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Virginia News Headlines: Monday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Monday, October 28.

*A year after Romney loss, GOP woes run even deeper

*First, admit the problem (E.J. Dionne, who I spotted yesterday at the Bill Clinton rally in Dale City, nails it in this column: “The wrong problem is the deficit. The right problem is sluggish growth and persistent unemployment.”)

*Poll: Democrat Mark Herring ahead in Virginia attorney general race

*Ken Cuccinelli’s fantastical vision of Terry McAuliffe’s spending plans

*A Non-Endorsement: In the Governor’s Race, None of the Above (Cuccinelli couldn’t even earn a Republican paper’s endorsement – in fact they RIPPED him as a “conservative extremist” – that has already endorsed him for statewide office once, and which endorsed Bush, Kilgore, McCain, McDonnell, Bolling, and Romney/Ryan. Enormous #FAIL for Cuccinelli.)

*A spinout on roads (“Cuccinelli’s plan to hand over road oversight to counties raises  financial and practical questions.”)

*Clinton urges voter turnout ahead of Nov. 5 election (“Former President Bill Clinton threw his political weight – and a little star power – behind Democratic gubernatorial nominee Terry McAuliffe in Richmond on Sunday at a homestretch event focused on getting out the vote.”)

*Bill Clinton and Terry McAuliffe, together again in four-day swing across Virginia (“Clinton told the audience that his friend would win over skeptics as governor…’a year from now, lots of people who voted against him will wonder what they were thinking on Election Day.'”)

*A president and his fun-loving sidekick: A bond as close as family

*Cuccinelli’s status as Virginia attorney general has complicated the race (“By not resigning to be a full-time candidate, he’s had a public stage – and found conflicts of interest.”)

*Terry McAuliffe’s big test: Turn out black voters

*A close, contentious race in Virginia’s 87th House District (David Ramadan is a corrupt extremist, kinda like Ken Cuccinelli, and needs to be unceremoniously booted out of office next Tuesday!)

*E. W. Jackson has history of financial woes (What is it with all these corrupt extremists in the Virginia Republican Party?!?)

*Sen. Rand Paul to Campaign for Ken Cuccinelli Monday in Fairfax (Rand Paul? You mean the extremist nutjob who voted to keep the government shut down and for the U.S. to default on its debt, thus ruining the economy? Oh yeah, THAT Rand Paul! LOL)

*Election 2013: Prince William a key swing county in race for governor

*Henrico a key swing county in governor’s race

*Both major parties losing the coalfields (Cuccinelli’s office sold out the people of Southwest Virginia to an out-of-state energy company. Plus, his economic policies would be ruinous for Southwest Virginia. Just a non starter all around.)

*Race for 17th District of House of Delegates seat pits familiar opponents (“Republican Chris Head and Democrat Freeda Cathcart also clashed in 2011.”)

*In latest Washington blowout, the bad outweighs the good

*A sunny, seasonable start to the week

Video: Bill Clinton Rallies Several Hundred for Virginia Democratic Ticket in Dale City

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I attended this afternoon’s rally for the Virginia Democratic ticket in Dale City. It was crowded, with around 450 people jammed into VFW Post 1503 on Minnieville Road, and people seemed to be fired up. I’m uploading my videos to YouTube now, and will post them here and in the comments section as they’re ready. First, here’s a short clip of Democratic Party of Virginia Chair Charniele Herring starting to speak about why she got into public service and why it’s so important to elect the Virginia Democratic ticket.



Check out the “flip” for video of the crowd cheering for Terry McAuliffe, and then Terry starting to introduce former President (and Governor, as repeatedly noted) Bill Clinton. Also check out the comments section for more videos.

Virginia News Headlines: Sunday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, October 27.

*Government shutdown was wake-up call for many young federal workers (“Disillusioned by furloughs and worried about budget cuts and pay freezes, they are being lured away.” Republicans, killing the government… quietly.)

