January 26, 2007

Post-Election Blues

Categories: Campaigns
Author: charlieahern
Time: 9:37 pm
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After losing my election campaign and a hiatus, this is my first post here in about five months.

Here’s the blog from my campaign for Santa Clara County Board of Education; AHERN for County Board of Education.

I plan to resume posting here and may be starting a few unrelated blogs or web sites.

More to come…

August 1, 2006

Attend Your Congress Member’s ‘Town Meeting’

Categories: Community, Local, Campaigns
Author: charlieahern
Time: 9:27 pm
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While Congress is on recess, now is the time to attend a town meeting hosted by the member of the House of Representatives for your Congressional District.

This round of meetings may be more contentious than previous cycles due to the probable shift to a Democratic majority in the mid-term elections and war-related issues (in Iraq and Lebanon). Republicans seem to sense their weakness, so they are in attack mode. Expect very negative campaign barrages in the Fall.

The Congress members and their staff attempt to control the event, but, unlike the faux ‘town meetings’ produced for W and Dick, Congressional staffers can’t control who attends these events. The staff watches for banners and projectiles, however the peer pressure from other attendees restrains the behavior of the fringes (right, left, and off-the-wall).

Here are some tips for making your attendance at a public meeting hosted by your Congressional Representative effective and less stressful for everyone involved:

  • Clearly print your specific question on the cards provided. Refer to the title of legislation, particularly if the Congress member co-sponsored it. Do some homework.
  • Assume that the Congress member will not read aloud your rapier-like screed that starts “You $%*&#@ spineless coward…”
  • If you absolutely must communicate your screed to the Congress member and the audience, then bring a stack of leaflets and hand them out to the incoming audience. Include contact information, in case someone agrees with you.
  • Some people can’t resist loudly arguing, muttering insults, and shouting questions. The other attendees wrote down their questions and expect the Congress member to ignore the loudmouths and answer the next written question. Dissent means never having to say, “I’m an asshole, and so is everyone who agrees with me.”
  • Listen to the questions other people are asking. You may have a few narrow issues that push your buttons, but try to understand the other issues that may concern large segments of your community. How are the issues related?

July 1, 2006

Contribute to Giffords (AZ) and Madrid (NM)

Categories: Action, Campaigns
Author: charlieahern
Time: 9:53 am
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Two candidates for the US House of Representatives need your support:

In the 1st District in New Mexico, which includes Albuquerque, the state’s Attorney General, Patricia Madrid, campaigns against a long-term Christian-Republican incumbent. The incumbent has collected the fourth highest cash total from Tom DeLay’s ARMPAC campaign money-laundering operation. Because Madrid has a high profile in the state and this district went for Kerry in 2004, Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball considers this election a toss-up.

In the Arizona 8th district, including Tucson, State Senator Gabrielle Giffords is running for the Democratic Congressional nomination. Robert Reich mentioned her in his blog, so I made a campaign contribution. Sabato also rates this as a toss-up. Attacks by rightist Christian-Republicans on the remaining “moderates” in the party may sufficiently damage the party organization that it might not conduct a strong campaign in November. (As an indicator of the corruption in the Christian-Republican party, the right-wing candidate recently fired his campaign manager when reporters discovered the campaign manager’s conviction for sexually abusing teenage girls.)

The national Christian-Republican machine will pour money and negative attacks into both of these campaigns. Madrid’s district includes many Hispanic voters, so the attacks may not focus on anti-immigrant race-baiting. Arizona’s 8th district includes about 1/3 of Arizona’s border with Mexico. The rightists’ candidate, a former golf pro, already uses immigration/race as his wedge issue.

So, before you log off, please take a few minutes to contribute to Giffords and Madrid.

May 23, 2006

Fixer on the TX Supreme Court Admonished

Categories: Community, Campaigns
Author: charlieahern
Time: 9:46 pm
Reactions :2 comments

From the Austin (TX) Statesman (5/24/06): Texas Supreme Court Justice Admonished

For a glimpse of what we might expect from the political operatives appointed to the US Supreme Court by Bush the First and Bush the Second, consider;

Texas Supreme Court Justice Nathan Hecht crossed an ethical line last year when he quietly assured conservative leaders about high court nominee Harriet Miers’ views on religion and abortion, a judicial review panel concluded.

