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Uber taps Eric Holder to probe harassment claims – KGO-TV

Uber said on Monday that it is tapping former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to help conduct an investigation into sexual harassment claims made by a former employee.

Uber CEO Travis Kalanick announced the move in a letter sent around to company employees which was seen by ABC News.

In his note to employees, Kalanick said he hired Eric Holder, Attorney General under President Barack Obama, and Tammy Albarran -- who are both partners at the Washington D.C.-based law firm Covington & Burling -- to "conduct an independent review" of Fowler's claims.

"I believe in creating a workplace where a deep sense of justice underpins everything we do," Kalanick said in the memo. "What is driving me through all this is a determination that we take what's happened as an opportunity to heal wounds of the past and set a new standard for justice in the workplace."

The company plans to hold an "all hands" meeting on Tuesday to "discuss what's happened and next steps," Kalanick's note said.

Fowler, who currently works for the online payments provider Stripe, wrote in her Sunday blog post that a manager of hers when she worked at Uber had sexually harassed her over online chats. She wrote that after she took screenshots of the conversation and sent them on to HR, no action was taken.

"Upper management told me that he 'was a high performer' (i.e. had stellar performance reviews from his superiors) and they wouldn't feel comfortable punishing him for what was probably just an innocent mistake on his part," Fowler wrote.

Kalanick on Sunday called the descriptions in Fowler's post "abhorrent," saying that the actions described have no place at Uber.

"It's the first time this has come to my attention so I have instructed Liane Hornsey our new Chief Human Resources Officer to conduct an urgent investigation into these allegations," he added. "We seek to make Uber a just workplace for everyone and there can be absolutely no place for this kind of behavior at Uber -- and anyone who behaves this way or thinks this is OK will be fired."

Kalanick also posted his reactions to Twitter on Sunday, embedding a link to Fowler's blog post.

Uber board member and Thrive Global CEO Arianna Huffington also promised a "full investigation" on Sunday and asked people to email her directly about the allegations.

According to Monday's memo, Huffington, along with the company's human resources chief, will attend the "all hands" meeting on Tuesday and will conduct "group and one-on-one listening sessions" to get feedback from employees.

ABC News could not independently verify the details of Fowler's story.

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Uber taps Eric Holder to probe harassment claims - KGO-TV

Uber Hires Eric Holder To Investigate Sexual Harassment Allegations – Sci-Tech Today

Uber has hired the former US attorney general Eric Holder to investigate allegations of sexual harassment after an engineer went public with claims that she repeatedly faced sexism and discrimination at the ride-sharing company.

In a staff email shared with the Guardian on Monday, Ubers CEO, Travis Kalanick, said Holder would conduct an independent review and also revealed that women made up only 15% of the companys workforce in engineering, product management and scientist roles.

The hiring of Holder, who was attorney general under Barack Obama, comes as the description of harassment from Susan Fowler, a former site reliability engineer, has gone viral, prompting women across Silicon Valley to share stories of facing misconduct and discrimination in the male-dominated tech industry.

Its been a tough 24 hours. I know the company is hurting, Kalanick said in his email. It is my number one priority that we come through this a better organization where we live our values and fight for and support those who experience injustice.

Fowlers lengthy account on her blog alleged that management and the HR department at the San Francisco-based company frequently dismissed documented cases of sexual harassment, protected a repeat offender and threatened to fire her for raising concerns.

Fowler, who declined to comment further on Monday, alleged in her post that a manager immediately propositioned her for sex when she joined in late 2015, and that a director explained the dwindling number of women in her organization by saying the women of Uber just needed to step up and be better engineers.

Fowler, who now works for technology company Stripe, said a manager harassed her with messages on the company chat system but did not face any consequences from HR despite her providing screenshots. She said she later learned that other women had complained about his inappropriate behavior.

Upper management told me that he was a high performer -- and they wouldnt feel comfortable punishing him for what was probably just an innocent mistake, she wrote.

In one anecdote, she said managers had promised staff leather jackets but ultimately decided not to order them for women because there were not enough women in the organization to justify placing an order.

Following her complaint about that incident, an HR representative asked if I had ever considered that I might be the problem, she said. Her manager also later told her she was on thin ice and that if she filed another report, she would be fired, according to her account. Although an HR official admitted that this threat was illegal, no action was taken, she said.