*Exclusive: The feds have made 330,000 Obamacare subsidy calculations

*Attorney general: Herring (The Daily Press says, correctly, that “Mr. Obenshain, generally sticking to the GOP party line, has too often voted against individual freedom and in favor of intrusion in the lives of citizens – such as his votes in favor of a law mandating unnecessary ultrasound procedures for women seeking abortions, and in favor of voter ID laws that seem to be aimed less at detecting fraud than at discouraging voting among demographic groups that tend to lean Democratic.” Go Herring!)

*Attorney general candidate Mark Obenshain carries bulk of GOP’s hopes in Virginia races (Just remember, Obenshain has said repeatedly that Ken Cuccinelli is his MODEL Attorney General. That’s all you really need to know…to vote for Mark Herring, that is!)

*Two Loudoun Mayors, Former Trans. Sec. Back Herring (“The candidate for Virginia Attorney General wins praise for working across the aisle.”)

*National Republican group gives an additional $660K to Obenshain campaign for Virginia AG (It’s amazing, the Republicans are basically abandoning Cuccinelli and Jackson, going all out for Obenshain.)

*Obenshain claim about Herring misleading (“Mostly false.”)

*Cuccinelli Tests Conservatism Va. Governor Race (And it flunks.)

*McAuliffe, Cuccinelli spar over social issues (This campaign really has felt like Groundhog Day for weeks if not months now. We know their positions, we know who these guys are, let’s just vote already!)

*McAuliffe: Bipartisan solutions for state’s economic future

*Probe of gifts leaves McDonnell sidelined in Va. governor’s race (This is “news?” Man, the Post is really hurtin’ today.)

*Terry McAuliffe would struggle to satisfy all of his donors’ desires as Virginia governor (Uhhhh…hello? First of all, every politician has donors with “desires.” Second, that includes Ken Cuccinelli, whose donors include all kinds of unsavory characters like the Koch brothers and Pat Robertson. Third, what is the point of this article? Disappointing.)

*How much did McAuliffe know about annuity investment? (And the answer by the reporter is… absolutely no clue, just pure speculation. Another fine article by the Kaplan/Bezos/Washington Post. Ugh.)

*Endorsements for Northern Virginia’s House of Delegates (Whoops, they admit that they inadvertently forgot to publish their endorsements in two important races. They then proceed to botch one, get one right, again obsessed with the transportation bill. Whatever. This paper has become a complete joke.)

*Video interviews | Hear what the candidates have to say

*Schapiro: McAuliffe tentatively readies for governing

*Candidates for governor share stage in Richmond (“Despite event rules stipulating that each candidate answer the same question without rebuttals, Democrat Terry McAuliffe, Republican Ken Cuccinelli and Libertarian Robert C. Sarvis drew stark contrasts for voters on a wide range of issues as the campaign enters its final stretch.”)

*Hot race for 12th District House of Delegates seat (Go James Harder!)

*Getting ready  for a brilliant future (“One in eight children in the commonwealth isn’t ready to learn upon reaching school age. Early education is helping to improve academic results.”)

*D.C. area forecast: Still sunny, still cool, and still quite nice

Pat McCrory Gives Cooch Endorsement, GOTV “Help” and Lessons in How Not to Govern

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He doesn’t get it, but NC Governor Pat McCrory is actually giving instruction to Ken Cuccinelli on how not to govern. Along the way, he teaches how not to be a human being and how not to be an ethical person. Now we learn that during the government shutdown he was the only governor in the entire US to stop processing new applications for food stamps AND to stop making food stamp (TANF) payments.

