Crossposted to Progressive Electorate and Daily Kos

This week, the five of us who helped found Peanut Butter PAC are focusing our attention on Jennifer Brunner in keeping with this week’s unofficial theme.   I hope to be able to get Brunner’s position on the Patriot Act by this Friday.  I have contacted her campaign about it and am still awaiting a reply.  Since it is Wednesday and the middle of the work week, I figured it was a good day to tackle what each Ohio Senate Candidate plans on doing about the jobs problem.  It should certainly be the number 1 priority for Democrats once health care reform is put to bed for this year.

I will start with Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer BrunnerHer Jobs page is top under Issues.

Jobs are the number one issue in my campaign. But jobs can’t be considered in a vacuum. Issues like health care and fair trade policies go hand in hand with developing a sustainable recovery in Ohio and stable communities for the years to come.

There is no silver bullet for creating new and better jobs. It will take cooperation among many levels of government, business and even advocacy groups to grow Ohio’s economy again.

Brunner is correct in that health care reform done right would save jobs and even help create new ones as premiums would be brought under control, as insurance rate increases have hurt small businesses and have eaten into already flattened wages.   Trade polices are also important to look at as NAFTA incentivized big corporations to move their factories to Mexico and left behind hard-working American workers for non-union Mexican workers.   Brunner tend goes on to explain that Ohio’s unemployment rate is at 10.9% and explains more about health care reform and starts on what is needed.

Now the “hue and cry” is that health care reform was not the issue President Obama and Congress should have tackled first (despite the fact that reigned in health care costs helps our economy)—but rather they should be turning away from health care reform and focusing on jobs. The focus was on jobs—first thing—with the stimulus package that bailed out banks and the out-of-balance budgets of the states and directed funds toward jobs in the states in health care, energy independence and education. But clearly, this hasn’t been enough.

Others and I have suggested Congress take unspent bailout money and use it for infrastructure jobs in our states. Infrastructure building is one of the most direct ways to get people working again quickly, especially skilled workers in the building trades, which is often called the “tip of the spear” to jobs recovery in any area. My friends in the IBEW and many others like them could use that help, and our communities would benefit from it.

Brunner gets it on infrastructure spending, and I have quoted this part before.  Sh also correctly asserts that the stimulus was primarily a jobs creation effort albeit one that was watered down with useless tax cuts.   Brunner goes on and talks about unemployment benefits.

In Ohio and many other places in the U.S. we need some common sense solutions—like letting people work part time when they can find it but not cutting off their unemployment benefits. Few states allow this, so why not pick up this regulation from the states for now and get people working again, even if only part time?

Most people on unemployment are receiving just a portion of what they were earning. They still have their mortgages to pay, prescriptions to pay for, cars to fuel and repair, and kids’ lunches to buy—so why not let them do it with reduced benefits? They would have longer to find a sustainable job for the same overall benefit cap while small businesses could safely begin to grow right now.

The wages they receive would most likely be substantially less anyway than their weekly benefit but if they could take the job, it could lead to a full-time position and they could still receive partial benefits while working without giving up their unemployment benefits completely.

The U.S. Department of Labor’s website is clear that unemployment insurance programs (created in 1935 in response to the Great Depression) play a key role in helping businesses, communities and the nation’s economy by providing temporary income support for laid off workers.

I do think after that little stunt that Jim Bunning pulled, we know that Republicans somehow think of unemployment as a disincentive to working rather than a means of support while families are looking for a new job.   I am thankful that Brunner gets it that we want people to be able to continue to pay their mortgage and the rest of their bills.

Allowing those laid off workers to start working part time, for instance for up to 6 months, would be a good start. The USDOL’s Trade Adjustment Assistance program that provides a variety of re-employment services and income support for jobs lost by increased imports or “shifts in production to foreign countries, due to trade and business tax policies” (better known as “outsourcing”) sets a similar time frame.