On Monday, Kalanick said Uber board member Arianna Huffington, founder of Huffington Post, would also assist in the investigation alongside Liane Hornsey, the companys newly hired chief human resources officer, and Angela Padilla, general counsel.

The harassment controversy comes as Kalanick struggles to move past the viral #DeleteUber campaign, which stemmed from his participation on Donald Trumps economic advisory council.

The company has long refused to release demographic data on its workforce, even though most major tech companies have in recent years begun disclosing data and publicly acknowledging their lack of diversity. Apple, Facebook, Google and Twitter have all published staffing reports.

Kalanicks email only provided gender data, saying the 15% figure for women has not changed substantively in the last year. The email did not offer statistics on the number of women in senior roles, a key metric for diversity.

A spokeswoman declined to provide racial demographic data to the Guardian on Monday. The CEO said he and Hornsey would publish a broader diversity report in the coming months.

Fowler alleged that when she left Uber at the end of 2016, out of over 150 engineers in the site reliability engineering teams, only 3% were women.

This is not the first time a tech corporation has hired Holder in the wake of a discrimination scandal. In 2016, home-sharing startup Airbnb brought him in to investigate claims that users were refusing to rent their homes to black guests, a controversy that spread under the hashtag #AirbnbWhileBlack. The company subsequently implemented new staff and rules aimed at preventing discrimination, though some critics said the reforms were inadequate.

Image Credit: Uber (logo).

2017 Guardian Web under contract with NewsEdge/Acquire Media. All rights reserved.

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Uber Hires Eric Holder To Investigate Sexual Harassment Allegations - Sci-Tech Today

Can a Sanders Democrat Win the New Jersey Governor’s Race? – The Nation.

Illustration by Victor Juhasz.

Whither the Democrats after 2016? a year before the 2018 midterm elections, that question will get its first real test in New Jersey, one of only two states (along with Virginia) where the governorship is at stake this year. And just as last years presidential primary pitted Hillary Clinton, the establishment candidate, against Bernie Sanders, a left-leaning insurgent, the two leading candidates in New Jerseys 2017 Democratic primary have staked out their turf in the partys Clinton and Sanders wings.

Voters in deep-blue New Jersey, who have groaned under the weight of Governor Chris Christies Republican administration since 2009, are eager for a fresh start. With Christies approval rating at an all-time low of just 18 percent, the odds strongly favor a Democratic win over any of the potential GOP candidates aiming to succeed him.

The states Democratic primary, which takes place in June, is shaping up as a choice between the favorite, Phil Murphy, a multimillionaire and former Goldman Sachs executive with strong backing from the party establishment, and his leading challenger, Assemblyman John Wisniewski, a veteran legislator and former chair of Sanderss presidential effort in the state. For Wisniewski, the primary is an uphill climb, and hes running an insurgent, populist-tinged campaign that he hopes will inspire the same enthusiasm that energized the Sanders movement.

To hear Wisniewski tell it, his campaign is part of a national effort to bring the Democratic Party back to its roots. The party periodically has to go through reevaluation and soul-searching about its core beliefs, he told The Nation. The party went through that right after Ronald Reagan became president, and there was this view that the party needed to be more centrist. We had a movement led by the governor of Arkansas, who later became our president, about taking the party to the center. Over time, the party started to become indistinguishable from the Republicans. What were seeing today is a natural reaction thats built up over the years, where a lot of rank and file feel that we Democrats havent stuck to our core beliefs.

Perhaps the biggest challenge that Wisniewski faces is New Jerseys entrenched system of party bosses. The state is notorious for the power wielded behind the scenes by a handful of figures, such as South Jerseys George Norcross, an insurance executive, and North Jerseys Joseph DiVincenzo Jr., the Essex County executive (whose domain includes Newark). Along with other, less powerful Democratic machines and the party chairpersons in each of New Jerseys 21 counties, they exert enormous influence in primary elections, in part by controlling which candidate gets the favored first line on the ballot. In the 2016 presidential primary, the entire New Jersey Democratic leadership, including all of the states elected officials (except Wisniewski), lined up for Clinton, who won 566,247 votes to Sanderss 328,058.