That’s right, NC stood alone. Not only did Pat McCrory deny food stamps to hungry North Carolinians (despite the president’s guarantee the states would be reimbursed after the shutdown ended), but also he lied about it to three members of Congress, Congresspersons David Price, Mel Watts and G.K. Butterfield. They wrote:

“Your assertion that you did not discontinue the operation of the TANF program is simply not credible…Your administration did not merely ‘notify’ the service providers that federal funding for Work First programs may not be available in November…The notice that your administration sent to county social services directors on October 10th expressly directed them to cease processing new applications for benefits ‘until federal funds become available.’ In addition, the notice state unequivocally that the state would be ‘unable to make any Work First Family Assistance payments in November 2013’ absent congressional action.”

The letter said the McCrory took a similar action on the WIC program for pregnant women and babies before reversing itself.

So, McCrory rejected the expansion of Medicaid even though it would cost NC nothing for three years and only 10% thereafter. He cut living human beings from unemployment insurance, food and health care, but also he exploited the government shutdown to further starve food stamp and WIC recipients.

Ignoring all of that, McCrory attempted this week to get out the vote for Ken Cuccinelli anyway. At this point you might be tempted to erupt with BWAHAHAS (about McCrory’s ego). But I would caution: First, blocking people from receiving the food they need is serious business. Second, they fooled North Carolinians and could possibly fool Virginians…unless you work to increase Terry McAuliffe’s margin. Ten days to go. Don’t North Carolina Virginia.

Richard Nixon and Louis XIV Got Nothing on Ken Cuccinelli

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(So, Ken Cuccinelli combines extreme right-wing lunacy with slimy corruption (CONSOL Energy, Jonnie Williams, Bobby Thompson, etc, etc.), a complete lack of ethics. The worst of all worlds. – promoted by lowkell)

We’ve all read about Ken Cuccinelli’s ethics problems.  He’s taken a lot of money from the Star Scientific folks, bought their stock, and didn’t report it.  He’s tried to dodge by saying that the problem in Virginia is a bad ethics law, not bad people.  It’s the legislature’s fault, he says, not his, and there ought to be a special session to fix the law.  But he’s swept under the rug that his Office is gutting part of the statute with a surprising (the kindest adjective that would fit here) interpretation. It’s an interpretation that shows his disdain for government ethics and his kinship with folks who think compliance with law is for other people.  

Virginia’s Conflict of Interest Act says that senior officials like Mr. Cuccinelli are filers who have to disclose investments and gifts.  Each state agency has to offer training on the Act to its filers, and each state filer has to get trained by his agency at least every two years.  Pretty clear.  

But, when a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request asked who in the Attorney General’s (AG’s) Office got trained during the Cuccinelli years, things fogged up pretty quick.  A response on Attorney General Cuccinelli’s letterhead stonewalled.  It said, first, that the FOIA Act didn’t apply to the AG and his Office, and secondly that, while “each state agency” had to provide training on ethics, the AG’s office was not a state agency. No documents were produced.

The assertion that the AG’s office was exempt from the FOIA attracted press interest, and was quickly withdrawn. The second assertion – that the AG’s Office is not a state agency — slid under the radar, at least up to now.

Why the stonewall on the FOIA request? It’s hard to get past the suspicion that the AG’s Office didn’t want to come clean on ethics training. It took two more FOIA requests and months of delay, but in the end the AG’s office coughed up documents showing that during the Cuccinelli’s years as AG only one person in the AG’s office has been trained on the Act’s every-two-year schedule and Cuccinelli himself has never been trained.  

The subsequent FOIA requests asked that the AG produce any court decision, opinion of the attorney general or other authority that would support the assertion that the AG office is not a state agency. The AG’s response: “no such document could be found.” It nonetheless stuck to its position that for purposes of the Conflicts Act training requirement “this Office is not classified as a ‘state agency.'” It had two reasons. Neither holds up.

