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Getting What They Really Paid For

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“Koch brothers” has morphed into a shorthand description of a consortium consortium of greedy 1-percenters, which bought and paid for the right wingers.

My reading of the latest used tea leaves is that they’ve lost control of what they bought and paid for, and are now officially afraid.

They should be.

If the baggers manage to tank the economy completely, all the coal and gas industries are going to stop making money. All of the their investments in stocks and bonds are going to lose significant value. The value of their mega plex homes will drop like a rock. When United States goes under, we will take the world with us: all of their money that they’ve squirreled away in the Caymen’s Islands will be worth what they are to the human race.

Zero.  

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, October 11.

*NBC/WSJ poll: Shutdown debate damages GOP (“The Republican Party has been badly damaged in the ongoing government shutdown and debt limit standoff, with a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finding that a majority of Americans blame the GOP for the shutdown, and with the party’s popularity declining to its lowest level.” And boy do they deserve it!)

*No deal but hints of progress after Obama, GOP talk (The Teapublican hostage takers continue to hold the country hostage. Why? Because they are angry extremists, obsessed with their hated “Obamacare,” ensconced in safe districts, and living in a delusional echo chamber of their own making.)

*Shrunken paychecks turn up anxiety for the furloughed

*Shutdown’s effects begin to ripple out (It’s only going to keep getting worse. Thanks Teapublicans.)

*Boehner is playing to win (Yep, and he apparently doesn’t care that the country is losing, big time.)

*A Republican Party no one could control (“The breakdown of party discipline coupled with the rise of an extreme ideology are the twin forces propelling the current crisis.”)

*D.C. climate will shift in 2047, researchers say; tropics will feel unprecedented change first (Bottom line: We need to phase out fossil fuels fast, as in ASAP!)

*Last debate in Va. governor’s race won’t include Libertarian Robert Sarvis (“The station said that Sarvis came in at an average of 9 percent and therefore would not qualify under debate rules worked out between the major-party candidates.”)

*Cuccinelli and McAuliffe trade blows at forum (I love how newspapers “report” – 95% of the forum was NOT the candidates “trading blows,” yet the other 5% is what the media focuses on. Why is that? Because it sells more papers?)

*Doug Wilder endorses Terry McAuliffe for governor

*Northam: EPA rules on coal-fired plants “a bit more stringent” than necessary (As an environmentalist friend of mine put it, “Now that’s an answer everyone can hate!” In fact, the EPA’s new rules are very modest in relation to the climate emergency scientists tell us we’re experiencing. Bottom line: we need to phase out CO2 emissions as rapidly as possible if we want to have a recognizable planet to live on.)

*Hues of green and rose (“Cuccinelli says McAuliffe is over-promising, but neither man has a coherent vision for state finances.”)

*Benefits for disabled Virginia veterans in jeopardy (Thanks a LOT Eric Can’tor, John Boehner, Ted Cruz, etc.)

*Elections board to fight suit by Democrats

*Cuccinelli, McAuliffe use campaign surrogates in different ways (I love how the reporter says right-wing hate radio host Mark Levin “has a history of controversial comments.” “Controversial?” Try “bigoted,” “outrageous,” “disgusting,” and “unacceptable.” “Controversy” implies there are two “sides” in a legitimate debate. That is not he case with Mark Levin’s hate mongering, which you can read for yourself here.)

*TV’s Duggar Family to Campaign for Cuccinelli (Total freak show.)

*Kaine submits comments on Medicaid expansion in Virginia

*McDonnell, Warner discuss what the shutdown means to Virginians

*Herring: Obenshain too ‘extreme’

*Caps blow two leads, fall to Carolina (It could be a loooong year for the Caps if they keep playing like this.)

*Washington Redskins team name: Another letter, the same spirit (Sally Jenkins nails it.)

University of Richmond Forum: Live Blog

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Tonight’s gubernatorial “forum” (not a “debate”) at the University of Richmond is being live streamed here. I’ll live blog anything interesting.

UPDATE 8:12 pm: I’d say Terry did very well – knowledgeable, informed, detailed, focused, authoritative, gubernatorial, answered the questions (unlike Cuccinelli), bipartisan, get things done, focus on growing the economy, making sure Virginia is open and welcoming to everyone, etc. As for Cuccinelli? Kind of all over the place – dodged the questions, denied/glossed over a lot of what he’s stood for his entire life, outright lied, personally attacked Terry…just don’t really get this guy, but I guess the word is “flailing.” Or #FAIL, as we say on Twitter.

UPDATE 8:08 pm: Have to move Virginia forward in a mainstream, bipartisan way. Endorsements have been extraordinary – Will Sessoms, first time ever has endorsed a Dem for governor. Fairfax Chamber of Commerce. The credit unions. Etc, etc. We are facing major challenges – sequestration, shutdown – and cannot let this rigid ideological agenda hurt our economy. How is paying people to sit at home a productive economy? Want to bring broadband to rural areas, necessary to bring business there. Exciting challenges ahead, but also tremendous opportunities. There are real differences in this race.

UPDATE 8:04 pm: Question #7, on social issues. We’ve become a laughing stock on late night TV due to what’s been proposed in Richmond. Executive Order #1 – no discrimination in state employment based on sexual orientation. Cuccinelli referred to LGBT people as “self destructive and soulless human beings.” We need to have a DREAM Act in Virginia, would do that very early in a McAuliffe administration. It’s bipartisan legislation. “I trust women” to make their own health care decisions, legislators shouldn’t be doing that. Cuccinelli sponsored “personhood” legislation, would make the pill illegal in Virginia – I’d veto that. Women are 50% of the workforce. Women’s health centers being closed, that needs to stop. Put more teeth into equal pay laws. If you work the same job, you should get the same pay. Make Virginia open to everyone. Would be a brick wall against anything that would take away a woman’s right to choose.

