Conejo Valley Democrat

Entries categorized as ‘Tony Strickland’

The Wired President

April 10, 2009 · Comments Off

You’ve got to love Barack Obama. Okay, I can hear some of you “drill baby drill” types objecting. But listen, we’ve gone from a president who could not pronounce the word nuclear to someone who produces slick fireside chats like this one, his latest:

See what I mean? He inspires confidence. And his forays into the web are turning President Obama into seemingly the most accessible president since Lincoln, who used to talk to virtually to everyone who showed up.

Obama’s weekly video addresses can be found at www.whitehouse.gov. You can download it as a podcast, too. I used to listen to Obama’s podcast when he was a state senator from Illinois. He published only a few, and ditched the podcast when his schedule evidently got to busy, but he has retained his familiar style: the particular way he has of making his listeners feel that is one of them, not an elite.

He’s got a blog, too, at whitehouse.gov/blog/. Sure, it’s nothing more than a less formal press release written by staffers, but it’s worth reading. And the photos are gorgeous. Those White House photographers know their stuff.

Then there was his online town hall meeting held on March 26.

I was one of the 90,000 people who submitted questions to the president. Here’s the way it worked: you logged onto whitehouse.gov and could submit questions in one of several predetermined categories, such as education, jobs, and healthcare. You could submit your own questions, and you could vote on other people’s questions. The president gamely vowed to answer the most popular questions based on the popular vote.

There seems to have been an organized campaign by pot smokers to ask the question why he doesn’t legalize marijuana. The president didn’t sidestep the issue, he commented on it right away, dismissing the idea of legalization. There were also dozens of silly questions about legalizing online gambling. And then there were those who simply used the event as a way to bloviate.

The idea of an online town meeting was smart. For the president, it provided a safe, scripted environment (he was in a room packed with people largely sympathetic to his administration) and the less safe, unscripted questions from people participating online.

But the best aspect of the meeting was just this participation. Visitors felt like they had a stake in the process: the could submit content, vote on others’ content, and maybe, just maybe, have the president read their question on the air. A brilliant strategy.

Soon all this online civic engagement will be old hat. Even our state senator, Tony Strickland, is dipping his toe in the water (awkwardly, unconvincingly, but nevertheless):

So where does this leave us? In a brave new world. Although posting videos, podcasts, and legislation online does provide some measure of transparency, the politician, be he Barack Obama or Tony Strickland, still controls the message.

But that’s why we have people like bloggers, or, even better, journalists. If only newspapers weren’t dying out.

Categories: Barack Obama · Tony Strickland
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The Year in Review

February 23, 2009 · Comments Off

It has been a bittersweet year for the Conejo Valley. We’ve seen the worst—a crippling downturn in the housing market, a rash of store closings, a sharp increase in unemployment, the reelection of Elton Gallegly and Audra Strickland, the election of Tony Strickland, the passage of antigay legislation—and we’ve seen the best—the election to the presidency of Barack Obama.

Only one mark in our favor seems trifling, pitiful, laughable. But it is not. The nation can always and forever be proud to have elected an African American to the highest office in the land. The Democratic party can always be proud that it was the first party to successfully run an African American candidate. But most of all, the American people can never cease to be proud of what it has accomplished by the election of this man to the White House.

We have rejected eight years of regressive policies, economic mismanagement, willful ignorance, and petulant statesmanship. We have accepted in its place a new openness. We have confirmed America’s place at the standard bearer of liberty, as a place where the Constitution, not a muddled theocratic conception of the world, is the highest source of law. We have reclaimed our rightful place among the community of nations.

Barack Obama, there is a lot on your shoulders, but we believe in you. Do not ever be discouraged. There is a nation depending on you.

There was a telling few seconds of video on the NBC Nightly News the other night. The story dealt with California’s fiscal crisis and Republican obstructionism. A brief snippet of video showed Tony Strickland in the Senate chamber lethargically poking away at a Blackberry while the important business of the state passed him by. His answer to the budget crisis was a simple “no.” No is not a responsible answer. No simply abdicates responsibility to someone else. No is not leadership.

It would be easy at this point to bemoan the loss of Hannah-Beth Jackson to Strickland in the narrowly contested Senate race. But what matters is where we go from here. We have a budget; there is still much work to be done. So Democrats lick the wounds they’ve suffered from during the last year, but  can be confident in the knowledge that they have won the fight—and that their good work will continue to invigorate our nation.