First, the AG’s office asserts that the AG’s office is not a state agency because the Virginia Constitution prescribes the requirements for election to the office of Attorney General. This is not persuasive. If being mentioned in the Constitution was enough for an agency to ignore the training requirement, the State Corporation Commission wouldn’t be training its filers, but it does. (Their letter is at the end of this post.) Second, it is silly for the AG’s Office to point to the statute that creates it to say it is not a “state agency,” when that law proceeds on the assumption that it is an “agency.” In particular, that Chapter of the Virginia Code says that:

• the AG’s Office may not promulgate regulations “when another state agency is authorized” to do so.  Va Code § 2.2-520(B)(2);

• the AG’s Office is authorized to refer discrimination complaints “to another agency” (Va Code § 2.2-520(B)(1)); and

• filings with the AG’s Office affect “the time limit for filing with other agencies.” Va Code § 2.2-522.

The Virginia Administrative Procedure Act defines “agency” in terms that cover the AG’s Office (see Va Code § 2.2-4001 and §§2.2-520 (B)(2) and 59.1-9.10 (M)). Indeed, the Virginia Administrative Code lists the Department of Law as “Agency 45.”

If more is needed, consider that the Conflicts Act is aimed at providing standards that are “uniform throughout the Commonwealth,” that the Act creates “a single body of law applicable to all state and local government officers and employees,” that it is aimed at assuring citizens that public officers will be guided by law, that the Act is to “be liberally construed to accomplish [its] purpose,” and that with rare exceptions that don’t apply here the Conflicts Act “shall supersede all general and special acts and charter provisions which purport to deal with matters covered by this chapter . . . .” Va Code § 2.2-3100. The position the AG’s Office asserts would frustrate each of these aims.

What’s really important here is not that Mr. Cuccinelli is a bad lawyer, running an office that takes indefensible positions for short term advantage. It is that he doesn’t care about ethics. Someone who cared about citizens’ having confidence in their elected officials wouldn’t strain to cripple the law’s training requirement. And, even if he were somehow convinced that the Conflicts Act could not be read to require the AG’s Office to train its filers, someone who cared about government ethics would voluntarily require filers in his office to get training at least as good as that offered to other state filers.

Mr. Cuccinelli has done none of this. He seems to think that he has cornered the market on morality and ethics and that it would be a waste of his valuable time getting trained on what the law says on morality and ethics.

In that regard, he’s not alone.

• “L’Etat, c’est moi.” Louis XIV.

“[W]hen the president does it, that means it is not illegal.” Richard M. Nixon.




Appendix

Provisions of the Virginia State and Local Government Conflict of Interests Act that speak to the purpose of the Act and that require training on the Act are excerpted below.

§ 2.2-3100. Policy; application; construction.

The General Assembly, recognizing that our system of representative government is dependent in part upon (i) citizen legislative members representing fully the public in the legislative process and (ii) its citizens maintaining the highest trust in their public officers and employees, finds and declares that the citizens are entitled to be assured that the judgment of public officers and employees will be guided by a law that defines and prohibits inappropriate conflicts and requires disclosure of economic interests. To that end and for the purpose of establishing a single body of law applicable to all state and local government officers and employees on the subject of conflict of interests, the General Assembly enacts this State and Local Government Conflict of Interests Act so that the standards of conduct for such officers and employees may be uniform throughout the Commonwealth.

This chapter shall supersede all general and special acts and charter provisions which purport to deal with matters covered by this chapter except that the provisions of §§ 15.2-852, 15.2-2287, 15.2-2287.1, and 15.2-2289 and ordinances adopted pursuant thereto shall remain in force and effect. The provisions of this chapter shall be supplemented but not superseded by the provisions on ethics in public contracting in Article 6 (§ 2.2-4367 et seq.) of Chapter 43 of this title and ordinances adopted pursuant to § 2.2-3104.2 regulating receipt of gifts.

This chapter shall be liberally construed to accomplish its purpose.

§ 2.2-3128. Semiannual orientation course.

Each state agency shall offer at least semiannually to each of its state filers an orientation course on this chapter, on ethics in public contracting pursuant to Article 6 (§ 2.2-4367 et seq.) of Chapter 43 of this title, if applicable to the filer, and on any other applicable regulations that govern the official conduct of state officers and employees.

