August 2005

Hackett: AKP Media Used by DCCC

Axelrod’s media group. For all the complaining about the DCCC, this was a serious buy and they went outside DC to get a good firm-in fact, one of the best to do the work.

This is a sign of hope for many who are frustrated with some of the Washington run campaigns–Axelrod works out of the Midwest and I think consistently demonstrates an understanding of values being more important than a specific issue.

John Lapp, exec Director of the DCCC is from Iowa as well so I don’t doubt that played a role.

I was going to say they should put some of their better stuff on the web, but it’s already there. Frighteningly enough, they don’t even have some of the best stuff up there.

Illinois Congressional Races: The Big Picture

While Democrats will find it hard to expand from a 10-9 majority, there are some excellent possibilities for pick-ups this cycle and an important seat to defend in IL-08.

Many on the left are angry with Bean, but it’s hard to tell how having Kathi Salvi or David McSweeney will be a better outcome for those on the left. I’m not sure the thought goes that far. The difference this time for Bean will be that running as an incumbent, and a well financed one, she’ll be running a different kind of race. Instead of just arguing that it’s time for a change, she’ll have to focus on what she has done for the District and make a values pitch to voters that she shares the values of the District better than her likely GOP opponent. Her money will be national money and not local money.

I’ll be removing her from the ACT Blue account simply because small scale donations don’t have the same impact for incumbents that they do for challengers. I’ll add someone else who is running a decent campaign and needs cash. This is not any indictment of Bean who I strongly support in that race.

The primary goal of those recruiting candidates and trying to make a decent run for a Blue State that, until Bean’s election, had more Republicans in the delegation, is to retain Bean. Everything else is gravy.

There may yet be some gravy. Two Democrats are vulnerable theoretically. Bean is certainly a top tier target and will face a big money challenger. The other potential vulnerable Democrat is Lane Evans who was just assessed a fine for FEC violations (okay a negotiated deal, but still a fine) and has one of the most bizarred Districts ever created. There don’t appear to be credible challengers to Evans in 2006 so while that could heat up, my guess is serious Republicans are eyeing when Evans retires.

Republicans are facing challenges in several seats, at least 3 of which are competitive Districts include 6, 10, and 11. 6, much has been written about and I’ve heard the Kerry numbers were 47% in that District making it a vulnerable seat. Three Democrats are running in the primary and Roskam is running on the Republican side. Cegelis was interviewed here for those interested.

Illinois 10 was not seriously contested last cycle, but is essentially a Democratic leaning District with Republican moderate Mark Kirk as the incumbent. He has well over $1 million in the bank. That much money isn’t just a danger to a potential challenger, it’s also a danger to Melissa Bean who is just next door. Zane Smith is running for the Democratic nomination with the strongest challenger, Susan Garrett bowing out.

Illinois 11 which slipped farther in the Republican column in the last Presidential race, also has a Congressman who doesn’t seem able to get any good press and has a strong challenger in John Pavich who had an excellent fundraising quarter.

On top of that 18 might be an open seat that while Republican leaning is a seat that could effectively be challenged by Democrats and Illinois 15 has David Gill running and trying to raise more money for this cycle.

Republicans will be playing serious defense in at least 2 Districts and attempting to hold 2 open seats if LaHood runs for Governor while Democrats will be attempting to defend one seat that’s tough and essentially have free rides for the rest of the Democratic candidates with the possible exception of Lipinski facing a primary challenge–though such a challenge won’t mean a serious threat of Republican takeover of IL-03.

The hope seems to be have been to spread the GOP thinner than it currently is, but it’s hard to get strong challengers. The biggest issue was specifically Kirk since he had a huge chunk he could spread around to support other candidates in various ways. The Republican Scrum for the Governor’s race has a lot of money going there keeping less money available for the House races.

With strong fundraising, campaign focus from the Emanuel, and a lot of relatively good press, the first part of the plan would seem to be in as good of shape as it could be given Bean is in a Republican District in terms of lean. While such a District is never safe, it’s as good as it can get for now.

But the bonus is that at least two Districts are in play and potentially another one for Democratic pickups–and that’s all gravy. None are what an objective analysis would call a likely pick-up, but all are those kind of Districts that shoud be challenged by an active Party trying to pick up seats. Even though many are calling for the DCCC’s head right now, the Illinois picture is one of the stronger cycles that Democrats have seen in years. Add to that challenges to Lipinski and there is a lot to look forward to in 2006.

Making more Districts competitive means the incumbents are better protected by forcing Republican’s to spend money in District’s they haven’t before with the added bonus of potentially picking up more seats.