UPDATE 7:59 pm: Question #6, on renewable energy and reducing Virginia’s carbon footprint. We need an “all of the above approach.” Huge opportunity to create 21st century energy jobs, we can be a global leader on this. Could power 700,000 homes with offshore wind energy. We should make rotors, blades, etc. in Virginia. We need a mandatory renewable energy standard like other surrounding states. Need to be on cutting edge of 21st century technologies. Meanwhile, Cuccinelli went on a “witch hunt” against climate scientist Michael Mann and UVA. The broader cost is what 21st century innovator would come to a state where your Attorney General is suing scientists? We need to be open and welcoming, bring scientists here from around the globe.

UPDATE 7:56 pm: Question #5, on education affordability. Education is an investment not an expense, need to make sure everyone who wants an education can get it. Financial aid is so critical, need more of it. Always should look at any efficiencies in education. We have spectacular colleges and universities, helps us lure businesses from all over the globe.

UPDATE 7:50 pm: Question #4, on health care coverage. Notes that Cuccinelli does not support Medicaid expansion, while he does (as do Bill Bolling, the Chamber of Commerce, etc, etc.). Morally, socially it’s the right thing to do. We will get it done. It’s our money. It’s the law of the land. Very conservative governors in America have agreed to expect Medicaid expansion. Why would we pay our money IN to the federal government so other states can use it, but not us? Medicaid expansion is a tremendous opportunity for Virginia. If we don’t accept Medicaid expansion, there’s a cost to us. Federal DSH payments will be ending, rural hospitals can’t afford that, say Medicaid expansion money is absolutely critical. Virginia’s one of the wealthiest states, we should never be 50th in any category – need to recruit best STEM teachers to Virginia, invest in teachers and community colleges. Notes that Cuccinelli has proposed $1.4 billion tax cut without any way to pay for it.

UPDATE 7:49 pm: Question #3, on civil liberties and surveillance. Terry says “it’s always a balance.” Work with Congressional delegation to make sure legislation is reasonable and balanced. Bring all stakeholders together, including law enforcement and civil liberties folks, to come up with approach that works for everybody.

UPDATE 7:45 pm: Question #2, on jobs. Talks about growing, diversifying. Need a transportation system that works to move people and goods around, for quality of life. We need to bring big Panamax ships to Virginia. Commercialize great research we have at our colleges and universities. Double angel investor tax credit. Virginia should become global leader on new, 21st century technologies. Invest in education, including early education (pre-K) and STEM, reform SOLs. Also need a great healthcare delivery system, for Medicaid expansion.

UPDATE 7:42 pm: Question #1, on bipartisan compromise. “Bipartisanship is key.” Says sequestration, the government shutdown are examples of what happens when the Tea Party, Sen. Ted Cruz (close Cuccinelli ally) pushes an ideological agenda. “I wouldn’t have even been in the same room as Ted Cruz with the damage he’s done” to Virginia families. “I wish Ken Cuccinelli had stood up and told [Ted Cruz] that.” We have to work in a bipartisan way, we’ve done it in Virginia (e.g., with the transportation bill, which Cuccinelli strongly opposed).

UPDATE 7:40 pm: Terry McAuliffe now taking the stage. Talks about economic challenges facing Virginia, becoming a leader in cybersecurity, nanotechnology, etc. Working in a bipartisan way, bringing people together. Mentions Doug Wilder endorsement.

UPDATE 7:39 pm: Cuccinelli is done, thank god. This forum sucks, by the way – no followups means that the candidate can talk about whatever he wants, with nobody challenging him. In Cuccinelli’s case, that’s a huge problem, as he just lies and lies…

UPDATE 7:29 pm: Question #7, on social policy. Cooch claims he’s not running on that, hasn’t put out a social policy, even though he’s spent his entire career obsessed with abortion, contraception, homosexuality, etc. Basically dodging the question (as he’s dodged every question tonight), talking about gangs, human trafficking…claims he’s “pro happiness” (hahahaha, right – except if you’re a woman, gay, poor, middle class, or believe in science). Ramble, ramble…now attacking Terry again. Weird. Claims he wouldn’t do anything to ‘step in on contraception,” yet he strongly supported a “personhood” amendment which would…wait for it…ban many forms of contraception. Can we say BIG LIE? Now goes into the “Terry rented out the Lincoln Bedroom”/Global Crossing/Greentech spiel. Uh Ken? It ain’t working. Now he’s getting warmed up, says “Democrat prosecutor,” “he was investing in people dying,” etc. NASTY (also ridiculous, puerile, you name it).

UPDATE 7:25 pm: Question #6, on making higher education more affordable. Of course, Cuccinelli’s massive tax and budget cuts would devastate public education, as would his plan to siphon resources OUT of public education and INTO private education. Cooch now talking about “crushing” student debt, but provides no real suggestions on what to do about that. Cooch is emphasizing “STEM” education, even as he personally denies science. Irony, anyone? Now he’s touting Liberty University, one of the worst schools in America, the creation of right-wing theocrat Jerry Falwell. Ugh.