§ 2.2-3129. Records of attendance.

Each state agency shall maintain records indicating the specific attendees, each attendee’s job title, and dates of their attendance for each orientation course offered pursuant to § 2.2-3128 for a period of not less than five years after each course is given. These records shall be public records subject to inspection and copying consistent with § 2.2-3704.

§ 2.2-3130. Attendance requirements.

Except as set forth in § 2.2-3131, each state filer shall attend the orientation course required in § 2.2-3128, as follows:

1. For a state filer who holds a position with the agency on January 1, 2004, not later than December 31, 2004 and, thereafter, at least once during each consecutive period of two calendar years commencing on January 1, 2006.

2. For a person who becomes a state filer with the agency after January 1, 2004, within two months after he or she becomes a state filer and at least once during each consecutive period of two calendar years commencing on the first odd-numbered year thereafter.

As to the State Corporation Commission and training, they advised by letter of September 6, 2013 that:

“Virginia Code § 2.2-3114 provides that ‘. . . members of the State Corporation Commission . . . and other persons occupying such offices or positions of trust or employment in state government . . . shall file, as a condition to assuming office or employment, a disclosure statement of their personal interests and such other information as is specified on the form . . . .’ In accordance therewith the Commission members and a number of additional Commission employees are designated by the Commission to file the required disclosure statements every January. The Commission members and these same Commission employees take the orientation course offered by the Office of Attorney General at least once during each consecutive two-calendar-year period. The Commission maintains records of each attendee’s name and the date of their participation in the course.” (Ellipses in the original.)

WaPo’s Virginia Editorial Writer Fails Yet Again

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(UPDATE: Ha, they must have read this, as they just updated with endorsements in the two districts they’d missed earlier. Bizarre, nonsensical endorsement in the 50th; good endorsement in the 51st. – promoted by lowkell)

I’ve written repeatedly that the Washington Post’s Virginia editorial writer, long-time international correspondent Lee Hockstader, has little if any knowledge of Virginia politics (e.g., lives in DC to my knowledge and almost never – ever? – crosses the Potomac Ocean River to check it out, let alone attend political events). For instance, in January 2010 I pointed out Hockstader’s editorial to the effect that since Democrats won a crucial victory, increasing their majority to 22-18 in the state Senate, so obviously now Democrats are “in deep trouble” (according to Hockstader, the margin was “wafer-thin,” hence his absurd conclusion). He claimed in the same editorial that all 40 Virginia Senate seats would be up THAT November (of 2010), which of course was off by a year. Details details.

Anyway, I bring all this up today because Hockstader’s been a busy beaver, churning out the Post’s endorsements for Northern Virginia House of Delegates races. There are just a few problems with them you might want to be aware of.

1. For some strange reason, Hockstader completely missed two important districts with contested races – the   50th (Democrat Richard Cabellos vs. Republican Jackson Miller) and the 51st (Democrat Reed Heddleston vs. Republican Rich Anderson)- even though he claimed to be doing “endorsements in Northern Virginia’s contested House races.” Well, those two are most certainly contested, and they’re both certainly in Northern Virginia (Prince William County to be exact; wonder if Hockstader’s ever been there). Also note that Tim Kaine won the 50th last year by 9 points over George Allen (as did Barack Obama over Mitt Romney), so this is definitely a competitive district. Kaine also won the 51st last year (as did President Obama), making this district competitive as well. Meanwhile, Democrat Reed Heddleston has nearly matched Anderson in fundraising, and Jeff Schapiro report that Anderson is being targeted by Democrats for a possible pickup in 10 days. Yet for whatever reason (cluelessness?), neither the 50th nor the 51st district merits Hockstader’s fine “analysis.”

