“When I see a first-class individual who makes $80,000 a year, he’s lower middle class. When I see someone who is making anywhere from $300,000 to $750,000, that’s middle class. When I see anyone above that, that’s upper middle class.
Month: March 2010
My Introduction
Hi! I’m a Hong Kong transplant who has been attuned to US Politics since the 2004 Presidential election. While I’m an avid reader of this website, I regard it as a major resource for elective races at all levels, as I know this is a highly left-leaning space. Ideologically, I’m a left-leaning independent who’s not registered with any major political party, vote Democratic for federal races but willing to vote for the right Republicans at local, state legislative, governor and statewide cabinet races; as long as that candidate does not hold socially polarizing views, not extremely pro-rich/pro-business in economics and sufficiently committed to good government. In short words, I’m a good government voter.
Ocassionally, I can vote on a more conservative Republicans if his/her qualifications suits a particular post well (Disclaimer: I had vote for Republicans for County Commissioner, State Representative and Ag. Commissioner in Florida. In particular, I find Charlie Bronson really qualified and that Florida is one of the few Southern States where state Democrats ressembles fairly closely to national Democrats, in part of the Northeastern transplants in SE Florida and in part due to that state’s high degree of urbanization. As a result, most rural politicans with intimate knowledge on agricultural issues are now Republicans; since most Democrats who vote their party here are urban liberals). By the same token, I’m open to voting for Adam Putnam for Ag. Commissioner in this year’s race.
In term of CD’s, I used to live in FL-19 & part-time in FL-08; but had voted only in the former. I now resides in MS-02. Both districts are similarly uncompetitive, but for different reasons (FL-19 is heavily Jewish & MS-02 is majority-black). My state House and Senate districts in Florida (HD-85 & SD-27), however, are swing districts; maybe with some Democratic tilt. And my Palm Beach County Commission District has a Republican commissioner (Warren Newell) until very recently, when he switched to become a Dem, then indicted and imprisoned on public corrpution charges. And the former state representative in HD-85 (Shelly Vana), is his current successor after unseating his appointed replacement (Bob Kanjian); whom I had voted for. Meanwhile, my state Senator Dave Aaronberg is running for the state AG, leaving his seat open to a takeover bid by the GOP, as it also contains GOP-tilting Lee County (Fort Myers).
Thanks for reading!
SSP Daily Digest: 3/22 (Afternoon Edition)
• CA-Sen: Ex-Rep. Tom Campbell is getting an endorsement that may boost his cred with the socially conservative right: from the man who couldn’t even beat Gray Davis, Bill Simon. Simon hopes socially conservative voters will still take a look at Campbell’s fiscal credentials.
• IN-Sen: Retiring Evan Bayh hasn’t said anything specific about what he’s doing with his gigantic $13 million federal war chest. But a spokesperson gives some hints: “What he has said is that you can expect him to help the Democratic Senate nominee in Indiana and to help like-minded Democrats – people who want to get things done, who are practical and who want to reach out and forge principled compromises.”
• KY-Sen: Jack Conway is pointing out an important ideological fracture line, which seems to have gotten little media attention in the Democratic primary in the Bluegrass State. Conway says he supports the health care legislation passed yesterday, while Dan Mongiardo has previously said he’d “throw it out and start over.”
• NH-Sen: Speaking of HCR, Kelly Ayotte was quick to abandon her previous flavorless, position-less campaign and get on the “repeal!” bandwagon. With Paul Hodes having been a “yes” in the House, this may become one of the marquee issues in this race, and by extension, the battle for the Senate.
• NY-Sen-B (pdf): Siena has a new poll out of the Empire State which includes a couple head-to-heads in the Senate race. They just won’t let up on the George Pataki front, finding that he leads Gillibrand 45-39 in a hypothetical race, while Gillibrand leads actual candidate Bruce Blakeman 48-24. There are a couple other names on the “actual” candidate front they might want to try out instead — Joe DioGuardi and David Malpass — and now it looks like one more is poised to get in. Dan Senor apparently has enough Wall Street support behind him to go ahead and launch his bid. One other name who’s now saying she won’t run, though, is former Lt. Gov. and malfunctioning health insurer spokesbot Betsy McCaughey, who it turns out is backing Malpass.
