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Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, August 24. Also, check out President Obama’s weekly address, in which he talks about “major new reforms…to make college more affordable for middle class families and those fighting to get into the middle class.”

*Hagel: US Weighs Military Options for Syria (“The U.S. defense secretary has strongly suggested that the U.S. is moving naval forces into place in anticipation of any decision by President Barack Obama to order military action on Syria after apparent chemical weapons use.” Good. Use of chemical weapons is not acceptable and needs to be strongly deterred.)

*50 Years Later (“As we approach the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, I have a gnawing in my gut, an uneasy sense of society and its racial reality.” Me too. The right wing has gone completely off the deep end with “Obama Derangement Syndrome,” and it’s not a pretty picture.)

*Obama Slams Dirty Energy Money In Congress: ‘Fossil Fuel Industries Tend To Be Very… Influential’ (Not to mention in the Cuccinelli campaign!)

*Mann: Reality and threats of climate change are clear (Anyone who “denies” it is a fool and/or a tool, and needless to say should NOT be considered for public office, any more than you’d consider voting for someone who denies gravity, thinks the moon landings were faked, or believes humans rode on dinosaurs a few thousand years ago.)

*Virginia’s ethics laws create a vacuum (“As Virginians await word on whether Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) and his wife, Maureen, will face a federal indictment, the response from lawmakers to Richmond’s most lurid scandal in years has been strangely subdued. One reason may be that, in a state whose ethics laws are so flimsy, few are willing to point the finger for fear the accusation may come boomeranging back.” Bingo, nailed it!)

*McDonnell indictment unclear, experts say (“Legal experts say the Justice Department has leeway in dealing with ethics cases.”)

*Secret agent man (“Turns out Cuccinelli is much, much more than a run-of-the-mill, run-amok ideologue. He’s a man of mystery and intrigue. A secret agent.” Ha.)

*The Messy Facts in Virginia (“It’s an ugly gubernatorial race in the state, yet many of the harsh attacks are accurate.”)

*McDonnell uranium adviser joins Williams Mullen (Ah, the slimy, corrupt “revolving door”…and in this case, for once, it’s “both sides” that do it.)

*National Zoo’s panda gives birth

*Superb weekend weather ahead (“The only weather worry this weekend might be making sure you keep the sunscreen handy.”)

*Nationals earn .500 season record with 11-10 win over Royals (Now, can they build on this? We’ll see, but it’s good that the offense has finally come alive!)

Cuccinelli’s New Ad Backfires and Draws More Attention to Cuccinelli Scandals

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The following is from the McAuliffe campaign. My (rhetorical) question is why do TV stations allow demonstrably false advertising from Ken Cuccinelli to run, but not a totally accurate ad from Tom Steyer about TransCanada? Hmmmm

 

Ken Cuccinelli’s new ad aiming to distance himself from the Star Scientific scandal has backfired and brought more attention to his relationship with Star and its CEO Jonnie Williams and his “issues of trustworthiness” with Virginia voters. Recent reports have noted that Cuccinelli’s refusal to follow Governor McDonnell’s lead and return the $18,000 worth of gifts and trips from Star and Williams, as well as his office's inappropriate involvement with out-of-state energy companies in a lawsuit against Virginia landowners have clearly taken a toll on voters’ confidence in him.

While Cuccinelli attempted to regain voters’ trust with this new ad, it instead was interpreted as a “clear sign” of “concern” from his campaign.

Here’s a roundup of the backlash Cuccinelli’s ad is receiving:

AP: “The new commercial comes as fresh polling finds Cuccinelli struggling with issues of trustworthiness as a result of the scandal that touches him in addition to the Republican governor. McDonnell and his family received more than $145,000 in gifts and loans from Jonnie R. Williams Sr. of Star Scientific Inc., most of it not reported on state economic interest forms.  Cuccinelli, however, received $18,000 from Williams and his company over four years.”

Jeff Schapiro on WCVE: New Cuccinelli ad is “clearly a sign of some concern by the Cuccinelli people.”

The Hill: Cuccinelli ad is “a sign that the negative campaign is taking a toll on the Republican's numbers.”

 Washington Post: “Cuccinelli’s spot, titled “Facts,” also aims to put more distance between himself and McDonnell, the subject of state and federal investigations into luxury gifts and loans that a Virginia businessman provided to the governor and his family. Cuccinelli has his own ties to the businessman, Star Scientific chief executive Jonnie R. Williams Sr., but he also called on a state prosecutor to investigate the governor.

Williams provided $18,000 in gifts to Cuccinelli, who initially failed to disclose $4,500 of them as well as extensive stock holdings in Star. At the time, Cuccinelli’s office was representing the state in a civil tax suit brought by Star.