As for Murphy, his vast wealth gives him the abilitymuch like New Jerseys previous Democratic governor, Jon Corzine, also a former Goldman Sachs executiveto largely self-finance his campaign. So far, Murphy has loaned his campaign at least $9.5 million, driving potential challengers from the race before it even began. And Murphy has funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars to county organizations and local politicians, helping to secure the support of all 21 county chairpersons. (According to state records, since 2014, Murphy has given $63,000 to the Passaic County and $60,000 to the Union County Democratic organizations, and with his wife, Tammyalso a Goldman Sachs alumhes funneled $148,850 to the Bergen County organization.)

In addition to the county leaders, Murphy has lined up support from New Jerseys two senators, Cory Booker and Bob Menendez; most of organized labor, including the New Jersey Education Association (NJEA) and the Communications Workers of America (CWA); and prominent leaders like Newark Mayor Ras Baraka.

Though Murphy is the clear favorite in a race that includes Wisniewski and several other challengers, he has opted to single out Wisniewski for strongly worded attacks, with Murphys campaign calling him a 21-year Trenton insider and party bosseven though not a single one of New Jerseys actual bosses have backed Wisniewski, and most have lined up in Murphys camp.

When asked what he thinks about the fact that Murphys campaign website doesnt mention that he spent more than two decades at Goldman Sachsit says only that he work[ed] his way up to help lead a major international businessWisniewski responded, I think that speaks for itself. The mind-set that comes from Goldman Sachs doesnt connect with New Jersey voters.

First elected to the state assembly in 1995, Wisniewski might seem to be a creature of business-as-usual Jersey politics, at least on the surface. Over the past two decades, he has chaired the Assemblys transportation committee; led the 2011 reapportionment effort; served for three years as chairman of the New Jersey State Democratic Committee; and was a member of the Democratic National Committee.

But if you look a little deeper, youll see that Wisniewski has a strong independent streak. He hails from the city of Sayreville in central New Jersey, a former industrial town along the Raritan River whose factories have mostly shuttered since the 1960s, and hes repeatedly been elected with strong support from labor and progressive groups. (Among his other achievements, hes earned a lifetime score of 0 percent from the American Conservative Union for his voting record.) And hes bucked the Democratic Party leadership and its boss-driven agenda time and time again.

For example, when Christie launched an aggressive assault on the pensions and health-care benefits of state employees in 2011, he did so with the support of Norcross, DiVincenzo, and other Democratic bosses, whose allies in the Assembly joined the Republican governor to give him the margin he needed to pass the changes despite massive protests outside the State House by the NJEA, the CWA, and other unions. In June of that year, Wisniewski appeared on MSNBCs Rachel Maddow Show, where he joined her in bemoaning the state of the Democratic Party and added, in regard to the pension-reform fiasco: We fought real hard, but unfortunately there were some Democrats who chose to side with the Republicans on this bill.

We [at Goldman Sachs] are elite in the sense the Marine Corps is elite. Phil Murphy, 1998

And in 2013, when Christie found himself enmeshed in a scandal over politically motivated lane closings on the George Washington Bridge, Wisniewski led the special committee investigating Christie and his croniesbut he says that leading Democrats in the Legislature expressed concern about his rocking the boat. I received calls from Democrats saying, John, this is not going to end well, Wisniewski recounted, or, more tellingly, Youre making it hard to get things done. The governors not going to agree to do things if youre pursuing him. New Jersey, Wisniewski adds, is all about making deals, and some Democrats feared that his Bridgegate committee would hurt their ability to make deals with the Republican governor.

But it was Wisniewskis decision in late 2015 to support Sanderss primary campaign that put him squarely against the states Democratic establishment. Though Wisniewski had compiled a 20-year record as a liberal New Jersey legislator, he hadnt paid much attention to the Vermont socialist before 2015. I liked Senator Sanders, and I knew who he was, Wisniewski told The Nation. But when he traveled to Minneapolis in late 2015 for a meeting of the DNC, he was astonished by the hundreds of supporters lining up to see Sanders, many of whom had traveled long distances. I saw a level of enthusiasm and engagement that I didnt see for any other candidate, Wisniewski recalled. It was on a lot of different levelscertainly about all of the progressive issues that Sanders represented, but it was also about the need for a change in our national Democratic Party, that we had become too corporate.

Back home, Wisniewski signed up to chair the San- ders campaign. His decision didnt sit well with the states Democratic leaders. I announced my support for Senator Sanders, and I wont use any names, but I had one assemblyman call me up and say, Im on board, I love everything that Sanders stands for. Im glad youre leading the effort. What can I do to help? And 48 hours later, I got a call from the same assemblyman, who said: I got a call from my county chair, who said that if I support Sanders, I wont get the party line for reelection next time. And I had a number of elected officials tell me, Im with you, but quietly. Unofficially. Below the radar, so to speak.