I applaud some of the more long-term steps being proposed like:

1. Unfreezing the credit market for small businesses and manufacturers,

2. Helping small and mid-sized manufacturers (especially former auto suppliers and auto component manufacturers – Ohio’s largest industry) retool for the clean energy economy,

3. Fostering entrepreneurialism and the creation of new jobs through business incubators like I’ve seen in Beachwood, Ohio,

4. Preparing our workforce for new jobs through tailored, regional workforce development programs to support high-growth industries, and

5. Enforcing trade laws to invest in domestic manufacturing and production, like Senator Sherrod Brown’s Trade Enforcement Priorities Act, to give the federal government more authority to address trade barriers and require the U.S. Trade Representative (Ohio Republican Senate candidate Rob Portman’s former job in the Bush administration) to analyze trade barriers that have the most adverse effect on U.S. exports and employment to crack down on the unfair practices that have killed American jobs and drained our country of our sources of prosperity.

All of those are good ideas, especially retooling for a clean energy economy, which echoes what many progressives call for and looking at the worst trade practices that are killing off American jobs.   She also has a full section under Issues regarding Trade, but you get the idea with Brunner.  She’s through and solutions-oriented.

Next, we look at Lieutenant Governor Lee Fisher and his take on Jobs.  Fisher has a brief page on Jobs.  Below is his opening statement:

My top priority is economic recovery for Ohio and the nation, and that means a relentless focus on saving and creating good-paying jobs. When I was asked by Ted Strickland to run as his Lieutenant Governor in 2006, Ohio was just beginning to feel the effects of the Bush Administration’s misguided trade policies, failed economic program, and disastrous fiscal stewardship that ran up our national debt. Never in our lifetime have we seen such a catastrophic national economy.

I support common-sense economic principles: fiscal discipline, living within our means, rewarding hard work, investing in our people, and growing a strong middle class. In the Senate, I will fight to reduce the deficit and support pay-as-you-go budget rules to make sure Congress lives within its means. I also will fight to implement tax policies that reward work, support middle-class families, and encourage investment and job creation.

Despite these tough times, I continue to believe in the innovative, entrepreneurial spirit of America and the power of economic growth and fair competition to create shared prosperity. With the right policies in place, I am confident we can create good jobs and grow our economy in a way that benefits all Ohioans.

Let’s see:  somehow reducing the deficit creates jobs?   It will help our bond rating, that’s for sure.   Cutting spending and letting infrastructure go certainly won’t create jobs.   He says strong middle class, well…that’s good.   How do you intend to keep the Middle class strong?   The page then mentions Fisher as Director of Development but then fails to mention that Fisher quit the position just a month after President Obama took office when Ohio was still hemorrhaging jobs.  That’s Leadership for you.   And people wonder why Fisher won’t debate Brunner.   That has to be a big reason why.

Lee believes we can and must make Ohio a hub of energy production, putting thousands of Ohioans to work creating sources of clean, renewable energy like wind turbines, solar panels and fuel cell-powered cars.

I somehow take it that Fisher would find the funding for this, and also minimie the bureaucracy when it comes to installing solar panels on one’s roof as well?   I think the focus on fuel cells for cars is unrealistic right now.  Biodiesel is much more inplementable right now, not to mention that I know switchgrass ethanol is being worked on.    The page then lacks to mention anything about trade or infrastructure.    Fisher then mentions health care reform passing and then educational attainment and job training.  He talks about trade but then doesn’t give any specifics on his trade policies.  And on energy, he doesn’t mention nuclear at all, and then mentions “clean coal”. Yeah, “clean coal” is like “jumbo shrimp”, it’s an oxymoron.

I saw in a post not too long ago that there were two other nobodies that popped into the Democratic race at the last moment.  There’s no mention of them on OpenCongress, and so I won’t bother with them.  If someone can even name these nobodies on the ballot, then I’ll consider updating with their positions if they have a website.