• MI-Gov (pdf): It turns out there was a lot more meat to that Insider Michigan Politics/Marketing Resource Group poll than what got leaked on Friday. They also looked at the Democratic primary, finding state House speaker Andy Dillon in charge at 21, followed by Lansing mayor Virg Bernero at 9 and state Rep. Alma Wheeler Smith at 6. They also did a whole bunch of general election permutations, all of which were won by the GOPers by suspiciously large margins (at least when compared with other recent polls): Mike Bouchard over Dillon 41-26, Mike Cox over Dillon 44-27, Peter Hoekstra over Dillon 43-27, Rick Snyder over Dillon 42-26, Bouchard over Bernero 45-23, Cox over Bernero 45-26, Hoekstra over Bernero 43-27, and Snyder over Bernero 44-24.
• NY-Gov (pdf): Naturally, Siena also has a gubernatorial half to its poll. They find newly-minted Republican Steve Levy’s entry to the field to be rather unwelcome: ex-Rep. Rick Lazio is beating him 45-16 in the GOP primary. Either way, Democratic AG Andrew Cuomo (with a 63/22 approval) seems to have little to worry about; in November, Cuomo beats Lazio and Libertarian candidate Warren Redlich 59-21-3, while beating Levy and Redlich 63-16-4.
• OH-Gov: John Kasich is still reaching out to teabagger nation as his core of backers, and consistent with that, he’s having Fox gabber Sean Hannity host a Cincinnati fundraiser for him on April 15. I sure hope Kasich gets a bigger cut of the proceeds than Hannity’s military charity recipients seem to.
• OR-Gov: The last big union left to endorse in the Democratic gubernatorial primary finally weighed in, and Oregon’s AFSCME went with ex-Gov. John Kitzhaber rather than ex-SoS Bill Bradbury, who’d gotten the teachers’ union endorsements. The AFSCME also endorsed newly appointed Treasurer Ted Wheeler in his primary bid against state Sen. Rick Metsger, and also, in an unusual step, endorsed two Republican state Reps. in rural eastern Oregon who voted “yes” on raising income taxes, probably figuring that non-wingnut GOPers is probably the best we’re going to do in those districts.
• LA-02: Republican Rep. Joe Cao probably ended any hopes of hanging onto his dark-blue (and 21.7% uninsured) seat by voting against health care reform yesterday, but just in order to emphasize the way in which he slammed the door shut on himself, he also compared abortion as a moral evil comparable to slavery. Because that’s a comparison just bound to go over well in his black-majority district.
• MA-10: Former Republican state Treasurer (from the 1990s) Joe Malone made it official: he’s running in the 10th to replace retiring Democratic Rep. Bill Delahunt. He’ll still have to get past state Rep. Jeff Perry in the GOP primary, though.
• PA-06: Manan Trivedi and Doug Pike traded union endorsements in their Dem primary battle in the 6th. Trivedi got the backing of the Iron Workers local, while Pike got the nod from the local AFSCME.
• PA-12: Bill Russell seems like he just can’t take a hint, despite the GOP uniting behind Tim Burns. Russell says he’ll write himself in for the special election between Burns and Democrat Mark Critz, in addition to continuing to contest the same-day GOP primary against Burns. Meanwhile, the pro-life Critz’s main opponent remaining, Navy vet Ryan Bucchanieri, got an endorsement that ought to give him a financial boost, from the National Organization for Women.
• WV-01: We’ve heard rumors that the local Democratic establishment wasn’t very enthused about propping up Rep. Alan Mollohan, who faces both a credible primary challenge and a self-funding Republican opponent. Here’s some of the first public whiff of that: the state Democratic chair, Nick Casey, says he won’t be taking sides in the primary battle between Mollohan and state Sen. Mike Oliverio (although he did predict that Mollohan would be the eventual victor).