One cause for concern was John Currie, chairman of the state Democratic committee and a strong Clinton supporter. John Currie was furious that I came out for Bernie Sanders, Wisniewski said. Months later, Currie got his revenge. In June 2016, Currie unceremoniously booted Wisniewski (along with Reni Erdos, another Sanders supporter) from the DNC, replacing him with an insurance executive who was also a party fund-raiser. They werent content just to be cheerleaders for Hillary Clinton, Wisniewski told The Nation. They wanted to make sure that there was no opposition at all. In the end, not a single party leader, big-city mayor, member of the State Legislature, or member of Congress from New Jersey backed Sanders. They feared that what John Currie did to me, hed do to them, Wisniewski said.

For his part, Currie told The Nation that Wisniewskis ouster from the DNC had nothing to do with his support for Sanders. Its my right to put anyone on the committee, Currie said. I preferred another gentleman. Asked whether New Jerseys county chairpersons have too much influence over the process for selecting a nominee, Currie said no: I think county chairs bring discipline to the party. I like our system in New Jersey very much.

Were Wisniewski to win the June primary, of course, Currie and the rest of the Democratic establishment would probably support him, though theres no guarantee: In 2013, when Christie was running for reelection, a number of Democratic bosses in the state opted not to back Barbara Buono, their own partys nominee. After her defeat, Buono issued a scathing denunciation of the onslaught of betrayal by the Democratic bosses, some elected and some not, who covertly supported Christie.

To prevail against these forces, Wisniewski will have to run an outsiders campaign, much as Sanders did last year. That effort is well under way, he said: Were doing town halls, meet-and-greets; we have field organizers, phone banks, and were raising funds$5, $27, because were not supported by a $10 million check.

In January, Wisniewski led a meeting of some 270 organizers and activists at Hudson County Community College in Jersey City, part of a National Day of Action called for by Sanders to oppose the Trump administrations assault on health care. Standing before union members, retirees, and dozens of millennials whod worked for the Sanders campaign, Wisniewski went far beyond defending the Affordable Care Act. To robust cheers from the crowd, he attacked ideologues in Washington who really care only about insurance- company profits [and] fantasize about privatizing Medicare, before adding: Im going to do everything I can to work toward a single-payer system right here in New Jersey!

Meanwhile, a few days later, The Nation caught up with Phil Murphy at a gathering of the Northeast Regional Council of Carpenters. Around 800 members packed a room at the Renaissance Woodbridge Hotel in Iselin, New Jersey, for a town hall organized in conjunction with Murphys campaign. We endorsed Murphy back in October, said Kevin Davitt, a spokesman for the carpenters union. Murphy, whos been preparing to run for governor for several years, has aggressively courted labors support, and hes earned the backing of the NJEA, the CWA, the Service Employees International Union, the Laborers International Union of North America, and the police and firefighters unions. Tall, slim, and fit, and bearing an uncanny resemblance to the actor Michael Keaton, Murphy bounded onto the stage in Iselin, energetic and brimming with enthusiasm. He grabbed the mike, called out to people in the audience, acknowledged the standing ovation, and then shed his jacket. What an extraordinary show of support! he exclaimed. After a punchy speech to open the event, Murphy took questions from the crowd for more than an hour.

There was, however, evidence of careful orchestration for the slickly produced event. Just before John Ballantyne, the unions leader, introduced Murphy, dozens of carpenters dutifully filed in to stand behind the stage as a camera-ready backdrop. People working for Murphy were everywhere, including videographers, press people, and event managers. Almost every question from the audience was prearranged, according to documents obtained by The Nation, which include an e-mail from Michelle McCormick of Groundwork Strategies, a PR firm, to Kenneth Smith of SmithMedia: Ive attached a draft agenda and the candidate questions for your referencealong with a list of five questions to be asked by the audience. Sure enough, as Murphy called on random audience members, the printed questions on the list were read.

