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Let’s Not Forget what Bob Goodlatte Is: An Obedient Solder for a Dark and Destructive Force

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( – promoted by lowkell)

There was something about what Chris Graham of the Luray Page Free Press wrote about Bob Goodlatte that I felt moved to respond to. This is the comment I posted in response:

There seems to me some confusion, Chris, in your opening sentence: “Bob Goodlatte can sound partisan in press releases and on the campaign trail, but by and large, the Roanoke Republican is more comfortable with a lower-key approach to politics.”

There’s a difference between tone and content. Bob Goodlatte’s tone may be “low-key.” Goodlatte’s demeanor is impeccable, if stiff and artificial. He seems a bland and well-behaved gut. But as for whether or not his content is “partisan,” what could be more partisan than being a rubberstamp for your party. That’s what Goodlatte is, 94-98 percent of the time.

And let me say most strongly, when we’re talking about being partisan in behalf of today’s Republican Party, there has never been, in the history of the United States, a political party so consistently destructive and dishonest as what today’s Republican Party has become. Bob Goodlatte has given his support to one destructive policy and tactic after another, and he’s not hesitated to reinforce the lies and distoritions of the Republican Party line.

It is the worst kind of partisanship, to work to deceive the people in order to help one’s party get power at the nation’s expense.

In my campaign against him this past year and a half, I called him out on his lies about the budgetary implications of Obamacare. I accused him of hypocrisy and inconsistency on his big theme of opposition to “big government.” I labeled as “the politics of dishonesty and distraction” my Goodlatte’s channeling of the deliberate Republican distortion of the President’s “you didn’t built that” statement. I tried to show that all these lies were examples of the Republican Party line that’s been degrading our public discourse, turning politics into war, disabling our government from coming to reasonable decisions to deal with real challenges facing our nation, and thus damaging America.

That’s why I was willing to spend more than a year and a half of my life, and expend all the energies (physical, emotional, and spiritual) at my command, in order to campaign against this rubberstamp for the terrible thing that the once-great Republican Party has become.

Andy Schmookler recently ran for Congress in the 6th Congressional District of Virginia, challenging the incumbent Congressman, Bob Goodlatte.  An award-winning author, political commentator, radio talk-show host, and teacher, Andy moved with his family to Shenandoah County in 1992.  He is a summa cum laude graduate of Harvard University and holds a PhD from the University of California at Berkeley, published as the book The Parable of the Tribes:  The Problem of Power in Social Evolution..  

Video: Tim Geithner Says No Deal if Republicans Refuse to Raise Top Tax Rates

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Good for Geithner, and good for the White House not letting the Republicans try to bully them, as is their wont. The fact is, the overwhelming majority of the American people believe that the rich should pay higher rates as part of a balanced, deficit-reduction package. If Republicans are so beholden to intransigent, anti-tax/anti-government extremists like Grover Norquist that they won’t compromise, then we will all know exactly who to blame – and to vote out of office in 2014 – if we end up with no deal on January 1, 2013.  

Virginia News Headlines: Sunday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, December 2.

*The GOP and its urge to purge (“It seems the Republicans have run out of squishy moderates to purge. Now they’re starting to run conservatives out of town for being insufficiently doctrinaire.”)

*Cuccinelli: 2013 a chance to show “conservatism isn’t dead” (Also see Cuccinelli’s stump speech, in which he mostly uses buzzwords like “liberty” and “freedom” – which every American cherishes – but avoids specifics, like taking away women’s right to choose what they do with their own bodies, away from them. Clever, huh?)

*Cuccinelli dismisses ‘rebranding’ of GOP, makes appeal to Bolling supporters (Cooch demonstrates yet again he’s an unabashed right wingnut, no backing down or moderation from this guy at all.)

*Virginia GOP candidates hold annual Advance gathering (The fact that Iran/Contra felon Oliver North was “the talk of the annual gathering” says a great deal, none of it good, about the radical, extremist Republican Party of Virginia. Also, note from these photos the almost complete lack of diversity – this party does NOT look like America – and the heavy emphasis on polluting, extractive industries. Basically, this party’s an Orwellian nightmare come to life.)

