2008

Yesterday, when I was watching the CNN/YouTube Democratic debate I noticed that there was a significant number of Californian's questions that were selected to be asked of the candidates. Out of the 38 questions that were asked, eight came from Californians. No other state even came close to matching that total. Minnesota, Michigan, South Carolina and Pennsylvania had two each. The rest were single digits and two came from unknown locations.

Everyone in the country was eligible to submit a question. A state by state breakdown of the origin of all of the 2,000+ questioners is impossible to find, since we only know user names. However, during the debate they listed the hometown of almost all. So we can't know if this was a representative sample of the questions asked. Regardless, it is great to see so many Californians get a chance to ask the candidates questions during the debate. Wouldn't it be ironic if there were more CA questions asked during this debate than the one in LA?

Below the fold are the Californian questions and the name and hometown of the questioner.

>> read more

Hillary Opening SF Office

posted by Julia Rosen | 07.17.07

The LA office was already opened a few weeks ago. Next Monday is the official opening/debate watching event in San Francisco. The two hour YouTube/CNN debate is on Monday night and they are opening up their offices for up to 500 supporters. It must be a pretty big place.

Here are the details:

What: Hillary for President San Francisco Campaign Office Opening

When: Monday, July 23
Come Early to Watch the Debate: 4 p.m.
Official Party Kick-Off: 6 p.m.

Where: 1122 Howard Street - Top Floor
San Francisco, California, 94103
(Between 7th and 8th Streets)

Who: Local elected officials, fellow supporters and you

RSVP: Via email mmartin@hillaryclinton.com
(RSVP today as we only have room for 500)

Man I wouldn't want to be mmartin, dealing with all of those RSVP emails and random questions. This thing would have been better dealt with by an online response form.

MoveOn held their climate change townhall this weekend and numbers are starting to come out from both the straw poll and the attendees. It was the largest MoveOn event since 2004, with over 100,000 people at 1,300 house parties. There is immense interest from activist Democrats in what the presidential contenders have to say on climate change.

Obama got a lot of kudos for his bold moves on the environment over the weekend, and broke some new ground during the townhall, announcing a proposal for carbon auctions to fund alternative energy research.

Some activists pronounced themselves delighted with Obama’s words aired over the weekend.

The president of Clean Air Watch, Frank O’Donnell, said Obama’s support of carbon auctions “shows a terrifically enlightened attitude.” O’Donnell noted that a recent Congressional Budget Office study found that buying and selling emissions allowances would produce long-term economic benefits.

Interestingly, that did not translate into votes in the straw poll, where Edwards had the clear lead in both the overall vote and among those who attended the house parties. MoveOn allowed all of their members to participate in the straw poll, even though many of them may not have seen all of the candidate's remarks. Obama came in forth in both. Environmentalists' concerns with Obama's position on coal-to-liquid fuel may have effected the results. He has been moving away from that position, much in the way that Clinton has done on free trade. However, the shifting may not have solidified support for him in this particular crowd.

The results of the straw poll will go for more than just a few blog posts (even if they are on the NYT site). MoveOn will run print ads in newspapers in Iowa and New Hampshire next week, announcing the results. They used an email announcing the results to fundraise for the ads.

“The enormous response we got from our members on this issue emphasizes how important it will be for our next president to make solving the climate crisis a top priority in 2008,” said Eli Pariser, Executive Director of MoveOn.org Political Action.

“MoveOn members want leaders who will take on the oil and coal industry and create a clean energy economy. That’s probably why Sen. Edwards’ support of cap and auction systems – which force polluters to pay citizens—and his call for more green collar jobs received such strong backing,” added Ilyse Hogue, Campaign Director of MoveOn.org Political Action.

MoveOn will host a third and final townhall in the fall on affordable health care. The first was on Iraq.

Hill: Sen. Obama seizes on Live Earth in bid to woo environmentalists

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WaPo: For Democrats, Pragmatism On Universal Health Care

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UK: Adviser becoming a liability for Hillary Clinton

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2008 Candidates Vow to Overhaul U.S. Health Care

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Philly: Obama tells teachers he supports merit pay

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AP: Burned once, Clinton adopts cautious approach on health care reform

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Nation: High Stakes on Health

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AP: Dodd defends Family and Medical Leave Act

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The campaigns are in fundraising mode and the legislature is bogged down in budget negotiations, so it's time for random video afternoon.