UPDATE 7:21 pm: Question #5, on renewable energy and reducing carbon footprint. How on earth is a climate science denier and fossil fuel shill going to answer THAT one?!? By rambling about producing biodiesel, apparently. Now he’s talking about offshore wind energy, which he claims he’s supported. Well, alrighty. OK, now he’s back to normal, falsely bashing clean energy and talking about how the “war on coal is a war on our poor,” which is TOTALLY backwards. In fact, research has found that areas of Appalachia with intensive coal production are WORSE OFF in every way than neighboring areas without intensive coal production.

UPDATE 7:16 pm: Question #4, on health care coverage, Medicaid expansion. Claims he wants everyone to have health care coverage, which is utterly laughable. Goes to standard GOP talking point about buying health insurance across state lines, somehow manages to drop the name of Ronald Reagan. Basically he’s dodging the question, yet again, as he’s done all evening. Why? Clearly, because he has nothing constructive to say. Now he’s talking about adjusting to the Affordable Care Act, which is interesting, because it seems like an implicit acknowledgment that what he usually calls “Obamacare” isn’t going anywhere. Hmmmm.

UPDATE 7:14 pm: Question #3, on civil liberties and security. Not sure why this particularly relevant to Virginia, isn’t this 99% a federal issue? Anyway, Cooch is rambling about being for law enforcement but also supposedly being a “civil libertarian” (except when he’s mandating government to perform invasive medical tests on women, to tell you what you can and can’t do in your bedroom, etc.).

UPDATE 7:10 pm: Question #2, on improving the job market. Cooch claims this has been the focus of the race, which really isn’t true. Now, let me guess…yep, tax cuts! (shot?) Claims we should follow the example of North Carolina (where Teapublicans are destroying the state) on taxes – brilliant! Says Terry McAuliffe “personally” drove jobs out of Virginia. With a pitchfork or what? Who knows, the guy’s nuts.

UPDATE 7:08 pm: Question #1, on the government shutdown and bipartisan compromise. Cuccinelli laughably claims he’s worked across the aisle. The first Big Lie of the evening, and it’s only a few minutes old! Heh. Now he’s doing the false equivalence/”both sides” thing for the shutdown, segueing into attacking Terry McAuliffe. Same ol’ same ol’, in other words.

UPDATE 7:07 pm: Cuccinelli giving his usual intro. “Won’t need on the job training,” blah blah blah.

UPDATE 7:04 pm: Moderator explaining now why Robert Sarvis wasn’t invited to the “forum,” but will appear on campus at a later date to answer the same questions. Ken Cuccinelli welcomed to the stage first.

Quentin Kidd Sees the Down Ticket Races Less Certain

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Tucker Obenshain photo 131010TuckerObenshain_zpsfc65e22d.jpgIn quick succession, four polls have shown the race for governor is slipping away from Ken Cuccinelli. Yesterday Quenton Kidd, Director of the Wason Center for Public Policy at Christopher Newport University (CNU) discussed recent poll results with Cathy Lewis on Norfolk’s WHRV. Not all the news was great.

After about a month or so with a McAuliffe lead of around five percent and margins of error around three and four percent, there had been an argument that the gubernatorial race could be closer than the numbers indicate. Two days ago, Politico published a poll showing McAuliffe holding a 10 point lead and soon afterwards CNU released the results of a poll with him up by nine percent. Roanoke College had McAuliffe up by seven and today the Quinnipiac University poll has him with a lead of eight.

Lewis asked Kidd about the libertarian candidate. Kidd responded that Sarvis continues to perform well with about eight per cent of the vote (according to CNU). Sarvis’s support, by Kidd’s assessment, is coming out of what would naturally be Cuccinelli’s voters; he’s a protest vote for Republicans and independents who would normally go with the Republican. So the real question is: What do they do on election day? Do they stay home, do they go back to their natural base and vote Republican, or do they stick with Sarvis? Kidd believes that is the real unknown right now.

Kidd told Lewis CNU is currently conducting a poll asking about the shutdown and who is to blame; he expected the Quinnipiac poll to address the shutdown (it did). This he said, would begin to give a clearer picture about whether the race opening up for McAuliffe is directly or indirectly attributable to the “larger politics” around the shutdown and Ken Cuccinelli’s connection to those “larger politics.”

Those politics are reflected too in what Kidd says his polling shows is a 12 point gender gap. Some other polling shows an even larger gender gap, so, Kidd concludes, it is fair to say the gender gap is real, but that that is not the only problem Ken Cuccinelli has. According to Kidd, Cuccinelli is losing independents by 16% in the CNU poll. Over a third of the voters claim independent status. But even more troubling for Cuccinelli is that he is losing 10% of Republicans who are unwilling to commit to him, rather opting for Sarvis or undecided.

In particular, the CNU poll asked Republicans what kind of Republicans they are: business minded, social conservative Republican, or some of both. Cuccinelli is losing both business minded and some of both by about 10%. This means that, with the gender gap, there are really three big gaps to overcome between now and election day. According to Kidd, some of these look too big to overcome; gender and independent in particular.

When Lewis asked Kidd about the Lieutenant Governor’s race, his analysis was less certain. This race, he remarked, has been all over the place. There are polls, says Kidd, that indicate the race as even. However, CNU shows Ralph Northam up by 11 points. Interestingly, Northam and Jackson are about even in Hampton Roads with Northam up around two percent. Northam leads big there among women and independents, similar to McAuliffe. But, Kidd says, when you get down ticket, voters move around a lot.