*Once-marginalized firebrands taking aim at governor’s race (More superficiality, style over substance, and false equivalency from the corporate media.)

*Cuccinelli, McAuliffe face challenge in middle (Yet MORE false equivalency from the media; the reality is that Terry McAuliffe is about as centrist a Democrat as you can get, while Cuccinelli is about as far right wing  – think Todd Akin, Richard Mourdoch, Christine O’Donnell, Rand Paul, etc. – as you can find in this country.)

*Schapiro: Cuccinelli crashes McDonnell-Bolling party – again (“Bolling made three mistakes: He believed in waiting his turn. He thought he’d actually get it. And he trusted the other fella.”)

*Jackson formally opens campaign for lieutenant governor (This lunatic almost makes Kookinelli look sane. Wow.)

*Federal budget cuts would force Va. to slash spending

*Transportation funding on legislators’ agenda

*Editorial: Liberty University v. Obamacare (“The courts can bring clarity to controversial mandates about insurance and birth control.”)

*Learning to love (maybe) the new express lanes on the Beltway in Va.

*Some in Loudoun County not thrilled with new proposed stadium location

*Metro riders tired of dark stations (“Commuters and advocates call for better lighting in stations to be part of ongoing WMATA improvements.”)

*Why name an airport ‘Dulles’?

*Absent argument for Virginia Beach’s arena

#FAIL: Most Powerful VA Government Board You’ve Never Heard Of Says Benefits of Solar “Unknown”

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Would you be at all surprised if I told you there was an extremely powerful (e.g., its authority “encompasses utilities, insurance, state-chartered financial institutions, securities, retail franchising, and railroads”), almost completely unaccountable, Virginia government agency which almost no Virginians have ever heard of, let alone know what it does?  What about if I told you that this body has been described as Virginia’s “fourth branch of government” and “the most powerful regulatory body in America?” Would you be at all concerned? How about if I told you they just issued the following, absurd ruling:

The State Corporation Commission (SCC) has approved a demonstration project for Dominion Virginia Power which will result in the construction and operation of company-owned solar generation facilities at various commercial, industrial, and public government locations. The purpose of the demonstration is to assess the benefits solar distributed generation has on the company’s distribution system.

The SCC order caps the cost of the solar distribution generation program that can be charged to customers at $80 million. The company was seeking authorization to spend $111 million, a figure that did not include financing costs.

We find that the proposed demonstration Solar DG Program – the benefits of which are unknown at this time – at the level of cost proposed by Dominion is not in furtherance of the public interest.

So, on the one hand, the SCC did end up approving this tiny solar project. Yay. On the other hand, it took the SCC 18 months (!) to do so. In addition, the SCC actually claimed that the benefits of solar power are “unknown at this time,” even as solar power is growing by leaps and bounds around the world, and even as the need for solar power is more urgent than ever.

Finally, what the SCC did finally ended up approving was a mere pittance compared to many other states, not to mention countries like Germany, which are racing ahead with clean energy. So, congratulations SCC, for slowing down Virginia’s transformation to a clean energy economy, for doing the bidding of the entrenched fossil fuel interests in this state, and for putting greed and profit ahead of people and the planet. Heckuva job!

So who on earth is responsible for this pathetic situation? Let me introduce you all to the SCC’s three commissioners — Mark C. Christie, Judith Williams Jagdmann, and James C. Dimitri.  

First, there’s Mark Christie, who was “counsel to the speaker of the House from 2000 to 2004, and a former gubernatorial staffer.” On the former, the Virginia House Speaker from 2000 to 2004 was, of course, a Republican – Vance Wilkins (got a ZERO rating from the Sierra Club for being rabidly anti-environment, also a total slimeball, forced out for corruption and sexual scandal) through 2002, then the abysmally anti-environment ALEC tool Bill Howell since then. ‘Nuff said on Christie.

Then there’s James C. Dimitri, who even Republican Congressman Frank Wolf noted “has been representing Dominion Power in its efforts to build huge transmission power lines across much of the northern part of the Commonwealth.”