There is a lesson for the pros out there that dismiss Cegelis. While I’m both critical and hopeful of Christine’s efforts, the better she does, the better others do.

UPDATED: Fixed because of really bad writing and some clarity issues.

Helmets and Seatbelts

I’ll add kids should learn that wearing a helmet when cycling is non-negotiable, but what Eric says (though I have one less)

ZORN REPLY – I have three children. We aren’t particularly rigid parents and I’m not going to hold us out as models of perfection-we’ve been known to bend on bedtimes, food choices and so on, and, yes, every once in a while we give in to a particularly well thrown tantrum. But some things have always been non-negotiable. And the kids learned at the earliest possible age that they must always, always be properly seated/belted in the car or the car doesn’t move. Period. Give in on this point just once and you’ve guaranteed yourself years of nagging trouble, at best.

CD Six is a threesome in the Primary

Lindy Scott of Wheaton College’s Center for Applied Christian Ethics has jumped into the race. Lindy, send me a note if you can, I’d love to add you to the on-line interviews for the 6th District.

The oddity of the primary is that while everyone has a conspiracy theory about who is pulling whos strings, the reality appears to be that the establishment has deep misgivings about Cegelis, but neither of the other candidates are an establishment candidate. And my guess is that there won’t be an establishment candidate of the type that is the annointed one by the Party. From what I can tell, a couple were sounded out, but nothing worked out. While everyone thinks parties are organized and power brokers can call shots, in an area like DuPage, there isn’t the infrastructure for that kind of control.

More specifically, the DCCC can’t get involved in contested primaries in open seats (incumbents being primaried like in IL-03 is different, but there’s a question of why they’d bother there given there is little threat of a Republican winning if Lipinski were defeated). DCCC will try and recruit candidates in cases where there is a winnable races, but isn’t the complaint that the DCCC doesn’t contest enough races? They are damned if they do and damned if they don’t.

The frustration in this race is that the the Cegelis supporters who complain that the Party tries to shove a moderate down liberals’ throats are arguing for the party to clear the field for the liberal. While I understand that people think their candidate is the best option, that’s the point of primaries.

Certainly it’s true that a brutal primary can hurt the eventual nominee–I think we’ll see that in IL-08 on the Republican side the way things are shaping up. However, it seems that the three currently in the 6th CD’s Democratic Primary aren’t going to be competing for the same voters as much as competing with pretty distinct factions within the party.

I have mentioned before that I have concerns about how well Christine will play in a general election. She is going to have to appeal to moderate swing voters with some positions that aren’t necessarily moderate. Clearly if she can control the debate to be about Social Security, Ethics/DeLay/Rove, and balancing the budget, she’d be fine, but the problem is that Roskam is going to run a brutal campaign designed to hit every hot button social issue he can. It’s a legitimate discussion to have over how to best win the 6th District.

One of the greater concerns I have with the many of the activists in the Democratic Party is the above consideration is ignored–there seems to be a rejection of median voter theorem which pretty clearly describes the process of getting to 50%+1 to win an election. Running to the left isn’t always a smart strategy.

On the surface, the 6th isn’t a natural place to try and win with a liberal voice–it’s a moderate swing district now and usually you would want someone who is politically towards the center. With Roskam, there’s probably some room to go to the left, but carefully.

Each of these candidates is going to have to demonstrate the ability to run a decent campaign.

Christine’s first challenge was raising money. While she certainly hit her first goal she still has to meet the next hurdle, attracting more traditional money and getting her campaign spending under control. She’s got a good start, but the money is flowing too quickly out. Having been around a grass roots campaign that was remarkably effective, the Cegelis campaign is going through cash more like an incumbent campaign. On the surface, someone can make an argument for each of the expenditures. A little travel, some staff, event expenses, the fundraiser.

Having talked to some folks about the fund expenditures, the money for the fundraiser is probably a good expense as long as the candidate is sitting and making her calls, and then when sick of making her calls, make some more, and then when ready to scream and give up–make some more calls. It’s expensive so a candidate has to exploit it for all it’s worth.

The legal, hard to tell, but it seems high (not that Dan isn’t worth it), but in a grassroots campaign and one that won’t break $1 million for a while at least, it seems excessive.

Rent–well, that probably should wait. Again, one can make a good call as to why you spent it, but saving the money should probably win.

Staff–probably about right. If they are doing events and scheduling you probably need what they have.

Travel seemed high as did the cell phone bills, but more to the point is how to sell the candidate. Coffees in different neighborhoods that expand the volunteer list are essentially free except very minor dollars by the person holding them and it lets someone get a broad base of supporters and donors to build on good on-line fundraising. It keeps costs down and then you can also run weekend canvassing to update and monitor your lists.