How about a flashback to a time when candidates were having large rallies in California. Here is an official campaign video on Obama's huge 12,000 person rally in Oakland back in March.


SEIU has not endorsed anyone yet, but Anna Burger, one of the top leaders at SEIU International is leaping to his defense, following the insinuations by the NYT that his poverty work was improperly motivated. Burger calls it "insulting to the workers around the country he's lent his tireless support to over the years." She has penned a piece for the Huffington Post on the subject.

Ask them what they think of Edwards' work on poverty, and they will tell you about the difference it's made in their lives. When 450 poverty-wage janitors went on a two-month strike in Miami for a better life for their families, Edwards didn't hesitate to offer his support. When Edwards was asked to join the hotel workers campaign, he rolled up his sleeves and made those workers' struggles his own. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, he traveled to Louisiana not for a photo op, but to do real work for those affected. And he held a summit on the failed response to which I and other national leaders were invited to devise ways to ensure the mistakes of the federal government were never repeated.

Burger sounds personally offended by the NYT article, which the Edwards team has been aggressively pushing back on.

To call into question the motivation of a person who has done so much to advance the cause of workers is unwarranted and unjust. Voters have a right to reject or support a candidate based on the facts. My union, SEIU, hasn't endorsed a candidate yet because we feel strongly that it's still early and our members need time to evaluate where the candidates stand. But voters can't make an informed opinion when reporters focus their efforts on trying to raise controversy where there is none.

Edwards efforts to woo the support of labor is paying off. He may not have an endorsement, but he has vocal backup.

It seems like this is the week to roll out new TV ads for the Democratic presidential contenders. Yesterday, Obama released his first two ads of the cycle, now here is John Edward's offering called "Strength of America". The ad is airing in New Hampshire and features a cameo by Elizabeth Edwards.


Barack Obama's First Ads

posted by Julia Rosen | 06.25.07

Obama released his first two ads of the cycle in Iowa today. It was a relatively modest buy, but he is getting a lot of earned media out of it. They are by and large bio pieces and pretty traditional political ads.

The first ad is called "Carry" and emphasizes his ability to work in a bi-partisan manner and highlights his work in the IL legislature on health care among other issues.

The second ad is titled "Choices" and focuses on his work as a community organizer.

Interesting move not to put them in YouTube, but brightcove configured this way let me grab the code. No real big difference from a user perspective.

This weekend I had the opportunity to join a few fellow bloggers and interview Elizabeth Edwards. I had written a post last week arguing that there was not a huge controversy between the advocacy of Michael Moore for single payer health care in SiCKO and the presidential contender plans that would by and large stay within the private health insurance industry. This was an opportunity to put that to the test. I opted to ask Elizabeth about the differences between single payer and John's plan and she immediately emphasized that they really were not that far apart.

They are not that different... And honestly single payer is not going to pass in this country. It is not going to happen. We may get to single payer, but we are not going to jump to single payer.

John is in favor of bold moves about a lot of things, but we have to be realistic and the point is to get people covered. So, John's program allows private insurers, if they bid and are willing to follow a pretty stringent set of rules to participate. But he also has a government option.

After a bit of back and forth, Elizabeth explicitly presented the Edwards plan as a transitional piece of legislation between the current system and single payer. She highlighted the support from Paul Krugman and another health policy expert at Princeton that John has the best plan.

It's got the specificity, got the capacity to pass and is actually is probably our most logical path for us to take, if we are ever going to get to single payer.

This is right in line with what I have been writing on these pages. The interview was the first time that I have seen a campaign argue along these lines. The country is not in a place to pass single payer right now. First people need to see that the government can provide affordable, more efficient health care, before there is support for a truly universal governmental program. It is fascinating to see this kind of progressive policy argument be made.