• Redistricting: Cillizza has a little more background on the Democrats’ efforts to gear up for the 2012 redistricting battles, which we discussed last week in terms of the DLCC’s efforts. The DGA is getting in on the act, too, with a Harold Ickes-led effort called Project SuRGe (for “Stop Republican Gerrymandering”), also focused on maximizing Dem control of state legislatures.
• Votes: Lots of slicing and dicing in the media today regarding who voted which way, and why, on yesterday’s historic health care reform vote. Nate Silver has a bunch of nice charts up, which show that district lean and Reps’ overall ideology was much more determinative than whether the Rep. is considered vulnerable in November in terms of a “yes” or “no” vote. And Some Dude over at Salon has a more concise look at Reps who most mismatched their districts with their votes. Finally, if you want to see the “(some) Dems are still doomed” conventional wisdom in full effect, they’ve got that in spades over at Politico.
• Passings: Our condolences to the Udall family, which lost family patriarch Stewart Udall over the weekend. Udall, 90, was Congressman from Arizona and then John F. Kennedy’s Interior Secretary, and many of our environmental protections that we take for granted today bear his stamp.
• $$$: The fundraising quarter is almost over, and Adam B. is opening up another round of “We’ve Got Your Backs” over at Daily Kos (and cross-posted here), dedicated to showing some (financial) love to the House Dems in the most difficult districts who did the right thing on health care reform.
NEW GOAL: We’ve Got Your Backs
INITIAL GOAL OF 200 CONTRIBUTORS: DECIMATED. We’re now going for $25,000 total raised today.
We did quite a lot of good in November — almost 400 Kossacks made 5,545 individual contributions to the twenty most vulnerable Democrats who voted both for health care reform and against the anti-choice Stupak-Pitts amendment, raising over $30,000 to help these candidates secure reelection in 2010.
What we demonstrated then to Democrats in vulnerable districts that when they stand with our party and for progressive causes, the netroots will have their backs. And they noticed. Several of them called or emailed me personally to thank all of you for your efforts, including Members who have never had anything to do with the netroots before then. And last night, almost all of them went back and voted for health care again.
And we need to have their backs.
Listed below are the twenty Democrats (plus one) who have cast the toughest votes for health care reform — for HCR last night, and against the Stupak Amendment in November. A few of them voted “no” the first time around (Boyd, Markey, Kosmas, Murphy), but we should welcome them into the fold and thank them for supporting health care reform now.
These are the Democrats whose districts are most likely to oppose them for what they have done to make health care affordable for all. It’s up to us to demonstrate to these often-moderate candidates that when they stand up for progressive causes, progressives will stand behind them.
I believe it’s especially important for those of us who’ve decided to turn the spigot off when it comes to Democratic party institutions based on their multitude of failures to take this opportunity to demonstrate what we’re capable of doing for specific candidates who are taking risks to make progress happen.
My initial goal is 200 contributors. Then we’ll take it as high as you’re willing to go.
Here’s who you should be supporting — these Democrats (listed by District, Name, PVI), elected in Republican and swing districts (and mostly in the past three years), for whom every close vote for reproductive freedom and health care reform can become the next opposition campaign ad:
AZ-01 Kirkpatrick, Ann R+6
FL-02 Boyd, Allen R+6
CO-04 Markey, Betsy R+6
AZ-05 Mitchell, Harry R+5
AZ-08 Giffords, Gabrielle R+4FL-24 Kosmas, Suzanne R+4
NY-19 Hall, John R+3
FL-08 Grayson, Alan R+2
MI-07 Schauer, Mark R+2
NY-20 Murphy, Scott R+2WI-08 Kagen, Steve R+2
CA-11 McNerney, Jerry R+1
IL-08 Bean, Melissa R+1
IL-11 Halvorson, Debbie R+1
IL-14 Foster, Bill R+1MN-01 Walz, Tim R+1
NY-23 Owens, Bill R+1
NH-01 Shea-Porter, Carol R+0
NY-01 Bishop, Timothy R+0
OH-15 Kilroy, Mary Jo D+1VA-05 Perriello, Tom R+5**
** Technically, Tom Perriello shouldn’t be here: he voted for the Stupak Amendment the first time. But he has also voted for ACES and the stimulus bill despite being a freshman member elected by less than 1000 votes in an R+5 district — McCain and Bush both carried it — so if you’re willing to make one exception, Perriello is the exception you should make.