Finally, there’s Judith Williams Jagdmann, formerly top deputy to Virginia Attorney General Jerry Kilgore (R), himself a puppet of Big Coal (see here, for instance).

In sum, we’ve got three people on the State Corporation Commission who are all big fans of big coal, and of (ironically) Dominion Power. We’ve also got three people who most definitely do not appear to be friends of clean energy alternatives like solar power.  Thus, I suppose we shouldn’t be too surprised that these three people somehow managed to take 18 months to (reluctantly) approve a tiny, solar demonstration project, when what we obviously need at this point is an all-out, urgent push for clean energy on a massive scale.

As if that’s not bad enough, the SCC still has not approved Dominion Power’s request (made in November 2011) to start up a Community Solar Power Program. Again, this isn’t a huge deal compared to the magnitude of what we need, but it’s positive in that it would allow Dominion to buy back a lot more energy from people who want to place solar on their homes (e.g., allow Dominion to provide incentives to people to put solar on their home). So why’s the SCC taking so long on this apparent no-brainer? I can’t prove this, but given the backgrounds of the three SCC commissioners, I can’t help but wonder if it has anything to do with their friendliness to coal, and to coal’s vicious opposition to clean energy, which it knows is increasingly an economically competitive option, not even counting all the “negative externalities” (pollution, adverse health consequences, mountaintop removal, etc.) coal brings to the table. #FAIL

P.S. By the way, what surprised me the most in researching this blog post is how LITTLE information there is out there publicly about these three extremely powerful individuals. That, in and of itself, speaks volumes – none of it good.

Gerrymandering Stole Dem House Gains in Virginia

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So by now Obama’s commanding 4 point victory in the Commonwealth (51% to 47%) and Kaine’s 6 point victory (53% to 47%) have been proclaimed and celebrated. Now we can really and truly say that Old Virginny is dead. But we also have the disappointment of our House races, where none attracted significant national attention as a competitive race. The Congressional delegation remains unchanged at 3 Democrats and 8 Republicans. What happened?

It’s not for lack of effort. According to the unofficial results from the State Board of Elections available now, Democrats received 1,849,820 votes total statewide in all House races. Republicans fell behind at 1,832,966. This is a closer split than either Obama or Kaine, it’s practically a 50%-50% tie. But that’s a lot closer than the delegation itself, which is only 27% Democratic and 73% Republican!

Let’s look district by district.

1st District

Defining T-Mac

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Cross posted at Daily Kos

The most searing lesson of President Obama’s electoral slaughter of Mitt Romney just 3 weeks ago is a simple one — define yourself and your opponent, early, often and effectively.  Both the Obama campaign’s characterizations of the president as a progressive fighter for the middle class and of Romney as an out-of-touch gazillionaire elitist fit like a glove and worked.  

This lesson resonated over the past week as the national press and blogosphere suddenly discovered that Virginia has a governor’s race this year, and it’s going to be a doozy.  Predictably, and happily, much of the coverage focused on the facts that: 1) AG Ken Cuccinelli is an ultra-extremist crackpot and 2) LG Bill Bolling is awfully pissed at the way that Cuccinelli stole the crown from his coronation, and just may scheme to get back at him with an independent campaign.  

The other piece of the coverage and discussion, though, has been a surprisingly negative first impression of Terry McAuliffe — the presumptive nominee (unless awesome former US Rep. Tom Perriello jumps in the race).  The WaPo showed its “balance” by framing the race as one between hyper-partisans on both sides — this despite McAuliffe’s lifelong reputation as a moderate businessman, whose ties to Bill Clinton could only be interpreted as “radical” by the tea party crowd.  

Meanwhile, a number of progressive commenters on blogs and the WaPo comments section demonstrated their nervousness about whether McAuliffe could actually beat the scariest candidate for governor we’ve ever seen in Virginia.  Many seemed to define T-Mac as a Beltway insider type just not ready to pound the cobblestones of ol’ Virginny.  