WRICThis morning republican gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli is airing a new ad distancing himself from Governor Bob McDonnell and the recent scandal involving campaign gifts. New polls show Cuccinelli is struggling to gain voters trust as after he accepted 18 thousand dollars in gifts from the CEO of Star Scientific. Right now Governor McDonnell is in the middle of a criminal investigation over more than 145 thousand dollars in gifts that were unreported in his office. In the ad, Cuccinelli takes credit for launching the investigation into McDonnell. Meanwhile, a recent poll shows Cuccinelli is trailing Democrat Terry McAuliffe by 6 percent ahead of November’s election.

WTTG: McDonnell has apologized for accepting those gifts from a campaign donor and returned or paid back what he can. But he is still the subject of state and federal investigations. Meanwhile, attorney general Ken Cuccinelli also received gifts from that same donor. Now he’s trying to separate himself from the scandal as he runs to replace Bob McDonnell. The republican candidate is airing a new ad now that casts McDonnell in a negative light and takes credit for launching an investigation into his actions. The ad comes days after a separate poll shows Cuccinelli losing distance in the race against democrat Terry McAuliffe. 

Ethics Violations Distract From Real Dangers of Republican Leadership

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As the discussion swirls around the potential ethics violations by Ken Cuccinelli and Governor McDonnell, some of the more deplorable positions the Republicans hold have taken a back seat.  Questions of ethics have utility in undermining personal integrity and sowing doubt, but often say little about the larger issues infecting the political ideologies of a party.  When attention is drawn to personal issues, it gives everyone else in the party a pass on having to address the more draconian policies they have implemented.

Republicans have a women problem.  The party has systematically made the state of Virginia a more dangerous place for women live.  Shutting down women’s healthcare clinics, mandatory trans-vaginal ultrasounds, and repealing HPV vaccine mandates top the list of women’s health threats engineered by Virginia Republicans.  These policies not only present a long-term threat to the general health of the Commonwealth, they defy common sense.

The corruption allegations surrounding Cuccinelli have been successful in casting doubt on his ability to lead the state.  The downside of this is Ken Cuccinelli’s backward social agenda has become a sideshow allowing General Assembly members subscribing to the same mindset to fly under the radar.  An excellent example of this is Barbara Comstock (R-McLean) in the 34th District who is up for reelection this year.  She has consistently supported reducing women’s health options and has even gone so far as to publicly stating Roe v. Wade should be overturned (http://nbcnews.to/1daDoF2 at 5:00 mins).  

The debate over ethics cannot obscure the larger issue of the dangers of Republican leadership in General Assembly.  The trade off for scoring points against Cuccinelli has come at the expense of making GOP candidates answerable for backward, and sometimes treacherous, policies.  If the entirety of the problems with the Republican Party could be resolved through ethics reform, it would be easy to move Virginia forward in a constructive manner.  However, the issues are much more deeply ingrained in the larger psyche of GOP leadership.  Addressing these matters must become the top priority going into November.  

Top Virginia GOP Donor: Having African-American President Fomenting “Black-on-White Violence”

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According to top Virginia GOP donor – and, based on these comments, a clear victim of severe, probably terminal, “Obama Derangement Syndrome” – Marion “Pat” Robertson:

We are having a tremendous amount of this black-on-white violence and I have a feeling that instead of bringing racial harmony, having an African-American president has exacerbated the problem…He seems to be wanting to bring division among people instead of bringing them together; he is one of the most divisive leaders this country has ever had. And, it just seems he wants to rub the edges raw every chance he gets to talk about the rich, or talk about the privileged, or talk about the impoverished middle class, blacks and whites and so forth. There’s always something there to stir up controversy.

Translation: a) Obama is “divisive” because he’s black; b) Obama is rubbing things raw by talking about the same things (rich people, the poor, the privileged) that Jesus did. Hmmmm.

Of course, this is the same top Virginia GOP donor who has said: Gays Destroy Society, Want Christians in Jail; that gays are really straights with “chromosomal damage”, that Planned Parenthood backs genocide and inspired Hitler, that “Wild” Liberals Support “Society of Death” , that…well, you get the idea. And meanwhile, I haven’t heard Robertson’s “dear friend” “Bobby” McDonnell condemning his continued spewing of hateful remarks, nor have I heard Ken Cuccinelli uttering a peep about them either (by Cuccinelli’s own reasoning, he needs to denounce Robertson immediately or else he must condone his remarks!), nor have I seen Virginia Republicans returning all the money they’ve received from Robertson over the years. To paraphrase Ken Cuccinelli’s own language, “Will Cuccinelli speak out against Pat Robertson now?” I’m not holding my breath waiting for him to do so, that’s for sure.