The overwhelming majority of these twenty Members were elected in 2006, 2008 or, in the case of Scott Murphy and Bill Owens, 2009. As the most recent additions to Congress, almost every one of them is on the NRCC’s primary target list for 2010.
We need to protect them for having done the right thing. We need to show that when Democrats act courageously in the interests of our country, progressives will have their backs and support them.
So please, visit the WE’VE GOT YOUR BACK v2.0 ActBlue page and spread some sugar around today — $3 each? $5? $10, $20 or more? That’s up to you. And then promote it on your Facebook page, your Twitter feed and your own diaries.
If politicians in tough districts see that national support exists when they do the right thing on a big vote — and there may be no bigger one than the one they cast last night — they will feel more comfortable doing it again the next time. They won’t have to worry about losing some donors over these pro-choice and pro-health care votes if they’ve gained our loyal support instead. And when the NRCC targets them this fall, they will be able to fight back.
Give now. If you have given to some of these candidates in the past, give to the rest today. Show them, right now: WE’VE GOT YOUR BACK.
SSP Daily Digest: 3/22 (Morning Edition)
House Healthcare Vote
The House just voted to pass the healthcare bill that the Senate passed in December, 219-212. When the House voted on its own healthcare bill in November, 39 Democrats voted “no.” On this bill, 34 Dems voted no. We’ll bring you the roll call as soon as we have it.
UPDATE: Roll call on Senate bill here.
Of the 39 original “no” votes, 29 voted “no” a second time (note that one of those original “nos,” Eric Massa, is no longer in Congress, and another, Parker Griffith, switched parties):
District | Incumbent | Obama %age | Kerry %age |
---|---|---|---|
AL-02 | Bobby Bright | 36 | 33 |
AL-07 | Artur Davis | 72 | 64 |
AR-04 | Mike Ross | 39 | 48 |
GA-08 | Jim Marshall | 43 | 39 |
GA-12 | John Barrow | 54 | 49 |
ID-01 | Walter Minnick | 36 | 30 |
KY-06 | Ben Chandler | 43 | 41 |
LA-03 | Charlie Melancon | 37 | 41 |
MD-01 | Frank Kratovil | 40 | 36 |
MN-07 | Collin Peterson | 47 | 43 |
MO-04 | Ike Skelton | 38 | 35 |
MS-01 | Travis Childers | 38 | 37 |
MS-04 | Gene Taylor | 32 | 31 |
NC-07 | Mike McIntyre | 47 | 44 |
NC-08 | Larry Kissell | 53 | 45 |
NC-11 | Heath Shuler | 47 | 43 |
NJ-03 | John Adler | 52 | 49 |
NM-02 | Harry Teague | 49 | 41 |
NY-13 | Mike McMahon | 49 | 45 |
OK-02 | Dan Boren | 34 | 41 |
PA-04 | Jason Altmire | 44 | 45 |
PA-17 | Tim Holden | 48 | 42 |
SD-AL | Stephanie Herseth Sandlin | 45 | 38 |
TN-04 | Lincoln Davis | 34 | 41 |
TN-08 | John Tanner | 43 | 47 |
TX-17 | Chet Edwards | 32 | 30 |
UT-02 | Jim Matheson | 39 | 31 |
VA-02 | Glenn Nye | 51 | 42 |
VA-09 | Rick Boucher | 40 | 39 |
On the flipside, 8 Dems who voted “no” the first time switched to “yes” this time:
District | Incumbent | Obama %age | Kerry %age |
---|---|---|---|
CO-04 | Betsy Markey | 49 | 41 |
FL-02 | Allen Boyd | 45 | 46 |
FL-24 | Suzanne Kosmas | 49 | 45 |
NY-20 | Scott Murphy | 51 | 46 |
OH-10 | Dennis Kucinich | 59 | 58 |
OH-16 | John Boccieri | 48 | 46 |
TN-06 | Bart Gordon | 37 | 40 |
WA-03 | Brian Baird | 52 | 48 |
And five Democrats who had voted “yes” the first time switched to “no” this time:
District | Incumbent | Obama %age | Kerry %age |
---|---|---|---|
AR-01 | Marion Berry | 38 | 47 |
IL-03 | Dan Lipinski | 64 | 59 |
MA-09 | Stephen Lynch | 60 | 63 |
NY-24 | Mike Arcuri | 51 | 47 |
OH-18 | Zack Space | 45 | 43 |
GOP Rep. Joe Cao (LA-02) also voted “yes” last time but switched to “no” this time.