As far as the Attorney General’s race, Herring holds a slim lead, according to the CNU figures, though within the margin of error; statistically speaking: an even race. But what is unexplainable is that Herring and Obenshain are tied among women voters. Somehow Obenshain has avoided the backlash of female voters evident at the top of the ticket. They are also nearly tied among independent voters where Herring has a two percent lead. This race, Kidd figures, is the race that Republicans can feel more comfortable about. According to Kidd, Obenshain has been smart in two ways: 1) he has used what would normally be a disadvantage as an advantage in that his campaign is not getting the attention that the races for governor and lieutenant governor have been getting, thus distancing himself from Cuccinelli and Jackson, and 2) he put his daughter out front in his campaign which sends a message that he is not like the other two Republicans.

In a stark contrast from what is termed the “Virginia Way,” voters no longer think that elected officials will put partisan differences or their own self-interest aside in pursuit of the public good. One aspect of this year’s contest is that politicians are no longer viewed as ethical. 64% of likely voters responded that politicians are less ethical than they used to be. Further, Democrats and Republicans do not see the same issues as being important. There are two streams of discussion going on parallel but not connected to each other.

Today on The Kojo Nnamdi Show, Kidd discussed further the turn that the Jonnie Williams scandal had on Cuccinelli’s initial campaign strategy. He also said he expected that in the closing days of the campaigns Northam would press his financial advantage over Jackson to solidify his lead. In any case, there remains in Kidd’s view uncertainty about how voters will behave down ticket. This, it seems, would be particularly true for those who turn out to vote for Sarvis.  

New Report: Cuccinelli’s Plan Would Cost Virginia At Least $8 Billion

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Hahahaha, Terry McAuliffe's campaign gets its revenge on Kookinelli. Now, let's see if the Washington Post prints McAuliffe's press release just like they essentially printed Coochie's yesterday. Riiiight.

Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe’s campaign today released a new report, “Cuccinelli’s $8 Billion Tax Plan,” describing how Ken Cuccinelli’s irresponsible budget gimmick and support for eliminating the corporate income tax could cost the Commonwealth at least $8 billion over four years and deplete necessary funding streams from localities for education, transportation, and other critical investments that will keep Virginia competitive in the 21st Century.

Ken Cuccinelli’s proposal to give massive tax breaks to Virginia’s top earners and corporations, compounded with the fact that his running mate E.W. Jackson said Cuccinelli supports his proposal to eliminate the corporate tax completely would cost the Commonwealth $2 billion annually, totaling at least $8 billion in lost revenue over four years—a dangerous plan for the future of Virginia’s economic well being.

The full report can be found below and attached.


Cuccinelli’s $8 Billion Tax Plan

Ken Cuccinelli has proposed massive tax breaks for the wealthiest Virginians and corporations and has offered no specifics on how he will pay for them, which alone would blow a $1.4 billion hole in the state budget each year. To compound that, Cuccinelli’s running mate E.W. Jackson said he and Cuccinelli want to fully eliminate the corporate tax rate, which would create an additional $660 million loss in revenue in addition to Cuccinelli’s $1.4 billion proposed cut, which already included a one third reduction on the corporate tax rate.

In total, Cuccinelli's plans would reduce state revenue by $2 billion annually if Cuccinelli and Jackson continue to offer no specifics on how to make up for the lost revenue, costing the Commonwealth at least $8 billion over four years and placing greater burdens on Virginia’s middle class families.

 

Cuccinelli’s tax plan: “More likely to manufacture an unnecessary budget crisis”

Under Governors Warner and Kaine, Virginia won the title of the best state for business. This in part is because of Virginia’s “already-low tax rates, and its tax regulatory system,” as the Virginian Pilot editorial board stated. However, over the last three years, Virginia has dropped to 5th, much in part due to its lack of up to date transportation infrastructure.

Ken Cuccinelli’s extreme tax proposal “is more likely to manufacture an unnecessary budget crisis that undermines the commonwealth’s fragile recovery, pushes a greater financial burden onto cities and counties and still leaves the state incapable of fulfilling its responsibilities,” the Virginian Pilot editorialized in May 2013.

The Pilot Editorial Board continues, that the plan would cut “$1.4 billion from the state’s annual budget at a time when Virginia’s general fund has already declined 1 percent,” and by refusing to indicate which programs he would cut in order to make up for the lost revenue, or which loopholes he would close to serve the same goal, Virginians are left to assume that they would have to pay higher taxes, or lose funding for education or transportation.

 

“What are you going to do to keep localities whole?”

When Cuccinelli announced his plan, Virginia’s Republican Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling condemned the irresponsible gimmick, stressing the impact the lost revenue will have per year on Virginia’s communities and families. “What are you going to do to keep localities whole, or to keep the state whole, are you just going to expect people to further cut funding for education and transportation and health care?” Bolling questioned in an interview in May.

The Washington Post called Cuccinelli’s plan “fantasy,” and said it “would mean eviscerating education, public safety, infrastructure and social services, which together account for a large majority of that spending.” The longest-serving Republican member of the Virginia House of Delegates, Vince Callahan, who served for 36 years on the Appropriations Committee, said the cuts would be “draconian,” and that “money from cutting any loopholes is minuscule compared to the tax cuts Cuccinelli wants”—another voice discussing the real implications of Cuccinelli’s tax magic.