For his campaign, Murphy isnt running as a centrist corporate Democrat, but rather as a progressive champion making a strong appeal to labor. Despite his more than two decades on Wall Street, he is quick to acknowledge that the financial sector is underregulated, that the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act was a mistake, and that Wall Street should have been held accountable for the 2008 meltdown. Asked by The Nation whether people at Goldman Sachs should have been criminally prosecuted for fraud rather than merely fined, Murphy deflected, saying: Nobody on Wall Street has paid a price for bringing the country to its knees. I find that offensive and unacceptable.

Im going to do everything I can to work toward a single-payer system right here in New Jersey. John Wisniewski

At the Iselin event, Murphy delivered a stem-winding populist speech. Weve got to grow the economy, but weve got to make it fair! he said. Its not only unfair, but its rigged. Its not honest. Its time for morning in New Jersey! This prompted another standing ovationled, it should be mentioned, by the union execs in the front row. Slamming right-to-work laws and calling for a minimum-wage increase, Murphy said: Weve done a lousy job in our partythe Democratic Party, the party of labor reminding people that we are the party of labor.

Concluding his speech, Murphy told the carpenters: Its easy for me to say the right things. [But] look at my life story and ask yourselves: Does this guys life match up with what hes telling us? In fact, its a good guess that few in the audience knew Murphys life story. As the meeting drew to a close, we asked some of the union members present if Murphy had made the sale. I thought he answered the questions fairly and wisely, said one veteran carpenter. Im going to do some more study about him. Asked if he knew that Murphy had spent 23 years at Goldman Sachsa fact that the candidate hadnt mentioned once during his 60-plus minutes onstagethe carpenter thought for a moment before responding, So you mean hes the swamp we need to drain?

Murphy was hired by Goldman Sachs in 1983, when he was fresh out of college. His many years there shaped his worldview and left him with a Rolodex of powerful contacts. We [at Goldman Sachs] are elite in the sense the Marine Corps is elite, Murphy said in 1998, according to The Wall Street Journal.

After stints heading Goldmans Asia and Germany operations, Murphy returned to the New York headquarters in 1999, just as the firmand Wall Streetwere undergoing a dramatic transformation. That was the year Glass-Steagall was repealed and a ban was placed on the regulation of derivatives. Both moves were orchestrated by Robert Rubin, the Clinton administrations Treasury secretary and another Goldman Sachs alum, and they took Wall Street and investment banks like Goldman to new levels of risky, highly leveraged speculative activities.

In 1999, Murphy joined the firms management committee, an elite group that included Hank Paulson, later George W. Bushs Treasury secretary, and Gary Cohn, now President Trumps top economic adviser. Two years later, he became co-head of the division overseeing the assets of pensions, foundations, hedge funds, and other institutions and wealthy individuals managed by Goldman, which totaled $373 billion by 2003. And as a prime broker for investors, his division fed hedge-fund clients enormous lines of credit, fueling Wall Streets speculative bubble.

Murphy gave up his day-to-day role at Goldman in 2003, becoming a senior director before finally leaving the firm in 2006. That year, he took over as finance chair of the Democratic National Committee, where he worked alongside Howard Dean, coaxing checks from wealthy donors, including Wall Street bankers and hedge-fund moguls. We raised almost $300 million in my three years there, Murphy told The Nation. By 2009, he and his wife made personal contributions totaling nearly $1.5 million to Democratic candidates, committees, and party organizations, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. In keeping with the long-standing presidential habit of appointing big donors as ambassadors, President Obama tapped Murphy in 2009 to be US ambassador to Germany.

Murphys Goldman connections were instrumental in his transition from Wall Street to politics. He is a close confidant of former treasury secretary and Wall Street veteran Robert Rubin, the minence grise of the Democratic Party when it comes to financial issues, reported the German weekly Der Spiegel after Murphy was named ambassador. It was through his connection to Rubin that Murphy began working as a Democratic Party fundraiser. Murphy also had ties to Michael Froman, Rubins chief of staff at the Treasury. According to WikiLeaks, in 2008, it was Froman who recommended to John Podesta, then overseeing Obamas transition, that Murphy get a top job in the administration.

Despite his Wall Street backgroundor perhaps in an effort to overcome itMurphy agrees with Wisniewski on a wide range of issues, including the need for a $15-an-hour minimum wage, a more progressive tax system, stronger environmental protections, and more effective gun control. Murphy has garnered a positive response from many Jersey Democrats for his innovative proposal to create a state-owned public bank, which, he told The Nation, would be explicitly modeled on the century-old Bank of North Dakota. Itll be a peoples bank, he said. Our model would make student loans at reasonable rates, small-scale infrastructure loans working with community banks, and small-business loans.

