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EMILY’S LIST and The Farm Team announce training

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The Farm Team is pleased to announce that we are partnering with EMILY’s List to offer three training opportunities in Virginia for pro-choice Democratic women and their key campaign staff in the next few months.

We hope you will share this invitation with any current women officeholders or future candidates that would benefit from this training.

As you may know, EMILY’s List is a political donor network and political resource for pro-choice Democratic women candidates. EMILY’s List has initiated a program designed to recruit and train women to run for and serve in elected office in the states.

Whether a pro-choice Democratic woman is currently serving on the school board, or in the General Assembly, or just beginning to think about running for elective office, we are certain this training will provide her with the skills and inspiration needed to successfully run for office.

We will hold our first training in Lynchburg on Monday, December 17th 2012.  The RSVP link for the first event is http://emilyslist.org/take-act…

The program, including materials and meals is free, however space is limited. Partial participation is not possible – you must make a commitment to attend the full program in order to be allocated a seat at the training.

Future trainings will be held Monday, January 14th in Northern Virginia and Friday, February 8th in Williamsburg. Stay tuned for details and RSVP links for those dates.

If you have any questions, or would like further details, please contact Jessica Byrd at 202-326-1400 or jbyrd@emilyslist.org or Julie Copeland of The Farm Team at 804-272-5955 or farmteam.va@gmail.com

BLS: Despite Superstorm Sandy, Unemployment Rate Drops to 7.7% (lowest in 4 years)

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Great news:

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the U.S. economy added 146,000 jobs in November, nearly double the projections. What’s more, the overall unemployment rate dropped to 7.7%, its lowest point in four years.

[…]

To be sure, 146,000 jobs isn’t evidence of a robust economic recovery, but given Sandy-generated expectations, the figures come as a pleasant surprise

Now, just imagine how good things would be if: a) we hadn’t gotten into the “Great Recession” in the first place under George W. Bush’s administration; b) Republicans hadn’t been obstructionists the entire first four years of President Obama’s first term; c) Republicans hadn’t caused the U.S. credit rating to be downgraded; d) Republicans hadn’t created the very “uncertainty” they decry; and e) we hadn’t had the public sector job losses we had, thanks to Republican refusal to provide more aid to the states? By the way, what ever happened to that supposed “socialist” (actually an Eisenhower/George HW Bush-style moderate through and through) Barack Obama destroying the economy? Yeah, that’s why the stock market doubled, the housing market’s rebounding, unemployment is way down from its Great Recession peak, consumer spending is up, etc., etc. Not that Republicans will easily abandon their narrative of that scary black/Muslim/Kenyan/radical/blahblahblah in the White House, but they really should check out this thing called “reality” once in a while, I strongly recommend it! 😉

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, December 7 (a date that shall live in infamy, according to FDR).

*Debt Ceiling Bluff Called By Harry Reid, Leaving Mitch McConnell To Filibuster Himself (The absurdity of Republicans’ misuse of the filibuster takes on comic dimensions, courtesy of one of the slimiest members of that fine body, Mitch McConnell.)

*Good riddance, Mr. DeMint (One of the only things I can ever recall the egregiously bad Jennifer Rubin writing that actually made a relatively coherent, based-in-truth case for something.)

*Kaine says his campaign showed positive ads work (Perhaps they worked in Tim Kaine’s race, hard to know, but most campaign folks believe that NEGATIVE ads are what really work. Hard to say, as the record is mixed.)

*McDonnell still wary on state exchange, Medicaid expansion (You can be wary all you want, Bob, but as governor you still have to put your big-boy pants on and deal with it!)

*McDonnell said U.S. uncertainty requires conservative Va. budget

*Kaine Calls For Higher Taxes For Rich, Spending Cuts

*Virginia’s Kaine backs changes to filibustering (“Says he’d favor it regardless of party”)

*Sen. Warner: 80% Chance U.S. Will Avoid Fiscal Cliff (The only way we will avoid it is if Republicans start to seriously negotiate, something they’ve been unwilling to do up until now. The clock’s ticking…)

*Terry McAuliffe, Democratic hope (“Love him or hate him, Bill and Hill’s buddy is the only thing standing between the state and a Tea Party governor”)

*McDonnell expresses support for Cuccinelli’s 2013 bid

*Kaine: Porta-Potty dream summed up election

*Va. activists remain wary of Cuccinelli administration (Weird headline: people are a lot more than “wary” of this homophobic wacko)

