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Those Who Fail to Learn From History...Will Keep On Losing!

Monday, November 23, 2009

More "whitewashing" from the DPVA? It sure seems that way. I'm hearing from reliable sources that Tim Kaine and Creigh Deeds will be coming to the DPVA's State Central Committee meeting on December 5 specifically in order to discourage any discussion about what happened in the recent election disaster.

If true, this is absurd, idiotic, and "cover your ass" at its worst. The fact is, State Central Committee is the governing body of a party that just suffered a huge defeat, and if they don't fully discuss what happened - and make whatever changes in personnel, structure, etc. that are required - they are doomed to keep on losing. That would be fine, except for one problem: it won't be only members of the DPVA's State Central Committee who will suffer, it will be everyone who lives in Virginia and is forced to live under right-wing ideologues like "Pat Robertson's Manchurian Candidate," Ken Kook-inelli, etc. Ugh.

Stop the DPVA Whitewash!

The following email -- complete with Orwellian/Panglossian talk about "success stories" and "lessons learned" coming out of 2009 (a complete debacle in every way, as laid out in this "After Action Review") - was sent out by DPVA Political Director Don Marks. It epitomizes everything wrong with the DPVA - clueless (they didn't learn any "lessons" and there were no "success stories" to speak of), closed (these meetings are not open to the public), authoritarian, hostile to grassroots activists and anyone who doesn't toe the "party line" (it was confirmed to me by multiple sources "in the know" that these meetings "are another mechanism to stop the talking"), unwilling to look honestly at what went wrong and to make the necessary changes to move forward successfully, more concerned about protecting their little fiefdoms than about actually winning elections, etc. I encourage everyone to attend the meeting nearest you, demand that your questions be answered, and stop this DPVA whitewash before it goes any further.
Central Committee Members and Local Committee Chairs,

Thanks for all your hard work in 2009. As we transition into 2010, the DPVA leadership would like to hear from you about success stories and challenges on the local level. We know that the local committees are where the action happens -- and we want to get your advice before moving into a crucial 2010 cycle.

That's why DPVA staff will be coming to you for "roundtable" discussions with all the central committee members and local committee chairs. We believe it's important to take the lessons learned from this past year and refocus the DPVA towards the 2010 elections and support President Obama's agenda in Washington. So, please join us.

Please respond to this email to RSVP.


Thanks for all you do and I'll see you out on the road,

Don

Richmond- Saturday, 11/21- 3:30PM
DPVA Headquarters
1710 E. Franklin St
Richmond, VA 23223

Roanoke- Sunday, 11/22- 3:00PM
Lancerlot (3rd Floor)
1110 Vinyard Rd
Vinton, VA 24179

Charlottesville- Tuesday, 11/24- 7:00PM
Albemarle Co. Offices (Rm. 235)
401 McIntire Rd
Charlottesville, VA 22902

Fairfax- Monday, 11/30- 7:00PM
Hyatt Fair Lakes
12777 Fair Lakes Circle
Fairfax, VA 22033

Arlington- Tuesday, 12/1- 7:00PM
Arlington Westin Gateway (Ballroom C)
801 N. Glebe Road
Arlington, VA 22203

Newport News- Wednesday, 12/2- 7:00PM
Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 540 Union Hall
7812 Warwick Blvd
Newport News, VA 23607

Norfolk- Thursday, 12/3- 7:00PM
Hilton Norfolk Airport, Norfolk
1500 North Military Highway
Norfolk, VA 23502

UPDATE: A member of the DPVA Central Committee told me they were very disappointed to learn that DPVA staff were organizing a series of meetings around the state, but insisting that these regional meetings only be attended by members of the Central Committee itself. This Central Committee member wondered aloud why DPVA staff would pass up opportunities to meet with other Democratic activists who don't normally go, or cannot afford to go, to the DPVA quarterly meetings?