There are some differences as well between the two candidates. Wisniewski, as noted earlier, strongly supports a Medicare-for-all single-payer plan for New Jersey; Murphy suggests that while he favors such a plan in principle, its more practical now to defend the Affordable Care Act. And while Wisniewski supports making state colleges and universities free to New Jersey residents earning less than $125,000 a year, echoing Sanderss 2016 pledge, Murphys higher-education plan is focused on loan relief and refinancing.

One area where Wisniewski has been sharply critical of Murphy is on the long-running battle in New Jersey over pensions and health-care benefits for state employees. Back in 2005, while Murphy was a senior director at Goldman Sachs, he was named by then-Governor Richard Codey, a Democrat, to chair a commission, the Benefits Review Task Force, which would propose ways of dealing with the growing pension crisis resulting from persistent state underfunding. That report made a series of recommendations, many of which drew sharp criticism from organized labor. Murphy approached it in Wall Street fashion: Lets extend the retirement age, make employees pay more, and cut benefits, Wisniewski said. Thats a straight Wall Street way of approaching a financial problem. At the time, the biggest unions representing state employees, such as the NJEA and the CWA, attacked the Murphy report. Carla Katz, then president of CWA Local 1034, promised: We will fight vigorously and loudly against any cuts to our pensions or health benefits proposed by the task force.

Today, as noted earlier, both the NJEA and the CWA are backing Murphy. Hetty Rosenstein, the CWA-NJ state director, admitted that back in 2005, her union was unhappy with the Murphy-led commissionbut she and other union leaders point out, rather illogically, that the measures proposed in that report have largely been enacted since then, especially during Christies all-out assault on state employees in 2011. And, Rosenstein added, Murphys perspective in support of collective bargaining, having seen it in the intensely unionized society in Germanywell, that impressed us. Besides, she said, his support from New Jerseys county chairs, which all but guarantees Murphy the top ballot line, is probably decisive: You cant win a primary off the line. Does that mean the CWAs decision to support Murphy is a pragmatic one? It is partially pragmatic, she replied.

Its worth noting that Rosenstein co-led the Bernie Sanders campaign in the state along with Wisniewski last year. Another New Jersey progressive closely allied with organized labor, who would speak only on background, insisted that Wisniewski backed Sanders purely for opportunistic reasons, in order to appeal to the Vermont senators base: Did he take a center-left position to create an opening for his gubernatorial campaign? Probably. Said another: Hes no Bernie Sanders.

Not surprisingly, Wisniewski disputed these claims. By supporting Sanders, he said, he alienated both the Clinton machine including Murphy, one of Clintons principal fund-raisers in New Jerseyand the states Democratic establishment, making it far harder for him to gather political support. Its laughable that they think they know what makes a progressive in New Jersey, and to compare that to a progressive from Vermont, he said. I happen to come from New JerseyI dont come from Vermontbut Ive always supported increasing the minimum wage, making college affordable. The states Democratic Party has moved to the right, he added, and become ever more willing to make deals with Governor Christie. As an example, he cited a recent bill, supported by 43 of 48 Assembly Democrats, raising the gas tax by 23 a gallon in order to replenish the states transportation fundwhile at the same time abolishing New Jerseys estate tax and making other changes benefiting the wealthy that will cost the state $12 billion over 10 yearswhat Wisniewski called tax breaks for the super-wealthy.

The stakes are higher now than ever. Get The Nation in your inbox.

Though much of labor supports Murphy, National Nurses United has come out in favor of Wisniewski. John understands the struggles of New Jersey families and will stand up for our communities when Wall Street and corporate special interests try to game the system at our expense, said NNUs Esteban Ramirez-Orta. And Jeff Weaver, the former national campaign manager for Sanders who now leads Our Revolution, the Sanders spin-off, endorsed him in January. John Wisniewski stood with us, and he stood with us early, Weaver told The Nation. His platform is a progressive platform. And in addition to that, I dont think we need more Wall Street executives in government, in Trumps administration or in New Jersey.

Although Bernie Sanders has yet to weigh in with an endorsement in the race, he did issue a statement in January that read, in part: I want to thank John Wisniewski for the strong support he gave me during the Democratic presidential primary. He played a great role in that race, and I am confident he would make an excellent governor for New Jersey.