*McAuliffe explains opening plant in Mississippi not Virginia (Not to Ryan Nobles: “Democrat” and “Democratic” should be capitalized; “its” is the possessive form not “it’s”)

*McAuliffe’s car company never finished Virginia incentive application (Interesting story, although also riddled with typos…)

*Wind offers a cleaner future

*White House crasher to campaign for governor in Hampton Roads

*Capitol Day recap: uranium and health care debates loom

*Editorial: Tighten the texting law

*Conflict of interest charges raised over Arlington transit vote (It’s amazing, when I raised this about Barbara Favola’s multiple conflicts of interest, the reaction I got from the County Board was hostility. Now, Board member Libby Garvey is raising a conflict of interest with fellow Board member Chris Zimmerman. We’ll see what the reaction is this time…)

*Va. Sen.-elect Tim Kaine reaches out, across aisle to fellow freshman Ted Cruz of Texas (Hahahaha, almost 24 hours later, they’ve STILL got this as “Timothy F. Kaine.” The Post sucks.)

Bruce Bartlett v the Fringe-anomic Republican Percenters

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Bruce Bartlett appeared on Elliot Spitzer tonight to discuss the budget negotiations.  He not only said President Obama was right regarding the path he has taken.  He said the President should have gone further in rebuilding our infrastructure. (We here at BV have been saying that too.)

Dan Burger of Patriotic Millionaires also spoke with Spitzer..

Diane Rehm Has Become the Most Useless Talk Show Host Ever

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A mere shadow of her former self, Diane Rehm once had a spine, heart and courage. She questioned and challenged guests, and even served as one of the key skeptics in the runup to the Iraq war (based upon lies). Now she is the worst radio show host in America. I remember painting the outside of my house during the runup to the Iraq war and during the early days of the war itself. And each day I painted, I listened to Diane each day.  

But in recent years, she has let vocal GOP ideologues bully and talk over other guests while making false statements, bashing ordinary Americans, conspiring to harm them, and otherwise doing the bidding of the 1%. So too, she sloughed off the role of a skeptical host yesterday in a show addressing hunger in America. Diane acted non-skeptically, asked almost nothing, and  challenged nothing. If she asked a question it was completely idiotic, such as, “Where does the food (for food banks) come from?” Americans were thus uninformed and even dis-informed because she lets guests get away with complete fabrications and alternate-universe notions of what is actually happening in our country. Why is she still taking up the airwaves? Why not just skip the intermediary and let the ever-polemic Steven Moore have his own show?

Yesterday, she pretended to offer a serious discussion on hunger in America. Instead, what she offered was some sort of cruel joke. I have never been on food stamps and I have never been obese, but I was offended by the outrageous crap coming from her show and under its banner. It was worse than offensive.  

She sat idly as Steven Moore, once a Club for Growth hack and now a member of the WSJ editorial board, belittled poor people. The bastard does this right before the holidays with true (Charles) Dickensian flourish. But the modern-day Scrooge had no Tiny Tim-inspired better day. Talk about the “worst of times.” He claimed those on food stamps did not need food, but rather they had too much of it. Make the man do a Food Stamp Challenge now!

The proof, he suggested, was in obesity in America. He implied the poor and working poor were all obese. He suggested America should scrap food stamps. And he proceeded to lie about the same old welfare-to-work and food stamps lies the GOP tried to get away with before the election.  

God, it gets old.  And there is Diane out-Charley-Rose-ing Charlie Rose. It’s pitiful. The airwaves are a public resource. It’s time NPR take back the two precious hours the Diane Rehm Show takes up. I am not alone in questioning Rehm’s handling of this show. She needs to retire-and soon. In the meantime, the Diane Rehm Show is a load of bull and it is the public getting reamed by its content.

Who is “Timothy F. Kaine?”

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Last I checked, our Senator-elect's name was Timothy Michael Kaine, or Timothy M. Kaine for short. For whatever reason, the Kaplan/Washington Post seems to think otherwise (see below).  And yes, I realize that may seem like a minor mistake or even petty to point out, but from what I can tell, it's symptomatic of a broad decline in standards of all kinds – from typos to factual errors to lazy/bad journalism to an almost complete lack of journalistic ethics – at the Post over the past few years. As for the Post's coverage of Virginia politics, it's declined sharply in recent months, both in terms of quality and quantity (for more on that topic, see here). Coming into a critically important Virginia election year, it's not a comforting thought that the Post's institutional knowledge of the Virginia political scene is thinner than a book discussing Ken Cuccinelli's progressive policy positions.  Heh.