That actually was my impression of Terry four years ago when he tried to make the jump from Washington power broker to Virginia gubernatorial candidate without having taken the time to prepare the voters or himself for that leap.  In the four years since, however, I have watched him do the hard work of hitting pretty much every local Virginia Democratic campaign event and fundraiser he could find.  If there’s a Democratic dogcatcher from Albemarle to Warrenton that he hasn’t met yet, I’d be surprised.  He has shown by burning all that shoe leather that he is not some fly-by-night dilettante but a candidate willing to listen, learn, do what it takes, and entrench himself in the state.

Meeting and endearing himself to Democratic activists and candidates statewide, however, was only step one, a foundation to build on.  Now he has to introduce himself to the vast majority of voters, who according to the polls, have no clue who he is.

Considering this, it was not a good sign that the McAuliffe campaign chose this week, as the race erupted into national view, to stay stone silent.  It’s time for them to define their candidate — before he is defined in the worst terms by others — and they have no time to waste.  

Terry does not start out with a particularly positive public image, but I believe that he can turn that around if he and his campaign make a concerted effort to do so.  For him to become our vehicle to beat the wretched Cuccinelli will require directly confronting — not sweeping under the rug — several major challenges to his image.  These include:

1) The millionaire challenge — yes, America just rejected another rich businessman for the highest office in the land, making this a not very good time to have anything in common with the Mittster.  Beyond the basic image question is the example that Romney’s long business career created a record that was used so effectively against him — from offshoring jobs to evading taxes.  

I actually think this challenge can be beaten down and even turned into an advantage by a skillful campaign, for three reasons.  First, Romney’s problem was NOT that he was a businessman, but that his business and political career were both focused on the transfer of wealth from the 99% to the 1%.  So many of his actions and his policies on taxes, regulation, the budget, etc., reinforced the same message, it was not all that difficult for his opponent to connect the dots and drive the point home.  

Terry, by contrast, can run on being the anti-Romney: the progressive businessman who   respects the limits of the marketplace and the value of government.  He will need to weave this narrative carefully in order to motivate Democrats, who definitely don’t want a Romney type at the top of the ticket, to go to the polls.  Still, in purple Virginia, it is not a bad thing to have a candidate with extensive private sector knowledge and experience, particularly if he articulates how he sees bringing the right lessons from the business community to government.

The second reason this should not be a serious disadvantage is that it is hard to see how Cuccinelli, who attacks the very idea of government regulating business over environmental, health or any other factors, could credibly attack McAuliffe on this issue, without confusing his tea party supporters and the corporate moguls lined up to write checks to him.

The third reason that this doesn’t have to be a major barrier could be summed up in 2 words: Mark Warner

2) The Virginian challenge — Curiously, one word I noticed crop up frequently in on-line comments about McAuliffe was “carpet bagger.”  Perhaps it’s not enough to point out that Terry has actually lived in Virginia over 20 years, since the paved-in-gold streets of McLean are not everyone’s vision of the “real Virginia.”  Nor is it enough to point out how many major state candidates these days are from somewhere else.  (Like: Ken Cuccinelli, NJ; George Allen, CA; Tim Kaine, MN; Mark Warner, IN; Bob McDonnell, PA — need I freakin’ go on here?)

In fact, this is more a question of style than actual fact.  I’m not going to encourage Terry to take the embarrassing Mark Warner route of sponsoring NASCAR teams.  But there is a certain pose that candidates in the Commonwealth are expected to strike.  

Call it the myth of the Virginia Gentleman.  The Virginia Gentleman is expected to be somehow above politics (think Monticello or Mount Vernon) and yet a man of the people; comfortable whether hunting foxes in the highlands or squirrels in the lowlands; always willing to take the principled stand (think John Warner refusing to support Oliver North) but also skillful in playing politics behind closed doors; likable but somehow distant, as if already chiseled into stone before his time. (Sorry, ladies, for all this gender-biased language, but this archetype may explain why we’ve had so few female leaders in the state.)

Rather than trying to explain it, I would simply suggest studying video, pictures and the career of John Warner, who made himself into the ultimate Virginia political archetype.