 

Cuccinelli wants to eliminate the corporate tax rate completely

While Cuccinelli’s initial plan, released in May, called for a reduction of the corporate tax rate from 5.75% to 5%, just four months later, his running mate E.W. Jackson told supporters that Ken Cuccinelli wants to eliminate the corporate tax rate completely. This would add an over $660 million loss in the state budget annually, and when added to Cuccinelli’s original tax cut plan over four years, could result in at least $8 billion in revenue loss during Cuccinelli’s term if elected.

In September 2013, E.W. Jackson stated that he and Cuccinelli “really believe that if you plan properly, you could do away with the corporate tax in Virginia.” He added that, “this is something Ken [Cuccinelli] won’t talk about, not because he’s willing to, but because he’s only got four years, of course.” If elected, Jackson pledged that he will “certainly work to make sure that we get rid of the income tax” too. Again another tax cut for Virginia’s wealthiest, with no specifics on which loopholes to close or programs to cut to make up for the lost funds.

Just a week before E.W. Jackson said those words, Cuccinelli assured his supporters that he and Jackson are “running together” and “running hard.”

 

Cuccinelli’s plan: Bad for business

Rather than boosting Virginia’s economic status, editorial boards and leaders from both parties from across the state have criticized Cuccinelli’s plan, saying that it could lead to economic turmoil and greater burdens on the middle class.

The Washington Post editorialized about the impact of Cuccinelli’s plan: “Mr. Cuccinelli suggests that cutting corporate income taxes by a third would transform Virginia into an irresistible magnet for businesses, which would grow at lightning speed. But what businesses, and which employees, would be content to live in a state whose budget starves its schools, social services and public safety?”

Vince Callahan expressed a similar sentiment, noting “It frightens me to put the Commonwealth of Virginia into the hands of someone who has no vision for Virginia.”

Cuccinelli’s tax proposals, his willingness to starve localities of funding for critical infrastructure and education funding, and his refusal to embrace the programs that actually encourage businesses to locate in Virginia and grow, such as business incentive programs, show his lack of understanding of what Virginia needs in their next governor. Even Republican Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling criticized Cuccinelli’s business proposals, stating, “You can get rid of all our incentives, but let me tell you, there will be a price to pay for that…You’re not going to be a jobs governor.”

Virginians need leaders who will put pragmatism over ideology, who don’t use fuzzy magic to try to mislead Virginians into believing their irresponsible budget plans.  Virginians haven’t fallen for Ken Cuccinelli’s “fuzzy math” or “tax magic”, and they don’t want a governor that will cost the Commonwealth at least $8 billion over a term. 

Virginia Polls Agree: 2013 a Watershed Election. Time to Go All in for Herring and the Sweep.

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by Paul Goldman

Seemingly a political eternity ago (these campaigns are long), I wrote that a candidate like GOP presumptive nominee Ken Cuccinelli might no longer be electable in Virginia. I based that observation on exit poll data (see below) from the 2009 Deeds vs. McDonnell race. I got the expected yada, yada, yada in email, texts, and conversations over the next few weeks. Moreover, at the time, some of us were trying to get AG Cuccinelli to back certain changes in the state election laws removing constitutionally flawed denials of certain political rights to candidates and voters.

So people thought I was being…well…a little too provocative. But my analysis had not the hint of anything personal, and I knew the AG’s staff reads my stuff, so they would see the analysis as being what we do at 200-proof, on TV regularly in Richmond, for national web sites and newspapers.

We don’t judge right or wrong, issue wise or personal traits: we leave that to the “gurus” – the really smart people. We just call it like we see it. And if you studied the 2009 exit poll, something seemed self-evident if you made A FEW REASONABLE ASSUMPTIONS.

1. Logic suggested that the 2009 exit poll should have caught the GOP wave AT THE CREST. The McDonnell-Bolling-Cuccinelli, three-way landslide set the record; there had never been such a complete up-and-down-the-ballot wipeout in the modern two-party era in Virginia. So at 200-proof, we figured: this has to be, as Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt might say, “as good as it gets.”

2. The exit poll found McDonnell winning female voters by 54%-46%, an 8-point difference. Exit polls, of course, have their own margin of error. So in theory the actual difference could have been somewhat narrower or wider. But +8 seemed a good relative barometer.

3. Ergo, at the TOP OF THE WAVE, the GOP had a decent but not overwhelming margin with women. Moreover, among self-identified “working women,” the two candidates were basically dead even.

4. Meaning that the roughly 70% of women self-identifying as in a different statistical category accounted for the entire McDonnell female voter margin. He carried this group 60%-40%, or roughly the size of his overall statewide victory margin.

5. Moreover, when you look at the rest of the exit poll, it is clear that McDonnell did better than Republicans invariably do in Virginia among young women and higher income, so-called “soccer moms.”

6. Therefore, if you could get a 1989-type situation, where you could isolate the election on women’s issues, then logic suggested it would be impossible for any GOP GUV candidate, especially one with Cuccinelli’s dubious female-issues resume, to get anywhere near the McDonnell 2009 numbers UNDER ANY FORSEEABLE CIRCUMSTANCES.

7. As the previous point implies, a guy like Cuccinelli, who has gone out of his way to raise concerns among THESE VERY FEMALE VOTERS, would on paper at least be the easiest opponent for a competent Democratic GUV campaign to turn politically radioactive on women’s issues.

8. Most importantly, the exit polls and other data suggested to us at 200-proof a new dynamic, namely that male voters were becoming more attuned to seeing women’s issues from the female voters’ perspective. This was not true a generation ago. But it is true now, meaning it allows candidates a greater freedom in how to play these issues in terms of winning an election.

