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What It Means to Say a “Sick and Broken Spirit” is Damaging America

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Last fall, before a crowd of 350 people, I made a campaign speech about “a sick and broken spirit.”  At the end of the speech, people sprang to their feet as if they had heard something meaningful. A video of the speech went viral  . But what did people think I meant by that word, “spirit”?

Spirit is something that one cannot see but that one can discern from the way things move. We see the spirit as we “see” the wind when trees bow before it

So it is with the sick and destructive spirit that now animates the Republican Party.

We cannot see that spirit directly.  What we see are the actions of politicians like Bush and Rove and Cheney, and the words of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck and the minions of Rupert Murdoch, and the way of doing politics practiced by the NRA, and by Liberty University and by the Republicans in Congress who made it their top priority, in a time of national crisis, to make our president fail.  

Those things show us the force of the invisible wind that compels trees to bend in the direction the wind is heading.

And we see the sick and destructive spirit whose portrait, in that viral video, I painted like this:

• A spirit that makes a fight over everything

• A spirit for which there is no such thing as “Enough” of wealth or power

• A spirit that appeals continually to the worst in people, their hatreds and fears

• A spirit that lies about everything



When we see a force that acts coherently and that consistently inflicts damage, we infer that there’s something operating that we do not see.
 

When we speak of character in a person, what do we mean?  Do we see the person’s character?  Not directly.  We infer it from the pattern of his words and actions.  

And so it is with entities like the dark force that’s arisen on the political right.  From the consistencies — the dishonesty, the destructiveness, the cruelty, the lack of integrity, the contempt for justice, the insatiability — we can infer just what kind of character inhabits this force.  But instead of calling it character, as with an individual, the vastness of this thing that operates in our cultural/political/moral system in America, the way it operates at a scale still further removed from our immediate perception, led me to call it a destructive spirit.

There really is a Something — encompassing a veritable empire of people and organizations and resources — animating the drive toward all this political ugliness and degradation.

I have written about that Something, again and again, but perhaps never as directly as in There Is an It: As in Baseball You Can’t Hit What You Can’t See

I wrote:

From coherence of effect, one can infer a commonality of cause Just as Newton did not have to see the gravitational force that governs the pattern of planetary motion around the sun, so we do not have to see the “It” to understand that it is there.

An It behind the dividing of groups against each other.

An It behind the preying on the vulnerable and serving the   privileged.

An It behind the fostering of ignorance.

An It in the unwillingness to sacrifice selfish advantage for any larger good.

…It is a force that must be confronted and defeated. Understanding is the first step.

When we look at this pattern of patterns, do we not see what our civilization has always understood to be the pattern of evil? It’s there in the Bible.

It is only to the degree that Americans can this dark spirit for what it is, and can reject it, that our nation has a chance to revive, in Lincoln’s phrase, “the better angels” of its nature.

And that, after all, is what politics is ultimately supposed to be for.

Explaining how such a destructive spirit can arise, is the purpose of the “Swinging for the Fences” project.

And making that destructive spirit –that “It”– visible is the reason for all I’m attempting to do: the advocacy of a political strategy for heavily Republican districts; a “Rogues Gallery” strategy; and, soon, on the website “Like the Dew”, an attempt to engage Southerners about the Southern component of this political force on the right.

I hope you will join me in these efforts.

 

Terry McAuliffe Fairfax Office Opening

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Terry does a great job of laying out the campaign, emphasizing the stark contrast of his common sense solutions with Cuccinelli’s extreme crackpot agenda. He announced we will be opening 35 field offices all over Virginia so we can talk to our voters on-on-one and get them out to vote this year. Meet your organizer in Fairfax on the flip.

Meet Your Organizer in Fairfax County 2013

Cuccinelli’s Fatal Political Mistake Becoming Clearer

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( – promoted by lowkell)

by Paul Goldman

As often happens in gubernatorial races, the difference between winning or losing doesn’t rest on substantive positions, TV ads, big-time endorsements, turnout organization, candidate charisma, etc. Rather, it comes down to a basic “process” issue. That is to say: the fatal problem starts with a fundamental mistake on how one organizes one’s campaign.