The same John Warner who, by the way, was born in…Washington, DC.

3) The seriousness challenge — we come now to the most intangible yet perhaps most serious of Terry’s image issues.  His problem is not likability, as he comes across pleasantly both on the stage and in person.  He has an infectious, almost child-like joie de vivre that makes it easy to see why he’s been so successful in getting rich donors to part with gobs of their money.  What he does not convey as well, however, is the kind of seriousness of purpose that we expect from our leaders.  

Somehow, his goofy smile and less-than-crisp presentation and that lingering suspicion that he’s just a rich guy leaving the boredom of Washington, DC on a lark to find a new kingdom to conquer — all combine to raise doubts about whether he’s got the right stuff both to beat the Kook and govern the state well for 4 years afterwards.  

To be fair, many politicians convey seriousness when they don’t actually have any, and many people who deserve to be taken seriously aren’t just because of how they come across.  Well, we still have to deal with the parts of life that suck.  And yes, like it or not, politicians do need to reinvent themselves from time to time.  

To beat this challenge, Terry will have to refine his manner a bit in public.  It may mean smiling less, avoiding over-talking, listening well and respectfully, studying Virginia’s issues furiously and having a crisp answer ready to go on each of them.  Terry’s buddy Hillary Clinton actually gave one of the most masterful demonstrations of how to manage such a transition when she made the leap from First Lady to junior US Senator.  She showed both the discipline and the humility to learn from others, essential qualities to display when one is trying to make a good impression as the new kid on the block.

Terry of course must be ready to hit home runs when asked the most basic questions demanded of any candidate, like: Why are you running?  What are your top priorities for the state?  How will your experiences in life help you accomplish these goals?  All these answers must weave together into a theme, a story, an image that makes the voters feel clear and reassured about who this guy really is.  

Defining Ken Cuccinelli will be easy since he has a long record of extremism to tap into — no exaggeration necessary!  And the fact that so many Virginians have barely a clue who Terry is presents the advantage of a relatively clean slate.  But of course that can be a curse too if others grab the chalk first and make indelible impressions.  And we all know how talented the GOP is at the fine art of mudslinging.  

T-Mac and his campaign need to build on the goodwill they have established among Democrats statewide, get their story in shape and start introducing him to the public in a big way –ASAP.  

Flashback to 2007: Jeannemarie Devolites Davis Calls Herself a “RINO”

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From the Raising Kaine archives, 9/30/07. And now she’s baaaack (after losing badly to Chap Petersen in November 2007), somehow thinking a self-described “RINO” has a snowball’s chance in hell of winning the 2013 Republican nomination for LG at a convention dominated by the ultra-right-wing, the same people who deep-sixed her husband politically for supposedly being a…yep, “RINO”? Can we say “delusional?”

Smell the desperation!  Obviously well aware that she’s in serious danger of losing her state senate seat to Chap Petersen in a Democratic district, Republican Jeannemarie Devolites Davis is now claiming not to be a Republican after all!.  Check this out:

On the campaign trail, Devolites Davis describes herself as an independent, a moderate who can best represent a centrist constituency. At a forum Thursday night before Equality Fairfax, a gay-rights organization, she called herself a “RINO” — Republican in Name Only — a derogatory term used by members of the GOP’s conservative wing.

As the Richmond Times-Dispatch article correctly notes, “RINO” is normally a “derogatory term,” yet JMDD has resorted to calling herself one in order to pander to the increasingly “blue” electorate of the 34th State Senate district.  But voters aren’t going to be fooled by the Davises blurring tactics.  People in the 34th district are well aware that if they want a real Democrat and not a “RINO,” they’ve got a superb option in Chap Petersen.  Why vote for someone who’s ashamed of who she is when you can vote for a proud Democrat?

By the way, Jeannemarie can run around calling herself a RINO all she wants, but the super-conservative Family Foundation of Virginia gives her a solid 64, higher than Republicans John Watkins and Fred Quayle, not to mention higher than any Democrat in the State Senate  Among other things, JMDD is praised by this right-wing group as having voted for the anti-gay marriage amendment.  I wonder what the Family Foundation thinks of JMDD calling herself a RINO.

Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, December 1. Also, see President Obama’s weekly address, in which he “urges Congress to take action to help grow our economy and strengthen the middle class.”

*Obama: GOP holding middle class ‘hostage’ (And Obama’s exactly right.)

*Fiscal Cliff Fictions: Let’s All Agree to Pretend the GOP Isn’t Full of It

*Mitch McConnell makes an offer (And it’s a really bad joke.)

*Obama urges immediate tax cut extension for middle class

*Sen. Warner: We won’t fall off fiscal cliff (“We know we’re going to have to generate some additional revenues, the best down payment is to go ahead and let the Bush tax rates for the top two percent go back up.”)

*GOP fratricide in Virginia? (“So it was that Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II, a right-wing firebrand who has flirted with birtherism, denied climate change, bashed gays and waged a jihad against abortion, managed to outmaneuver Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling.”)

*Radtke wants Bolling censured (Radtke appears to be getting “more stupider,” as they say in 7th grade, as time goes by…)

*Chris Graham: A man without a country (But who would want to be a citizen of Loonyland, aka “the Teapublican’t Party,” aka the John Birch Society 2012 Version?)

*Advice for Cuccinelli (Why would anyone in their right mind take advice from one of the worst, most sycophantic, least professional, lamest, nastiest, smarmiest, craziest talking heads among Beltway Blabberers? And those are Jennifer Rubin’s GOOD qualities! LOL)

*Bill Bolling partly pinned hopes on Romney win (So much for THAT plan!)

*Terry McAuliffe announces campaign co-chairmen

*Ollie North to endorse Snyder for LG (Seriously? Somebody would actually WANT the endorsement of Mr. Iran-Contra/Arms for Hostages Scandal? Truly astounding.)

*He (or she) who hesitates is lost (“In the modern era of Virginia politics (which I date from the election of Linwood Holton as the first Republican governor in 1969), every lieutenant governor or attorney general who has sought re-election has ultimately failed to win the governorship.”)

*U.S. to sell wind farm leases off Va.

*Group issues proposed guidelines on uranium mining in Va.

*Va. Farm Bureau uranium stance upsets disappoints mining company

P.S. Also see Nate Silver’s When Internal Polls Mislead, a Whole Campaign May Be To Blame

New Progress for Virginia Offshore Wind Energy

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London Array Phase 1 Offshore wind Farm is seen under Construction at Frinton On Sea (1209) Saturday 14th April 2012The Obama administration today announced plans to sell leases for preliminary offshore wind energy development activities in two areas of federal waters recently identified and reviewed off the coasts of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Virginia. The leases will be sold through a competitive auction in 2013:

“Wind energy along the Atlantic holds enormous potential, and today we are moving closer to tapping into this massive domestic energy resource to create jobs, increase our energy security and strengthen our nation’s competitiveness in this new energy frontier,” said [Interior Secretary Ken] Salazar. “We are implementing the President’s all-of-the-above strategy by focusing on developing areas with the lowest potential conflicts and the greatest expected gains. As we experience record domestic oil and gas development, we are moving forward at the same time with efforts to ensure that America continues to lead the world at developing the energy of the future.”

The lease sales, which will be held next year, will be the first-ever competitive sales on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) for wind energy, and are major milestones in the Administration’s “Smart from the Start” wind energy program to facilitate the siting, leasing and construction of new projects. These lease sales cover two WEAs along the Atlantic coast that have high wind resource potential. […]

The proposed lease area offshore Virginia will be auctioned as a single lease and totals about 112,800 acres about 23.5 nautical miles offshore southern Virginia. It is expected to support more than 2,000 MW of wind generation – also enough electricity to power 700,000 homes. For a map of the proposed area, click here.

Learn more about why developing offshore wind energy is so critical for Virginia’s environment & economy – and how you can help keep it moving along – from the Virginia Conservation Network’s Chelsea Harnish.