Virginia Organizing Project Executive Director to Defend Against Trespassing Charges Brought On By Anthem


The preceding video and the following press release are both from the Virginia Organizing Project. This is how private health insurance company Anthem treats its paying customers, apparently. And this is what Republicans in Congress (plus a few misguided "Democrats") are defending. You might want to keep this in mind as you watch the rest of the health care reform debate unfold in coming weeks...
As the Senate votes to begin debate on health care reform legislation this week, another health care debate will heat up in Richmond when Joe Szakos defends against trespassing charges brought on by his own health insurance company. On Monday, November 23, 2009 at 1:00pm, Joe Szakos, executive director of the Virginia Organizing Project will stand trial to defend against trespassing charges brought on by Anthem after visiting their headquarters in July to question his organization’s health insurance premium increases.

Virginia Organizing Project executive director Joe Szakos originally showed up to defend against trespassing charges in Henrico General District Court on September 22, 2009. However the complaining witness, an employee of Anthem, was unable to attend the trial. The case was continued to Monday, November 23, 2009. The Commonwealth’s prosecution asked for a continuance because their key witness was out of town despite having been served the subpoena seven weeks prior on August 5, 2009. Szakos’s defense opposed the motion to continue the trial to a later date but was overruled.

Szakos was charged with trespassing on Anthem’s property in July when he and three Virginia Organizing Project board members attempted to meet with Anthem officials to discuss their concerns about a recent insurance premium increase and the use of money paid as premiums going to anti-health care reform lobbying. The Virginia Organizing Project pays $25,000 per month in premiums to Anthem for its employees. Anthem and its parent company WellPoint have spent millions lobbying against a public health insurance option, including soliciting their own customers to speak out against reform.

Whipple Clip Dozen: Monday Morning

Thanks to Tom Whipple for the Monday "Whipple Clips."

1. TAX REFUNDS INCREASE SHARPLY IN VIRGINIA
2. WEBB, WARNER VOTE FOR HEALTH-CARE DEBATE
3. STONEY OUT, CRANWELL IN
4. PALIN WELCOMED BY 1000+ FANS AT ROANOKE BOOK SIGNING
5. SARAH PALIN'S FANS CHEERED HER WILDLY
7. PROBE OF ALLEGED BIAS AT VMI CONTINUES
8. AAA PROJECTS 3 PERCENT INCREASE IN HOLIDAY TRAVEL
11. THERE IS NO EASY WAY OUT
14. HAMPTON BOASTS LOW TAXES, BUT HAS HIGH ADMINISTRATION COSTS
15. BEACH SHERIFF LOOKING AT ALTERNATIVES FOR REVENUE
16. HIGHER CITY TAX NOT IRKING DINERS
19. GLOUCESTER SUPERVISOR GREGORY WOODARD LOOKS TO CLEAR HIS RECORD

Lost An Election? Feeling Down? Try This!

The Blue Virginia Award for "Best Way to Get Your Mind Off of Losing an Election" goes to Greg Werkheiser (D). On his Facebook page, Werkheiser reports that he...

*"...just rode a bike from tip of 10,000 foot volcano to sea level through seven microclimates" (11/18)

*"...is still recovering from the night sleeping in the trees in the rainforest" (11/23)

Now that's the way to get one's mind off of losing for the second time in four years to Del. Dave Albo (R-Abuser Fees)!

P.S. I'm trying to figure out if Greg is in Hawaii, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Indonesia, or what.

Congratulations Penn Quakers!


No particular Virginia connection here, except that the University of Pennsylvania is my alma mater and the mens' football team is now Ivy League champs. Congratulations!

Al Gore: "Out Crazy the Crazies" on Climate Change

Sunday, November 22, 2009

10 Pieces of Unsolicited Advice To President Obama

For a while now, I've been watching the Obama administration with hope, but also with a growing sense of unease. That unease has centered primarily on the Administration's and Congress' failure (so far) to accomplish many of the things Democrats campaigned on, which many of us worked our butts off to see happen, and which we were given a mandate to carry out with our huge victories in the 2006 and 2008 elections. I'm talking about everything from enacting policies that favor the working and middle classes, to shutting down Gitmo, to reforming our broken health care system, to dealing aggressively with climate change, to jump-starting a clean energy revolution in America, to tackling our structural budget and trade deficits, to breaking the stranglehold of special interests on our politics, etc. So far, we've seen some progress in these areas, but not nearly enough. True, it hasn't even been a year since Barack Obama was sworn in as president, but believe it or not, we may already be running out of time as we approach a mid-term election year, following which will come the start of the 2012 presidential campaign...and the potential for political paralysis once again.