Conservative Media Attacks Help for Elderly, Disabled and Working Poor

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The Cato Institute, funded by a who’s who of right-wing billionaires, big-money polluters, and corporations looking to preserve tax loopholes, is once again attacking assistance for the elderly, disabled & working poor. Here’s how Cato’s scam works: They assume every possible recipient takes 100% advantage of every possible benefit available to them. This is self-evidently stupid: If recipients were making as much as Cato laughably claims, their income would be too high to receive many of those same benefits.

But does that stop right-wing media from parroting Cato’s nonsense? Of course not! Fox, Rush Limbaugh, and a litany of other talking heads were among those uncritically repeating Cato’s claims. Not mentioned: That Cato and its extremist allies are totally fine with billions in annual taxpayer handouts for oil and coal polluters, corporate tax dodgers, and wealthy dead people.

As the Center on Budget & Policy Priorities reports, Cato is engaged in Mitt Romney’s 47% class warfare, trying to paint disabled veterans and working single parents as moochers:

The claim behind these critiques is clear: federal spending on entitlements and other mandatory programs through which individuals receive benefits is promoting laziness, creating a dependent class of Americans who are losing the desire to work and would rather collect government benefits than find a job.

Such beliefs are starkly at odds with the basic facts regarding social programs, the analysis finds. Federal budget and Census data show that, in 2010, 91 percent of the benefit dollars from entitlement and other mandatory programs went to the elderly (people 65 and over), the seriously disabled, and members of working households.  People who are neither elderly nor disabled – and do not live in a working household – received only 9 percent of the benefits.

Moreover, the vast bulk of that 9 percent goes for medical care, unemployment insurance benefits (which individuals must have a significant work history to receive), Social Security survivor benefits for the children and spouses of deceased workers, and Social Security benefits for retirees between ages 62 and 64.  Seven out of the 9 percentage points go for one of these four purposes.

Why is making up phony numbers so critical to Cato? Because the social safety net is America’s favorite example of how progressive government programs can solve problems. Social security, SNAP (food stamps) and Medicare not only save the old, sick & poor from starvation and fatal illness, they’re extremely cost-effective.

Making up phony numbers is also important to rallying the GOP’s angry white male base. As Duncan Black once put it at Eschaton:

I like the inclusion of Craig T. Nelson saying, “I’ve been on food stamps and welfare, did anybody help me out? No.” Because I think that quote really gets to the true core of [BS] mountain. One can never be quite sure how much conservatives believe their own [BS], but my longstanding theory is that they believe there’s some secret super generous welfare system that only black people have access to. When they had hard times, got their government handouts, their government handouts sucked. But the blahs are out there buying their t-bones and driving their cadillacs, so they must be getting the really good welfare. Nobody helped poor Craig out, because the food stamps and and welfare sucked. They don’t understand that this is because food stamps and welfare do suck.

The reason that spending on many of these programs has gone up is that conservative economic policies and out-of-control deregulation crashed the economy, driving up unemployment and forcing more families to turn to government assistance. Even for people who have jobs, declining real wages and benefits mean it’s harder than ever to make ends meet.

If we really want to help workers get off government assistance, we should demand businesses pay their workers a living wage. Take action to show your support for raising the minimum wage closer to a fair level.

Mark Herring: Virginians Can’t Trust Mark Obenshain on Ethics Reform

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From the Mark Herring for AG campaign…superb job by Mark on the Kojo Nnamdi Show a little while ago (and far, far superior to Mark Obenshain's stumbling, bumbling appearance there recently).

On Radio, Herring Points Out Obenshain Hypocrisy on Ethics Reform

Today, on the Kojo Nnamdi Show, Democratic candidate for Attorney General Mark Herring called out his opponent, Senator Mark Obenshain, for voting against a bill to ban gifts, and for remaining silent as the gifts scandal engulfs two of Virginia’s highest elected officials.

“I do want to take this opportunity to point out some very serious differences between Senator Obenshain and myself on these ethics issues,” Herring said. “When the story first broke, I was the one that called for an independent investigation back in April. Senator Obenshain was silent. I’ve called on the Governor and the Attorney General to return and reimburse Star Scientific for those gifts. And I think even on this show a couple of weeks ago, Senator Obenshain was ambivalent and kind of waffled on that; later he said, 'well, that’s a political calculus.' It’s not a political calculus. It’s about doing what’s right.

“And when he had the opportunity to vote for a gift ban in the legislature, a gift ban on legislators, he voted against it. He voted to kill it.”

