Democrats Work : The New Permanent Campaign

David Sirota’s nationally syndicated column this week focused on the new politics of service and the organization “Democrats Work“.

San Francisco Chronicle:

In 1976, a young political consultant named Patrick Caddell sent a memo to Jimmy Carter telling the president-elect to wage “a continuing political campaign” that fuses public policy and political goals. This doctrine became known as the permanent campaign, and it is now changing from a White House tactic into a national grassroots organizing strategy.

Today’s permanent campaign aims to ensure that the recent surge in Democratic voter turnout becomes the foundation of a lasting political infrastructure for progressives, rather than a momentary boomlet of presidential election euphoria. That means “creating mechanisms for people to remain engaged in politics between elections,” as Thomas Bates says.

He co-founded Democrats Work, a nonprofit group whose mission was on display when 12 volunteers of varying ages gathered last week to prepare dinner for residents at a Denver homeless shelter. The participants were not just giving back to their city – they were becoming Democratic Party activists.

“Lots of folks want to do community service but are not political,” says Erin Egan, who runs the 500-member Colorado branch of Democrats Work. “But when they volunteer with us, they see the Democratic Party’s values and often become committed political volunteers.”

The word is spreading! Be a part!

Our projects next month include working the San Francisco Food Bank. On March 29th we will be helping to distribute thousands of pounds of food to the hungry throughout the city. Visit Democrats Work for the details and to get updates on other projects near you.

50 State Blog

I'm headed off to Texas here in a bit, and juls is off to Ohio. This weekend should be really interesting heading into what might be make or break primaries.  Over the flip, check the 50 state roundup.

California
   Karen Bass will become the new Speaker of the Assembly. She will team with Senator Darrell Steinberg to lead the California legislature for the next two years. She is the first female Democrat to lead the Assembly.

New York
   Daily Gotham reports on endorsements in a Congressional race beginning to heat up in New York's 13th District. This one is all that stands between us and a free-of-republican-Congressmen New York City.

Iowa
   noneed4thneed reports that corporate groups are already funding television and radio ads attacking some Democrats in the Iowa House.

North Dakota
   What if one of the people spreading the crazy lies about Barack Obama is a senior Republican member of the North Dakota House of Representatives?

Kentucky
   In the wake of the KY debacle two weeks ago with the state party in the Senate primary, BlueGrassRoots made a Wiki project to give Kentuckians the informational tools to “infiltrate” and take over their party at the local/county level.

Washington
   Nicole Brummitt is mother of a son whose father is incarcerated in Washington and transferred to a private prison in Arizona. In her story, $3.3 billion company profits of the pain of incarcerated Washingtonians and their families, she sheds some light on Corrections Corp of America. Washington Department of Corrections currently contracts with CCA. In a time where we are seeing crime decrease in Washington there is also a strange epidemic of the prison population increasing. More prisons and more prisoners means more profit for CCA.

Virginia
   The Virginia GOP says it won't stoop to smearing Obama, allowing the media to talk about smearing Obama. Every Virginia GOP representative voted against energy efficiency last week.

Texas
   Sen. John Cornyn tried to swiftboat Democrat Rick Noriega by calling on him to release his military records. Looks like that backfired as Noriega released them and his records are stellar.

New Mexico
   Outgoing Senator Pete Domenici is a shill for Big Oil and an opponent to alternative energy proposals.

Oregon
   Vicarious Thrill Dept: It was endorsement week in Oregon, and everybody went Obama. Senate candidate Steve Novick offered his highly-developed support for Obama, with primary competitor Jeff Merkley following up with his own version, as well as a dig at Novick for not endorsing him HARD enough. But maybe the most important blessing came from a new Oregonian who may actually be more popular than Obama in the state: Greg Oden got a call from Barack and tells us in his blog diary he will cast his first vote for Prez this fall for Obama.

Illinois
   A bill to correct some of the state's over-reliance on local property taxes for education by “swapping” out a portion with the state income tax is making its way through the Illinois Senate

Iowa
   Shows of support for an Iowa House bill that would make it easier for moms to breastfeed will include a “nurse in” at the State Capitol next week

Indiana
   Another nutty complaint was lodged against the Andre Carson campaign this week

New Jersey
   Paid family leave is one step closer to being a reality in New Jersey.

North Carolina
   Greg Flynn at BlueNC covers the drought that extends to every area of North Carolina. Not one area of the state is spared.

