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AD-35: Williams Emphasizes Local Fundraising, Goes on the Offensive

by: David Atkins (thereisnospoon)

Mon Aug 03, 2009 at 19:14:46 PM PDT


Full disclosure: I have endorsed Das Williams, but do not have any official involvement in the campaign.  I am attempting to cover this race as evenhandedly as possible.

In my previous analysis of the AD-35 primary race, I included the competing press releases between the Williams and Jordan campaigns.  The gist of the issue was that while Jordan's release emphasized a $10,500 advantage in cash on hand and $1,600 advantage in total funds raised, the Williams campaign emphasized the $12,500 personal loan made by Jordan to her own campaign to give those numbers a boost.  Also noted was the attempt by the Williams campaign to portray Jordan, despite her having held no elected office in the past, as a Sacramento pol, even as the Jordan campaign painted Williams as untrustworthy, opportunistic and overly aggressive and ambitious.

Williams' latest press release is already doubling down on this campaign theme, emphasizing the comparatively large number of donations coming to Jordan from outside the district, compared to Williams.  And it is a staggeringly wide discrepancy to the tune of 85% to 22%:

Santa Barbara, CA - Following recent reports of strong early financial numbers, Assembly Candidate Das Williams today released the following comments regarding a breakdown of contributions that shows 85 percent of his campaign's donations come from within the 35th Assembly district, while his main opponent, Susan Jordan, received only 22 percent of her contributions from district sources:

"I'm humbled by the outpouring of local grassroots support and enthusiasm about my candidacy," said Williams.  "Voters are ready for a new vision, new direction and new priorities."

As of the June 30th reporting deadline, Das Williams for Assembly raised over $120,000 - with no personal loans and no unpaid debt to report.

Das Williams is running to succeed Assemblymember Pedro Nava who will be termed out in 2010.  

Das Williams grew up on the Central Coast and is a product of local public schools. In 2003, he became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council, and was re-elected in 2007. Das has worked as a teacher, a policy aide for former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, and a community organizer who worked to stop the development of a Wal-Mart in Ventura and enact local living wage laws in Santa Barbara and Ventura. Das serves on the Peabody Charter School Board and is a national board member of the National Organization for Women (NOW). Das received his undergraduate degree from the University of California at Berkeley and holds a graduate degree in Environmental Science & Management from the University of California at Santa Barbara.

This is a risky strategy for Williams.  The numbers are impressive, certainly, and reinforce the idea that Jordan is leveraging statewide connections rather than local chops.  But it's also the second aggressive release from the Williams campaign in a couple of days, and will do nothing to dispel the negative image helpful to the Jordan campaign of Mr. Williams as a back-climbing career politician.  At this early stage, the question seems to be: will the Williams campaign gain on substance from surprisingly good fundraising and strong local support, or lose on tone from negativity?

With no publicly available poll numbers yet, only time will tell.

David Atkins (thereisnospoon) :: AD-35: Williams Emphasizes Local Fundraising, Goes on the Offensive
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Billion dollar baby (0.00 / 0)
Did Williams mention his  maxed out contributions from a billionaire and his family members? Takes money from billionaires and tries to stop Wal-Mart.    

not to be combative, but not sure I understand (0.00 / 0)
which donations are you talking about specifically?

And as to big dollar donors and stopping Wal-Mart, I'm not sure what the big problem is.  I suspect you'll find a lot of big dollar money on both sides.  They've raised an insane quarter million in a safe dem assembly race a year out from the primary.

No matter where the money comes from, I would hope that anyone interested in Ventura politics would help stop Wal-Mart from coming in.  Wal-Mart is a blight anywhere it appears, and is an economic drag on a city anywhere it appears, whether short-term thinking councilmembers realize it or not.  Does taking money from a multi-millionaire automatically mean that one is a hypocrite for working on social justice and progressive economic issues?  If so, then few democrats alive would escape your ire, I imagine.

As an aside, when the city council was considering giving a special exemption for Wal-Mart to have exceptions to the strict zoning plan for the Victoria Corridor over the strident objections of a large number of anti-WalMart progressives, some councilmembers and conservative speakers said that the city council shouldn't be legislating social/moral issues.

I went up to speak, and said that with all due respect to my conservative friends, city councils DO frequently legislate on moral issues, and do so every time they prevent a porn shop from opening next to an elementary school.  And I said that, in fact, a WalMart in the community would be more harmful to the moral and social welfare of Ventura citizens than a porn store next to an elementary school.  That got a silent ovation from most of the crowd, and shocked disbelief from conservatives and most councilmembers.  But it definitely made a splash, and pretty much quashed the "legislating morality" angle

Keeping WalMart out is a big issue here, and one of the reasons that I support Das is that he's fought so hard on it.


[ Parent ]
Kudos to anyone fighting Wal-Mart (8.00 / 1)
Salinas has been fighting to stop a Wal-Mart Supercenter from destroying small businesses and jobs for a while now. Earlier this year the city council voted to approve a big box ordinance that would have blocked the planned Supercenter.

Wal-Mart, in typical fashion, went out and spent the money to gather signatures and put that ordinance on the ballot in an effort to repeal it. As a result, the city council backed down and repealed the ordinance.

Wal-Mart preys upon small, poor towns. Fighting them is a moral act.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
So much for neutral reporting (2.00 / 1)
Sounds like you're a campaign spokesman and not exactly a neutral party. The death of print means we get blogger cheerleaders reporting the news for us. Long live the Fourth Estate. If this guys big claim to fame is shutting down Wal-Mart in a recession then he's got trouble.  

Dude. (0.00 / 0)
first of all, the post gave its own fair shair of critiques of Das.  Secondly, the author made clear that he is supporting Das.

If you want a blog whose author supports a different candidate, I can point you in the right direction.  Of course, given the fact that you're using a little-known talking point regarding one contributor, it seems like you're not really interested in unbiased reporting to begin with--especially given the fact that it appears that you registered on this site tonight just to be able to comment on this post.


[ Parent ]
if I'm a campaign spokesperson, I'm (0.00 / 0)
the crappiest spokesperson ever.  I should be fired or removed immediately, lol.  I've been bending way over backward to be evenhanded here, and to heap praise on Jordan and her team, and to admonish the Williams team for overaggressiveness.

I don't know what kind of progressive you are if you love WalMart so much, but you either need to do your research on what WalMart does to communities, or you're just looking to piss in the punchbowl.  WalMart's prices aren't lower, it will cost jobs, not create them, and the city will lose revenue over the long run, not gain it.  If you knew anything about WalMart and its history, you'd know that.

Finally, I suggest you look well at both Susan's and Das' bios.  They're both incredibly talented and active progressives who have a wide variety of accomplishments under their belts.  A little education on the candidates themselves will go a long, long way.

Anyone who harbors intense dislike for either of these candidates at this early date has a real chip on their shoulder, or has a pre-existing rivalry/hatred for Das, Susan or Pedro.

Get a life.


[ Parent ]
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