Medina County Dem News
Friday, January 18, 2008(Medina County Democratic Action Committee)
MCDAC
Newsletter
January 18, 2008
Joyce V.
Kimbler,
Editor
Letters to the
Editor
Broadway Comes To
Iowa
The snow dust has settled in Iowa
and the pundits are in retrospect. The
mainstream media will now inform us how it
happened that an underfunded Mike Huckabee beat
the Republican front runners and their media
favorite, Hillary Clinton placed third in the
corn-belt caucus.
Democrats came out to
vote in unprecedented numbers almost doubling
past presidential primaries. Those numbers are
telling. Democrats are hungry for change, not
just a new path for our country, but a new path
for the Democratic Party. Hillary offered
Democrats a repackaged move to the middle
shades of a Democratic party in the minority
ala Bill Clinton White House tenure.
Progressives Barak Obama and John Edwards gave
Iowans a vision of the new Democratic Party,
one that will reestablish our international
role as the light on the hill, the courage to
fight the corporate take over of our democracy,
and what we must do to rebuild our middle
class.
The Republican turnout was
underwhelming. Huckabee was able to win by
playing to what has become the base of the
Republican Party in recent years the
religious right, proving there are still enough
believers who have not lost faith in the GOP.
The question is; Can Huckabee play on
off-Broadway, or better put to Independent
voters? It is hard to fathom that free-thinking
Independent voters, those who will decide our
next president, duped a second time into
believing the Republican Party speaks to their
values.
There always comes a time on
Broadway to shut the theatre doors and write a
new musical - and hire different
actors.
Patrick J Carano
Summit
County
Medina County Democratic
News
Medina County Dem Kathie Jones
Chosen as John Edwards Delegate
At the
16Th Congressional District caucus held on
January 3, 2008, Medina County Dem Kathie Jones
of Sharon Township was chosen as a female
delegate for John Edwards. This is the second
time that Kathie has been selected as a
delegate for a presidential candidate at a
16Th. District caucus. Kathie's selection means
that three Medina County Democratic women were
chosen as delegates at the 16Th. Congressional
District caucus. Congratulations to all those
Medina County Dems!
Medina County Dem
Amanda Armstrong Selected As Obama
Delegate
Amanda Armstrong, who grew up
in Seville and is President of the Medina
County Young Democrats, was selected as the
third female delegate for the Barack Obama
campaign. This brings to four the number of
Medina County Dems selected as potential
delegates at the 13Th and 16Th Congressional
District caucuses held on January 3, 2008. All
were women. Two were for Bill Richardson, one
was for John Edwards, and one was for Barack
Obama.
Ohio Democratic
News
Lakewood, Ohio Democratic Club
Sponsoring Dem Nomination Straw
Vote
Would your organization be willing
to cosponsor an Ohio Democratic Presidential
Straw Poll this Jan 31? The Lakewood Democratic
Club has secured a time and location and would
like to include as many Northeast Ohio
Democrats as possible. We hope you can team up
with us to put on Northeast Ohio's first-ever
(to our knowledge) straw poll!
Why
should Iowa and New Hampshire have all the fun?
It’s our turn to have our say! This event will
give Ohio Democrats the chance to cast an early
vote for their choice for the Democratic
Presidential Nominee BEFORE Super Duper Tuesday
(Feb. 5). The winner of the straw poll will be
publicly announced to let the media know who
Ohioans want for president.
By
cosponsoring, you agree to:
Lend your
name to the event
Publicize the event to
your members
Ask your members if they can
volunteer to run the even (e.g. set up, break
down, check in table, count votes,
etc.)
There is no cost to your
organization.
Eligibility To Vote: Any 18+
year old Ohio resident may cast one vote for
the cost of $5 (funds defray cost of event).
Voters must be physically present; no proxy
voting. Non-registered persons can vote in the
straw poll, then register to vote in the
official March 4 primary
DEADLINE: If you
can cosponsor, please let us know by Sun, Jan
13 so we can include you on the flier and still
have time to publicize the event. (Preliminary
flier attached.)