Lastly, we have Rob Portman, the Republican.  Portman currently polls ahead of either Brunner or Fisher, but it is only March and his lead isn’t that much.   On Portman’s Issue page, Jobs is on the top.  His Jobs tab talks about him visiting manufacturing plants and small business.  Then he tells a whopper:

But Crown Battery’s management – like many other small business owners – are fearful of the health proposals currently being debated in Washington that could raise small business taxes and force workers into government-run plans that do less and cost more.

The current Jobs Bills being passed and debated in Congress actually cut taxes for most small businesses.   The 15 Billion dollar Jobs Bill was mostly tax cuts. So that’s lie #1.   The only plans that people are being forced into are the ones run by Wellpoint, Aetna, the Blue Crosses and all the other health insurers.  So unless Uncle Sam is the one really running Wellpoint, that is a blatant lie.  Furthermore, there is no government-run plan in the current Senate Bill or in the President’s proposal.  He could somehow be saying that 65 year olds or older shouldn’t be on Medicare though.   So is that it, Mr. Portman?  You think seniors shouldn’t be on Medicare?   He then goes on to concern troll the Employee Free Choice Act, extols nuclear as an alternative fuel source(but silence about all others) and says cap-and-trade(and he calls it a “tax’) would kill jobs.  He then goes on further about job training and faith-based charities to help the less fortunate.

So there you have it.  Brunner, Fisher or Portman.   I think the choice is clear as to who is the best candidate on jobs, and that is Jennifer Brunner.

CT-Sen: Notes from the Alpert vs. Blumenthal debate (Or Progressive vs Incrementalist)


03 Mar

To be cross-posted to Daily Kos and Progressive Electorate.

On March 1st, I attended the first Democratic Senate debate for Connecticut’s Senate seat.   Merrick Alpert, businessman from  the Mystic area squared off against Attorney General Richard Blumenthal of Greenwich at the University of Hartford’s Lincoln Theater at the debate sponsored by the Hartford Courant and Fox 61.  I came away with better understanding of both and throughly impressed that one candidate spoke out for Medicare For All.

Before the debate, the make-up of the audience was an interesting contrast.  On Alpert’s side of the theater was a bunch of working class people dressed like normal people.  Blumenthal’s side was full of men and women in suits and had many of the AG’s office staff there.  In the interest of full disclosure, I sat next to Merrick’s brother and was surrounded by his family and talked to some of them about the differences between the two candidates.  I was told by one of the pro-Alpert supporters that knew Blumenthal that Blumenthal “stands for nothing” while Alpert always “says where he stands”.

The debate’s format was that a moderator asked the candidates questions.  There were three main topics that the moderator asked the candidates two questions on: the Economy, Health Care and Foreign Policy.  Each candidate had two minutes to respond and one minute for rebuttals.  The moderator was one of the Courant’s staff.

On the first question, which was about regulating the financial companies that caused the  Great recession, Blumenthal said that yes, he’d regulate the financial sector, and said that he had been calling for that for years and before we had the financial meltdown.  He also stated that “Everyone is saying Washington is broken and corrupt.   Washington is saying that Washington is broken and corrupt”.   He then cited his record of fighting against Big Tobacco, the pharmaceutical industry and Microsoft.  His priorities would be a new Consumer Protection Agency, registering of derivatives and other regulatory measures. Alpert in answering the question stated that he knows that he is a real underdog. He wants to be the contrast to incrementalism.   We then said that financial companies need to be fully regulated and not just at the margins.  He then said that we made a huge mistake in 1999 when the Glass-Staegal Act was repealed.  He would put back the Glass-Staegal Act and separate the investment banking sections and the commercial banking sections and he’d make sure they’d always be separate.   He also would break up the “Too Big To Fail” banks so this would never happen again.  Blumenthal then says that we have to regain control of the markets, empower the S.E.C(Securities and Exchanges Commission), and end bonus to companies like A.I.G.  He emphasized that he could get results.  Alpert then states he’d go further.  “We lost 10 Million jobs, we need to get those back”  He then said he’d invest in education, infrastructure and public-private partnerships.  He then said that “lawsuits won’t bring jobs”.  I don’t think that last statement was fair or meaningful, it was a cheap sound byte.  Alpert is right that boldness is needed to rein in financial companies and Blumenthal has a solid record of this.