Categories: 2008 election · Audra Strickland · Barack Obama · Conejo Valley · Conejo Valley Democrat · Democrats · District 19 · Elton Gallegly · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Paul Miller · Republican Party · Republicans · Thousand Oaks · Tony Strickland · global warming

Good Man Gone: Dantona Bows Out of District 19 Senate Race

January 8, 2008 · Comments Off

I was shocked when I opened the paper this morning. There was this headline: “Democrat Dantona Drops Run for Senate.”

 

Well, it was a good run.

 

Dantona, as you may know, was running for the Democratic nomination for the state senate’s District 19 seat. He announced his candidacy this summer, an early announcement, but one probably made in the hope of deterring former state assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson from running for the same seat.

 

Dantona said he made his decision to “keep the peace”–that is, to avoid a costly showdown with Jackson at the primary.

 

I acknowledge his logic, but really, it’s a shame.

 

Dantona was the best person for the job. District 19 is a conservative district that is very closely split between Democrats and Republicans. He was a candidate that could appeal to both sides of the aisle.

 

Although I will support her, as will most Democrats, I have my doubts about whether Jackson can inspire the centrists. But neither can her Republican rival, Tony Strickland, who is just a bit right of the mercifully retired Trent Lott.

 

With most voters ignorant of the issues in the race, many will probably deliver a straight party-line vote. Another crucial factor will be partisan turnout. Whoever can motivate the troops stands a good chance of winning.

 

Dantona took, by and large, the right positions on the right issues. As a sort of farewell to his candidacy, I present here a short excerpt of my interview with him at a Simi Valley fundraiser on October 18. My hope is that Jackson will adopt his positions on many of the issues.

 

 

What the state going to look like under your leadership? What are you going to differently than Mr. McClintock.

 

Certainly much differently than our previous state senator and Tony Strickland. I think, as I talked about out there, outsourcing of jobs, it’s ridiculous that corporations should be allowed to have any type of…that obviously when you have corporations who are getting federal and tax benefits and outsourcing those jobs, they’re getting the best of both worlds. They’re saying, well, we don’t have to hire the 10 or 12 or 14-dollar-an-hour employee here, we can hire a $3 a day employee in New Delhi or in Manila, and I’ve been to Manila, I went to Manila three times to look at and travel there because of outsourcing. I am not against globalization. What I’m against is when major corporations end up outsourcing jobs Americans, Californians in particular, lose their jobs, they can’t afford any health care, they can’t afford anything else in terms of putting food on the table. In addition, the corporations are taking their tax benefits, the major corporate heads are taking their huge bonuses of millions and millions of dollars and the people in these other countries, these third-world countries like New Delhi I mean, in India, like the Philippines, are working for less than what the minimum is even in those countries, that’s wrong. That’s a big problem for me.

 

I care about the ability of women to be able to choose what they want, that they’re working on the same level. We have two people that are living, I don’t even know how many years back, neither one of them know that women have rights, okay. They have been terrible on the issues of women’s rights. They have been terrible on the issue of choice. They have been terrible about it’s a woman’s decision and that’s going to be…that’s not going to change from where the Democratic party is, but it’s going to change about what this district’s talking about, and that’s really true.

 

And I think the other thing we talked about here too was just the ability…the major difference between myself and Tony [Strickland], McClintock, and any of the Republicans is that I can work with both sides now. I can work with the pro tem and the leadership of the party, and that’s what we need. You elect Strickland or anybody else including McClintock and they could never work with the leadership.

 

This district was unrepresented for 8 years under McClintock. It will be unrepresented if another Republican takes over like Strickland. These people are not mainstream people. McClintock is so far to the right that his own party has problems with him. The moderates have come to me.

 

Categories: 2008 election · California Senate · California Senate District 19 · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Jim Dantona · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland

Climate Change and the Conejo Valley

November 15, 2007 · Comments Off

I recently finished Tim Flannery’s The Weather Makers: How Man Is Changing the Climate and What It Means for Life on Earth . I wasn’t terribly compelled by its yawn-inducing cover—a flaming ice cube—but my timing in taking on the book couldn’t have been better, and the book itself was superb.