A textbook case in point is the 2013 Ken Cuccinelli for Governor campaign. The more I study it, the more convinced I am of the following: there is a fundamental flaw at the heart of the campaign, one which no TV ad, no issue position, no fundraising, no nothin’ of the sort, can fix. Mr. Cuccinelli created it.

The problem: Cuccinelli forget to the read the Bible. Specifically, Mathew 6: 24, wisely addressing the age-old problem of whether a man can serve two masters. Since the campaign year officially began on January 1, there have been two people running for the GOP nomination for Governor: Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, and Governor guy wannabe Ken Cuccinelli.

As a matter of law and substantive work as regards the office of Attorney General, it is possible for these two Ken Cuccinellis to serve the same master: that is to say, the god of gubernatorial campaigning. With all due respect to the AG and his staff, it ain’t that hard being the AG. It ain’t that hard as regards the substance of running for governor. So as a legal matter, as a substance matter, it is easy to be AG and run for governor at the same time. The gods accept that, no big deal.

They do it in every other state. So when Mr. Cuccinelli, supported by Professor Sabato and others, said the state’s tradition of having the AG resign to run for governor made no legal or substantive sense, they had a good point. Cuccinelli and Sabato were absolutely right.

But Professor Sabato was not endorsing Cuccinelli’s decision to break with the tradition.  Hardly. He was only saying the tradition made no sense as a legal and substantive. He was only saying it made no sense as a political matter, per se.  But Professor Sabato was not addressing the issue that mattered most: whether, as a practical matter, Ken Cuccinelli was capable of doing it. Sabato didn’t address the specific, only the general.

What do I mean? It is clear to me now that Mr. Cuccinelli believes he is capable of being two different people at the same time, keeping both identities separate and apart. He believes he can be AG, doing the job independently of any connections to his ambition to be governor. In addition, he believes he can separate out his Cuccinelli for Governor existence from his AG’s role.

Can he do this? In theory yes. Will the public appreciate it? In theory they can. It is a hard sell. But even if you could sell it, there is a fatal flaw in the creation of these two entities. They each BY NECESSITY require having two separate staffs with two separate priorities who can’t communicate with each other. Thus, on matters which affect AG Cuccinelli, he has an AG’s staff of aides and press people who handle that part of Mr. Cuccinelli. Then, on matters which GUV GUY wannabe, he has a gubernatorial campaign staff of aides and press people who handle that part of Mr. Cuccinelli.

Accordingly, Mr. Cuccinelli is a man trying to serve two masters at the same time: and the gods of gubernatorial campaigning are bemused that a human would dare think this was possible. This is a godlike power. They aren’t happy with him for claiming he can do it. The results speak for themselves.

Fact: The campaigns of Attorneys General running for re-election, or running for governor in other states ARE RUN OUT OF THEIR AG OFFICES. Yes, they have a campaign staff, a campaign office, a campaign manager, whatever. But the politics, the guts of the campaign, is run from INSIDE THE AG’S OFFICE. Trust me: That is the way the game is played. There is no other way to do it.

The reason is simple: When you run for governor, it is 24/7 politics,  not 24/7* [except when I am being AG.] There is no asterisk. You can’t serve two masters. You can’t be AG Cuccinelli served by AG Cuccinelli staff whenever you decide to slip into that mode, and then GUV GUY Cuccinelli served by GUV GUY Cuccinelli staff whenever you decide to slip into that mode. Mathew 6:24 made that rather plain, or so I thought.

For some reason which defies both experience, logic, and frankly gut common sense, Mr. Cuccinelli believes differently: he believes he can be both people at the same time. NOT POSSIBLE.

As I say, the issue is not whether you can do the work of AG and the GUV GUY wannabe at the same time. It is not a WORK PROBLEM. It is a PROCESS PROBLEM. There can be only ONE MASTER. And it has to be the person who runs your politics. He or she will have to able to be a lawyer and a political person, so it ain’t easy. But it is what it is.