2. As Catherine S. Read writes in the comments section to Hockstader’s final endorsements, the “over-the-top” endorsement of Republican Tom Rust, “while relegating his challenger {Democrat Jennifer Boysko} to not even a full sentence – a label actually – shows a glaring bias in favor of the status quo.” Read adds that Hockstader’s “slanted and dismissive endorsement [of Rust] is so reflective of exactly what is wrong in Virginia…back-slapping backroom old boy BS,” and that it completely ignores Rust’s vote for anti-women’s-health-clinic legislation “that is closing clinics around Virginia.” Great, huh?

3. As commenter “terje1” writes, the Post/Hockstader “seems to have decided that the only test they have for Republican incumbents is having supported the transportation bill – as if backing one piece of reasonable legislation overrides every other extremist bill pursued by the Republicans in the legislature.” This commenter adds:

Virtually every one of the Republicans being endorsed for re-election by the Post also voted in lockstep for every far right Republican social and economic proposal. They do not deserve to be rewarded for supporting transvaginal probes, closing women’s health clinics or blocking a qualified gay judge. This history is too important to overlook in making endorsements and voters’ decisions…Republicans don’t deserve to be rewarded for their extremism. Voting Democratic for House of Delegates is the only way to send a clear message about the direction the Commonwealth should head in.

So true. Yet over and over again, Lee Hockstader breezily dismisses examples of that “extremism.” For instance, Hockstader argues that right-wingnut Mark Dudenhefer “was one of a handful of lawmakers to speak out against an otherwise highly qualified judicial nominee who happened to be gay,” which should alone disqualify him from an endorsement. Yet Hockstader waves his hand and blows that one off, claiming that it’s overridden by – wait for it – Dudenhefer’s “pragmatic” and even “courag[ous]” “vote in favor of the transportation funding bill.” Seriously? So it’s ok to be a bigot, as long as you vote for a (flawed) transportation bill? Gotcha.

Likewise, Hockstader endorses right wingnut Jim LeMunyon, again based on his vote for the transportation bill (which Hockstader says “bucked right-wing orthodoxy”), even though LeMunyon is a Tea Partier through and through, voting for – among other things – the infamous “trans-vaginal ultrasound” mandate. Yeah, that one really “bucked right-wing orthodoxy!” Heh.

It basically goes on and on like this, where Republicans are given a pass on all their other sins, as long as they voted for the transportation bill. Whether you like the transportation bill, dislike it, or have mixed feelings about it (as I do), I simply don’t see how it’s a well-thought-out endorsement when all you’re doing is repeatedly citing that one bill as significant enough to override everything else.

Yet that’s exactly what Hockstader does, again and again. Of course, this guy has a long history of weird endorsements. One of my first disagreements with him wasn’t so much THAT he endorsed Harris Miller over Jim Webb, but the mush-brained thinking as to WHY he did – because supposedly Webb’s “somewhat strident populism on trade policy tends toward xenophobic sloganeering and business-bashing,” and that Webb supposedly had “given scant time and attention to issues ranging from education to tax policy to immigration.” WTF? I’m sorry, but I know Jim Webb, and whatever else you think about him, he doesn’t give “scant time and attention” to issues. Hockstader also completely overlooked the fact that Webb was a stronger candidate, purely from an electoral point of view, to go up against George Allen. Why is it that a bunch of grassroots activists, who I’m sure Hockstader holds in utter contempt, were able to figure that one out, but that he wasn’t? Uhhhh.

Finally, I’d just add that although I understand why Democrats – particularly challengers – like to tout the “Washington Post endorsement” (even though there’s not much evidence, other than perhaps Creigh Deeds in 2009, that it has any “juice” in general elections), I really wish that at least Democratic incumbents would stop giving any credence to Lee Hockstader’s uninformed, clueless drivel. All you’re doing is encouraging him, when we all should be doing the exact opposite.

Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, October 27. Also, check out President Obama’s weekly address, in which he discusses frustrations over the Healthcare.gov website, and efforts to repair it “in the coming weeks,” with people working “overtime, 24/7.” Obama also reminds everyone that Healthcare.gov isn’t the only way to apply for coverage.