The challenge for insurgent campaigns is to do everything cheaper and less expensively than others–even if you don’t raise as much as others, you get to have good on hand numbers and use the money for the end on media and mail for the really hard to reach. Too many campaigns focus on big events instead of working volunteers to do the work for small events.

Now, Christine’s supporters will probably complain about this–and that’s fine, but let me get to the point—there’s a point where you have to cross from insurgent to the person everyone wants to pretend they’ve been supporting all along. To do that, you have to have the right story going in the gossip. That story needs to be huge fundraising or good fundraising and especially good money management. Insurgents just can’t quite pull off the first–and fighting against Roskam it won’t matter–he’s got deeper pockets. If you can demonstrate a smart campaign spending plan that’s a low burn rate and yet you can keep your name in the headlines (which she is doing) it’ll go along way to moving from the insurgent to being the candidate everyone rallies around. In many ways, Bean’s campaign worked because she used her first campaign to showcase she could be frugal and outperform expectations.

What about the other candidates? Well, they have to show they can raise the money first and then one can evaluate their spending. They started later so to date there isn’t much to discuss. Christine comes to the election with some baggage within the party. One can argue all they want whether it’s fair or not, but the basic point is that it doesn’t matter—you have to jump through the hoop to win. I think Christine’s focus on improving her operation and fundraising is great and I think it’s the way to get party support for a general election, but with raising money comes using it wisely.

Two Favors

For those out there that are DFA oriented, I have two candidates who deserve to receive the DFA Endorsement.

The first is David Loebsack who is running for Congress in the 2nd District of Iowa. Iowa-02 was 53-43 in 2000 and on paper is a strong pickup opportunity. The challenge is that Jim Leach holds the seat and he has a moderate voting record including the Sierra Club endorsement in at least one cycle. The problem is that Leach’s voting for a Republican leadership results in a lot of immoderate policies. David was my college advisor and and I consider him a good friend. He knows the challenge he is facing and it is a tough race to say the least. He needs the support of the grassroots and netroots so please fill out the form if you are so inclined.

David’s website is here and while I don’t want to start daily asks for money this far out, you can donate to himi through my Act Blue page linked on the right.

Secondly, an original Dean’s Dozen, Jeff Smith is running again, and this time for Missouri State Senate in the City of Saint Louis. Jeff ran a grassroots campaign that outperformed nearly all expectations and came very close to going to Congress in Dick Gephardt’s old seat. He’ll now be running for an open seat in the Missouri Senate–a place that desperately needs some energy after the Blunt administration’s repeated attacks on working families.

Recommend both here
http://www.democracyforamerica.com/recommendation

Pajama Posting

While many made fun of Tatel for the line, it’s very serious in what he was talking about in terms of privilege. Many want to draw a distinction between what blogs and what the larger press does, but the problem is most eloquently pointed out in Tatel’s decision–namely that the right of a free press is a ‘broadly granted personal right’.

Are we then to create a privilege
that protects only those reporters employed by Time Magazine,
the New York Times, and other media giants, or do we extend
that protection as well to the owner of a desktop printer
producing a weekly newsletter to inform his neighbors, lodge
brothers, co-religionists, or co-conspirators? Perhaps more to
the point today, does the privilege also protect the proprietor of
a web log: the stereotypical ?blogger? sitting in his pajamas at
his personal computer posting on the World Wide Web his best
product to inform whoever happens to browse his way? If not,
why not? How could one draw a distinction consistent with the
court?s vision of a broadly granted personal right? If so, then
would it not be possible for a government official wishing to
engage in the sort of unlawful leaking under investigation in the
present controversy to call a trusted friend or a political ally,
advise him to set up a web log (which I understand takes about
three minutes) and then leak to him under a promise of
confidentiality the information which the law forbids the official
to disclose?

The problem with differentiating between forms of media is that the privileges many reporters are advocating aren’t privileges, but rights–and the confusing of privileges and rights only weakens those that everyone has as a personal guarantee in our social contract.