The second question was what should government do to create jobs.   Alpert said government shouldn’t be on backs of small business.  He again stated that lawsuits won’t bring jobs, he then added that entrepreneurs would bring jobs.  He wants us to “stop overtaxing” businesses.  He then states that he has a bold new plan to invest in education especially vocational schools that give real job training, he also states that infrastructure needs to be invested in like High Speed Rail, and money towards public-private partnerships that did great things like the Erie Canal, the Human Genome Project, and the creation of the Internet.   He says he has a $1 Trillion plan to get the economy back on track.  Blumenthal then says that job creation is most important.  He would extend Unemployment benefits and brings up Bunning’s disgraceful hold on UI extension.  He then said tax credits and payroll exemptions would be what he’d pursue and aid through the Small Business Administration and then said that green jobs should be there too.  Wants to lower cost of business in Connecticut. He said that the state has the highest electrical rates in the country.   He would also end the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which he says is an enemy to Connecticut.  Alpert mentions that mitigation measures cost a lot.  And says that all Blumenthal has done for jobs is “20 years of lawsuits, 20 years of press conferences”.   Blumenthal then defends his suing, saying that lawsuits do bring jobs(which Simmons supporters later tweeted around and two Republican candidates have taken as a bumper sticker slogan for Blumenthal’s job creation plan).   He said that businesses welcome competition and an even playing field.  The he mentions his suits against pharmaceutical companies for misusing patents.  Other than the perhaps mistaken concern (I don’t live in Connecticut so CT residents can jump in and give me some background if small businesses are taxed too much)about taxing businesses too much, I’d say that Alpert has the better plan for job creation.  Blumenthal’s is too small and might be too prone to deregulation fever.  Also the Small Business Administration only serves 2 to 3 % of the small businesses in America, hardly something that helps Main Street.  I am also cuious about just what Blumenthal has done or is planning to do about the high electricity rates in the Nutmeg State.

The third question was on health care.  The question was how would the candidates reconcile the needs of the underinsured and the uninsured who need care versus the thousands that depend on their livelihood in the state from the insurance industry.  Alpert said he’d reconcile the two by telling the truth.  He said that there is “a fundamental right to health care”. It is also a matter of national survival he said. He would open Medicare  up for all.  He then pointed out that there would be a secondary market for insurers to still do business in, providing private plans that go beyond Medicare’s basic coverage.  These already exist for seniors and are called Medicare Supplemental Plans.   He also believes that it is our responsibility to provide health care coverage for all Americans.   Blumenthal then agreed that providing health care is “a moral obligation”.  He said that “good health care is good insurance coverage” (Michael Moore disagrees with him on that). He then said his most important job as AG isn’t suing Microsoft or arguing at the Supreme Court(SCOTUS) about protections against sex offenders, the thousands of cases from ordinary Connecticut citizens battling their insurance companies for treatment is his most meaningful work.  He would also prevent abuses in the health care system, eliminate paperwork, computerize medical records, and would pool people together for better coverage.  He believes in people freely joining purchasing pools for coverage.  He would also improve health care for veterans, and create a bill called “No Veterans Left Behind.”  Alpert points out that insurance rates have skyrocketed.  He said that Connecticut is the most expensive state to have health insurance.  He then shows the front page of the Hartford Courant to prove his point.   He then asks “how have lawsuits kept costs down?”, which was another dig at Blumenthal and not a statement for tort reform.    Blumenthal answers that he and consumer advocates have been “straitjacketed” in their ability to keep rates down.  He would try to get more authority for the sate of Connecticut to help control insurance rates.   Once again, Alpert is bold and more progressive on this.  Blumenthal is more “tinker at the edges” and legalistic.   I strongly urge a Blumenthal supporter to send Attorney General Blumenthal a copy of Sicko posthaste on the reasons why insurance coverage isn’t health care coverage.