Sincerely,
Tom
Bullock
Lakewood Democratic Club, 1st Vice
President
216-337-1318
2008
Presidential Campaign
Democrats Out
Voting Republicans in Primaries
This is
a very interesting statistic, and one that is
not good for the GOP. So far, there have been
two contested Republican primaries and one
contested Republican caucus where individual
votes were counted. Those are Iowa, New
Hampshire, and Michigan. In those three
contests, according to CNN's Election Central,
the total number of Republicans votes was
867,136.
On the Democratic side, there
has been two contests where individual votes
were counted Those were New Hampshire and
Michigan. In Iowa the Democratic Party reported
the number of delegates that each candidate won
at the district level, but does not release
individual votes. In those two contests the
total number of Democratic votes was 877,082.
In other words, the total number of Democratic
voters in two races exceeded the number of
Republican voters in three races. Not only was
the total bigger, but in Michigan Obama and
Edwards weren't on the ballot and Clinton
didn't campaign.
Quite frankly these
figures indicate that rank and file Republicans
don't have the saem enthusiam and intensity
that rank and file Democrats have about the
2008 elections. Six years of Bush, of a war
that seems neverending, of budget deficits, of
incompetence. of constitutional violations,
have weakened the Republican Party. Couldn't
have happened to a better group of
people.
Newsweek Cover Story on Hillary
Clinton
Newsweek is following up its
cover story on Barack Obama with a
cover story
on Hillary
Clinton. It is a very interesting article. It
contends that a mistake the HRC campaign made
was assuming that she was known by voters. It
also contends that both HRC and her advisers
have learned that she is not that well known
and that they have to allow the public to see a
more complete picture of her.
When
Clinton ran in New York for the US Senate she
adopted a strategy of going everywhere to
dispel the images that voters had of her. It
worked in that she was able to do well enough
in upstate New York to counter the Republican
vote in the suburbs of New York City. Doing
that made sure that the big Democratic vote out
of New York City was sufficient to elect her.
She followed the same campaign strategy that
Charles Schumer had used in 1998.
The
problem, though, is the size of the United
States makes it hard to do that on a nationwide
basis, especially if your campaign is
distracted by charges of racism made by other
Democrats. The question is can you go around
the media and get enough voters to change their
opinions about you? Opinions that have been
formed not on personal experience by on the
basis of media stories.
Well, we are
about to see if HRC can pull it off. On the one
hand she is an incredibly polarizing figure in
American politics. On the other hand she is a
very intelligent and very hard working woman.
Only a fool would count her out, as the media
found out last Tuesday in New
Hampshire.
CNN Poll Shows Democrats
Leading Republicans in White House
Race
CNN has a new poll out that shows both Obama
and Clinton leading all Republicans including
John McCain, although McCain gives each of them
the toughest race. Here are some figures from
the polls:
Obama 56%, Guiliani
40%
Obama 59%, Romney 37%
Obama 49%,
McCain 48%
Obama 58%, Huckabee
39%
Clinton 55%, Guiliani 42%
Clinton
58%, Romney 40%
Clinton 50%, McCain
49%
Clinton 56%, Huckabee
42%
Interestingly, all Republicans run
1% to 3% better against Clinton than against
Obama. Obama gets a bigger percentage against
Guiliani, Romney, and Huckabee, but not against
McCain. Clinton has the highest "would
definitely vote for" rating at 37%, but ties
with McCain on the would "definitely not vote
for rating" at 43%. Obama is at 30% and 38% in
both categories respectively. According to this
poll, over 50% of those polled said that would
definitely not vote for Giuliani, Romney or
Huckabee. Hopefully one of those three will get
the Republican nomination.
Where Do
Edward Supporters Go?
Those of us
supporting John Edwards for President may soon
have to face the fact that he is not going to
be the Democratic nominee. Sooner or later in
politics you have to win elections. So,
assuming that Edwards is out, where does his
support go?