Zeroing in on Rove

Kos and others are pointing out that Fitzgerald is zeroing in on Rove, but I hardly find that news. Once Cooper’s notes confirmed Rove was the person in question, it was obvious who Fitzgerald is going after. From the Appeals Court Decision

Cooper refused to comply with the subpoena, even
after the Special Counsel offered to narrow its scope to cover
only conversations between Cooper and a specific individual
identified by the Special Counsel. Instead, Cooper moved to
quash the subpoena on June 3, 2004. On July 6, 2004, the Chief
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia denied Cooper?s motion in open court, and confirmed
the denial with reasoning set forth in a written order issued on
July 20, 2004

…………………

Applying this standard to the facts of this case, and
considering first only the public record, I have no doubt that the
leak at issue was a serious matter. Authorized ?to investigate
and prosecute violations of any federal criminal laws related to
the underlying alleged unauthorized disclosure, as well as
federal crimes committed in the course of, and with intent to
interfere with, [his] investigation, such as perjury, obstruction of
justice, destruction of evidence, and intimidation of witnesses,?
see Letter from James B. Comey, Acting Attorney General, to
Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney, Northern District
of Illinois (Feb. 6, 2004), the special counsel is attempting to
discover the origins of press reports describing Valerie Plame as
a CIA operative monitoring weapons of mass destruction. See
majority op. at 3-5. These reports appeared after Plame?s
husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, wrote in a New
York Times op-ed column that his findings on an official mission
to Niger in 2002 cast doubt on President Bush?s assertion in his
January 2003 State of the Union address that Iraq ?recently
sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.? See id. at
3.

An alleged covert agent, Plame evidently traveled overseas
on clandestine missions beginning nearly two decades ago. See,
e.g., Richard Leiby & Dana Priest, The Spy Next Door; Valerie
Wilson, Ideal Mom, Was Also the Ideal Cover, Wash. Post, Oct.
8, 2003, at A1. Her exposure, therefore, not only may have
jeopardized any covert activities of her own, but also may have
endangered friends and associates from whom she might have
gathered information in the past. Acting to criminalize such
exposure of secret agents, see 50 U.S.C. ? 421, Congress has
identified that behavior?s ?intolerable? consequences: ?[t]he
loss of vital human intelligence which our policymakers need,
the great cost to the American taxpayer of replacing intelligence
resources lost due to such disclosures, and the greatly increased
risk of harm which continuing disclosures force intelligence
officers and sources to endure.? S. Rep. No. 97-201, at 10-11
(1981), reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 145, 154-55.
The leak of Plame?s apparent employment, moreover, had
marginal news value. To be sure, insofar as Plame?s CIA
relationship may have helped explain her husband?s selection for
the Niger trip, that information could bear on her husband?s
credibility and thus contribute to public debate over the
president?s ?sixteen words.? Compared to the damage of
undermining covert intelligence-gathering, however, this slight
news value cannot, in my view, justify privileging the leaker?s
identity.

……………………………..
Read More

I Am Beginning to Get the Term Reality Based Community

Much like Truth Girl I often find the term strange–as someone who is a Christian it seems a bit too far for me in that I don’t reject faith and it always seems to me that such a line puts faith as not important. That said, today’s headlines at the Huffington Post cut to the core of what many have problems with

Bush On Intelligent Design: ?Teach It In Schools?…

Bush On Rove: He Has My ?Complete Confidence?…

Bush On Palmeiro: ?I Believe Him?…

Facts don’t matter, only your point of view in this brave new world.

Kirk has Served in Iraq During the Operation Iraqi Freedom

Well no. Not actually and no criticism of Kirk who I respect for his service, but loon Jean Schmidt in Ohio 02 is attacking Paul Hackett for saying he would be the first Congressman to have served in OIF.

Schmidt’s idiots called up Kirk’s office and asked about his service and then went forward with the idiotic release.

Here is the moron claiming it’s a scandal and reprinting the Schmidt press release like the useful idiot he must be.

Most who follow Illinois politics know that Kirk served in several postings including the First Gulf War, enforcing the No-Fly Zone, and in Kosovo, but as a Naval Reserve officer he volunteered to serve in IOF, but the Department of Defense barred him from doing so and he served one day a week doing intelligence work in Washington–a noble service. Kirk didn’t serve during the current ongoing operation in Iraq–a fact that in no way denigrates his service previously in Iraq nor his service in Kosovo.

Jean Scmidt’s a liar. Have some fun with her:
Call the Schmidt campaign at 513-295-1960 and 513-575-0840 and ask how it’s possible to have served in OIF before it even existed.

Skoien Better Do Some Fundraising

Because between his account and the Cook County Republican Central Committee the on-hand is
Cook County Rs: $3,057.32
Skoien’s: $266.13

Raised:
CCR $67,592.30
Skoien $818.50

Spent:
CCR: $68,389.34
Skoien: $918.50

Owed to Skoien
CCR $26000
Skoien: $16,605.93

Owed to Others
CCR $25,000

The Cook County Republican Central Committee is bankrupt without Skoien’s personal loans to it at this point. For those trying to make a conspiracy out of Skoien’s firing, let me point out that one guy with a bank account doesn’t threaten the Mayor. If anything the Mayor was annoyed by Skoien’s firing because it made his problems salient in the media instead of letting them fall away.