As far as the timing goes, Al Gore had just won a well-deserved Nobel Prize for his work on spreading awareness of climate change. His particular contribution, as everyone now knows, was the documentary An Inconvenient Truth.

It has been about a year since the British government released the Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change, which showed the world that fighting global warming would actually save money—and lives—in the long run.

Flannery, an Australian scientist, reviewed data and studies on climate change to produce the book. His conclusion: we must act soon if we are to avoid catastrophic global warming by the middle of this century.

The book is a compelling read written for the layperson. You do not need any particular knowledge of science to understand the issues.

Flannery helpfully debunks global warming myths, including many of those propagated by our own state senator responsible for the Conejo Valley, Tom McClintock.

This is good reading for anyone looking to combat Republican attacks against global warming science. Most of the these attacks are based on long-discredited arguments, pseudoscience, and studies commissioned by energy companies. As such, Flannery’s well-supported arguments should cause serious readers to think twice about swallowing the GOP’s assertions.

The Republican line, that climate change is a hoax dreamed up by liberals and scientists looking to keep grant money flowing, has led President Bush to strongarm scientists and public servants into watering down their own reports of the effects of climate change.

The Bush administration’s sins against the environment are well documented. Let’s take a look at some of the headlines over the course of his tenure as president.

It all started when Bush refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol: see “Global Warming: U.S. Turns Its Back on Kyoto,” published by CNN in 2001. Bush’s intransigence was a giant step backward. Both the United States and Australia refused to ratify the treaty, which would have required modest cuts in carbon emissions.

The Bush administration argued that these cuts would harm the U.S. economy, an allegation conclusively put to rest by the United Kingdom’s 2006 Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change.

In 2001, Scientists Warn Bush on Global Warming” appeared on the BBC News website. After the National Academy of Sciences report mentioned in the article was released, the Bush administration had to tone down its very loud, public doubts about climate change.

It did not stop them altogether.

Bush Disses Global Warming Report: Dismisses His Own Environmental Protection Agency’s Findings,” appeared on www.cbsnews.com on June 4, 2002. The EPA report, said Philip Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust, “undercuts everything the president has said about global warming since he took office.”

Even the Pentagon spoke truth to power: “Now the Pentagon Tells Bush: Climate Change Will Destroy Us” appeared in the Guardian in February 2004.

The Pentagon report, leaked to the press, predicted war and the possibility of a dangerous escalation using nuclear weapons as nations try to defend dwindling food supplies in the face of traumatic climate change.

“The findings will prove humiliating to the Bush administration, which has repeatedly denied that climate change even exists,” wrote authors Mark Townsend and Paul Harris.

The president, still apparently disbelieving in the veracity of scientists’ claims about the human causes of global climate change, tried to stifle the constant stream of science unfavorable to his opinions.

In “NASA Scientist Rips Bush on Global Warming,” released by the Associated Press and published on MSNBC.com on October 27, 2004, NASA scientist James Hansen, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said, “In my more than three decades in government, I have never seen anything approaching the degree to which information flow from scientists to the public has been screened and controlled as it is now.”

What else should Americans expect from a Texas oilman?

The Republican Party Platform of the ill-fated 2004 election trotted out its same old arguments about climate change, but at least acknowledged the problem:

“Republicans are committed to meeting the challenge of long-term global climate change by relying on markets and new technologies to improve energy efficiency. These efforts will help reduce emissions over time while allowing the economy to grow. Our President and our Party strongly oppose the Kyoto Protocol and similar mandatory carbon emissions controls that harm economic growth and destroy American jobs.”

This carefully crafted paragraph is the epitome of Republican prevarication. It seeks to recognize the problem, but scuttle any chances of resolving it.

The problem with this logic, as Flannery points out in his book, is that Bush offers no alternative to Kyoto that will address the urgency of the climate change problem.

It is instructive that the GOP’s website, in its issues page, does not even list global warming or climate change, but does devote a panel to “Faith & Values.”

All of this evidence makes it clear that the president and his party are pursuing the wrong set of values: In its meek offering to public opinion, the GOP touts the president’s advocacy of “coal, nuclear, natural gas, and renewable sources” of energy. Note the first on this list—the biggest polluter of all, and an industry that is a big supporter of the GOP.