The AP ran a story dated January 12, 2008 on
that very issue. It is a very interesting
article. Here's one quote from the article that
illustrates why John Edwards is important to
the Democratic Party:
Edwards draws
much of his support from people over 50 and
those without a college education, the survey
found. His voters are more likely to be men
than women, and a third are evangelical
Christians a much larger share than among
Clinton or Obama voters.
The loss
of such voters has been a problem for the
Democratic Party. White men went for Bush over
Kerry by a margin of 62% to 37%. Educationally,
the only two groups that went for Kerry over
Bush were those without high school diplomas,
(50% to 49%) and those with post-graduate
degrees, (55% to 44%). The only age group that
Kerry carried were voters 18-29. In that age
group Kerry got 54% and Bush got 45%. Kerry
lost both Catholic and Protestant voters, but
he really got killed among white, evangelical
voters. He lost those voters by a 78% to 21%
margin.(All of these figures are from the 2004
CNN exit poll.)
Given the fact that
Kerry won 17 states and only lost the popular
vote by approximately 3%, it is easy to see
that Democrats would only have to do a little
better with the above groups to win the
presidency. The question becomes what
Democratic candidate, other than Edwards, can
get more votes out of the above groups than
Kerry got.
It is a tough decision to
make. This might be one reason why, according
to the AP article, a poll taken in December
showed that Edwards supporters were split
evenly between Obama and Clinton when Edwards
was removed from the equation. Here is a quote
from the article:
A mid-December
survey of voters nationally conducted for the
AP and Yahoo News found that Edwards supporters
split about evenly between Clinton and Obama
when asked which candidate would be their
second choice. Clinton and Obama each were the
second choices of about 27 percent of Edwards
supporters. Another 28 percent were unsure who
would be their second choice, and the rest were
thinly scattered among other
candidates.
By the way, Edwards
supporters nationwide amount to about 14% to
20% of the Democratic vote, according to national
polls. In
Medina County, where MCDAC is based, there are
16,776 Democratic voters. If Medina County
reflects the nationwide average, then there
would be approximately 2348 to 3355 Edwards
supporters among Medina County Democrats. There
could be more, however, since in the 2004
Democratic primary in Ohio, Edwards got 31.8%
of the vote. Obviously, in a close election
between Obama and Clinton, Edwards supporters
could be a big factor.
So, where do
Edwards supporters go? Both Clinton and Obama
have a lot to recommend them. Obama is a new
face, doesn't have the baggage of the whole
Clinton-Lewinsky controversy, and is a very
inspirational speaker. Clinton is experienced
in the ways of Washington, has plenty of grit,
can both take and deliver a punch, and has a
great command of policy. My guess, though, for
what it is worth, is that Obama will do a
slightly better job of emotionally connecting
with former Edwards supporters if Edwards is
not a viable candidate by the time of the Ohio
primary on March 4th, 2008.
Articles
of General Interest
Congressional
Dems Introduce Bill to Prevent Bush From
Signing Long-Term Agreement Without
Congressional Approval
On January 13,
2008, we published an entry
in which
we said that Democrats need to introduce
legislation prohibiting Bush from entering
agreements with the Iraqi government that
continue beyond the end of his presidency.
Imagine our delight, and to be honest, also our
chagrin, when we found out that Congressional
Democrats have done, and are doing, just that.
One bill has been introduced
by Senator
Hillary Clinton in the Senate and another bill
will be introduced by Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT).
Rep. DeLauro will introduce the Iraq
Strategic Agreement Review Act of 2008, which
would require the administration to consult
with Congress on the agreement and withhold
funds for the agreement if it did not come in
the form of a formal treaty. "We simply cannot
allow the Administration to finalize an
agreement that could lead to permanent bases in
Iraq and other major economic and political
commitments without Congressional consultations
and approval," she says in a statement on the
bill.
This is only the first step,
however. The second step is to big it a
political issue when the Republicans bottle it
up in the Senate or Bush vetoes it and the
Republicans don't provide enough votes to
override his veto. What Democrats need to do is
take our full page ads in about 100 of the
biggest newspapers in the US asking Americans
if they want to see American troops in Iraq
until 2018. If they don't, ask them to call
their Republican Senators and Representatives.