For his part, Wisniewski said that hes talked with Sanders, and hes hopeful hell get an endorsement both from him and from Our Revolution, which is polling its supporters in New Jersey about the race, as well as the states Working Families Party. Can he run a Sanders-style campaign in New Jersey and win? Party bosses [think] that by virtue of their ascension to party leadership, theyre in control of whats best for the Democratic Party, Wisniewski said. As Senator Sanders showed, that aint necessarily so. There are a lot of people who disagree with that across the nationand right here in New Jersey.

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Can a Sanders Democrat Win the New Jersey Governor's Race? - The Nation.

Sdao: It’s a Great Time to Be a Democrat in Orange County – VoiceofOC

Opinion By Fran Sdao | February 21, 2017

Fran Sdao, Chair, Democratic Party of Orange County

What a great time to be a Democrat in Orange County! It is easy to lose sight of that when we read or watch what the President-Elect is saying. However, that is also exactly why it is a great time to be a Democrat here. The moment is ours.

Democrats turned out in record numbers to vote last November. For the first time in 80 years the Democratic candidate for President won in Orange County. Frustrated Democrats are now turning out in record numbers to Democratic club meetings, State Party delegate elections and to meetings/events in our communities. We must capture this energy and enthusiasm, and focus on protecting the values and principles of the Democratic Party as we prepare for the 2018 elections.

I am honored to have been chosen by unanimous consent to serve as Chair of the Democrat Party of Orange County. I am so grateful to have widespread support as I begin this term. I have been warned, and totally get the joke, that the chairs job is that of herding cats.

Challenging as that sounds, that is what is best about the Democratic Party. We are a widely diverse and inclusive Party that represents the changing demographics of Orange County. We are deeply passionate activists committed to making our communities better places for all children, families, and neighbors. We organize and campaign to elect candidates who will advance our platform and promote the values and programs that generations of Democrats have worked to achieve.

We may not always be heading down the road on the same path, but we are guided by the same goals: quality child care, preschool and K-12 public education, access to higher education, good jobs with living wages, decent affordable housing, accessible quality health care, equal rights, clean air and water, and care for our veterans and seniors.

During the next several weeks, we will develop our strategic plans that will take us to the 2018 elections. These plans will be created around three key areas: communication, collaboration and candidates.

There are now more than 525,000 registered Democrats in Orange County. We need to communicate with them and actively engage them in the 2018 elections. Democrats are busy people doing great things everyday in our communities and we need to spread that word. I hope to engage our Party leaders and members through discussion groups, forums, workshops and events. We have a loud voice, lets use it.

We can accomplish so much more by working together. We have partners with whom we must build and strengthen relationships to better focus on common goals. By collaborating with each other within the Party structure, as well as with our partners, good public policy and successful elections will be possible.

Lastly, we must focus on developing our future leaders. This past election has motivated an impassioned group of bright young people with progressive ideals to get involved in their communities and in our Party. We must embrace them as we look to develop and support candidates for seats on school boards, city councils, state offices and Congress. I encourage all Orange County Democrats to seek appointments and positions within their communities. Build your experience and knowledge. Get prepared for leadership.

As President Obama said, If something needs fixing, lace up your shoes and do some organizing. If youre disappointed by your elected officials, grab a clipboard, get some signatures, and run for office yourself. Show up. Dive in. Persevere.

Lets get the Party started.

Fran Sdao, Chair, Democratic Party of Orange County

Opinions expressed in editorials belong to the authors and not Voice of OC.

Voice of OC is interested in hearing different perspectives and voices. If you want to weigh in on this issue or others please contact Voice of OCInvolvement Editor Theresa Sears atTSears@voiceofoc.org

For a different view on this issue, consider:

Whitaker: Republicans Path Toward Prosperity For Orange County

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Sdao: It's a Great Time to Be a Democrat in Orange County - VoiceofOC

Looking behind a poll that shows gasp! a Democrat leading in Sixth District – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)


Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
Looking behind a poll that shows gasp! a Democrat leading in Sixth District
Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
The April 18 race to replace U.S. Rep. Tom Price, R-Roswell, is a non-partisan special election, but is being conducted in a heavily Republican congressional district. There are 18 candidates, including five Democrats and 11 Republicans. The Clout ...

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Looking behind a poll that shows gasp! a Democrat leading in Sixth District - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)