What crystallized all this in my mind were three things. First, I've been increasingly frustrated at the drawn-out health care "debate," which has neither succeeded in producing health care reform nor allowed us to move on to other, pressing issues like climate change, foreign policy, the economy, etc. Second, I had a long conversation yesterday with a friend who I affectionately call an "Obamabot," because of his intense (and early) support for Barack Obama and also for his tendency not to see any flaws in the man. Yesterday, however, even my "Obamabot" friend admitted that he was getting frustrated with the Obama administration on a number of fronts. Third, this morning's Maureen Dowd's NY Times column (as well as excellent editorials by Tom Friedman and Frank Rich) on Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, populist anger, etc. got me thinking about where Obama's presidency is at right now, and what he needs to do to fix it. With that, here are 10 pieces of unsolicited advice for Barack Obama.

1. Be more like Teddy Roosevelt; "carry a big stick." Sure, it's great to be all about bringing people together, hope, change, carrots, lollipops and puppy dogs. But sometimes, frankly, the president has got to show people he can kick some serious ass and is prepared to do so if need be. That means, when someone crosses you on something that matters, they need to feel pain - loss of committee chairmanships, no more White House support for pet projects in their home states, etc. Basically, this goes back to Machiavelli, who said "It is better to be feared than loved, if you cannot be both." Right now, does anyone in Congress (or in other nations' capitals) fear Barack Obama? As in, do they factor into their calculations serious repercussions for going against Obama's wishes? Right now, maybe I'm missing something, but I'm not seeing it. A perfect example is Joe Lieberman, who has continuously dissed Barack Obama (e.g., campaigning for John McCain and Sarah Palin, threatening to join a Republican filibuster of a top Obama priority - health care reform) yet has suffered no adverse consequences. To the contrary, he should have been stripped of his committee chairmanship and told that he would get nothing for his state until he got back on the reservation. That would have sent a message to everyone else: cross Barack Obama at your severe peril. Instead, Lieberman got away with it, sending the exact opposite message - cross Barack Obama and nothing bad will happen to you. Not good.

2. Be more like Teddy Roosevelt; "speak softly." Most importantly, that means not over-promising. Thus, Obama said he wanted an economic stimulus package on his desk by Inauguration Day, and that didn't happen. He set an end-of-summer deadline for health care reform legislation to be completed, and that didn't happen either (now the White House is saying "end of the year"...we'll see). He said that unemployment wouldn't surpass 10%, and it has. He was very strong rhetorically about Israeli settlement expansion on the West Bank being unacceptable, but faced with resistance from Israel and its allies, Obama has now all but thrown in the towel on that one. He said he would accept nothing less than fundamental change in Washington, and so far, it looks amazingly like the "same ol' same ol'" up on Capitol Hill. I could go on and on, but I'll spare you. The point is, these were all worthy goals, but the problem is that when the the President of the United States says something's going to happen and then it doesn't happen, and when this occurs repeatedly, a lot of people start thinking he's "weak," or "indecisive," or "all rhetoric," or "dithering," etc. The point is, the president should be very careful what he promises to do, and when he makes a promise, he needs to make damn sure that promise is met. End of story.

3. Be more like LBJ, or get someone who can be. For all his flaws as a human being, LBJ was masterful at cajoling, arm twisting, flattering, doing whatever it took to get Congress to do his bidding. Right now, it sure doesn't look like we're seeing that in the relationship between Barack Obama and the Democratic Congress. It's long past time for that to change. Oh, by the way, wasn't Rahm Emanuel supposed to be taking care of this? Hmmmmm.

