May 2006

Duckworth Pledges No Earmarks

It’s a good stance for swing voters

Stuart Rothenberg took on the race: (paid subscription)

Finally, Democrats have been acting for months as if they already have Hyde?s Illinois open seat in their hip pocket. Their nominee, Tammy Duckworth, faces Republican state Sen. Peter Roskam, whom they portray as a prot?g? of Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas) and a conservative firebrand. Roskam worked briefly on Capitol Hill for DeLay (during the Congressman?s first term), as well as for Hyde.

Hyde?s open seat isn?t as Republican as you might think. Bush won it with 53 percent both when he first ran for the White House and four years later when he ran for re-election. Moreover, virtually all of the state legislators from the area are Republicans. But Democrats argue that the suburban Chicago district seems to be inching their way.

Republicans will not let even one of these districts slip away without a blood bath of a fight, and Democratic rhetoric about the Republican nominees in these four districts may not sell well among voters who actually have met the GOP candidates.

I?ve met three of the four Republican nominees in these districts ? all but Meier ? and, after hearing the Democrats describe Bachmann, Gard and Roskam as knuckle-dragging, fire-breathing, right-wing bomb throwers, I was more than a little surprised to find all three personable and reasonable-sounding.

I certainly understand why Democrats hate the Republican trio. All three are politically savvy, unapologetically conservative and results-oriented. In short, they?d likely be formidable adversaries on Capitol Hill.

But expectations are an important part of politics, and Democrats have spent so much time portraying Bachmann, Gard and Roskam as scary ideologues that when voters meet the Republicans, they may not only like them, they may also wonder about future Democratic charges and attacks. (Roskam was recently endorsed by local Teamsters and Operating Engineers unions.)

Of course, Democrats have various sorts of ammunition to use against each of the four Republicans, and if the Democratic tide is big enough, all four seats could turn Democratic. But Democratic strategists would be wise to treat the quartet of Republican nominees in these districts as serious, politically attractive candidates, not as crackpots.

This race is probably going to produce the most press releases with the word extreme in them from both sides. The point is important, Roskam is very conservative, but he comes off as very mild in person and it’s a point I’ve made a few times now.

Most important for Duckworth:

Duckworth is ramping up her November bid by replacing Joe Shafer with Jon Carson, who is charged with developing a more aggressive field organization

I don’t have any opinion on Shafer, but moving towards a more aggressive field operation is essential—the primary showed a very low turnout for a hotly contested race–reaching out to potential voters is essential.

Strategery

Atrios got the same ad I did. And ran it. As he said, do as you wish, but check out this for some background

The basic argument to end net neutrality centers around whether or not telcos can differentiate between types of information flowing over the networks. Their argument is somehow this gives them more ability to allow the internet to grow.

The problem with that is that there is not an open market in this case–the players are pretty much set and the barriers to entry are huge. Instead, giving telcos the ability to differentiate gives them the power to shape the internet of the future. They can pick and choose what applications and sites to allow or give preferential treatment and thus will be making decisions on what gets promoted and what does not instead of individual consumers.

Net neutrality simply means that the cost of internet service is paid for by end users who then can choose what to do on the internet only limited by their service level. Thus, individual users are allowed to utilize networks up to their level of service promoting true competition over the internet in terms content providers.

Without net neutrality, content providers could enter into agreements to promote their service over other services meaning the system would create barriers of entry to new content providers or simply content providers that don’t make the right agreements with telcos.

Ultimately, if you want to provide the most open access and allow individuals to choose content based upon their wishes and not telco agreements with certain content providers, net neutrality is the best way to go and the cost of such service is paid for by the person with the internet connection.

Consider this an open thread to point out the bogus points in the telco’s ad.

I Can’t Improve on Frank James’ Title

Bush cabinet member’s world of make-believe

One correction actually–put the apostrophe after the s.

“What the secretary was talking about (in his speech) was all of our accomplishments with minority contracts. At at the very end of his statement, the secretary offered an anecdote to explain politics in Washington D.C. He was speaking to a group of business leaders in Dallas and there were lots of Dallas Cowboys in the room.

“So he was offering an anecdote to say, this is how politics works in DC. In DC people won’t just stab you in the back, they’ll stab you in the front. And so the secretary’s point was a hypothetical, what he said was an anecdote. It did not happen.”

Let’s stop here momentarily and leave aside Tucker’s apparent misimpression that an anecdote is by definition fictional. It isn’t. An anecdote is a story about something that really happened, often used to illustrate a larger point.

Read the whole thing–James’ piece is brilliant in it’s simplicity.

Hat tip to Austin Mayor

Saying Your Piece

Apparently means not having to tell the truth:

Another Democrat, Michele Rosenfeld, called on Smith to resign.

“You apologized, but you never came clean about what happened. It’s been lie after lie,” she said.

Smith has said the $1,462 bill at VIP’s Chicago strip club was for a bachelor party where those attending didn’t have enough cash to cover the bill, and he paid for it with the village credit card. Smith has declined to name any of those attending the party.

The Star learned also this week that a $1,300 charge on the village card to Chicago Food and Beverage, on the same night as the supposed bachelor party, was for lap dances at the strip club. Smith said earlier that he could not recall the purpose of the $1,300 charge.

When Rosenfeld asked the mayor Tuesday night what that charge was for, he said, “None of it was paid for with village funds. I said my piece, and I will leave it at that.”

Good reporting by Susan DeMar Lafferty.

For Smith, actually it was paid for by Village funds and then reimbursed. At that point, it’s public record and as a public official, you don’t get off that easy.

And let me say, I don’t blame reporters for this–I assume it’s the editors who decide not to credit other forums, but this has also happened on Rich’s site. When a blog gets something right and that information ultimately comes from the blog, it’s appropriate to cite the writer of the blog at least. Much like if the Tribune had uncovered something, it’s appropriate to cite them. When I write for local newspapers, I do it.

It’s Not that He Believes It, It’s That He’s Stupid Enough To Say It

Alphonso Jackson:

After discussing the huge strides the agency has made in doing business with minority-owned companies, Jackson closed with a cautionary tale, relaying a conversation he had with a prospective advertising contractor.

“He had made every effort to get a contract with HUD for 10 years,” Jackson said of the prospective contractor. “He made a heck of a proposal and was on the (General Services Administration) list, so we selected him. He came to see me and thank me for selecting him. Then he said something … he said, ‘I have a problem with your president.’

“I said, ‘What do you mean?’ He said, ‘I don’t like President Bush.’ I thought to myself, ‘Brother, you have a disconnect — the president is elected, I was selected. You wouldn’t be getting the contract unless I was sitting here. If you have a problem with the president, don’t tell the secretary.’

“He didn’t get the contract,” Jackson continued. “Why should I reward someone who doesn’t like the president, so they can use funds to try to campaign against the president? Logic says they don’t get the contract. That’s the way I believe.”