The LA Times works hard at creating a story around the Democratic presidential contenders not endorsing the message of SiCKO and the potential of that to upset liberal activists. The problem is that it is not happening. It is a manufactured story. One only needs to trundle over to recommended list on Daily Kos, which is as good as any temperature reading of the activist base of the Democratic party as anywhere. On it is a piece titled "LA Times Hit Piece on SiCKO and American People". The reaction to the article was not to go off on the candidates, but the paper itself for fanning the flames of a non-story.

Here is what the LAT said:

Rejecting Moore's prescription on healthcare could alienate liberal activists, who will play a big role in choosing the party's next standard-bearer. However, his proposal — wiping out private health insurance and replacing it with a massive federal program — could be political poison with the larger electorate.

It is a legitimate question to ask, but some digging, or heck even getting the authors to talk to their colleagues in Sacramento would have gotten them an answer. The Democratic base already supports single payer health care, however, the majority recognizes that it is not currently a viable option on the national scale. Indeed that is the purpose of SiCKO, to spread the message to the greater electorate. Michael Moore understands that dynamic, which is why he appeared with Fabian Nunez, despite the obvious disconnect between his message and the current path of the legislature.

The LAT goes way overboard with this:

If Moore's fire-breathing proposal catches on among party activists, who tend to be suspicious of the private sector and supportive of direct government action, the candidates' pragmatic, consensus-seeking ideas could look like weak-kneed temporizing — much the way their rejection of an immediate pullout from Iraq has drawn heated criticism from antiwar activists.

Their bias is clear in labeling SiCKO as a "fire-breathing proposal". They are framing single payer health care as something that is supported by the dirty f#**# hippies that want an immediate pullout from Iraq. They see no nuance.

Now, don't get me wrong. There will be a certain percentage of the activist left who does attack the presidential candidates on this. Just as there are those here in California attacking Democrats over their health care legislation. However, the overwhelming response has been supportive of both pushing the American public on single payer and the contenders health care plans that move us in that direction. They are not mutually exclusive.

The two are not an easy match, but the media is the one pressing the candidates on the issue, trying to stir up trouble where little exists. They will continue to press the candidates at their press conferences, because it makes a nice little story for them.

The presidential campaign seems to have settled down in to a groove. Candidates traipse across the country rarely going a day without fundraising and calling at least one press conference. The early primary states are lavished with much more attention than the February 5th states. Every few weeks there is a debate or an event where they all get to make their stump speeches. This week it is the Take Back America conference in DC. The ratio of campaign events to campaign events is shifting as the quarterly deadline approaches and the need to feed the media beast with a large figure drives decisions. Hillary Clinton had a pretty classic campaign day today, which the AP details.

She was in her now home state of New York, but was upstate most of the day, going from appearance to appearance. She started off in Buffalo at the Eero Saarinenn designed Kleinhan Music hall for a $500 plate breakfast fundraiser. A neat space actually, if you happen to find yourself in Buffalo. It's right on the Frederick Law Olmsted park. Clinton left from there to plant trees with Buffalo's mayor at the City Honors High School. She had brought along seeds from a white ash tree from Eleanor Roosevelt's Hyde Park estate Val-Kill. The trees were meant to replace the ones that were lost in an enormous (even for Buffalo) snow storm. That one forced my grandmother to evacuate her home for a few days. The planting appearance gave Hillary a chance to promote her energy and environmental policy positions.

After planting trees and raising cash Clinton headed East to Rochester for a meeting on the city's crime rate and an opportunity to talk about her national anti-violence initiatives. Oh and she has another fundraiser scheduled in Rochester later today.

In that way, Clinton said, she sees her presidential run as a positive for New York.

"There's a linkage between everything I do in and for New York and what I'm trying to do on the campaign trail and what I want to do as president," Clinton said at City Honors High School, where a lawn full of children awaited her arrival for more than an hour.

"You can talk about global warming right here in Buffalo while we're planting trees that are going to benefit the people of Buffalo, and I want to make those connections," she said.

It is an effective approach that is employed by all of the major candidates. They smoothly transition from event, to press conference, to fundraiser. I am simply amazed that they don't screw up the name of the town more often, as they plant trees to harvest voters and cash.

AP: Edwards announces details of health care overhaul plan

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AP: Richardson outlines education reforms

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