4. Go populist. People on "Main Street" are hurting right now while "Wall Street" is actually doing pretty well (having been bailed out by the taxpayers), which means the country is rife for populist unrest of various sorts. Unfortunately, right now, the only sustained, semi-organized populist unrest we're seeing is coming from the (far) right wing of the political spectrum. Where's the equivalent populist movement on the left? Where's the sustained critique of corporate power, profits, and unhealthy influence on our politics? Where are the fiery/passionate speeches about "two Americas" (or, to paraphrase Jim Webb from 2006, "America is breaking into three pieces: the rich getting richer, the poor getting poorer, and the middle class getting squeezed")? Where are the policy initiatives that specifically favor the working and middle classes over the wealthy? If you've seen any of this, please let me know, because I've missed it.

5. "Let's get visceral!" Americans right now are hurting, worried, frustrated and angry. In part, of course, we need tangible results from Washington. But that's not enough. We also need the intangible, along the lines of FDR's "fireside chats" or Harry Truman's "Give 'me Hell!" or even - as Maureen Dowd puts it in her column (entitled "Visceral Has Its Value") this morning - Ronald Reagan's "acting skills to project concern about what’s happening to people." Unfortunately, I don't feel like we're getting any of that right now. Instead, I fear that Maureen Dowd is right when she says that, although Barack Obama is "highly intelligent" and "likable...he’s not connecting on the gut level that could help him succeed." As a result, Dowd writes, "[t]he animating spirit that electrified his political movement has sputtered out." That's not going to cut it. Right now, it's time for some passion - righteous anger, for starters - from Cool Hand Barack.

6. Ditch bipartisanship, at least for now. Sadly, the once-great Republican Party now has degenerated to the point where it has only one desire - to "break" Obama (or any other Democrat, on the national or state level) and to roll back progress wherever they see it starting to sprout up. Sure, it would be great if America could be - as Barack Obama said in his 2004 Democratic National Convention speech - not a country divided into "red" and "blue," but instead "one people, all of us pledging allegiance to the stars and stripes, all of us defending the United States of America." Unfortunately, as Tom Friedman explains in the NY Times today, "at least six things have come together to fracture our public space and paralyze our ability to forge optimal solutions." I recommend that you read Friedman's column to see what those "six things" are, but the bottom line is this: right now, our politics is largely broken if not completely dysfunctional. Certainly, we're far FAR away from Obama's vision of reasonable people from right and left working together in good faith to get things done and move America forward. Instead, we've got members of the "Party of No" whose incentives - the way their districts are drawn, the way talk radio and TV pull people to the extremes, etc. - are all to move further to the right, not to the center (let alone the left). Given that, it's time for Barack Obama to demand that Congress pass the agenda he ran on, and which he was given a clear mandate to carry out. If Republicans want to work in good faith with Obama, that's great. But if they truly have no other interest than to obstruct, delay and damage, then they can go off and sulk in a corner while Democrats get things done for the American people.

7. Don't negotiate against yourself. This goes back to point #6, and is epitomized by the absurd spectacle of Democrats trying desperately for months on end to gain Republican support for health care reform, and ending up with basically nada. What did that accomplish, aside from delaying action on the entire Democratic agenda and watering down the legislation in order to try and appease the unappeasable? Nothing whatsoever, as far as I can tell. It certainly didn't win over any "moderates," and it certainly didn't show the country that Democrats get things done. So, the point of all this was...???

8. Push for real change in Washington. The centerpiece of Barack Obama's campaign for president was the appealing but amorphous word "change." If that word is to mean anything, we've got to start seeing the end of "business as usual in Washington." Right now, is there any evidence of any "change" in said "business as usual?" I certainly don't see it, whether on the health care debate or on climate change/clean energy legislation or on pork-laden spending bills or on "pay as you go" or on... Anyway, enough is enough. If this continues, it will be not only a huge missed opportunity to put our country back on the right course, it will also be a political disaster for Democrats in 2010 and 2012. Think about it this way: if there's nothing to get people excited for Democrats in 2010 and 2012, why would we expect the results be any better than they were in Virginia and New Jersey 2009?

9. To accomplish #8, replace anyone in the Obama administration who doesn't believe in real reform and real change. I'm not talking about lip service, either, I'm talking about true believers in fundamentally changing the way this (broken) system of ours operates. Bring people in from outside of politics, outside of Wall Street, wherever you can find the "best and the brightest" progressive, reformist minds. Then, get it done; there's no time to lose.