America and the allies had many top generals  in WW2. But Ike was the boss of the boys fighting Hitler. It was his way or the highway. He wasn’t the best general, nor the best politician. But he was the perfect leader.

The last 4 months of the AG’s campaign for governor, and his tenure as AG, is a textbook example of why Mathew 6:24 was the wrong lecture for Cuccinelli to miss growing up. Mr. Cuccinelli says he will not resign. That’s his call. It might yet work out for him. But unless he solves his two-master problem, he has created a process that so far has only produced one political mistake, indeed legal mistake, after another.

To quote singer Lorrie Morgan: “What is it about NO that you don’t understand?”  

McAuliffe Campaign: Rips Cuccinelli’s “twisted version of history”

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From the McAuliffe for Governor campaign:

 

It's official — Ken Cuccinelli has launched his first television ad of the campaign.

The ad is precisely what you'd expect from him: an unabashed attempt to show Cuccinelli as a “compassionate conservative.”

While I don't think Virginia voters are going to buy Cuccinelli's twisted version of history, we need to fight back — and we need to do it now. Our April 30th fundraising deadline is right around the corner and it's more important now than ever before.

Will you chip in $5 to help Terry fight back today?

Here are some facts that don't appear in Ken Cuccinelli's ad:

  • Ken Cuccinelli directed public universities and colleges to remove protections against discrimination based on sexual orientation for students and faculty.
  • Ken Cuccinelli subpoenaed his own client — UVA — demanding documents from climate researchers as part of his mission to deny global climate change.
  • Ken Cuccinelli pushed through medically unnecessary regulations on women's health centers with the aim of his number one goal: ending safe and legal abortion in Virginia.

This is the real Ken Cuccinelli — the man the Washington Post described as “the most overtly partisan Attorney General in Virginia's history.”

Apparently, it's kind of tough to fit the truth in a 30-second commercial.

Virginians deserve to hear the facts about Ken Cuccinelli — and the latest polls show that many of them still need to. Between 30 and 40 percent of the Commonwealth doesn't know enough about Cuccinelli to form an opinion.

With simply the three facts above, we have a really compelling case. And believe me — there's a lot more where that came from.

But Cuccinelli is already sitting on $2.5 million from radical anti-choice group Susan B. Anthony List and the Republican Governors Association. $2.5 million can buy you a lot of ads like the one he's running now.

Will you help us make our case to Virginians by pitching in $5 before the April deadline?

Thanks for fighting alongside Terry,

Robby Mook
Campaign Manager

Terry McAuliffe for Governor 

Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, April 27. Also, check out President Obama’s weekly address, in which he says ” it’s time for a balanced approach to deficit reduction that makes smarter cuts and reforms in the tax code while creating jobs and strengthening the middle class.” The problem is, as always, Teapublicans are not interested in a “balanced approach,” and no matter how many times President Obama calls for one, they’re not going to give in. So…now what?

*Obama: Replace ‘dumb’ sequester cuts with ‘smarter’ cuts (Except for one problem…see the next item!)

*Ezra Klein: The Democrats have lost on sequestration (“But that’s game, then. Absent the willingness to accept the pain of sequestration and use it to overturn the whole policy, Democrats have no leverage to end it.” Brilliant, guys.)

*White House hails economic growth report

*Mark Zuckerberg’s New Political Group Spending Big On Ads Supporting Keystone XL And Oil Drilling (WTF?)

*12 Programs Congress Refuses To Save From Automatic Spending Cuts

*As U.S. wars end, drop in spending hurts economy

*Cuccinelli says he failed to disclose some gifts from Star Scientific CEO (“Amid controversy, attorney general amends disclosure forms to include stays at executive’s vacation home.”)

*Cuccinelli amends gifts disclosures

*Virginia’s assault on abortion (“The state’s arbitrary rules claim their first victim.”)

*AG’s office spells out conflict in Executive Chef case

*Goodlatte offers first bills on immigration (And of course it’s godawful.)