Posted at 12:44 PM ET, 12/06/2012

Va. Sen.-elect Tim Kaine reaches out, across aisle to fellow freshman Ted Cruz of Texas

Sen.-elect Timothy F. Kaine (D-Va.) has a new Republican BFF: fellow freshman Ted Cruz of Texas. 

Monday: Join Us For Caroling Against Cuts

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This Monday, you can help make a difference in protecting Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security and ending the Bush tax cuts for the top 2%. We’re joining with progressives from across the Commonwealth to “Carol Against Cuts” at Senator Warner’s offices in Norfolk, Vienna, and Roanoke. Can you join us?

Congress is trying to reach a deal by the end of the year to keep us from falling off the “fiscal cliff”. Help us make sure any deal puts middle class families first by protecting Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security and raising revenue by letting the Bush tax cuts for the top 2% expire.

Event details and links to RSVP below.

Carol Against Cuts: Vienna

When: Monday, December 10th from 11:45am – 1pm

Where: Tyson’s Corner Center: 1961 Chain Bridge Road, McLean, VA 22102

Senator Warner’s Vienna office: 8000 Towers Crescent Drive Suite 200. Vienna, Virginia 22182

We will gather at 11:45 at the mall entrance to the right of Nordstrom’s (when facing the building from the parking lot) at Tyson’s Corner Center. We’ll practice our carols and sing to shoppers at Tysons Corner Center for 30 minutes before walking down the street to Senator Warner’s nearby office to share our musical message and deliver comments to the Senator’s staff.

RSVP to join us in Tyson’s Corner.

Carol Against Cuts: Norfolk

When: Monday, December 10th from 11:45am – 1pm

Where: Senator Warner’s Norfolk office: 101 W. Main Street Suite 4900 Norfolk, VA 23510

We will gather on the sidewalk outside to share our carols with downtown workers on their lunch break before heading up to the Senator’s office to share our musical message and deliver comments to the Senator’s staff.

RSVP to join us in Norfolk.

Candlelight vigil against cuts

When: Monday, December 10th from 4:30pm – 5:30pm

Where: Senator Warner’s Roanoke office: 129B Salem Ave., SW, Roanoke, VA 24011

RSVP to join us in Roanoke.

Video: Northern Virginia Family Explains “What $2,000 Means to My Family”

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“Tiffany, who lives in Northern Virginia with her husband, son and parents, talks about what paying $2,000 more in taxes next year would mean to her family. Tell us your story at” http://www.whitehouse.gov/My2k

Top 10 Reasons Why Virginia 2013 Will NOT Be Virginia 2009 All Over Again

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You know the saying about how generals always prepare to fight the last war, more than the next war? In my view, that applies to politics as well. For instance, here in Virginia, many Democrats I talk to appear to still be processing, one way or the other, the 2009 disaster, which ended up wiping out our party in the House of Delegates, not to mention electing Bob McDonnell, Bill Bolling, and Ken Cuccinelli to the #1, #2, and #3 slots in the Executive Branch of Virginia. The concern is that 2013 will be a repeat of 2009 in many ways, with another series of losses following a year in which Barack Obama yet again carried the state (as did Tim Kaine). Anyway, before we get ready to relive, if not fight, the “last war,” here are my top 10 reasons why Virginia 2013 will not be the same as Virginia 2009.

1. Demographics continue to shift in Democrats’ favor. As this report finds, for instance, “
growth
 in 
minority 
populations
 in
Virginia continues 
a 
long 
trend, 
with 
the 
percentage 
of 
the 
population
 that 
is 
white 
alone falling
 by 
more than 
eight 
percentage 
points
between 
1990 
and 2010
” (from 77% to 68%). That trend is continuing, as only 53.6% of elementary school students in Virginia are white. Ultimately, that trend of about a 1-point-per-year drop (nearly 4 points between 2009 and 2013) in the share of Virginia that is white will show up at the polls big time. That can happen sooner, rather than later, if Democrats work hard to get out these new voters out to the polls, and obviously to vote Democratic, in 2013 and beyond.