10. Place the blame for our problems right where it belongs - the Republicans. Actually, this should have started even before Day #1 of the Obama administration. The fact is, Barack Obama and the Democrats inherited a series of horrendous, intractable messes - expensive (and bloody) quagmires in Iraq and Afghanistan, an economy in free fall thanks to Bush-o-nomics, huge deficits as far as the eye can see (thanks again to the Bush Administration and Republican Congress in 2001-2006), growing income inequality thanks to steeply regressive Republican taxation policies (and "free trade" agreements that aren't "free" or "fair"), the environmental catastrophe of global warming, our continuing and disastrous "oil addiction," unsustainable entitlement programs (this one's a bipartisan failure), etc. - from the Bush-Cheney rein of error. None of these were Barack Obama's fault, but the more time that elapses, the more people will forget how these terrible situations all came about and start making him "own" them. Which is why Obama needs to remind people, over and over again, of what really got us into this mess. Or, to put it another way, Obama needs to relentlessly push his political narrative, just like Republicans do when they pound home the same Frank Luntz talking points (mindless and false as they may be) like "death panels" and "death tax" and...why does everything Republican seem to have "death" in it?

So, there's my unsolicited advice for what it's worth (if anything). Not that I expect anyone to follow any of this, but at least I got it off my chest, which I often think is the main (only?) point of blogging anyhow.

Mark Warner on His Vote for Health Care Reform Legislation

The following statement is from Mark Warner regarding the health care reform bill that won an important cloture vote last night in the U.S. Senate. Thanks to both of our U.S. Senators, Warner and Webb (I haven't seen a statement from him yet), for supporting this critically important legislation. I look forward to their continued work in improving the bill as it moves forward, in strongly supporting a robust public option, and ultimately in voting "yea" to send the bill forward for President Obama's signature. We'll be watching.
I will vote to move this legislation onto the Senate floor because I want an opportunity to work to strengthen and improve the bill. If we do not move forward on health insurance reform, premiums for Virginia families will continue to rise, employers will remain at a competitive disadvantage in the global marketplace, and federal budget deficits will go from bad to worse.

Thus far, only those senators on the Health and Finance committees have had an opportunity to shape this legislation. Advancing the bill to the Senate floor provides an opportunity for the rest of us in the Senate to have a constructive role in making this legislation better.

For weeks now, I have been working with several of my colleagues on a series of potential floor amendments that we believe will further reduce the cost of health care, strengthening transparency and encouraging innovation to cut costs across the health care delivery system.

Tonight's vote to move forward with debate on the bill is a starting point, and it allows us to continue working to include these amendments in the final legislation. I will only support a final bill if I am convinced it will lower the deficit, drive down health care costs over the long term, and improve the value and quality of the health care Virginians receive.

Whipple Clip Dozen: Sunday Morning

Thanks to Del. Bob Brink (D-48) for getting up REALLY early this morning to bring us the "Whipple Clips!"

1. GOP EYES MCDONNELL STRATEGY
2. SHORTFALL TO MORPH SCHOOLING
3. PALIN'S BOOK TOUR COMES TO VIRGINIA
6. NO LIGHT AHEAD FOR A BLEAK STATE BUDGET
14. W&M, MARY WASHINGTON INCREASE TUITION FOR SPRING SEMESTER
16. ABOUT 700 PEOPLE SHOW UP FOR AREA’S FIRST COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR
17. STUCK IN THE MUD: STATE FINDS LAX OVERSIGHT OF EROSION CONTROL
18. VA. JOBLESS RATE FALLS TO 6.3%
21. GOV. KAINE WANTS FEDERAL HELP TO RECOVER FROM NOR'EASTER
24. SAFETY ISSUE LURKS UNDER DULLES RAIL BRIDGE PLAN
25. ARLINGTON COUNTY HOV INFRACTION RESULTS IN $1,000 FINE, POLICE SAY
26. KAINE ASKED TO RESTORE FELONS' RIGHTS