A Watershed Election Year

L.A. Progressive:
By Dick Price and Sharon Kyle —

The several political or at least politically tinged events we attended this week showed us that the momentum for change is running fever pitch here in Los Angeles. Clearly, chickens have come home to roost for the woeful Bush Administration and the failed right-wing policies supporting it. Democratic candidates up and down the slate stand to benefit.

Lined Up on the Sidewalk in Pasadena
At Friday night’s opening of Pasadena’s United Democratic Headquarters (UDH), folks were lined up six deep on the sidewalk out front on Lake Avenue to hear the likes of LA County Democratic Party Chair Eric Bauman, Congressional candidate Russ Warner, and State Senate candidate Carol Liu rally the overflow crowd.

John Gallogly, our friend on the UDH steering committee, said that fund-raising for the headquarters has gone so well that his powerful group is considering supporting a “Red Counties” strategy, renting buses to take precinct walkers from Pasadena out to Palmdale or Riverside or other outlying regions to help Democratic candidates win races in traditionally Republican districts.

“Look at all these people. We’ll get more volunteers than we can use here in Pasadena,” John said. “If we could pick a couple places not too far away, we could make a difference there, too.”

Our Northeast Democratic Club is working on opening its headquarters in Highland Park. Tony Scudellari and club president Bill Rumble are selecting a location, probably somewhere on Figueroa Avenue, and heading up fundraising efforts. Although our section of Los Angeles is about as blue as blue can be, turnout is often quite low—just 7% for one recent city council race. Rather than pursue a “Red States, Red Counties” strategy, our club will focus on engaging more of the local populace in the electoral process.

Already, several key Democrats — Assemblymembers Kevin de Leon and Anthony Portantino, LA Councilmembers Ed Reyes and Jose Huizar — have kicked in to fund the headquarters, but there are fewer deep pockets here than in Pasadena, so we’ll need to rely on smaller home-based fundraising parties.

Stepping on the Roses in Lafayette Square
Thursday night, we attended a barbecue for State Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, hosted by Reggie Jones-Sawyer, whose spacious lawn was packed with Democrats from throughout Southern California. Organizers were expecting 50 guests, and the turnout was easily double that.

Sharon ran into Linda and Bobby Jones, old friends from two decades ago when they organized BAPAC — Black American Political Association of California — in the San Fernando Valley. Linda, a school board member in Palmdale, is running for the open Assembly seat in the 36th Assembly District—one of those traditionally Republican strongholds that are in play in this very hopeful year.

Bobby, a high school teacher and minister in Palmdale, says the Bush Administration’s mortgage crisis, soaring gas prices, and economic downturn have hit his region especially hard. “Even with the long commute, lots of people moved out there because they could afford to buy. But now every block has an abandoned house,” he said. “People are looking for a change — people who wouldn’t have thought to vote for a Democrat in the past.”

We eagerly signed up to help Linda’s campaign, either by organizing a fund-raiser here in Mt. Washington or by getting a bus full of precinct walkers out to her district.

While at the event, we ran into another candidate for the California Assembly, John MacMurray. MacMurray is running in the 72nd A.D. This north Orange County district has a growing Democratic population but he could use some help. If you are in that area, lend a hand.

We also ran into Cynthia Loo and Lori Ann Jones, two Superior Court candidates we’ve come to know in recent months. Sharon is halfway through her law studies at the People’s College of Law — where Cynthia serves as a volunteer law professor — and our surveys have shown that LA Progressive readers are especially thirsty for information about judicial races. Because we support these two candidates, we’re planning a fund-raising event for them as well. Look for more on that in coming weeks.

Around the political speeches, we also talked with Henry Vandermeir, president of the California Democratic Council, and Ahjamu Makalani, Brad Parker, and David Sonnenborn from the state party’s Progressive Caucus about ways we can ramp up our work on the CDC’s newsletter and support communications for the Progressive Caucus.

The Rub
The Rub, of course, is time. We’ve both got pretty demanding day jobs and kids to raise and commutes to make. In this fabulous year, with its real hope for fundamental political change — yes, we know Obama supported the FISA bill, but we think we know why, too — we could find progressive political activities to occupy our every single waking moment. (Friends do ask if we ever sleep.)

But we think we’ve got something going here with the LA Progressive, something that both feeds our own burning need to support change in our society and also — at least to judge from the response we get everywhere we go—supports others in making that change happen.

So, we’ll keep looking for ways to leverage our e-zine and weekly digital newsletter, forming alliances and recruiting new writers wherever we can (check out our new Florida correspondent, Dick’s Dad).

We also will keep looking for ways to make this enterprise at least pay for itself. You see on our website that we’ve got Google and Amazon ads in place, but we’ll need lots more traffic to the site for that to cover our costs. We’re also thinking of approaching compatible progressive political candidates and officeholders for display ads on our site and in our newsletter. It seems that they might want to reach our audience.

In the meantime, we’re having a ball — though we’ve just agreed that one night a week, each and every week, will be “romance night.” Just us. No email. No articles. No phone calls. So don’t bother us that night, whichever night that turns out to be.