*HealthCare.gov fixes won’t be done until end of November, adviser says

*Immigration Poses Threat of Another Republican Rift

*JPMorgan to pay $5.1B in mortgage settlement

*Outside attorney appointed for VCU in McDonnell probe

*Saturday in-person absentee voting slated next 2 weekends

*Political candidate steals copyrighted puppy pic for campaign ad (“If there’s one thing Virginia GOP gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli hates more than sodomy, it’s intellectual property law.” But he DOES love puppy mills! Ugh.)

*Governors candidates are high energy and deeply divided on the issues

*Odd campaign leads to odd endorsements

*Seven statewide candidates appear jointly at NAACP forum

*Ben Tribbett: You Can Feel Good About a Vote for Terry McAuliffe

*Final endorsements for Northern Virginia’s House of Delegates (Well, at least Lee Hockstader – er, the Post – got 2 of 4 right.)

*New Virginia laws fire up abortion debate in state’s governor’s race

*Ken Cuccinelli lashes out at Terry McAuliffe (That’s all the angry, desperate Cooch has: lash out. And lie, of course. Pitiful.)

*Va. taxpayers are paying thousands each month in Gov. McDonnell probe

*Facing $140 million deficit, Fairfax school board seeks taxing authority

*A cool, but pleasant, weekend ahead

*First-time manager Matt Williams has one priority: Reach the World Series

It’s Simple: One Gov. Candidate Believes in Education; the Other Doesn’t.

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The subtitle of a recent Washington Post article (“Virginia gubernatorial candidates take different approaches to education”) might well have been: How to dumb down reports of flaming radicalism by happy talk. The article says the differences in the two’s “approaches” are pronounced. The problem is that Ken Cuccinelli doesn’t actually have an educational approach, platform or policy. Being a privateer isn’t having an education policy. It’s education system exploitation. It’s a school piracy policy which seizes the assets of publicly funded buildings, equipment, and student dollars. But don’t call that education. Cuccinelli represents the gutting of education in Virginia. Cuccinelli doesn’t know what education is. Importantly, he supports the opposite of it.

There never were good intentions about the Cuccinelli approach to “starving the beast” for Grover Norquist, instead of really educating Virginia’s children. It is Cooch, after all, who wants to use schools to indoctrinate kids in the most extreme pseudo-religious hatred for other human beings. It is Cooch who wants to tell educators what they can and cannot discover in science labs. It is he who rides herd on scientists he has a beef with, stifling any intellectual inquiry as he does so. It is Cooch who wants Virginia to face the climate future blindly rather than face up to and be ready for their climate futures. It is Cooch who aspires to be climate denier-in-chief for Virginia. And it is Cooch who wants to teach creationism and rewrite history books. This is the stuff of the Dark Ages. But it is not education policy.  

Every dollar siphoned off in corporate profits is a dollar not used to educate children. But schools-for-profit never were about real education anyway. They are about privateers and profiteers putting their hands out and interrupting the flow of tax dollars to schools.

Kids matter. Public schools matter. If Virginians support public education, there is only one candidate for them, Terry McAuliffe. Only one wants to infuse capital, sorely lacking (and lagging at 2009 levels) in public education. The other wants to use your tax dollars to fund for-profit companies and churches. The latter is NOT public education, or any approximation of it. Don’t let a history and science revisionist pretend to educate the children of Virginia.  He doesn’t know the meaning of such a serious and important responsibility.

Video: Northam Campaign Hits Jackson for Saying “Sin” Causes Birth Defects

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And Jackson’s response? He claims it’s all a lie, even though he wrote it himself in his book. It’s just like his ticketmates, Ken Cuccinelli and Mark Obenshain, both of whom now claim to be OUTRAGED (!!) that they’re being accused of saying and doing…exactly what they said and did. Uh guys? Maybe you should have thought of that BEFORE you said and did all that horrible, crazy, intolerant, extreme stuff?