*Maryland, Virginia road plans rely on Congress to avoid higher gas taxes

*Nats trounce Reds a second night (“Jordan Zimmermann throws a 1-hitter to catapult Washington to victory over Cincinnati on Friday”)

Democracy for America Wants to Send YOU to Netroots Nation

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( – promoted by lowkell)

This post was drafted by Democracy for America's New Media Manager, Alex Showerman. 

This will be my first Netroots Nation and I could not be more excited to go! Before I made the progressive movement my career and was a passionate activist in my free time, I had always wanted to go to Netroots Nation. I was drawn by the chance to attend the panels, see the big name speakers, attend the trainings, and most importantly meet fellow activists to take my involvement to the next level. Unfortunately, as a broke college student and young professional, I simply didn’t have the extra cash to go.

Here at DFA, we believe that progressive activists should not be discouraged from attending Netroots Nation because of cost, just as I was. That’s why as a major sponsor of Netroots Nation DFA will foot the bill for rising stars in the progressive movement to join us in San Jose. Developing the next generation of the progressive activists has always been a core value of DFA, and we view attending Netroots Nation as your launch pad!

Past scholars include folks who have successfully run for state office, prominent gun violence prevention activists, radio personalities, and well-known bloggers. This could be your chance to attend Netroots Nation and make the connections you need to take your activism to the next level. Here’s what you do right now:

  1. Apply! If you have always wanted to go to Netroots, but don’t have the spare cash, this could be your opportunity! 
  2. Nominate somebody who you think deserves to go, they’ll be flattered. 
  3. Most of all, vote for the activists you think are most deserving. 

Good luck and we look forward to seeing you in San Jose!

VPAP Analysis of 2013 General Assembly Legislation Interesting but Misleading

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In general, I think the Virginia Public Access Project (VPAP) does excellent work, especially given their small budget and staff levels. And, at first glance, these infographics (see to the right – click to “embiggen” – and on the “flip”) are no exception. However…I’ll get to why they’re not just misleading, but highly misleading, in a minute. First, though, if you just look at these graphics quickly, what you’d conclude is that the 2013 Virginia General Assembly wasn’t nearly as  vicious, nasty, embattled, etc., as most of us probably thought it was. Thus, according to VPAP, only 40 bills out of 2,574 (1.5 percent) introduced, and 40 bill out of 1,526 bills passed (2.6 percent) were “closely contested.” The rest of the bills that passed were either non-controversial binding resolutions (681 of those), ones that passed unanimously (489 of those), or ones that passed with 60% or greater support (329 of those). Sounds great, right?

There’s just one problem with this analysis, and it’s a big one. I spoke with Del. Scott Surovell a few minutes ago, and he explained it to me as follows: “Analyzing data like this would be like looking at Sudan from 60,000 feet and not seeing ethnic cleansing going on.” Why is that? Simple. As Del. Surovell explains, going from the original 2,574 bills introduced down to 1,526 bills passed, the vast majority of the 1,048 bills that died (or were “carried over,” etc.) met their fate in unrecorded committee votes. And when Del. Surovell says “unrecorded,” he means it in both senses: no audio or visual recordings of the proceedings, and no record of votes cast. That basically means there’s zero sunshine on the process where many good bills, and probably a lot of bad ones too, get weeded out. If you ignore all that, it’s no wonder you could conclude that things look pretty cordial down in Richmond.

By the way, it’s particularly revealing that efforts – including by Del. Surovell – to require that committee votes be audio or video recorded, and/or that a record be kept of who voted which way in committee, have gone nowhere in the Republican-controlled House of Delegates. The question is, why don’t Speaker Bill Howell and all his corporate buddies from ALEC, etc. want the public to know what’s going on underneath the dark, slimy rocks of the General Assembly? Gee, I can’t imagine!