If the DSCC and/or the DCCC ran such ads, they
would receive a lot of coverage and move this
issue up on the media's agenda.
Too
often, politicians and their advisers act as if
ads on television are the only way to go. A lot
of people, however, read the newspapers. You
could probably potentially reach 50 million or
so readers with such an effort. The cost would
be negligible compared to running 30 second tv
spots, and you would probably get just as much
of an impact. It is time to think outside the
box, pun intended.
Iraqi Defense
Minister Wants US in Iraq Until 2018
The
Iraq Defense Minister said yesterday in Washington
that he
envisions the US in Iraq until 2018. He doesn't
believe that his country will be able to handle
internal security until 2009 to 2012 and will
not be able to defend its borders until 2018 to
2020. These remarks need to be jumped on by
Democratic candidates running for President.
In the past Bubble-Boy has gotten away
with mouthing platitudes like "When the Iraqis
stand up, we will stand down." Platitudes that
were designed to sound tough, but avoid
actually telling the American people how long
their sons and daughters were expected to be in
Iraq. Now, thanks to the honesty of the Iraq
Defense Minister, we know what this
Administration's plan is for Iraq. Its plan is
that American troops stay in Iraq for another
decade.
It is time for Democrats to
engage the Republicans on this issue. The
choice is pretty clear. We can be in Iraq for
10 more years while the Iraqis fight among
themselves or we can set deadlines and get out.
We can't control what the Iraqis do, we can
only control what we do.
If Bubble-Boy
and the Duck Hunter would have told the
American people back in 2003 that we would lose
at least 4,000 American troops in Iraq, spend
at least half a trillion dollars, and be tied
up in Iraq for 15 years, there is no way that
the American public would have supported this
war. Of course, we weren't told that. Instead
we were told that we had to worry about
mushroom clouds over our country.
Right
now, according to a recent
CBS/New York Times poll, only 3% of Americans
would support having large numbers of American
troops stay in Iraq longer than five years.
Only 10% would support having large numbers of
American troops in Iraq for two to five years.
Given those numbers, there's no way that
Americans will buy into BB's 10 year
plan.
Progressive Spends Millions on
Naming Rights While Laying Off
Workers
Does this make any sense to you?
Progressive Insurance announced in November
that it
was laying off 341 workers, most of them at the
company's headquarters in the Cleveland area.
Now, in January, the company enters into a
deal with the Cleveland
Indians whereby it will spend approximately 3.6
million a year for 16 years to have the naming
rights to Jacobs Field.
The United
States Chamber of Commerce announced this past
week that
it will spend up to 60 million dollars to try
and influence the November elections. Why?
Because it is concerned about the populist
language being used by Democrats like Edwards
and Republicans like Huckabee. By the way, it
has no plans to disclose who gives it money to
influence U.S. elections or to attack
progressive candidates.
So why are
talking about these two items in the same
article? Because if corporations want to know
why populism is increasing in the United
States, they only have to look at actions like
the ones taken by Progressive Insurance.
Americans are coming to the realization that
corporations don't consider the best interests
of their workers or of the communities they are
located in when they do things. They only
consider the bottom line. Their motives are
usually self-centered. Indeed, considering the
fact that they owe their shareholders a duty to
increase the values of their shares, that's
probably exactly what they should do.
Where we have a problem is when they
act as if other actors in the political system
shouldn't do the same thing. Workers, when they
vote, should take their cue from the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and vote for candidates who
will act in their
self-interest. Act in their self-interest by
considering extending medical and parental
leave, by increasing the minimum wage, and by
coming up with a national health insurance
program. After all, what is sauce for the goose
is sauce for the gander.
Newsletter prepared by:
Medina County
Democratic Action Committee
Joyce Kimbler,
Treasurer
P.O. Box 1213
Medina, OH
44258
MCDAC Website
