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CYD endorses: Burton, Rooker, Bauman and Low, and Bradley

by: Dante Atkins

Sun Mar 01, 2009 at 12:35:17 PM PST


Note: I support Eric Bauman's candidacy

I attended the California Young Democrats Executive Board meeting at UCSB yesterday to participate in and report on their endorsement process for state party offices, and catch up with my YD friends from other areas of the state.  And we got to hear a speech on the federal budget and energy policy from Lois Capps,

Most of the endorsements were no surprise, especially as, in my experience, the CYD Executive Board tends to tack somewhat closely to the party infrastructure--so, to that end, the endorsements of Burton and Bradley were no surprise.  Alex Rooker was the only candidate for female vice-chair that showed at up at the Executive Board meeting, so it was no surprise that she got the endorsement over Alicia Wong.

Eric Bauman's endorsement, however, may be considered a little bit of a surprise.  Eric Bauman actually does have an opponent, a 25-year-old named Evan Low who currently serves on the City Council of a city in Silicon Valley.  Although Evan is by far the underdog, he actually could have been considered favored to get the CYD endorsement, since he is very active within CYD and well-known among the membership in Northern California.

There were passionate speeches on both sides, but Eric barely ended up winning the endorsement vote.  After Eric received the initial endorsement, there was a motion made to do a co-endorsement so CYD could avoid the risk of losing face by not supporting its own, which passed rather easily.

CYD isn't the first interest group or minority to issue a dual endorsement in the male Vice-Chair race, as Judy Chu, Betty Yee and Mike Eng have all done something similar.  What will be interesting to see is how each candidate chooses to market the endorsement, because while each candidate has indeed received a CYD endorsement, the actual process was a little more complicated.

Dante Atkins :: CYD endorses: Burton, Rooker, Bauman and Low, and Bradley
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Correcting the record (0.00 / 0)
As President of the California Young Democrats, I felt it necessary to reply to this account of yesterday's Executive Board meeting.

Both Evan Low and Eric Bauman are candidates that have great relationships with and legitimate claims of support in the California Young Democrats.  The closeness of the initial vote was proof of that, and our ultimate dual endorsement was a reflection of the fact that we will be proud to work with either candidate.

In terms of the support for the other candidates, I don't believe it had anything to do with "tacking closely" to any established structure.  Rather, we have worked hard to become an organization that moves young voters to the polls through peer-to-peer organizing methods.  Alex Rooker was a major supporter of our efforts in 2008, and both John Burton and Eric Bradley have expressed their support of CYD's goals in the coming year as we approach the 2010 elections.  

As mentioned during the meeting by myself and others: John Burton was a founder of the San Francisco Young Democrats; Eric Bradley founded the UCSB Democrats (the host chapter) and was a President of the LA County Young Democrats; and both Alex Rooker and Eric Bauman have been chosen by the membership as CYD Mentor of the Year.  Evan Low, Vice Mayor of CAMPBELL, has been a leader in the Silicon Valley Young Democrats for years and is active nationally with the Young Elected Officials network.

The deliberations on these endorsements were by and of the membership in attendance.  We as an organization aspire to fairness and openness in our process and the posting here has generated dozens of calls to me and other officers who believe your posting was a biased account of the days' work.  


2008: The Year of the Young Voter

2009: Leading the Change

www.youngdems.org


Rocky-- (0.00 / 0)
I didn't come here and pretend to speak on behalf of CYD.  I did explain the process, however.

I hear you're crafting a press release to rebut what I'm posted here.  That's fine.  You should send it to me and I'll post it.  But rather than being biased, I would call it brief.

And why the focus on Cambpell?  Truth be told, I put up the post in 5 minutes.  I didn't remember which city in Silicon Valley Evan Low was the mayor of, and didn't have time to look it up.  So I said he was on the City Council of a city in Silicon Valley.  All of which is entirely correct.


[ Parent ]
And I should mention (0.00 / 0)
that yes, Eric and Evan both have great claims of support.  We all know who Eric Bauman is and what his claims of support are--which is why I mentioned them.  To make it a story, however, I mentioned that Eric did have an opponent named Evan who also had a legitimate claim to the endorsement because of his activity.

You can call it biased if you like, but the truth is that my mentioning of Evan Low here is more publicity than he's gotten on this entire site--and, dare I say, more publicity than CYD has gotten, since I'm the only one here that actually writes about CYD issues.

And if the people don't like it and you've been getting calls, well, I'm sorry about that, but you can just say that you're not affiliated with it.  That would be just fine, and, like I mentioned, I would be more than happy to post your press release so it goes out over the same networks.  Your other option, of course, is to do what we do at LACYD and say, "there shall be no discussion in public about our endorsement deliberations."  That way, it's possible to send out laudatory press releases without the risk of how it actually worked being revealed to anyone.


[ Parent ]
didn't mention them (0.00 / 0)
should have been the part in bold.

[ Parent ]
A whole lot of smoke... (0.00 / 0)
...but not much fire.  I wasn't surprised by these endorsements, and I didn't attend the meeting.  No one should have been surprised.  The executive board of a statewide Democratic organization endorsed the statewide favorites.

I did find Rocky's "correction" of "the record" interesting in one sense: rather than articulate how each candidate might be qualified for the positions that they aspire to, he spent much of his comment laying out their affinity to the CYD as an organization. Rocky laid out leadership positions and avowed future support for future campaigns.

This style of laudatory celebration of long time insiders helps prove Dante's original sentiment, in my opinion.  Why these are the best, most qualified candidates (as well as what have these folks done lately), seems to have gotten lost somewhere along the way...


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