2. Ken Cuccinelli is not Bob McDonnell. In 2009, Bob McDonnell managed to convince a lot of Virginians that his Regent University “thesis” was long in the past, that today all he really cares about is jobs, jobs, and jobs (hence the slogan, “Bob’s for Jobs”). In the 2009 campaign, McDonnell played down hot-button social issues and portrayed himself as a moderate “soccer dad” from the ‘burbs. He was able to do that in large part because his personality comes across as reasonable and moderate, even if his views aren’t. In stark contrast, Ken Cuccinelli has been on the forefront in recent years, not decades ago, of the most hot button of hot-button issues – “Obamacare,” climate science (which should NOT be politicized, but Kookinelli did so anyway), GLBT equality, women’s reproductive freedom, you name it. Combined with a confrontational, in-your-face, my-way-or-the-highway, no-compromise style, Cuccinelli quickly became a hero of the “Tea Party” movement. Unfortunately for Cuccinelli, that also sets him up as THE perfect “villain” for Democrats to run against in 2013; truly, the dream candidate…for Democrats. Sure, Cuckoo will try to run to the center, but good luck with that; we’ve got his words, actions, etc. all recorded on video, audio, paper, electron, what have you, and by the end of the 2013 campaign, it’s likely that every sentient Virginian will have seen TV ads letting reminding them of what a nutjob Kookinelli is.

3. The Tea Party ain’t what it used to be. In 2009, the backlash against “spending,” “Obamacare,” “the debt,” “socialism,” a bad economy, etc, etc. was in overdrive, with the corporate media cravenly and irresponsibly going along for the ride (actually, the fomented much of it). Talk about a wave; 2009 was basically a tsunami, or to use another weather metaphor, Democrats had Superstorm Sandy blowing in their faces, while Republicans had those same winds pushing them ahead. In 2013? The Tea Party isn’t dead, but it’s a shell of what it was in 2009. More to the point, the forces that gave rise to the Tea Party in 2009 are not likely to be present in 2013, as the economy continues its recovery, Congress strikes a deal (or multiple deals) on the debt, the benefits of “Obamacare” become increasingly apparent, etc. Plus, Barack Obama is highly popular today, with something like a +10 net approval rating. In 2013, the weather looks likely to be calm, or possibly even a pleasant breeze at the backs of Democrats for a change, in Virginia. Quite a difference from 2009.

4. Terry McAuliffe is no Creigh Deeds. Whatever you think about Terry McAuliffe, in no way is he the 2013 equivalent of Creigh Deeds. For starters, McAuliffe is from suburban northern Virginia, the fastest growing part of the state, part of the Hampton Roads-Richmond-NOVA “urban/suburban/exurban crescent” that is key to Democratic success in Virginia, while Deeds was from rural Bath County, which is about as solid “red” as you can get (so much for “Deeds Country”). Second, Terry McAuliffe is likely to spend multiples of the $16 million Deeds spent in 2009. Third, as mentioned above, McAuliffe has an opponent who is an extreme figure by almost any evaluation, someone who will struggle to win independent voters, and who will motivate Democrats to turn out to the polls in droves to stop him. Finally, T-Mac is a much more dynamic speaker, also a much more partisan Democrat, which should again help him far outperform Deeds in revving up “the base.” Again, 2013 will not be like 2009.

5. Republican governance has given us tons of material we can use in 2013. Since Bob McDonnell took office in 2010, Virginians have seen Republican governance in action, and it ain’t pretty. From “transvaginal ultrasounds” to “personhood” to virulent anti-LGBT actions (e.g., the Republicans rejection of Tracy Thorne-Begland for a judgeship because of his sexual orientation), to an utter unwillingness to deviate from anti-tax orthodoxy while our state’s transportation infrastructure falls apart, etc., we’ve got TONS of material to work with in 2013. Truly, it’s like a gold mine of nuttiness and incompetence, and it’s going to be fun watching T-Mac pound them on it. 🙂

6. Our surrogates beat their surrogates. Who have they got to serve as “surrogates” for Ken Cuccinelli? Well, they don’t have any U.S. Senators, so forget that. Eric Cant’or is a wildly unpopular figure in Virginia, so forget that. Bob McDonnell is fairly popular, but I strongly doubt he has any love for Ken Cuccinelli. Bill Bolling is no Ken Cuccinelli fan, that’s for sure. Non-Virginians like Rick Santorum and Paul Ryan and Jim DeMint and Nikki Haley and Rand Paul have appeal to the same Tea Party base that Cooch does, but their hard-right views certainly won’t appeal to many moderates or independents. Oh yeah, we also have the newly-reeelected President Obama and VP Joe Biden, plus the wildly popular former President Bill Clinton and the even-more-popular Hillary Clinton, plus Virginia’s two most popular politicians – Mark Warner and Tim Kaine – and Jim Webb and… Yeah, I’ll take our surrogates over their surrogates any day. WIN!