In 2006, Obenshain voted in committee against prohibiting gifts from lobbyists and other persons to General Assembly members during regular legislative sessions. Headlines from this shameful vote are under “Background” at the bottom of this release. In August 2013, when asked whether Cuccinelli should return the $18,000 in gifts from Star Scientific’s CEO, Jonnie Williams, Obenshain said that he would leave it to others to “weigh the political calculus.”

As Virginia’s next Attorney General, Mark Herring will work proactively to prevent corruption, hold elected officials accountable and restore the public trust. Included in his “Restoring Integrity to State Government” plan. Mark Herring outlined his plan to clean up the ethical mess in Richmond:

  • Creating a State Ethics Commission to administer and enforce all of Virginia’s ethics rules and conflict of interest laws. The Commission would be made up of several appointed public officials. It would have professional staff and would be empowered to undertake investigations and hold hearings regarding alleged violations of ethics and conflicts of interest laws.  One of the Commission’s first orders of business would be a full review of Virginia’s ethics and conflict of interest rules.
  • Limiting Gifts and Strengthening Disclosure Requirements, such as imposing a $100 limit and full disclosure requirements on gifts to elected officials and their immediate family members from any business, organization, or person, other than a relative. Mark would also work to prevent public officials or their immediate family members from receiving gifts from lobbyists, their employers and those with business before the Commonwealth. This proposal also includes the requirement to fully disclose corporate loans, fully identify creditors and post disclosures to a single online location within ten days.
  • Root out, Punish, and Deter Corruption and Conflicts of Interest by requiring independent audits of financial disclosures by the State Ethics Commission and increased penalties for officeholders who violate conflict of interest and campaign finance disclosure laws.
  • Prohibit the Use of Campaign Contributions for Personal Expenses. Mark will work with legislators to pass a law that stops elected officials and candidates from using campaign funds for personal expenses.
  • Expand Public Access to Government Records by clarifying that the Attorney General’s office must honor FOIA requests and expanding the scope of FOIA to cover the State Corporation.

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Background:

Mark Obenshain, In 2006, Voted In Committee, Against A Bill To Ban Gifts To Lawmakers During Session. Mark Obenshain, on January 31, 2006, voted in the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee to kill Senate Bill 641, which was a bill to prohibit “gifts from lobbyists and other persons to General Assembly members during regular legislative sessions,” except for “unused tickets, honorary degrees and presents from relatives.” (Roanoke Times, 02/01/06, Senate Bill 641, 2006, and Virginia’s Legislative Information System Summary of Senate Bill 641, 2006)

Daily Press“Taxpayers Get No Free Lunch, But Lawmakers Get Free Dinners.”“Taxpayers get no free lunch, but lawmakers get free dinners. A Senate panel upholds the status quo. A Virginia senator who sought a ban on gifts and free dinners for lawmakers during the General Assembly session came up one vote short before a Senate panel on Tuesday. The Privileges and Elections Committee deadlocked on the bill from Sen. Roscoe Reynolds in a 6-6 vote.” (02/01/06)

Richmond Times Dispatch: Ray McAllister Criticized Mark Obenshain And The Republicans Saying, “You Guys Can't Limit Your Gift-Taking To The Other 305 Days Of The Year?” The Richmond Times Dispatch’s Ray McAllister opined, “The Republican Privileged: The six Republicans in the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee voted against a ban on getting gifts while the assembly is in session, enough to cancel the six Democrats and kill the bill. You guys can't limit your gift-taking to the other 305 days of the year?” (02/02/06)

Washington Post: “A Bill To Ban Gifts During The General Assembly Session Died In Committee On A Tie Vote” While “Lobbyists Frequently Appear Before Legislators In Committee Rooms Less Than 24 Hours After Treating Them To Expensive Dinners Or Buffet Receptions.” “Gifts totaling more than $11,000 were accepted during the give-and-take of last year's legislative session, when lobbyists frequently appear before legislators in committee rooms less than 24 hours after treating them to expensive dinners or buffet receptions. … In Richmond, the lobbying scandals in Maryland and the nation's capital appear to have done little to discourage the practice of accepting lobbyist-paid trips and gifts. A bill to ban gifts during the General Assembly session died in committee on a tie vote last week, and a bill to reduce disclosure requirements for gifts and dinners was unanimously approved in a House committee.” (02/05/06) 

An Ugly Intrusion of Republicanness into My 50th High School Reunion

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The main event of our Reunion was a big banquet, which consisted mostly of wonderful schmooze time and dining time. Then came the program time, which I found less wonderful because of what our MC threw in.

The MC was our class president. He’d been our class’s most outstanding athlete, and he stood out also back in the day for driving a fancy Chrysler 300 to school. He has a reputation for being a pretty good guy.  And he’s also a Republican.