9. Taking #1-#8 above collectively, it suggests that NO CREDIBLE DEMOCRATIC GUV CANDIDATE could possibly lose the female vote in the 2013 election against even the allegedly “moderate” Bill Bolling. Carried out further mathematically, we at 200-proof therefore concluded that against Cuccinelli, there was no way any credible Dem candidate would fail to win the female vote by at least a 54%-46% margin – thus a complete reversal – in 2013, even assuming the SAME ELECTORATE.

10. However, there seemed no way for the 2009 electorate, as captured by the exit poll, to be replicated in 2013. Why not? As we read the polls and remembered the election, the key driver on the GOP side had been an anti-Obama fervor of extreme proportions. This drove, among other things, a very strong turnout from self-identified Evangelical/Born-Again voters in the exit survey.

11. Thus, that +4 Republican over Democrat turnout  margin (37%-33%, with those not choosing either party making up the rest) couldn’t be replicated in 2013, because there simply wasn’t going to be the same anti-Obama fervor in 2013. It just wasn’t there, for the same reason the pro-Obama fervor had not been the same in 2012 as compared to 2008. These types of energy levels generally only happen one time.

12. Accordingly, 200-proof assumed the 2013 electorate would be roughly a partisan tie for statistical analysis. This means women will outnumber men by at least + 4%, perhaps a tad more.

13. Ergo, it seemed logical that unless Cuccinelli truly understood his vulnerability on the women’s vote, he would lose the female voter by at least 10 points (45%-55%), and it could approach 16 points (42%-58%) against any COMPETENT DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN.

14. Cuccinelli had hired Chris LaCivita as his key campaign strategy guy. With all due respect, Chris is not the guy you hire if you intend to run a female-voter oriented campaign. That is simply not his thing. Moreover, he has ZERO experience actually running a GUV race in Virginia or elsewhere. His reputation is built on allegedly being the brains behind the so-called “Swiftboating” of John Kerry in the 2004 presidential election over his military record. That’s it.

15. Everyone familiar with Virginia GUV politics knew Bolling would not run as a third-party candidate, because he simply is a myth in his own mind. He is too lazy. Moreover, he would lose badly.

16. Accordingly, for reasons #1-#15 above, you had to figure that 2013 would be the year when the female vote would finally become the defining statistical marker for Democrats running for Governor. Wilder, Warner and Kaine all won due to the female vote. But strategically, the politics of the state were such as to require a different spin on female issues from a strategy point of view. Warner and then Kaine ran on traditional budget, tax, and governing issues by and large.

17. Since Wilder’s election is historic in terms of turnout on all sides, it simply isn’t a good model to use for any other elections.

Therefore, at 200-proof, we considered the following question: If Cuccinelli was going to lose the female vote by at least 10 points and possibly as high as 16 points, could he mathematically win the race? In 2009, McDonnell carried the men by 62%-37% (rounding makes it less than 100%). Since we considered 2009 to be the CREST, then deductively NO GOP candidate in 2013 could get a 25 point spread among men even IF the same overall DEM-GOP-INDEPENDENT electorate mix was possible.

Statistical analysis suggested Cuccinelli, if all things went right for him, could get as high as 58%-42%, which admittedly is +16, close to the McDonnell number when you consider polling margins of error. But again: There was no way in 2013 to replicate the 2009 electorate in the opinion of 200-proof.

That is why we said: Terry McAuliffe might be making the “steal” of a lifetime, essentially being handed the Governorship of Virginia without any fight from all those in the party who – and there are legions – want to be Governor. And in turn, he could lead a sweep, meaning the next LG and AG would likely be the party’s nominees for AG in the foreseeable future. We said the other GUV wannabees might regret giving Terry a sure bet (presuming, as we did, he would run a competent campaign; he actually has run a deceptively clever campaign, but that is for another column).

Fast forward to today. The latest Q-Poll shows that Cuccinelli, as in the other polls, has done precisely what I’ve written about previously. Namely, he’s failed – along with Mr. LaCivita – to truly appreciate his problem with Republicans and women voters in Virginia. What is so ironic is that the Q-Poll shows that the men of Virginia actually “get it” as well as the women. Except for the men in the Cuccinelli campaign, that is!

In hindsight, we at 200-proof may have overstated a bit the ability of Democrats to get female voters in a normative election. Thus, while the Q-Poll and others indicate a +16 is even low right now in a two-way race, we think the polls could tighten in that regard by election day and also, the Cuccinelli campaign surely can’t stay as clueless on female politics for the closing weeks.

Yet, the basic watershed nature of 2013, as we suggested, seems very possible: an overwhelming female rejection of Cuccinelli in a way that expands the power of issues first harnessed by Wilder in 1989 and then Clinton in 1992. So much so that the term “women’s issues,” while useful for political shorthand, misses the larger point. These are now governing issues, for men and for women both, and partisan politics perhaps previously tolerated will be tolerated no more, at least if you want to be elected Governor of Virginia.

No one asked Mr. Cuccinelli to change his personal views, or to stop advocating them as Governor. No one is attacking his religious views either. But both he and his campaign utterly failed to appreciate the “intolerant” vibe emanating from his GUV effort this year. They blame it on the media, on being outspent by the “evil” McAuliffe campaign, yada, yada, yada. But the statistics don’t lie: the rejection of this type of politics has been building in Virginia for a generation at the GUV level where they are visible to voters as compared to down ballot races.

