Archive for April, 2015

Will the 'real Democrat' please stand up?

Click photo to enlarge

Mayor Steve Glazer talks with a shopper at the Orinda Farmer's Market in Orinda, Calif., on Saturday, April 4, 2015. Glazer is a candidate in the May 19 special election for the 7th State Senate District. He was at the farmer's market as mayor and to interact with potential voters. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group)

They support Democratic touchstone issues such as environmentalism, gun control, gay marriage and abortion rights. But they're often seen as party pariahs for espousing ideas like rolling back public workers' pensions, banning transit strikes and making it easier to fire bad teachers.

They're a new breed of Democrat politician, and they're shaking up the state's political landscape as business interests, independents and sometimes even moderate Republicans pour money into nasty Democrat vs. Democrat battles made possible by California's new "top-two" primary. And with the state Republican Party still searching for a path back from decades of decline, some political analysts say it's only the beginning of a long battle for the soul of the California Democrat Party.

Mayor Steve Glazer walks and greets shoppers at the Orinda Farmer's Market in Orinda, Calif., on Saturday, April 4, 2015. Glazer is a candidate in the May 19, special election for the 7th State Senate District. He was at the farmer's market as mayor and to interact with potential voters. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group) ( Dan Honda )

"Until recently you had to toe the line for whatever the public employee unions wanted you to do," said former San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed, one of the first Democratic politicians to poke Big Labor in the eye by fighting for pension reform. "The union leadership's job is to look out for the interests of union members. Elected officials' jobs should be to look out for the interests of residents and taxpayers. Those are very different jobs at times."

The Golden State certainly doesn't have a monopoly on ideological purity battles. Across the nation, establishment Republicans still engage in bitter feuds with tea party conservatives, while centrist Democrats such as Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel face off with more liberal challengers.

In California, intraparty disagreements are no longer confined to the more conservative "blue dog" Democrats in rural parts of the state. In 2012, old-line labor liberals contended with new-wave moderates in Assembly races in Marin County and Los Angeles. In 2014, the phenomenon recurred in a Los Angeles state Senate race, the South Bay's Ro Khanna-Mike Honda congressional race, and the contest for superintendent of public instruction.

And now it's playing out again in a special election for an East Bay state Senate seat, as Orinda Democrat Steve Glazer's calls for banning transit strikes and tightening teacher tenure rules have raised the ire of labor.

"Workers' issues are historically what the Democratic Party is about," said California Labor Federation spokesman Steve Smith. So if you're not OK with protecting pensions and organizing rights, "you're not a real Democrat."

Continue reading here:
Will the 'real Democrat' please stand up?

Anyone but Salmond: campaign to stop former SNP leader gathers pace

Christine Jardine on the campaign trail. Photograph: Ken Macpherson for the Guardian

There was a heckle, and some booing. Nicola Sturgeon, Alex Salmonds heir as first minister of Scotland, looked momentarily, but genuinely, uncomfortable last week when the audience for the televised Scottish leaders debates reacted grumpily to her refusal to rule out another referendum on independence.

According to Christine Jardine, the Liberal Democrat candidate hoping to deny Salmond a seat in Westminster, it was the moment the silent majority expressed that it was weary of the nationalist hubris.

They seem to have forgotten that they lost, she said. Alex Salmond said it was a once in a generation vote. They arent keeping to their word. And people are annoyed. I could not have had a better fundraiser and recruiter than Salmond for my campaign. A lot of people say to me that they have never voted Liberal Democrat but they will this time. It is not going to plan for them.

Jardine was speaking on the campaign trail in the commuter town of Ellon, 15 miles north of Aberdeen and part of the Gordon constituency that Salmond hopes will be his route to influence at Westminster. But his path may not be smooth.

We are reluctant to get too carried away, said Sir Malcolm Bruce, the retiring MP for the constituency, campaigning alongside his intended successor. But there is a mood and you can feel it.

The Liberal Democrats triumphed in Gordon in 2010 with a healthy majority of 7,000 (36% of the vote compared with the SNPs 22%). Bruce has held this seat for 32 years as a respected local man who offered a palatable alternative to the Tories in this relatively affluent area prospering from North Sea oil.

The latest Scotland-wide opinion polls have the SNP on 49%, Labour on 25% and the Lib Dems on a measly 4%. The only published poll to be done locally was in February, courtesy of the Tory peer Lord Ashcroft. That put the SNP in first place with 41% of the vote in standard voting intentions. The Lib Dems were in second place on 21% of the vote, ahead of Labour on 17% and the Conservatives on 15%.

However, when respondents were asked specifically about their constituency, the shares of the answers for the respondents rose for the Lib Dems and the SNP. A total of 43% of respondents said that they would vote SNP, while 26% said they planned to vote for the Lib Dems, putting the SNP well ahead but also pretty definitively making this a two-horse race.

It is the nature of the straight fight between Salmond and the anti-Salmond candidate that has given the Lib Dems a hope, and a strategy. It is one of 100 seats into which the party is putting all of its resources. One SNP canvasser admitted to the Observer: We think Salmond will win. But, actually, listening to what everyone says behind the scenes, it is going to be very close. An SNP voter, in Ellons market square, Kathleen Moore, 59, said: I dont think hell walk it.

Read the rest here:
Anyone but Salmond: campaign to stop former SNP leader gathers pace

Republican Rand Paul Launches US Presidential Campaign – Video


Republican Rand Paul Launches US Presidential Campaign
Kentucky Senator Rand Paul has become the second major Republican to announce his candidacy for president. Paul, a libertarian, is a favorite of the conservative Tea Party movement and has...

By: VOA News

Read more here:
Republican Rand Paul Launches US Presidential Campaign - Video

Republican MO Lawmaker has Amnesia – Video


Republican MO Lawmaker has Amnesia

By: This Week in Black and White

Original post:
Republican MO Lawmaker has Amnesia - Video

WHY BLACK MEN SHOULD PAY FOR A REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT! – Video


WHY BLACK MEN SHOULD PAY FOR A REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT!

By: Chris Smith

View original post here:
WHY BLACK MEN SHOULD PAY FOR A REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT! - Video