That Republican bit should be irrelevant.  Had I been the MC, it surely would have been irrelevant to the job I’d have done that I’ve spent my last nine years alarmed and disgusted by what the Republican Party has become.  I’d have figured that that had nothing to do with what brought us classmates together, a half century after graduation.  I’d have thought it contrary to our feel-good purposes to intrude any views of mine on matters that divide us.

But as it turned out, it wasn’t irrelevant.  For whatever reason, our star quarterback thought himself entitled to compel us all to join him in his brand of patriotism. It’s a brand I recognize, and it’s not one I like.

He did it in three distinct moves, over about a fifteen minute period, mixed in with thanks to the rest of the reunion committee, a bit of reminiscence, and a series of jokes (with a misogynistic theme running through them).

The first move was to make the declaration, with no particular context, that “we live in the greatest country in the history of the world.”  It’s a statement that was truer the day we marched out of the gymnasium to “Pomp and Circumstance” than it is now. But one then less frequently announced.  

Since then, while we continue to lead the world in military spending and power, and have surged to a lead in percentage of our people behind bars, our nation has fallen well back in the standings in various measures of human well-being-like in health, life expectancy, infant mortality, educational achievement, and social mobility.

The kicker is this:  the same Republican force that’s pumped up the “We’re # 1” mentality has been key to making our country notably less great by the values both of our founders and our religious traditions.

Our class president’s remark connected into all that chest-thumping, jingoistic sense of national superiority that our most recent Republican president used in order to get and maintain support for the kinds of aggressive American policies that made our traditional friends abroad fear and distrust us.

His next move, a while later, was to ask for all our classmates who’d served in the American armed forces to stand up and to tell the rest of us to applaud them.  I appreciate people’s service in the military, and I know that some of these guys from the class of ’63 put their lives on the line forty-some years ago.  But did this gesture toward the military have a place in our event?  

And, so many years later, and with people now at the age of retirement from long careers, is the service and sacrifice of soldiers the only kind worthy of appreciation?  

What about the teachers in the room, who worked long hours for not much pay out of devotion to their students?  And doctors and nurses, working hard to cure the sick?  And what about my friend Marv, sitting at our table, who’d brought integrity and sagacity to a domain of the law, helping thereby to make our society a bit more just and more sane?  

This extraneous call for us to applaud our soldiers, and only our soldiers, also rang a familiar note:  the militarization of virtue, promoted by that same Republican presidency, as a way of making our raw power the definition of our national greatness, as well as putting the misguided wars of choice beyond challenge by tying them to “our heroes” in uniform.  

Finally, as our MC was about to wrap things up, he called upon us all to stand and recite — as I do not recall our doing during our years together in high school – the “Pledge of Allegiance” to the flag.  I used to have fond feelings for the American flag, but in our times it’s become so completely connected with the kind of patriotism that’s been called “the last refuge of scoundrels” that it’ll be quite a while before I can see it again as standing for the Republic that offers “liberty and justice for all.”  

As a candidate for Congress, I refused to be one of those politicians who have been intimidated by this ugly form of patriotism into wearing a flag pin, or using the flag in my campaign hand-outs.  I preferred to talk about the values that animated our Founders.  Not the tarnished symbol, but the living substance.

Any one of these gestures, I might have overlooked.  But together, they form a pattern.  At some level our master of ceremonies must have known that he was pushing onto all of us a position on a matter of political controversy in our country. This pattern, after all, takes clear sides in what was one of the chief recent political battle lines in America.

This is a pattern we’ve seen before at important moments of the history of the past century:  the sense of superiority, the militarism, and the idolatry over the flag.  We’ve seen it in our own recent history, and we’ve seen it in chapters of the history of other nations.

They are always dark chapters.

Our reunion did not need that ugly bit of contemporary Republicanness intruding into our event.

Virginia 2009 vs. Virginia 2013: Where Have All the Polls Gone?

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I’ve noticed for a while that it seems like there have been very few polls of the Virginia governor’s race this cycle, but I had’t really looked into it. Until this morning, when I decided to check Real Clear Politics and see if my gut feeling was correct. Well, yes, it was. So far this summer (since June 1), these are the polls of the Virginia governor’s race.

*Quinnipiac (8/14-8/19) 48%-42% McAuliffe +6

*Quinnipiac (7/11-7/15) 43%-39% McAuliffe +4

*Roanoke College (7/8-7/14) 33%-39% Cuccinelli +6

*PPP (7/11 – 7/14) 41%-37% McAuliffe +4

*Rasmussen Reports (6/5-6/6) 44%-41% McAuliffe +3

That’s five polls of the Virginia governor’s race since the end of May 2013, with four showing McAuliffe ahead, and one not being a serious poll (NOT because it has Cuccinelli ahead, but because it’s been a piece of crap for years now).