Cuccinelli’s First TV Ad: His Wife is a Sure Winner

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(Lowell’s note: I’m promoting this because I think it shows what we’re up against this year. Anyone who underestimates Ken Cuccinelli or his team, including Chris LaCivita, or thinks we’re going to win easily just because Cuckoo is well…cuckoo, is delusional. So, Democrats, what are you doing to elect Terry McAuiffe and defeat Ken Cuccinelli? – promoted by lowkell)

by Paul Goldman

Let’s start with the great lyrics from ACDC’s super song “T.N.T.”

Women to the left of me, women to the right, I got no gun, I got no knife, but don’t you start no fight, I am dynamite.

With all due respect to the AG, the Cuccinellis have finally put the “A Team” on the field. Let’s give his strategy guy Chris LaCivita credit: he realizes a winner when he has one.

The K-man’s first ad, featuring a geeky image of him walking with his wife, then roughly 25 seconds of Teiro Cuccinelli talking into the camera, sometimes direct, sometimes over a montage of pictures, is right where Cuccinelli has to be to have ANY chance of being elected governor.

Guys, let’s face: We don’t matter in the 2013 campaign. The deciding vote is with the women, mostly in the suburbs. White guys, by and large, are Republican, end of story. Non-white guys, by and large, are Democratic, end of story. There is some potential movement here, but not enough to decide the governor’s race unless something unusual happens.

Meaning, for Cuccinelli to have any chance of winning, he has to close the gap among women. Hardly a revelation I would assume.

 

Enter, therefor, in ad #1: The Wife, The Mother, The Partner, The Middle Class Significant other. She is as good as it is going to get for the K-man among women. She is real, she is sincere, and she at least has an idea of how you win a campaign for Governor. My gut says: LaCivita may want to break new ground in Virginia by running Team Cuccinelli, Teiro and Ken, in that order I might add. That’s right: Team Cuccinelli, husband and wife Governor. It would be revolutionary.

LaCivita thinks he needs to do some measure of rehab of the Cuccinelli persona. Smart thinking.  LaCivita knows that if he doesn’t get some traction among women, he is toast. Smart thinking again. Third, LaCivita decided he had to GO FIRST WITH A TV AD, beating Terry to the airwaves. Smart again. Fourth, Cuccinelli has less money than Terry, yet he is going first. That’s usually a little risky, but it either says they are confident the money will be there, or they had to take a risk by using precious resources first. I figure a little of both.

The Democratic-leaning women’s groups, media and their allies have done a very effective job in demonizing Cuccinelli. At the same time, the AG has given people a lot to work him over with in  terms of politics. Meaning: it is all about the women. Therefore: If that is the case, why not run Team Cuccinelli for Governor?

Ironically, this has been a Dem concept. The GOP doesn’t go that route. George Allen made a big mistake last year, not running with his wife Susan, who is a far more appealing political figure at this point. That’s just the way it is guys: White Guys ain’t in no more.

This is the entertainment business. Nothing personal. All about selling tickets. Ma and Pa Cuccinelli? Why not?

Think back to 2009: McDonnell, facing a lot of the same political liabilities as Cuccinelli, brilliantly used his family and wife and daughters to overcome his liability on women’s issues. Having all those women around him really helped. Image is key. Cuccinelli doesn’t have the older daughters as did McDonnell. He has his wife. SO: Why not run as Team Cuccinelli?

The great irony of course is that Cuccinelli is running as the traditionalist, yet such a team concept is anything but relative to VA history. But this is why it might work for him, as opposed to say Terry. When you go against type, it is always higher risk, but higher reward. Team Cuccinelli is a lot stronger opponent than K-Man standing alone. And it looks like Chris LaCivita may have figured that out.  

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, April 26. Also, check out the video of Rachel Maddow making an analogy between the idiotic “poop cruise” “story” and the Bush library (both are assuming that “Americans have short memories”).

*Obama faces difficult decision on Syria action

*Senate votes to end furloughs of controllers, House could act today

*House conservatives to pursue their own agenda on immigration laws (Yep, the teahadists are determined to f*** up yet another thing. In 2014, we really need to toss every last one of these people out of the House!)

