Entries Tagged 'Politics' ↓

The Case for Support

If there is one thing the 2008 presidential campaign taught us, a political candidate needs a good fundraising operation and motivated grassroots support to win public office. Last year, Barack Obama had record numbers of both.

This is an off year, with local and congressional races dotting the country. Add a measurable degree of campaign fatigue to a populace struggling through a nationwide recession, mix in hot button national issues like health care reform, economic stimulus plans and wars that still rage in Iraq and Afghanistan, and this year’s campaigns are struggling to get attention.

Here in New York, we are faced with what was supposed to be a complete change over in city government. Term limit laws, enacted just before the 2001 city-wide election, then put new people in the office of Mayor, Public Advocate, Comptroller, and most of the city council seats.However eight years later, a political end run has occurred. Billionaire media mogul and two-term incumbent Mayor Michael Bloomberg masterminded a change to the law with full support of City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who reportedly has her own eye on the mayor’s seat, at some point in the future.

The term limits law was brought into existence by popular vote of the people of New York, and twice voters opposed efforts to overturn it. Yet through a backroom deal orchestrated by the very people who will benefit from it, the City Council used a loophole in the law to vote themselves and all other incumbents an extension. So instead of new, wide-open races, like it or not, New Yorkers are faced with incumbents trying to justify why they deserve yet another term in office. That especially includes the Mayor’s race.

One candidate not holding onto his seat is out-going City Comptroller Bill Thompson, who is instead seeking (and expected to get) the Democratic Party nomination to oppose Bloomberg for Mayor. (Bloomberg, once a Democrat, now a registered Republican, is running as an Independent.) Political pundits, who are often known to be wrong, look at Bloomberg’s deep pockets (he finances his own campaigns) and have dismissively suggested he’s a shoo-in. Sentiment among the grass-roots electorate is not so clear cut however.

While Mayor Mike doesn’t carry the polarizing persona of a Rudy Giuliani, the popular impression is that he is no more in touch with the concerns and problems facing middle, working and lower class New Yorkers than his predecessor, and still too quick to sell this city off to real estate developers. Throw in that now touchy issue of the term limits extension and New Yorkers are slowly waking up to the fact that the game is being rigged, and they don’t like it.

In the interest of full disclosure, I support Bill Thompson for Mayor and I am actively volunteering on his behalf. As a middle class citizen, while I make a decent income, I am still increasingly seeing my paycheck come up short at the end of the month as the cost of basic living rises and judging by my friends and neighbors I know I’m not alone.

Luxury high rise apartments have been built around me in Harlem that are clearly not intended for the people who presently live in that community. All over the city, Mom and Pop retail establishments have closed to make way for big box national chain stores and small business owners are finding it harder to make a go of it. Who will still be able to afford to live in New York in the next 20 years remains as much a mystery now as it did eight years ago when Bloomberg took office. It’s time for a change.

Bill Thompson will never be able to match Bloomberg in campaign spending (although every contribution helps). Since about the beginning of the year, the Mayor has spent around $40 million of his own money on campaign ads and slick brochures. I get a new one every week. My shredder stays busy.

But that all important grassroots support may make the difference in this campaign. In July, Thompson cut a Bloomberg lead in half in a Quinnipiac Poll, with fewer financial resources and having run no television ads. There is growing public awareness that there is a viable alternative candidate. As awareness grows, expect the lead to shrink further.

The Democratic Primary is a month away, the general election in November. There will be more to this campaign before all the votes are counted. New Yorkers should get informed and get involved.

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One hundred fifty miles up the Hudson River, in the state’s capital city of Albany, (where I lived for 11 years) another incumbent mayor faces a challenger with an uphill battle.

In a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans 11-1, elections are over after the primary. Mayor Jerry Jennings is seeking a fifth term (no term limits there) and faces opposition from Third Ward City Councilman Corey Ellis, who would become that city’s first African American Mayor if elected.

Jennings has a commanding lead in fundraising and the support of the more “establishment” Dems. Ellis received the endorsement of the Working Families Party.

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There are two other campaigns around the country we’re watching.