The fourth question was on the costs of health care and each candidate was asked for three things they’d do to lower costs.  Blumenthal would 1. enforce antitrust laws against lawbreaker citing his lawsuits against Big Pharma for misusing patents.  2. He would repeal the anti-trust exemption on health insurers.  3. “Prevention” which he didn’t explain much. Alpert said he would 1. make Medicare For All available via a buy-in.  He said that single payer is the best way to reduce health care costs.  2. He would tax the so-called “Cadillac health care plans” of executives.  (I called his campaign office for more detail, I was told that I would receive specifics on the threshold he’d use for this in a few days).  He said that most politicians want to kick costs down the road.  3.  He pointed out that Insurance companies pumped $46 Million into the 2008 election cycle.   He would fight for publicly funded elections and for term limits.  Blumenthal in his best “cribbed from the OFA playbook” retort said that “incrementalism isn’t a dirty word”.  He then said that protecting workers on job sites would lower health care costs, citing a recent power plant tragedy in Connecticut that killed five and injured dozens.   He would change OSHA to make it better, and he believes that it must be able to properly protect workers.   Alpert then states that “incrementalism is a dirty word” and this is one major difference between the two.  He then again says that he has a $1 Trillon plan for job creation, and that we need single payer.  He concludes that incrementalism is our enemy.   Blumenthal’s silence on the public option is deafening, and again small measures and legalistic maneuvers.  Alpert is right that single payer is a great cost control measure.

Next came the foreign policy questions.  Fifth question was Do we need to rethink the War on Terror?   Blumenthal said that there is too much to say for just two minutes to do it justice.  He said that we need more than bumper sticker slogans and that he supports the President’s current plan in Afghanistan.  He said the War on Terror is necessary.  Alpert says that he served in Bosnia as part of the peacekeeping forces and that he saw the orphanages and the mass graves that were there back then.   He said that our path in Afghanistan is the wrong one.  “We borrow billions from China”, and he opined that we are supporting an ineffectual and corrupt Karzai government.   He cites illegal opium trade, illegal timber cutting and illegal land grabs as evidence that the Afghan government is corrupt.   He said that the containment strategy that worked with dealing with the USSR would work on fighting terrorism.   He suggested immediate withdrawal from Afghanistan.   Blumenthal retorted that he relies on the good judgement of the military commanders on the ground there, and said that an immediate withdrawal would endanger our troops.   He said that the “temporary surge” in Afghanistan was necessary.   Alpert cited a statement that there are less than 100 active Al Queda operatives in Afghanistan.   He then said that the Army Manual that General Petraeus wrote states that we would need a ground force of 640,000 to have a chance in Afghanistan.   He then stated that combined with NATO we have approximately 140,000 troops on the ground. (I didn’t write down the exact figure he used, I am relying on memory for the 140 thousand).   “Not a path to victory”.   Since Alpert has combat experience and Blumenthal doesn’t, I’ll take Alpert’s expertise here.

The sixth question was what actions would you take against Iran?   Alpert would move to hard sanctions. He agrees with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton concerning Iran.   He also added that it would be quite difficult to do anything harsher than sanctions and thinks that sanctions could get Iran back to the table for negotiations.  Blumenthal agrees with sanctions and thinks that we need more diplomacy and military action should not be the first resort.   Alpert tells the audience that he traveled with Vice President Al Gore and met and married a Columbia citizen.  Then he asks Blumenthal what experience he has in foreign policy.   Blumenthal declined to answer him and said that he wants to answer the original question.   He said that “no one wants to use the military as the first resort”. (Except for John McCain of course and other teabaggers).   He would be mindful of the debts that our children would have to deal with, and asks why not delay putting another man on the moon(My sister whose livelihood depends on NASA would disagree).  After the debate, I contacted his campaign staff to follow-up on the Iran question.  I asked Merrick if he would be more vocally supportive of the opposition party in Iran.  His staff told me paraphrasing Merrick that absolutely yes he would be more vocal in his support for the opposition party in Iran(and he thought it was a good question).   He added that the people of Iran need to know that we do support their fight for freedom against the military dictatorship.  I was then told that we have to be careful though too.  If things get violent or the U.S acts against Iran with force, it would undermine the opposition and strengthen the military dictatorship by enabling it to crack down more on the forces who want freedom for Iran.  It is very tenuous I was told.