UPDATE: The roll call for the Republican motion to recommit the reconciliation bill is available. Dems voting with the GOP:
Altmire, Barrow, Berry, Boren, Bright, Chandler, Childers, Costello, Davis(TN), Donnelly, Holden, Lipinski, Marshall, Matheson, McIntyre, Melancon, Peterson, Ross, Shuler, Skelton, Taylor
On the reconciliation bill itself, two Dems voted “yes” who had voted “no” on the Senate bill, Lynch and Lipinski. On the flipside, Jim Cooper (TN-05) had voted “yes” on the Senate bill but voted “no” on the reconciliation bill.
Rasmussen Reports, You Decide, Vol. 11
Here he goes again on his own – goin’ down the only road he’s ever known.
AZ-Sen (R) (3/16, likely voters, 1/20 in parens):
John McCain (R-inc): 48 (53)
J.D. Hayworth (R): 41 (31)
Other: 3 (3)
Undecided: 8 (8)
(MoE: ±4%)
AZ-Gov (R) (3/17, likely voters, 1/20 in parens):
Jan Brewer (R-inc): 20 (29)
Dean Martin (R): 21 (31)
Buz Mills (R): 19 (n/a)
John Munger (R): 10 (7)
Other: 7 (8)
Undecided: 23 (20)
(MoE: ±4%)
CA-Gov (3/15, likely voters, 2/15 in parens):
Jerry Brown (D): 40 (43)
Meg Whitman (R): 40 (43)
Other: 6 (6)
Undecided: 14 (8)Jerry Brown (D): 42 (46)
Steve Poizner (R): 27 (34)
Other: 13 (7)
Undecided: 18 (13)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
CA-Sen (3/15, likely voters, 2/15 in parens):
Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 46 (46)
Carly Fiorina (R): 40 (42)
Other: 4 (7)
Undecided: 10 (5)Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 43 (45)
Tom Campbell (R): 41 (41)
Other: 6 (4)
Undecided: 10 (10)Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 46 (47)
Chuck DeVore (R): 40 (42)
Other: 4 (6)
Undecided: 9 (5)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
GA-Gov (3/17, likely voters, 2/17 in parens):
Roy Barnes (D): 41 (37)
John Oxendine (R): 41 (45)
Other: 6 (7)
Undecided: 11 (10)Roy Barnes (D): 40 (37)
Nathan Deal (R): 43 (43)
Other: 5 (7)
Undecided: 13 (14)Roy Barnes (D): 39 (36)
Karen Handel (R): 42 (45)
Other: 5 (5)
Undecided: 14 (14)Roy Barnes (D): 40 (37)
Eric Johnson (R): 38 (37)
Other: 6 (8)
Undecided: 16 (18)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
GA-Sen (3/17, likely voters, 2/17 in parens):
Johnny Isakson (R-inc): 52 (49)
Generic Dem: 31 (36)
Other: 5 (4)
Undecided: 12 (12)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
PA-Gov (3/16, likely voters, 2/8 in parens):
Jack Wagner (D): 33 (28)
Tom Corbett (R): 46 (49)
Other: 6 (5)
Undecided: 16 (17)Joe Hoeffel (D): 28 (29)
Tom Corbett (R): 49 (51)
Other: 5 (5)
Undecided: 18 (15)Dan Onorato (D): 29 (26)
Tom Corbett (R): 46 (52)
Other: 7 (5)
Undecided: 17 (17)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
PA-Sen (D) (3/15, likely voters, 2/8 in parens):
Arlen Specter (D-inc): 48 (51)
Joe Sestak (D): 37 (36)
Other: 5 (4)
Undecided: 9 (9)
(MoE: ±5%)
WI-Gov (3/16, likely voters, 2/17 in parens):
Tom Barrett (D): 42 (42)
Mark Neumann (R): 46 (44)
Other: 4 (4)
Undecided: 8 (10)Tom Barrett (D): 42 (40)
Scott Walker (R): 48 (49)
Other: 2 (1)
Undecided: 8 (10)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
WI-Sen (3/16, likely voters, 2/17 in parens):
Russ Feingold (D-inc): 45 (43)
Tommy Thompson (R): 47 (48)
Other: 3 (6)
Undecided: 4 (4)Russ Feingold (D-inc): 51 (47)
Dave Westlake (R): 35 (37)
Other: 5 (6)
Undecided: 10 (10)Russ Feingold (D-inc): 49 (47)
Terrence Wall (R): 40 (39)
Other: 3 (6)
Undecided: 9 (7)
(MoE: ±4.5%)
Fundraising Quarter Ends in Ten Days!