In comparison, here are the polls from 2009:

*Washington Post (8/11-8/14) 54%-39% McDonnell +15

*Rasmussen (8/10-8/10) 49%-41% McDonnell +8

*Daily Kos/R2000 (8/3-8/5) 51%-43% McDonnell +8

*PPP (7/31-8/3) 51%-37% McDonnell +14

*SurveyUSA (7/27-7/28) 55%-40% McDonnell +15

*Rasmussen (7/14-7/14) 44%-41% McDonnell +3

*PPP (6/30-7/2) 49%-43% McDonnell +6

*Daily Kos/R2000 (6/15-6/17) 45%-44% McDonnell +1

*Rasmussen (6/10-6/10) 41%-47% Deeds +6

*SurveyUSA (6/5 – 6/7) 47%-43% McDonnell +4

*Daily Kos/R2000 (6/1-6/3) 46%-34% McDonnell +12

That makes 11 polls in 2009 from June 1 through August 23 (McDonnell led all of them except for, ironically, the most pro-Republican one, Rasmussen).

So…in 2009 there were twice as many Virginia Governor polls from June 1 until now as in 2013. It’s weird, because if anything you’d think it would be the opposite, as 2009 was a blowout and 2013 is a much closer, more interesting race. What happened?

I’m not totally sure, but a few things jump out:

 1) the Daily Kos/”Research 2000″ polling partnership died a nasty death (lawsuit settled in 2011); 2) SurveyUSA seems to have largely disappeared, for whatever reason; and 3) Rasmussen has been less active this year (note that Scott Rasmussen just left Rasmusssen Research to become a GOP pundit, which is what he should have been all along!). In addition, this year isn’t a “Tea Party wave” year, and I’ve always felt that the media drove the Tea Party phenomenon. This year, maybe the media’s bored, even with a Tea Party candidate (Ken Cuccinelli) at the top of the Virginia Republican ticket, and two just-as-extreme-if-not-more-extreme candidates (EW Jackson and Mark Obenshain) down ballot from him? Also, I wonder if the polling industry in general has pulled back a bit after 2012, when there was so much controversy over likely voter models, supposedly “skewed” polls (there was never any evidence of “skewing” against Republicans; that was all another right-wingnut fever dream)? Hard to say.

Whatever the reason, we’ve had less than half the polls of the Virginia governor’s race from June 1 to August 23, 2013 compared to the same period in 2009. Of the polls we HAVE had, the trends in the two cycles are wildly different: in 2009, consistent leads for McDonnell from start to finish (with that one weird outlier of Rasmussen on 6/10/09, right after Deeds secured the Democratic nomination); in 2013, every reputable poll (and again – nope, Roanoke College polls are not reputable) has had McAuliffe leading Cuccinelli, albeit not by large margins.

Anyway, we’ll see if there’s a flood of polls after Labor Day. Last cycle, there were a whopping 29(!) public polls from 9/1/09 until the election.  I’d be shocked if we match that this cycle, but we’ll see soon enough…

Poll Shocker: McDonnell Comeback Possible, Prosecutor’s Risk Backlash?

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by Paul Goldman

“Call the grave diggers. We may have buried a guy whose still alive” is my take on the latest polling numbers showing Virginians have not joined the mainstream media mob who have decided to hang Governor McDonnell BEFORE the trial, indeed before there is any hard evidence that he is going to be indicted by state or federal authorities. Despite 4 months of relentless, unprecedented “he’s a crook” front page coverage led by the Amazon.com Post, His Excellency, our “gifted governor” has polling numbers a lot better than a goodly number of other Governors even in more Republican states. As the saying goes: Who would have thunk it?

Just when Dexter, the character in the Dexter HBO series, had McDonnell wrapped up and on the execution table, the script changed, or at least the Director cried “STOP!”. To be sure, this could only be like the scene in the movie The Perfect Storm, when the doomed passengers on the boat get a few hours of reprieve as they sailed into the calm eye of the great hurricane. Eventually, the giant waves and fierce winds surrounding their unreal zone of safety will reappear, leaving them no place to hide.

BUT let’s assume the Virginia newspaper posse is wrong, let’s assume after all these months of front page leaks and the latest editorials calling on him to RESIGN are wrong: let’s assume that Jonnie The Rat Williams is NOT believed by the federal prosecutors, let’s assume the prosecutors decide that McDonnell is telling the truth, that he might be a lot of things a Governor shouldn’t be, but not “a crook” as Nixon would have put it.