Hecht also erred in coordinating his advocacy of Miers, a controversial and ultimately unsuccessful nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court, with the White House providing daily reports of his media contacts and allowing administration officials to send reporters his way, according to a public admonition by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct.

In more than 120 interviews Hecht used his solid credibility as a Christian-Republican politician to drum up support for Miers. The White House even recruited him to lobby James Dobson, of Focus on the Family, who infamously stated “When you know some of the things that I know, that I probably shouldn’t know, you will understand why… I believe Harriet Miers will be a good justice.”

As we work our way through the primary season and approach the general elections in November, be sure to research the candidates for judge in your area. Do we really need another former prosecutor running our criminal courts? If Christian-Republicans control the judiciary from municipal courts to the US Supreme Court, where will America find merciful justice?

May 16, 2006

Reforms to encourage higher Turnout Elections

Categories: Campaigns, Progressives
Author: charlieahern
Time: 12:16 pm
Reactions :1 comment

An editorial in today’s Cincinnatti Enquirer, Top 10 Reasons to Vote Today, highlights a problem across the country; extremely low voter turnout in non-Presidential primary elections. As the editorial points out, primaries contested within only one party or in jurisdictions where registrations heavily favor one party become de facto general elections. In some places, turnout for primary elections may drop to the teens or single digits.

Here are three simple, cost-effective ways to increase voter turnout:

  • Make it possible and preferable for everyone to vote by mail.
  • Set the election deadline (or voting day) on Saturday.
  • Hold all primaries on the same day across the country.

Of course, the traditionalists of the Christian-Republican Party oppose general efforts to increase voter turnout, so election reform will attract opposition. Notice that the Enquirer only endorsed candidates in the Republican primary and did not propose any reforms intended to increase voter participation. So, was the Enquirer’s intention to increase voter turnout, or GOTV (Get Out The Vote) for their favored Republicans?

…so, why isn’t any Democrat running for Commonwealth Attorney in Kenton County, Kentucky? Too scared to lose?

Read the recent American Prospect special report on election reform; The New Ballot Box.

May 15, 2006

50 Simple Things…To Do Today.

Categories: Community, Reading, Action, Campaigns, Progressives
Author: charlieahern
Time: 10:15 pm
Reactions :No comments

A few years ago MoveOn.org published 50 Ways to Love Your Country. 50 Ways consisted of brief first-person accounts by progressive activists about how each became an activist. Each ‘way’ also included a few, brief MoveOn Tips of guidance. Recently, the less high-profile Earth*Works Action Network released 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Fight the Right. This is the latest in their 50 Simple Things book series. Between Ways and Things, I recommend 50 Simple Things. What it lacks in inspirational witness, it makes up for with some Background, several Things You Can Do, and lists of Resources for each ‘thing.’

Despite the title, the book does not simply focus on opposition to the rightist movement. It provides ideas about positive activities for progressives and liberals to address political, social and economic issues.

The suggested Things You Can Do are grouped under three headings; Simple Steps, It Takes an Effort, and For the Committed. These headings give the reader some sense of the level of commitment, in time and resources, that may be necessary to successfully complete an activity.

Each of the fifty activities usually begins with a fact or quotation, a Background section, some general information, Simple Things You Can Do, and a Resources section. If your attention wanders at the description of familiar ‘things-to-do,’ the authors provide red-meat quotations from some of the nastiest rightists; James Dobson, Ann Coulter, and Tom DeLay.

Thus instructed and inspired, I got involved in ‘thing-to-do’ #32, Volunteer for a campaign. So, Saturday I spent two hours waving a laser wand across call sheets to digitize the results of campaign phone banking earlier in the week

For ten bucks 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Fight the Right provides motivation and activities worthy of your time and energy. Buy it today…and do something new tomorrow.

50 Simple Things You Can Do to Fight the Right

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