New York
   The Albany Project deconstructs the GOP spin the day after an historic state Senate win of an upstate seat in republican hands for 128 years.

Arizona
   Rick Renzi “Staying the Course” in Arizona while facing a 35 count indictment and many years in prison if found guilty.

Alabama
   Thirty-one counties in Alabama lack a hospital offering maternity care, yet midwife assisted home birth is not legal in the state. The Alabama Birth Coalition organized a march on the State House last week advocating for legislation to allow licensed midwives to practice in Alabama.

Wisconsin
   Rabid wingers in Wisconsin tur “mistakes” molehill into “voter fraud” mountain.

Ohio
An eloquent self-produced video reflects the excitment building for Obama in all across Ohio, in Testimonial and Field Report From Morrow County, Ohio

West Virginia
   At West Virginia Blue they're going after Shelley Moore Capito. The woman doesn't stand a chance.

Pennsylvania
   Democrats in Pennsylvania want Ralph Nader to pay his legal bills from his last failed run for President before gaining access to the ballot in the state this year.

Missouri
   Show Me Progress outlines the qualifications of Andria Simckes who is running to be state treasurer.

Minnesota
   Barack Obama picked up two more superdelegates in Minnesota this week

Nevada
   Freshman Rep. Dean Heller (NV-2) is among the worst in Congress on Children's issues according to the Children's Defense Fund. The Clark County Democratic Convention in Las Vegas to allocate delegates for Obama and Clinton for the state convention ended up in a big mess with a do-over necessary. Here's an eye-witness account.

Kentucky
   BlueGrassRoots has the inspirational story of lobbying to restore voting rights for felons.

Maine
   Maine's Morning Sentinel apologizes after headline reads “Video shows Allen burning flag”

Prison Policy & Open Thread

I have a post up at Hullabaloo, where I’m proud to be writing, about the disturbing new Pew report which shows that more than 1 in 100 adults in this country are behind bars, and when you add in the parole and probation system it’s probably more like 1 in 50.  This is fast becoming the biggest problem that state legislatures face, and in California it’s magnified by soaring costs, overcrowding, and a continued fealty to “Tough on Crime” solutions.

I highlighted what two red states are doing as a novel solution, something we could certainly try in California instead of our haphazard collection of early release and building more jails and nixing independent sentencing commissions:

Kansas and Texas are well on their way. Facing daunting projections of prison population growth, they have embraced a strategy that blends incentives for reduced recidivism with greater use of community supervision for lower-risk offenders. In addition, the two states increasingly are imposing sanctions other than prison for parole and probation violators whose infractions are considered “technical,” such as missing a counseling session. The new approach, born of bipartisan leadership, is allowing the two states to ensure they have enough prison beds for violent offenders while helping less dangerous lawbreakers become productive, taxpaying citizens.

The comments over there are, as usual, great, and I wanted to open the discussion here.  Plus we haven’t had an open thread in a while, so here ya go.

Run, Democrat, Run!

Cross posted on Daily Kos

Last week we wrote a diary encouraging Democrats throughout the State of California to roll up their sleeves, get involved, and run for a seat on their local Democratic County Central Committees.

Since that time, a group of East Bay grassroots activists (a few of whom are Caliticians!) has put together a video talking about what motivates them to work through their local Democratic Party and why they think YOU should run for your Democratic County Central Committee.

Time is running short, though. The filing deadline to run for your County Central Committee is next Friday, March 7 at 5:00 p.m.  To beat that deadline, you’ll need to go to your County Registrar of Voters, register as a candidate and get copies of petitions.  Then you’ll need to gather 20 valid signatures from registered Democrats in your district.  You MUST turn in your signed petitions by March 7.

For a complete guide to the process, please go to our website at www.cadem.org/countypartyfaq.

In this critically important election year of 2008, there’s no better way to get involved with other committed and hard-working Democrats throughout your community and across the state.  

Penny

Online Organizing Director

California Democratic Party

Yacht Party Follies

UPDATE by Julia: Watch the video on the Yacht Party.

UPDATE by Robert: Arnold’s now getting in on the follies – the SacBee reports he said he agreed with Elizabeth Hill’s call to close $2.7 billion in tax expenditures but then backtracked a little while later.

Judy Lin at the SacBee took a look at the Yacht Party’s bankrupt arguments about how we simply have to enable tax evasion or poor people are going to starve.