In California’s 10th Congressional District, Iraq War veteran, Harvard graduate and out gay candidate Anthony Woods has considerable grassroots support in an 11 candidate field for a special election to fill a seat held by retired Representative Ellen Tauscher.

A bipartisan primary is set for September 1 with a November 3 run-off if no single candidate wins an outright majority.

Woods’ opponents include California’s Lt. Governor, a State Senator and an Assemblywoman, all of whom have a solid fundraising infrastructure. Yet in a recent July filing, Woods had the highest percentage of contributions from individual donors. He’ll need to continue to raise money to get into the November run-off.

Woods may be able to take inspiration from Detroit City Council candidate Charles Pugh, another out gay candidate who recently came in first against 17 opponents seeking City Council seats. Pugh, a former television broadcaster, won with 59,560 votes and 8.9 percent of the vote.

Pugh did not hide his sexual orientation but appealed to voters on the issues. However he won support of both the AME Ministerial Alliance and the Council of Baptist Pastors.

Now THIS is satire!

In a strictly tongue-in-cheek jab at their sister publication at Conde Nast, the editors of Vanity Fair have satirized the controversial New Yorker magazine cover depicting Barack and Michelle Obama. It will only appear on their website, but you have to admit it’s funny.

Vanity Fair McCain cover

The Vanity Fair cover similarly reflects stories that have swirled around McCain and his wife Cindy, seen here cradling vials of pills while the Senator leans on a walker. The American flag isn’t burning in the fireplace; instead it’s the U.S. Constitution. In place of a portrait of Osama bin Laden, a likeness of President Bush hangs on the wall.

Media Matters

The blogosphere and mainstream media were all abuzz today over the controversial cover on the latest issue of The New Yorker. Illustrator Barry Blitt has done a number of provocative covers for the magazine, but his latest shows Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama in the Oval Office, adorned in Muslim attire, a photo of Ossama Bin Laden on the wall and a burning American flag in the fire place, giving a “terrorist fist bump” to wife Michelle, herself decked out like a ’60s-era Black militant.

The picture has drawn stiff criticism from the Obama camp and even condemnation from Republican presidential hopeful John McCain, but the magazine is defending its decision, saying it is just another example of the type of satire Blitt is famous for.

The picture is satire, designed to draw attention to many of the ridiculous rumors that have swirled around Obama since he announced his candidacy. No one with any intelligence would take it seriously. But America is full of people lacking in basic intelligence or the ability to discern the truth from concocted lies and deliberate distortions. Many are just gullible enough to believe every single one of these and other rumors. And they vote.

The New Yorker article does go into great detail about the calculated rise of Barack Obama.

While that controversy brews, another flew in under the radar. This past weekend, syndicated television commentator John McLaughlin of The McLaughlin Group, asserted that Obama “fits the stereotype blacks once labeled as an Oreo — a black on the outside, a white on the inside.”

The watchdog group, Media Matters, wants McLaughlin to publicly apologize and has created a campaign to raise public awareness.

Finally, David Simon, executive producer of the critically acclaimed television series The Wire may be off on his next great adventure. Simon, who already produces the HBO miniseries Generation Kill, set during the Iraq War, has just gotten the greenlight from that network to produce a pilot about life in post-Katrina New Orleans. “Treme,” named after the New Orleans neighborhood where many musicians live, will film its first episode sometime later this year. The show promises to take a critical look at life in the city itself and if it gets picked up, production could start in 2009. Former “Wire” star and New Orleans native Wendell Pierce is one of the first names attached to the project.

Which Way Will Hillary’s Supporters Go?

That is the big question now that she has bowed out of the race for the Democratic Party nomination for President. Some commentators are weighing in on the real motivations behind her supporters’ lack of party unity and the ramifications for Democrats this November.

Tim Wise, a White man who calls Whites to task on their racism, pulls no punches in his open letter to Hillary supporters, Your Whiteness is Showing.

Meanwhile some key female Clinton backers are also calling for people to think before jumping on the McCain bandwagon. They point out that a vote for McCain is a vote against women’s issues.

I’m Voting Republican