{First, a quick plug for my blog Senate Guru.}
As we await the historic vote on health care reform, it’s important to remember that we’re just ten days away from the end of the first fundraising quarter of 2010. The fundraising totals reported in this quarter will be pivotal to determining the tenor of many races for the rest of the year. If there is any time to contribute, now is the time!
Please head over to the Expand the Map! ActBlue page and contribute whatever you are able to these terrific Democratic candidates for Senate.
Democrat | Currently At | End-of-Quarter Goal | Distance to Goal |
---|---|---|---|
Kendrick Meek | |||
Bill Halter | |||
Joe Sestak | |||
Paul Hodes | |||
Robin Carnahan |
Remember, the contribution you can make isn’t just a donation to a single candidate or political campaign. It’s an investment against Republican obstruction (and conservaDem enabling) and an investment toward achieving that more perfect union.
MA-9: Lynch Draws a Primary Challenger over Healthcare Vote
US Congressman Stephen Lynch, D-South Boston, has already announced his intention to vote “no” on Health Care Reform today.
http://www.boston.com/news/loc…
Luckily, a primary challenger emerged today. Needham Town Meeting member Harmony Wu is a former professor at Emerson College in Boston, and was the Needham town coordinator for the Obama campaign. Wu has said she will challenge Lynch if he follows through on his pledge to vote against Health Care Reform.
A Facebook page set up for Wu has drawn more than 400 followers within a few hours of being posted. Many are experienced organizers and campaign staffers from throughout the Boston area.
http://www.facebook.com/group….
This is only the begining.
If Representative Lynch votes against Health Care today, he will have a fight on his hands for the Democratic nomination.
Let this be a message to all Democratic members who are thinking of throwing their values out the window for the sake of political expediency in today’s vote.
We, the base, are watching.
Redistricting News Recap, 03-08 to 03-21
I’m starting a new blog on Redistricting in general and my work on compactness based redistricting in specific. This is a crosspost of a redistricting news recap over there.
Illinois, Prison Gerrymandering, Party vs Party…
Illinois
03-08, Rose Report, 03-19 Progress Illinois blog, 03-21 OpEd citing League of Women Voters efforts and IL Fair Map (I like that they have an ordered list of critera, and it is the same as mine.)
Prison Gerrymandering
03-09 Minnesota takes note of prison based gerrymandering
Party vs Party
03-15 AP Article parties wrangle to controle state legislatures and thus redistricting.
03-16, Huffington Post, DLCC to sepend $20e6 on state legislature races with eye toward redistricting.
In this 03-04 Wall Street Journal OpEd, Karl Rove wants to prove the supremacy of the Republican party by gerrymandering Democrats out of seats. (Noted 03-16 at the Rose Report)
03-19 WSJ OpEd seeks “permanent benefit” from redistricting power grab, no shame, greed is good:
“While the election of 1994 did signal a political realignment, none of that alignment translated into the much more permanent benefit that redistricting could provide in 2010 if the GOP takes over state legislatures across the country.” — Michael Solon, former advisor to Sen. McConnel (R-KY)