*Bush’s record looks worse and worse

*It’ll take more than a presidential library to make George W Bush popular

*Yes, George W. Bush Was a Terrible President, and No, He Wasn’t Smart

*McDonnell deflects mansion questions (Not acceptable, McDonnell needs to answer questions on this. Also, I’d point out that if this were happening to a Democratic governor, Republicans would be going NUTS!)

*Potholes  and primaries (“Speaker Howell is having to play defense against his own team.”)

*McAuliffe proposes gift limits for public officials (Excellent move. I’d go beyond this and call for major campaign finance and ethics reform in Virginia. Right now, it’s an abysmal situation, where Virginia Uranium can fly legislators to France for a sightseeing trip, etc.)

*Cuccinelli to air first TV ad of governor’s race (“The 30-second commercial features Teiro Cuccinelli, wife of the presumptive Republican nominee, talking about his work with the homeless and the mentally ill and about his efforts to combat sexual predators.”)

*Rigell renews push to allow drilling off Va. coast

*McAuliffe should unveil tax records

*Warner to chair Senate Commerce subcommittee on export promotion, innovation

*Mudslinging mars GOP primary for state House seat

*Democrats field candidates for Va. Beach House seats (“Four Democrats have lined up to run for Virginia Beach seats in the House of Delegates now held by Republicans, emboldened by the fact that incumbents in three of those districts aren’t seeking re-election.”

*A breath of fresh air for Fairfax Co. schools

*Arlington streetcars do pass the cost-benefit test

*Metro approves budget with no fare hikes for riders

*Virginia fails to collect $170 million in court fines and fees

P.S. This is really a bummer: “Loudoun Insider,” who was doing the job the paid media is SUPPOSED to be doing, says “Farewell Folks”. I can’t say I disagree with this either: “If only say one percent of the population really took an interest and got involved we could really have some positive change, but nah, everyone is too busy with themselves here (and I guess just about everywhere else) to care about politics.” Sigh…

McAuliffe Team Outfoxes Cuccinelli, McDonnell with Clever Move

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Never before has a sitting Governor and AG been so reduced in stature.

by Paul Goldman

As this column has been saying for weeks now, Governor McDonnell needed to do something proactive on the gift/Star Scientific issue. So did Ken Cuccinelli. The self-evident play, as discussed, was calling a special session of the General Assembly to take a proactive stance.

But McDonnell remains frozen like the proverbial deer in the headlights. He just finished a telephone call with reporters saying that he has a lot to say about the latest wrinkle – the food fight with the ex-Mansion chef – but he can’t on the advice of lawyers since it is an active case. THAT AIN’T GONNA CUT IT as an excuse for being late from your job at Subway or a Burger King, let alone Governor.

As for Cuccinelli, he wants to recuse himself on another case. This isn’t helping him either.

Into the vacuum steps Terry McAuliffe, who has proposed to be the toughest anti-gift guy in the Mansion ever. It doesn’t matter what the details are at this point. Terry is acting like a Governor, taking the lead, taking a stand, doing SOMETHING.  

As I have been saying for months: Terry’s team is in the game, Cuccinelli’s team isn’t capable of playing in that league right now. Forget the polls: they don’t matter right now. Terry has a campaign for Governor, Cuccinelli does not.

The AG has a lot of stances on a lot of things and lot of legal this and that. But he has no theme, nothing but “this is what I will do on this or that issue and by the way, my opponent is a big LIBERAL.” That’s good for 43% probably, the Ollie North number from 1994 give or take.

Terry has a message of where he wants to take the state: Cuccinelli has a message, at most, as to where he doesn’t want to take the state. The guy with the message wins. If you get into a car with someone, you want to know where you are going, not where you aren’t going. To this point, it seems to me Cuccinelli has recused himself from the campaign, not just a few cases.

As for the Governor, he is the lamest lame duck Governor ever in VA history. He can’t even comment on his own food guy because his lawyers fear the revelation. If this goes on for another 90 days, the Dems are going to win in a sweep.