“The immigrant who sprays fiberglass on a boat will lose his job. The small-business owner who installs avionics on an airplane will lose his business,” state Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth of Temecula told GOP members during a Feb. 15 floor debate. “Those are the people who are going to be affected by this. It’s not the rich.”

You know, never does a day go by that the Yacht Party doesn’t show its deep respect and concern for immigrants.  Somehow, though, I have the sneaking suspicion that they’re being, what do I call it, completely disingenuous.  The Legislative Analyst has correctly described this as tax evasion, the Governor has correctly described this as tax evasion, even the TAX EVADERS have correctly described this as legalized tax evasion.

Chuck Lenert, 57, of Sacramento saved nearly $30,000 in taxes when he bought a used 58-foot Kha Shing motorboat near Victoria, Canada, three years ago. It came with a docking slip in Canada, he said, so it was cheaper to leave it there and pay an attorney $2,500 to ensure his tax status was in order with the state.

“I was just following the rules of the state of California, so why should I pay sales tax?” Lenert said. “I wasn’t trying to do anything but follow the law.”

For a year, Lenert, who sells hardware for a living, would travel every few weeks with his family and friends and take the $376,000 vessel, named Knots and Bolts, around the waters off Vancouver Island to catch crabs, salmon, oysters and shrimp. After a year, he moved the boat to Washington state.

“I would say that the 90-day guys are more cheaters,” said Lenert, who has since brought the boat down to Sacramento. “I had a bona fide use.”

Not that it should even be a question, but contrary to the Yacht Party’s protestations, actually making yacht owners pay their sales tax would have no material effect on sales whatsoever.

The analyst’s report found that a longer exemption period had little impact on manufacturers and sellers because their products sell nationwide.

Tim DeMartini, owner of DeMartini RV in Grass Valley, said the length of the exemption doesn’t affect his business because two-thirds of his orders come from outside California. The average 40-foot big diesel, he said, sells for $150,000.

“It won’t make that much difference to us,” DeMartini said, adding that the impact might be greater for the buyer.

Due to this “conflicting” information, Yacht Party members are just so gosh darn confused about the issue that they’d rather just walk away from it, which has the added benefit of, you know, saving Commodore Ackerman’s yacht tax.

“I haven’t been able to conclude which argument makes the most sense,” said Assemblyman Roger Niello, R-Fair Oaks, who abstained from the vote.

As for Dan Walters’ predictable media “he said, she said” argument, I think there’s a slight difference between yacht owners avoiding sales tax and income tax credits for children for working-class families.  Call me nuts.

Reflections On Corporations II – Corporate Philanthropy

Who should decide whether our communities have museums, concert and dance facilities, parks and other cultural programs?  Who should decide on priorities for funding for disaster assistance or research into cures for diseases?  

Should the public make the bulk of these decisions, through the transparent and accountable systems of our democracy?  Or should a few individuals who control vast wealth and resources make these decisions for the people?

Because of dwindling tax revenues many communities have come to rely on “corporate philanthropy” for assistance with cultural programs, or to supplement their schools, or for other community benefits.  

The people who run corporations are in a position to decide to donate the corporation’s money to various causes.  Many of these are things that the people, through our government, no longer have the resources to support.  For example, the executives and Board of a corporation might decide to donate to build a museum.  They might decide to fund a school.  

And they might decide not to do these things.  

So look at what is happening — as discussed in the Feb. 26 post, Reflecting on Corporations, we have corporations using their resources to influence the public and government to change the rules of the playing field on which corporations operate – deregulating, lowering taxes, etc.  As this corporate influence brings cuts in corporate taxes (as well as cuts in taxes paid by the owners of the corporations), our society is left with fewer public resources for building museums, conducting research, etc.  

And then we have corporations stepping in, using some of their earnings to provide those benefits, with their executives deciding where to direct the resources.  For which the public is supposed to be grateful, and feel more favorable to the corporations, and perhaps grant them further benefits.

These are functions that the public once prioritized and controlled.  But today the balance of control of the country’s resources continues to shift more and more to fewer private individuals.  This massing of assets and resources into corporate hands takes away the people’s ability to decide to build museums and fund schools.  It puts more and more power to make decisions that affect the public into the hands of corporate executives.  Is this compatible with our understanding of democracy?