The seventh question was has the time come to normalize relations with Cuba.   Blumenthal said that now is the time to start.  He said that once the Castros are gone and the country becomes more democratic, then Cuba will be ready.   He stated that he would listen to the Cubans who live in Connecticut and said that he is the candidate that would listen.   Alpert then retorts “If ever you wanted to see an example of incrementalism as dangerous, that would be it”.   He said that we need to normalize with Cuba now.  He said that the embargo is a failed policy.  He has visited Latin America and those countries find our treatment of Cuba abhorrent.  He believes the policy to be an abysmal failure and state that Cubans are warm and friendly.  He thinks Americans need to go to Cuba.  Blumenthal then feebly tries to speak Spanish.  Then he says that we will eventually normalize relations with the country.  Alpert “I would vote for it tonight”.  He asks what are we afraid of?  That they’ll like us?  He said that even with the embargo and everything that’s happened, that Cubans like us.  I commend Alpert on taking a bold stand here.

The eighth and last question was on the Bush tax cuts.  Would they extend them or let them expire?  Alpert said that we ought to throw a party when the Bush tax cuts expire.  The audience loved this.   He then said that our veterans have been the only ones asked to sacrifice for the wars,  He said that taxes are one way that we can sacrifice to pay for these wars. Blumenthal thought that was offensive.  He said that he doesn’t favor war.  “Freedom isn’t free”.  He said that the Bush tax cuts should expire and  we need targeted tax cuts.

Then came the final statements.  Blumenthal told of his father who came to this country in 1935 to escape the Nazis and that his mother grew up on a farm and that his first job was shoveling manure.  He said that he learned that we have an obligation to give back.  Public service is a calling and he said that the race isn’t about him, it’s about the people and fighting for results.  Alpert said that he took an 117 mile walk across Connecticut to protest what was happening in Afghanistan.  He saw businesses with shuttered doors, bridges that were crumbling because no one was repairing them, and schools that had half of their class never graduating.  But he said he also saw hope.  He said ask the U.S Bobsled team, the New Orleans Saints or a once-unknown Senator named Barack Obama about being the underdog.  He said that America will embrace the underdog.  He said that he doesn’t want a McMahon(reference to Republican Linda McMahon) to buy the election, and that he is proud to be a part of the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party.

From reading various online polls and seeing comments in the Courant and other sites, the majority thinks that Alpert won this first debate.  I saw the workings of a great progressive as perhaps the next Senator from Connecticut and I saw another establishment candidate that thinks his name recognition and lack of standing for anything bold is enough.   I will continue to keep a close eye on both candidates and I fully intend to ask the Blumenthal campaign how they plan to control electrical costs and I will ask both campaigns where their candidate stands on immediately repealing Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and if they are willing to give the District of Columbia full representation in Congress.  I also will find out more specifics on Alpert’s plan with the excise tax.

Liveblog interwiew with Candidate Ryan Bucchianeri (PA-12) at 7pm ET on Daily Kos


18 Feb

I just thought I’d give all you fighting Progressives a heads up on this. AT 7 pm ET I will be conducting a live blog interview with PA-12 Democratic candidate Ryan Bucchianeri at Daily Kos.com, and I’ll be crossposting the interview here as well. I hope you join in and ask Ryan all the policy questions you’d like to.

I look forward to seeing you all there. Cheers.

Catch you later

: )

Crossposted at ProgressiveElectorate.com