Hearing Clinton Speak Is, by Itself, Worth Going Out of One’s Way For

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( – promoted by lowkell)

There are good political reasons to attend the Clinton-McAuliffe campaign events. But even if there weren’t….

Toward the close of last year’s campaign, at a rally in Roanoke, I heard Bill Clinton speak. I was extremely impressed. Really impressed. Even more than I’d been by his speech to the Democratic convention– a speech that (with the possible exception of Michele Obama’s) was the high-point of the convention.

Bill Clinton is not only likely the most gifted politician of our times, but he is also a great teacher. He spoke for about an hour on that occasion in Roanoke, and he was engaging and clear and persuasive, and he laid out with unusual clarity a whole host of issues– all done in a way that strengthened the candidate in whose support he had come, Barack Obama.

In the coming days, Clinton will be speaking around Virginia in support of his friend, Terry McAuliffe. Since the candidate himself will be there, unlike in Roanoke, and Clinton will be the endorser and not the surrogate, there will be doubtless less of Clinton than at the event last year. But Bill Clinton will not be short-changed, and I think Terry McAuliffe is too smart to worry about being upstaged when he’s got someone like Clinton to rally the troops for him. So those who attend these rallies will almost certainly get to witness a worthwhile and memorable Clinton performance.

Besides which, as I learned at the Virginia Democratic state convention in June, 2012, Terry McAuliffe is himself capable of giving a very powerful, very effective political speech. Indeed, in terms of the stem-winder variety of political oratory, McAuliffe may be the stronger of the two. His speech at the state convention last year was one of the most rousing political speeches I’ve ever heard, in person or otherwise.

So I encourage y’awl to consider attendance at the following events as worth your while. It’s worth doing for the usual political reasons– to support the Democratic ticket in this campaign home-stretch. But even if there were no election, just hearing Bill Clinton speak, in person, in the context of the political battles of our times, would be reason enough.

Here’s what an email I got says is the schedule (I think this list is incomplete, and I hope that those with additional information will provide it, below, in the comments):

Sunday, October 27, 2013

DALE CITY EVENT

WHAT: “Putting Jobs First” Event with President Bill Clinton and Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe

WHO: President Bill Clinton, Terry McAuliffe

WHEN: Sunday, October 27, 2013 at 12:30 PM EDT

Public Access time: To be announced

Press Access time: To Be Announced

WHERE: VFW Post 1503 – 14631 Minnieville Road, Dale City, VA 22193

CROWD ACCESS INFORMATION: Tickets will be available to the public on a first-come, first-served basis beginning at 10:00am on Wednesday, October 23 at the following location:

Democratic Party of Virginia Office

4349 Ridgewood Center Drive, Suite 102

Woodbridge, VA 22193

RICHMOND EVENT

WHAT: “Putting Jobs First” Event with President Bill Clinton and Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe

WHO: President Bill Clinton, Terry McAuliffe

WHEN: Sunday, October 27, 2013 at 4:45 PM EDT

Public Access time: To be announced

Press Access time: To Be Announced

WHERE: Richmond Community High School – 201 E Brookland Park Blvd., Richmond, VA 23222

CROWD ACCESS INFORMATION: Tickets will be available to the public on a first-come, first-served basis beginning at 10:00am on Wednesday, October 23 at the following location:

Democratic Party of Virginia Office

1710 East Franklin Street

Richmond, VA 23223

HAMPTON EVENT

WHAT: “Putting Jobs First” Event with President Bill Clinton and Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe

WHO: President Bill Clinton, Terry McAuliffe

WHEN: Sunday, October 27, 2013 at 7:45 PM EDT

Public Access time: To be announced

Press Access time: To Be Announced

WHERE: Y.H. Thomas Community Center – 1300 Thomas St., Hampton, VA 23669