The Q-Poll is just the latest make clear what the statistics indicated to 200-proof way back: this would be the year when the GOP guv guy would need a full-on response to the issues of concern to women. As we wrote, no one seen as wanting to be Governor for the primary purpose of implementing a conservative social agenda has ever been elected in Virginia. This may work in Deep South states, but not in Virginia in the 21st century. Indeed, the polls suggest that even self-identified Evangelical/Born-Again Christians aren’t all that revved up vote this year, despite Cuccinelli and E.W. Jackson being on the ballot.

All that being said, we at 200-proof do have some concern about our Sweep prediction. Due to the way down ballot  elections are “covered” (NOT!) by the news media these days, it seems Senator Obenshain has arrived for the final sprint in a lot better shape than seemed possible a few months ago. He has a storied name in Republican party circles. With McAuliffe and Northam in strong positions, Democrats need to seriously consider the risks vs. rewards of concentrating somewhat more on helping Mark Herring.

In theory, the statistical analysis suggesting that this was the year for a female pro-Democratic vote carrying the day implies it should go all the way down ballot, given GOP party politics. But in the “fog of war,” as the saying goes, things get lost.

Democrats have to decide shortly whether to go “all-in” for Herring. It seems like a no-brainer here at 200-proof. But such efforts are actually rare in Virginia politics on both sides. The most plausible scenario is still the 1981 DEM sweep: comfortable for Governor, big win for LG, and squeaker victory for AG. A win is a win. But a bigger win for Herring would make the capital letter “W” in “Watershed” visible across the country.

Here’s How to Keep Defeating These Republicans: Open Letter to President Obama

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Good for you, Mr. President, for standing your ground. I hope you’ve noticed how useful, for the overall political picture, it has been for you to hold firm and leave this Republican Party exposed as the reckless, anti-democratic, warlike force it has become.

Helping the American people see clearly the nature of the force that’s taken over that Party is and remains Job One, because none of the other important tasks that confront us as a nation can be tackled successfully so long as they retain the power to prevent good things from being accomplished.

If you’re going to be able to accomplish anything with what remains of your presidency, therefore, it is essential that after the 2014 elections, either the Republican hold on the House has been broken or the Republicans have been compelled to become a normal political party again.

Your top priority, therefore, must be to continue to press the attack on the destructive and dishonest spirit that now drives the Republicans.  

Already, thanks to your refusal to yield to blackmail, the American people – seeing the arrogance and indifference of the Republicans – have driven their approval numbers down to the lowest level ever measured for either political party.

As the Republicans figure out just how best to hide the reality of their surrender, I hope you will resist the temptation to become Mr. Nice Guy again. That’s not what America needs from you unless or until the Republicans become truly constructive participants in the nation’s governance.

Instead, America needs for you to come out of this immediate confrontation resolved to press the battle.

Whenever the Republicans lie or engage in illegitimate political tactic, call them on it.

Your bold statements about the Republicans during this shutdown have been jabs that landed well.  Keep it up. Keep throwing those punches whenever those Republicans act contrary to the public interest and to our nation’s political norms.

With their hostage-taking, the Republicans have exposed the deeper truth of the nature of the spirit that drives them: the once-respectable Republican Party is no longer a normal American political force.  They have become a profound danger to the well-being of this nation.

The American people are now readier than ever to see the Republicans for what they are. Your Job One is to expose what the American people are ready now to perceive.

Seize the moment. Until the Republicans become constructive partners in governing the country in the public interest, press the battle. Be constantly on alert to opportunities to shine the spotlight on the lies, the cruelty, the unwillingness to play by the rules, the insistence on making politics a kind of warfare, the indifference to the greater good.

Only when this dark spirit that’s arisen on the right has been driven far away from power will America be safe again.

What’s Wrong with Dominion’s Green Power Program? Pretty Much Everything.

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Renewable energy advocates in Virginia were astonished to learn a few weeks ago that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has given Dominion Virginia Power an award for its Green Power Program.

Dominion’s program is not, to put it mildly, a good one. Half of the money its customers contribute is siphoned off for overhead and “education.” The rest goes to buy renewable energy certificates from out of state. Over the years Dominion has collected millions of dollars in these voluntary contributions without building a single wind or solar facility to supply the program. Surely, the only green award this merits is one for greenwashing.

So I called the EPA to find out what criteria they use in determining who gets an award. It turns out the agency only measures the growth of a green power program, and Dominion has signed up more customers than other utility programs have.

I had to laugh. Customers of utilities in most other states have real options to buy wind and solar. If you can buy wind energy from an alternative supplier or participate in a community solar project, or if your utility is aggressively incorporating renewables into its power supply, you don’t need a green power program.

But Dominion has never built more than token amounts of renewable energy, and it continues to use its monopoly position to erect barriers to competition from others. The utility has signed up 19,000 Green Power participants only because it has effectively denied its Virginia customers any meaningful way of participating in the renewable energy market.  

News of this award will surely lure more people in. Yet even if every one of Dominion’s customers signed up for the program, it wouldn’t shrink Virginia’s carbon footprint. Instead, Dominion’s latest integrated resource plan reveals plans for more fossil fuel generation and increasing greenhouse gas emissions over the next fifteen years.

And it’s worse than that. As of this year, Dominion is actually using the Green Power Program to bankroll an attack on renewable energy – one the State Corporation Commission shamefully endorsed when it approved the company’s 3-megawatt “solar purchase program.”