And a related question:  Should corporate earnings be diverted from the shareholders?  Is it the proper function of corporations to make decisions about funding museums, etc?

Perhaps there should be controls that guarantee that corporate funds and resources are used solely for the benefit of the shareholders and broader pubic interest.  Perhaps corporations should be prohibited from engaging in any activities that influence our government or lawmaking or public opinion.  Perhaps they should operate on the playing field that We, the People lay out for them — and not be able to influence that playing field for the benefit of a few individuals who control the corporation.  

Perhaps.

Matt Gonzalez Quits Politics, Runs with Nader as Vice Presidential Candidate

UPDATE: Mayor Newsom has some thoughts about Matt Gonzalez on the Nader ticket over at the Big Orange. It’s worth a read, and perhaps a rec so others will get a chance to read it as well.

I made no mistake there, I mean that by running with Nader, Gonzalez has transitioned from feasible candidate to somebody shouting from the sidelines.  BeyondChron has the news:

At 9:00 a.m. Pacific Standard Time today, presidential candidate Ralph Nader will announce his running mate at a Washington DC press conference. BeyondChron has learned that it will be former San Francisco Supervisor and Board President Matt Gonzalez.

The previous day, Gonzalez had written a BeyondChron editorial about Barack Obama that harshly criticized the junior Senator from Illinois for not actually being that progressive.

But his record suggests that he is incapable of ushering in any kind of change I’d like to see. It is one of accommodation and concession to the very political powers that we need to reign in and oppose if we are to make truly lasting advances.

He goes on to recount some of Obama’s more troubling positions on class action and tort deform, where he enabled the Bush administration to plunder the rights of consumers and working Americans for the protection of corporations, on the plundering of our environment by mining corporations.

As for me, I am under no illusions that Obama was the progressive choice.  Clearly Kucinich was the best for that, but Chris Dodd and John Edwards were clearly to the left of Obama. I understood that and hoped that Edwards would squeak by with a win in Iowa. But once it become clear that Senator Obama was building a grassroots infrastructure that could be leveraged to produce long-term electoral strength, I knew that he should be the nominee.

Look, Obama isn’t perfect, and neither are any of the Democrats. I mean, you needn’t look any further than the front page of today’s Chronicle to see where the Dems are giving away money meant for WIC and Food Stamps to agribusiness giants like ADM. But as this movement grows, truly “we are the change we’ve been waiting for.”

Gonzalez acknowledges this in his post, that this movement is something special. But, this movement is not about any candidate. It’s been growing for a while, and Obama, like Dean before him, has only ridden the tidal wave of support for a new progressive agenda built from leadership from the grassroots on up. We have been bruised by the current administration, and while this might be a smaller step than we would have liked, it’s clearly a step in the right direction.

UPDATE: AP has it now too.

Karen Bass To Become Speaker of the Assembly

According to Capitol Weekly, it’s a done deal.

Assemblywoman Karen Bass captured the speakership Wednesday night to replace Speaker Fabian Nunez following a round of closed-door meetings.

Bass, a Los Angeles Democrat and the Assembly’s majority leader, received a majority of support in the Democratic caucus to win the job. Nunez engineered the deal that put her over the top. Several legislators, including some who had hoped to be speaker themselves, announced as they left the meeting that  Bass had won.

“She’s got it,” said Assemblyman Hector de la Torre, D-Southgate, after the final meeting.

Other than a brief few months during the post-Prop. 93 Willie Brown fallout, Bass will be the first female Speaker of the Assembly, and the first Democratic woman overall.  She becomes the 3rd African-American, and the 1st African-American woman.  2008 continues to be a year of firsts.

I also think that Bass and Darrell Steinberg well make an excellent leadership team, though it’ll be somewhat short-lived, as Bass is termed out in 2010.  I can’t think of many better combinations than this.

Bass-O-Matic

This evening, Assembly Majority Leader Karen Bass was elected Speaker of the Assembly. Bass, who I believe is the first African American woman elected to this position, will succeed termed-out Fabian Núñez.

Assemblywoman Bass represents the 47th Assembly District – the cities and communities of Culver City, West Los Angeles, Westwood, Cheviot Hills, Leimert Park, Baldwin Hills, Windsor Hills, Ladera Heights, the Crenshaw District, Little Ethiopia and portions of Korea Town and South Los Angeles.



cross-posted at TheLiberalOC.com