As I have written in this space – a lonely voice I might add – the law requires our  “gifted Governor” and his “gifted wife” be given the benefit of the doubt. The usual rule in the South is this: if it quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, and looks like a duck, it’s got to be Duck Dynasty don’t it?

But let’s assume – and let’s insist really – that if the prosecutors aren’t absolutely sure they have “their man”, then as the saying goes: If the facts don’t quite fit, then the prosecutors have to acquit.

Okay: That’s not quite the quip, but it’s close enough for government work in this case.

The polls don’t lie: Right now, knowing what they know, the people of Virginia aren’t demanding McDonnell resign, stand trial for criminal charges, or do anything but finish out what they still see as a positive 4 years at the Governor’s Mansion.

“Hell with the newspaper editorial writers and muckrakers!” say the people of Virginia. They seem willing – except for diehard Democrats and your died-in-the-wool “plague on both your houses” independents – to give His Excellency a second chance if the federal grand jury disbands without putting the Governor’s name on any piece of official paper. They may wrong but this is the majority view.

You read about people suddenly coming alive on the operating table, even supposedly after being tagged at the morgue: but not any who apparently buried alive at the local political graveyard beneath six feet of solid news print.

Does this mean Virginians have a high tolerance for bad gubernatorial behavior, or a low tolerance for a political lynch mob?

Neither really. But it does tell me this: McDonnell has made a big political mistake in not (1) making a better public Mea Culpa, (2) making a better public case for his being dumb but not corrupt and (3) failing to call a Special Session showing he has learned from his mistake and will use that experience to make sure it can never happen again. Had he done all three things, his positive ratings would likely be a lot higher: and the prosecutors would face a lot harder decision.

That’s right: one thing the prosecutors have been considering for weeks now is whether there will be a public backlash to their calling McDonnell a “crook” in so many words, or in using his wife’s blind ambition to force the Governor into taking a plea and resigning.

It has been a public hanging by the media: and thus it will be a public spectacle whatever the prosecutors decide to do. Right now, as indicated, the court of public opinion isn’t in a hanging mode. Again, you or I might a different view. But that’s a separate issue.

The reason for the polling numbers seems plain enough: The public at large isn’t convinced  what he is being accused of doing is so far different from the political norm to warrant criminal sanctions.

There is only one way to prove them wrong: he would have to be indicted, and then convicted by a jury of his peers. In that period, McDonnell would be forced to turn his Republican guns on the Democratic prosecutors, fair or not.

Based on the polling data, this scenario is possible: Most Republicans and a majority of independents might be convinced, in terms of the court of public opinion, that the DOJ of a Democratic Administration played a little politics with the claim of criminal conduct on the part of the GUV and possibly the First Lady.

The DOJ fear: Given the ethical rules once an indictment is issue, this could turn ugly as McDonnell’s lawyers start talking to the jury poll while the DOJ has to remain silent in relative comparison.

Why not therefore let the constitution of Virginia take its normal course, McDonnell will be gone in a few months anyway, why take the risk of a big public blow-up in the middle of a GUV race over what the people right now see as a personal failing, not a gubernatorial crime that has affected his performance in office?

But you say” “Paul, it is clear the public isn’t really informed, hasn’t been following the facts, when they learn the truth, the public will get outraged.”

My comeback: “I tend to give the public far more credit.”

Let’s cut to the chase: As I have written, I am not a big fan of what I will call this “Jonnie The Rat” case, where a sleazy business guy like Williams – based on what we know – gets to say “trust me prosecutors” on my ratting out the Governor for making secret illegal promises to me. It may be prosecutors have a lot stronger case, and one suspects they surely have good reason to think so sans Mr. Williams.

BUT: In the end, they don’t have a smoking gun is my guess. There was clearly more going around in the dark than Santa Claus when Mr. Williams was checking his gift list before dropping down the chimney of the Governor’s Mansion. Yet that being said: As I have written, Governors do favors for their friends and in our culture, friends tend to be $friends, like it or not, we need to be adults here.

I am not condoning it: but I refuse to be a hypocrite either just to nail a Republican Governor who I didn’t vote for [didn’t vote for him for AG either.]

Bottom line: Call me old fashioned, call me “a rebel, call me what you will” as the famous song goes, I would rather see 100 guilty men go free than convict one innocent man. And “innocent” in our culture, in our law, is someone who gets the benefit of a reasonable doubt.

That’s my take on the latest poll numbers: The court of public opinion is prepared to give their Governor a chance at redemption having now given his accusers all these months to make their case, legal, political, ethical and otherwise.

Should the prosecutors listen? Ideally no, but practically is another vital question. In my view, the better result in terms of what is good for the state would be to let the Governor off the hook IF he would agree to call a Special Session, fight for real ethics reform, and appoint a Governor’s Commission to study our laws to make sure we aren’t sending innocent people to jail or keeping them there due to things we need to change including a system which forces people to take pleas to things they didn’t do because fighting for the truth has become too costly or risky.