Dick Price & Sharon Kyle
Editor & Publisher, LA Progressive

How the 31st was won

Christopher Arellano and Yosi Sergant both gained 61 votes in the 31st Congressional District Obama Caucus and the tie was broken by a coin toss.

Congratulations Chris Arellano the winner of the coin toss. I believe there were 167 total votes and John Gallogly showed a strong third place finish.

Actor Mimi Kennedy Explains Los Angeles Voting Confusion

More Video’s coming at the Video The Vote YouTube Channel

Also Check out: Brad Blog the Best Source for Election Protection News

VIDEO EXCLUSIVE: Election Integrity Expert Mark Crispin Miller Says ‘Fringe Movement’ Within Republican Party Is ‘Dismantling Democracy’

Says Movement ‘Has Been Destroying The Voting System On Every Conceivable Front’
Adds That Even A ‘Cursory Study’ Of The 2004 Election ‘Makes It Abundantly Clear That The Election Was Stolen’

Via the Brad Blog: Guest Blogged by Alan Breslauer

Election integrity expert and author of Fooled Again, Mark Crispin Miller, made some remarkable comments while speaking to the LA Election Protection Task Force last night. Robert Carillo Cohen, producer of Hacking Democracy, was also a featured speaker at the event.

After covering some preliminary matters, Miller retold the story of his post 2004 election encounter with John Kerry when the Democratic candidate admitted that he believed the presidential election was stolen. This shouldn’t surprise anyone since, as Miller states:

And believe me, a cursory study of the evidence makes it abundantly clear that the election was stolen and it wasn’t even that close.

Which ultimately leads Miller to conclude that Kerry is in denial:

Because if you really do accept what happened, you realize that it is a catastrophe, it’s an emergency. And it’s something that a guy like John Kerry or Al Gore is simply not built to deal with, right? Because if you come to terms with what went down, you realize that it is an attack on American democracy. Business as usual can’t simply continue. We gotta do something. We gotta hit the barricades.

But resistance to the idea that American democracy is under attack goes far beyond Kerry and Gore. Miller believes the way to break through this resistance is to:

keep publicizing, to keep spreading the word, to keep making clear that it is not just this little thing here or that little thing there, we’re talking about a fringe movement that has taken over the Republican party that has been dismantling democracy, that has been destroying the voting system on every conceivable front, not just the machines. They are even messing with the census. They are preventing another census from being taken because if you have census data you can track this stuff more easily.

Finally, Miller concludes by going over a 12-step approach to reforming our elections.


WCW Los Angeles Forum: Shut Down Guantanamo!

Update: Tues., Jan. 8th, 4-6 p.m., hear Michael Rapkin & Sunsara Taylor with host Michael Slate on KPFK (90.7 FM).

wcw

Witness Torture

Thurs., Jan. 10th, 7:00 p.m.
Echo Park United Methodist Church
1226 N. Alvarado Blvd. (one block north of Sunset)
Los Angeles

Join us on Thursday, Jan. 10th at 7 p.m. for the forum “Shut Down Guantanamo! Drive Out the Bush Regime” on the eve of the International Day of Action to Shut Down Guantanamo.

Speakers will include:

Michael Rapkin, Marina del Rey lawyer who has represented an “enemy
combatant” in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. His client was imprisoned for five years
without charges or trial, and was tortured. Michael met with his client in
Guantanamo. He is a member of both the Union and Foundation Boards of the
ACLU. He will discuss the conditions in Guantanamo, including torture, lack
of basic protections, and the assault on the U.S. Constitution and Bill of
Rights.

Dennis Loo, sociology professor at CalPoly Pomona and co-editor of “Impeach the
President: The Case Against Bush & Cheney”. As a member of The World Can’t
Wait’s National Steering Committee, Dennis created the “Declare It Now - Wear
Orange” campaign. He will speak about the importance of individuals taking
personal responsibility for acting daily and publicly through DIN, and about the
difference each and every individual who does this makes in changing the dynamic
in society.

Sunsara Taylor, writer for Revolution newspaper and World Can’t Wait National
Advisory Board member, who occasionally spars with Bill O’Reilly. She will
address the critical moment that we face with the revelation of the CIA’s
destruction of torture tapes. Will the people in this country be silent and
accept this as the new norm? Or will millions speak out and reverse the direction
that the Bush administration, and the Democrats whoare complicit, are taking
society?

Actor and activist John Heard will read from the powerful new book, “Poems from
Guantanamo”.

A $5 donation will be requested at the door. No one will be turned away for lack
of funds. For more information, please call World Can’t Wait - LA at
323-462-4771, or e-mail us at worldcantwait_la@yahoo.com.

Cindy Sheehan & White Rose Coalition: Jan 1,2008 Rose Parade

Cindy Sheehan, her family and numerous others will be in Pasadena this coming Monday and Tuesday. The time for Impeachment and Ending the War/Occpuation is now…Media publicity for the White Rose Coalition is truly taking off. Come and be a part of history in the making..

Download the flyer with all the details