In this charade, Dominion buys solar power from homeowners and businesses to resell to the Green Power Program. The deal nets sellers a few cents over the retail price of electricity, but costs the Green Power Program almost three times as much. This overcharging of the Green Power Program would be bad enough. But the more insidious problem lies in Dominion’s justification for the high charge. It claims that rooftop solar energy is no more valuable than power from fossil fuels that it can buy at wholesale.

Dominion’s position flies in the face of recent studies demonstrating the benefits of solar energy to the grid, including generating power where demand is, providing power during peak hours when energy is most expensive, avoiding the need for transmission upgrades, eliminating line losses, and reducing the need for new generation.

It also runs counter to trends in states like Georgia, where Georgia Power has put a higher-than-retail value on the solar distributed generation it plans to buy, and says that paying the extra won’t put upward pressure on rates.

This makes it especially difficult to understand why Virginia’s State Corporation Commission approved Dominion’s Green Power rip-off. And predictably, Dominion has followed up its win with a deeply flawed study it plans to use as the basis for a new round of standby charges on customers who net meter (the case is PUE-2012-00064, available on the SCC web site).

So what is a dedicated renewable energy advocate to do?

There are options. If you are determined to buy RECs, you don’t have to go through Dominion. Buy from another source. But better yet, install solar yourself if you can. The price of solar panels has dropped so precipitously over the past few years (down 60% since the start of 2011) that you may find it worth taking out a home equity loan.

If you don’t have a sunny roof yourself or can’t afford the whole upfront cost, you can work with your school, community center or place of worship to install solar panels in your neighborhood. Interest in solar is very high among Virginia faith congregations, driving large turnouts for presentations on the topic given by Sierra Club and others in cooperation with the solar industry.

Or you can take the money you were spending on Dominion’s program and give it to a charity that will use it to install renewable energy here in Virginia; this may even get you a tax deduction. Low-income housing providers like Richmond’s Better Housing Coalition now put solar panels on many of their facilities, and will accept donations specifically for that purpose.

The Virginia Center for Wind Energy at James Madison University accepts donations to its Wind for Schools program, which helps public schools across the commonwealth install wind turbines for educational purposes.

A new non-profit, Three Birds Foundation, is working to put solar on public schools that serve low-income children in Virginia and elsewhere.

All these charities are committed to doing what Dominion, apparently, doesn’t want to do: install solar and wind energy in Virginia.  

Rep. Forbes’ Hate Group Pal Praises Putin as “Lion of Christianity” for Violent, Anti-Gay Crackdown

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Tomorrow, Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA) is raising cash for the anti-gay hate group the American Family Association. Today, the hate group’s “leader” Bryan Fischer had this to say about Russian President Vladimir Putin and his violent, anti-gay crackdown. Sadly, this is typical for Fischer, who says bigoted, insane, extreme stuff every day. For more, see Right Wing Watch’s YouTube channel. If you can stand it, that is.

Yesterday’s Legal Victory for Women’s Health Advocates in Virginia Highlights Importance of AG Race

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This story about women’s health clinics epitomizes why who ends up being elected Attorney General of Virginia really really REALLY matters.

Abortion rights supporters in Virginia are cheering after they won a small, first step in a challenge to strict, new state regulations that require abortion clinics meet hospital standards.

An Arlington judge rejected a motion from Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and the Virginia Board of Health seeking to toss out a legal challenge to the regulations. It means the case will now move forward.

[…]

The November election could have an impact. Attorney Larry Roberts said that an attorney general with a different view could simply not fight Codding’s lawsuit.

Pay particular attention that last paragraph and note what former Tim Kaine top advisor Larry Roberts has to say about how the Virginia Board of Health was “bullied [by Ken Cuccinelli] into adopting regulations that it did not intend to adopt.” That’s just one example of how important the office of the Attorney General is in Virginia. Keep in mind what the AG’s office is responsible for: “Defending the constitutionality of state laws” (or not); “Providing legal advice and representation in court for the Governor and the state government in general” (it’s very important what type of “advice and representation” that is); and “Providing legal advice, official opinions, to members of the Virginia General Assembly and local government officials” (ditto).

All this advice and representation is not just on women’s health, of course, but on basically every single issue facing Virginia, from the environment to guns to voting rights to civil liberties to consumer protection to ethics in government to…you name it. In Ken Cuccinelli’s case, we’ve seen the disastrous results of an Attorney General misusing the office as a platform for his extremist ideological agenda. We’ve also seen abuse of power, in the case of Michael Mann, and “quid pro quo” corruption in the cases of Bobby Thompson and CONSOL Energy.  

The question is, will we actually be crazy enough to CONTINUE this type of AG by electing Cuccinelli Clone Mark Obenshain, who has stressed that Cooch is a role model for him and that they are two “peas in a pod” ideologically? Or, should we instead support someone (Democratic nominee Mark Herring) who is strongly committed to upholding the LAW (I know, what a concept after four years of Cuccinelli’s abuses!), ensure that the AG’s office looks out for all Virginians (not just the wealthy, powerful and well-connected; again, what a concept after four years of Cooch), and maintains the highest levels of professionalism and ethics in the AG’s office (ditto)?

Really, this isn’t a difficult choice. Now, the only question is whether Mark Herring has the resources to communicate who he is, and also to let them know all about Mark Obenshain, by election day. On that front, I’m glad to see that Gabby Giffords is helping out, but we need more, both from big donors and from everyone else. If you can spare any amount of money, please donate to Mark Herring now. Thanks!