7. Democrats are more united than Republicans this time around. In 2009, Republicans were on fire, totally united in their opposition to their  false, absurd, laughable – but widely held among the Faux “News” watchers and Rush Limbaugh dittoheads – image of President Obama. This time around, Virginia Republicans have nothing like that to rally around, and meanwhile their party is experiencing turbulence over the rise of Ken Cuccinelli and the hard right/Tea Party wing, along with the purge of Bill Bolling and the more traditional/conservative Republicans. Plus, Bolling and Kookinelli simply despise each other. Meanwhile, Democrats should be about as united as they ever can be, “cats” that they are, against Ken Cuccinelli. And given no primary contest, T-Mac can spend the next few months consolidating that unity, while Cuccinelli can continue getting into fights with leading figures in his own party, most recently House Majority Leader Eric Cantor. Gotta love it.

8. Virginia Democrats (presumably) have learned their lessons from the “last war”. After the 2008 election’s great victories, many Democrats went to sleep politically, assuming (as I mistakenly did) that the mission was accomplished. Meanwhile, Republicans got to work building their opposition movement, totally misguided and hysterical though it was. This time around, Virginia Democrats presumably don’t need to be reminded too often what happened in 2009, the last time we had a gubernatorial election where our side was asleep and the right wing was wide awake.

9. DPVA will have new leadership. This can only be good news, and I’m very much looking forward to an improved Democratic Party of Virginia in 2013 compared to 2009.

10. The Republican convention process will pull their candidates even FURTHER to the right and out of the mainstream. The shift from a primary to a convention on the GOP side means that hard-edged, far-right-wing “conservatism” (in quotes because really the Cuccinellis and Snyders of the world are more John Birch Society than traditional conservative, let alone Country Club Republican or moderate/Eisenhower Republican) will be in charge in 2013. Watch for Republican candidates, particularly the 7 (seven!) running for LG, to outdo each other in terms of “teh crazy,” whether we’re talking about advocating the abolition of contraception and abortion in all cases, the imposition of theocracy on Virginia, making life hell for LGBT citizens, deporting every “illegal” back to where they came from, demonizing “Obamacare,” ranting about (non-existent) voter fraud, denying climate science, etc, etc. This should be entertaining to watch. Lots more popcorn in 2013 than in 2009 – enjoy! 🙂

Virginia News Headlines: Thursday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, December 6.

*WH ‘Absolutely’ Willing To Go Off ‘Cliff’ (Fine, do it if Republicans won’t start to seriously compromise!)

*Wolf Blitzer Stumps Top House Republican By Asking For Spending Cut Specifics (Here’s the fundamental problem: all those teahadists screaming to “stop the spending” don’t actually want to cut, ya know, SPENDING, on things like Medicare, Social Security, Defense, roads, schools, and a million other things they don’t want to lose. The fact is, we have a revenue problem – now at 60 year low point as a share of economic output – much more than we have a spending problem in this country. Yep, the Tea Party has it completely backwards; go figure! LOL)

*Obama coming to Va. today to speak about fiscal cliff plan

*Some in GOP seek broader deal on ‘fiscal cliff’

*A top priority, Kaine says, is to balance budget

*Perriello declines bid for governor, endorses McAuliffe (Note that Julian Walker of the Virginian Pilot, as well as just about every other reporter, linked to and/or credited Blue Virginia for its scoop on Tom Perriello yesterday. The only one that didn’t? One guess. Yes, the Washington/Kaplan Post, which almost NEVER links to or credits blogs for their stories. It’s unethical, of course, but the Post apparently is so desperate for “eyeballs” at this point, they don’t care. #FAIL)

*Cantor: Dems must reveal spending cuts to move ‘fiscal cliff’ deal forward (Gotta love this guy’s chutzpah, anyway…)

*Christmas in D.C.? Cantor says no cliff deal, no break

*Crackdown on texting while driving gets bipartisan support in Virginia (I believe this is what’s known as a “no brainer”)

*McDonnell to seek $500M annually in new transportation money

*Cuccinelli throws brushback at Cantor

*McDonnell addresses statewide transportation conference

*Northam gears up for lieutenant governor run

*State unveils new water quality initiative

*Arlington streetcar options mulled

*Chesapeake animal shelter project blows deadline, busts budget

*Moran Proposes Bill to Reduce Voting Wait Times

P.S. Also see Since big media suck, you might not know there is a climate change conference in Qatar now.