We call this “rough justice.” This is not a bad result at all when you are essentially dealing with a “political offense” in the main part. Real corruption over the years has always included actions by Governors that were far more serious and directly monied corrupt than what we have here.

This is not to condone it: but it is to say that if the price for “rough justice” for the many is to give Governor McDonnell  the benefit of the doubt, then 20 years from now, the interests of the state will have been far better served and the outcome far better for the greater good.

I read the polls as saying this: If the prosecutors are willing to accept this kind of “rough justice”, the public is “down” with that, and in that regard, it presents an opportunity to address far more series criminal justice issues than could otherwise be addressed right now in our political culture.

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, August 23. Also check out President Obama speaking about “his plan to make college more affordable, tackle rising costs, and improve value for students and their families.”

*Justice Department sues Texas over voter ID law (Excellent. Next lawsuit: against North Carolina.)

*U.S. Officials Are Weighing Response to Assault in Syria (I’m really thinking we need to respond forcefully to the use of chemical weapons against civilians by the Syrian government. It’s wildly unacceptable behavior, and if we allow it to go unpunished, I fear we’re setting a very dangerous precedent for the future regarding WMD use.)

*Congressman Peddles Conspiracy Theory On Climate Change: Only ‘Radical Environmentalists’ Get Grants (More evidence that there’s something seriously, seriously wrong with Republicans these days.)

*Boehner ups the ante for a budget showdown in September (And more evidence…)

*No, Chris Lane is not Trayvon Martin! (“If you want to actually understand race relations in this country, you need to understand the difference between these cases. But the right prefers to live behind a veil of intentional ignorance where the only kind of racism that exists today is black people disliking white people.”)

*GOP unhinged on Obamacare (“There is no chance the Senate or Obama would defund the act, yet Republicans keep trying.” They are suffering from a severe, possibly terminal, case of “Obama Derangement Syndrome.”)

*Galuszka: Virginia’s problem goes beyond McDonnell

*U.S. attorney investigating McDonnell to leave office as probe heats up (I agree with Galuszka that we need strong,systemic ethics reform in Virginia. I also agree that the Richmond Times-Dispatch, aka Republican Times-Disgrace, has its head firmly embedded in its butt.)

*Poll reports McDonnell’s honesty an issue for many

*Today’s top opinion: Back to health (I agree that Virginia needs tax reform desperately, but I strongly doubt I agree with the Republican Times-Disgrace on what that reform should look like…)

*Changing Demographics in Virginia Are Making Republicans Nervous (As well they should be…)

*Demographic Shifts May Help Virginia Democrats (Not one but TWO articles on Virginia’s changing demographics today. Sensing a theme here?)

*Why So Serious? (“Political idealism is a great principle but when faced with Ken Cuccinelli vs. Terry McAuliffe, realism takes precedence.” Bingo!)

*Terry McAuliffe Calls for Stiffer Drunk Driving, Domestic Violence Enforcement

*Election 2013: Attorney Gen. Democratic Candidate Mark Herring ‘Deeply Disturbed’ With Ken Cuccinelli and Opponent Mark Obenshain

*Will this be on the SOLs? (“In Virginia’s high-stakes testing climate, drills could be killing the desire to learn. It’s worth a review.”)

*Sen. Mark Warner meets with Roanoke rail workers to talk gridlock (My god, the false equivalency, b.s. “both sides” shtick is out of control! Can someone please explain to me why Mark Warner is Virginia’s most popular politician, as measured by public opinion polls? Ugh.)

*Federal cuts threaten team dealing with dolphin crisis (The type of harm the sequester is doing. Stupid, stupid, stupid.)

*In New Spot, Cuccinelli Tosses GOP Gov Under Bus (He can try to do that, but as Bob Lewis points out in his article, “Cuccinelli…received $18,000 from Williams and his company” as well. Plus, there’s Cuccinelli’s CONSOL corruption.)

*50 years after King speech, Norfolk marchers remember living “Dream”

*Stirring the student vote (“Virginia Tech students have too much at stake to sit out off-year elections.”)

*George Washington National Forest plan delayed

*Seven Fairfax high schools will ban sugary sodas from machines (Excellent move, every other school system should do this too!)

*Henrico School Board will not extend Russo’s contract

*D.C. area forecast: Front heads south today, making weekend weather hard to pass up!

*After near-win, Nationals rally to beat Cubs 5-4 in marathon 13-inning game (“Strasburg’s blown three run lead in the 9th inning was yet another of the season’s missed opportunities.”)