Conejo Valley residents are an educated bunch. A good number of us are employed by Amgen or Baxter, biotech firms, or Countrywide, a mortgage broker. Intelligent people staff each company and have driven their success, which persists despite recent setbacks.

These people, despite living in an area called Reagan country—due to the influence of the former president and his library in nearby Simi Valley—are savvy about climate change and will discriminate between the good arguments offered by scientists and bad arguments offered by a few feckless politicians.

Among the latter are Tom McClintock and Tony Strickland. McClintock is our current Republican state senator for District 19 and Strickland is vying for his seat with the eventual Democratic nominee, be it Hannah-Beth Jackson or Jim Dantona.

There is little the average voter with limited time can find out about Strickland’s views on climate change. Except, of course, his voting record as a state assemblyman.

As Jackson points out on her website, Strickland and McClintock “have consistently opposed sensible measures to protect our air, water and wild places.

Strickland and McClintock “both opposed important measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from motor vehicles (AB 1493, 2002), to recycle toxic electronic wastes (SB 20, 2003), and to increase California’s supply or clean, renewable energy (SB 1078, 2002).

Given this record, and given the urgency of the problem of climate change, we cannot afford to elect Strickland or anyone like him.

Things have changed in the past few years—the problem has become more urgent and voters are more educated about climate change thanks to Al Gore and others.

Conejo Valley residents will no longer elect climate change deniers.

Categories: California Senate District 19 · Conejo Valley · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Jim Dantona · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland · climate change · global warming

Jim Dantona on the Issues: Part 1—The Campaign

October 30, 2007 · Comments Off

This article is the first in a series about Jim Dantona’s views on the issues that are important to him and to residents of California’s State Senate District 19, which he seeks to represent. The district is currently represented by Tom McClintock, who will step down at the expiration of his term. Former state assemblyman Tony Strickland looks likely to win the Republican nomination; Dantona and former state assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson will contest the Democratic nomination.

Dantona Campaign SignWhen Jim Dantona announced he would enter the campaign for the California State Senate’s District 19 seat in August, the race was still wide open. Only former Republican assemblyman Tony Strickland was known to be running for the seat.

But then, after weeks of swirling rumors, former assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson announced on October 17 that she would enter the race.

After years of declining Republican voter registration in Ventura County, the race is competitive and according to Timm Herdt of the Ventura County Star, will be closely watched by both parties.

It will likely be one of the most contested and expensive Senate races in the state, as it is one of only a few that is potentially competitive,” Herdt wrote on August 28.

Now this is getting exciting.

Dantona’s candidacy has energized east county Democrats who have endured years of famine,” wrote Herdt in an October 24 opinion piece, “A Democratic Civil War?

The problem for Dantona is that Jackson enjoys the support of many people in Santa Barbara and the west end of the county.

This could mean an east-west battle over the Democratic nomination.

Make no mistake, District 19 is an important part of a very important state. It includes the Ventura County cities of Ventura, Thousand Oaks, Camarillo, Moorpark, Ojai, and Simi Valley among others. In Santa Barbara County, it includes the cities of Santa Barbara, Goleta, Montecito, and Lompoc, among others.

Even after the Democratic nominee is chosen, there will be a tough battle against Tony Strickland, who has already raised a lot of money.

So why is Jim Dantona running?

“This race means a great deal to me,” he said at a fundraiser on October 18. “We are motivated.”

“We can finally break the hold of the McClintock-Strickland machine that they’ve had for so many years.”

Dantona’s strategy has been to call himself a centrist, knowing that the district is narrowly split between Democrats and Republicans, with a large cadre of people declining to state a party affiliation.

“You know, it’s not a matter of just some label on you—you’re liberal, you’re conservative, you’re a Democrat, you’re a Republican—it doesn’t really matter: it’s about all of us living a better life,” said Dantona.

During the speech at his fundraiser, Dantona mentioned jobs, health care, and education as his primary concerns. These are the same issues he discussed in a September 13 article in the VC Reporter.

He added women’s reproductive rights to the list during an interview with me the night of his fundraiser.

“I care about the ability of women to be able to choose what they want, that they’re working on the same level,” he said.

The issues of jobs and health care are interrelated for Dantona.

“I am not against globalization,” he said. “What I’m against is when major corporations end up outsourcing jobs, Americans, Californians in particular, lose their jobs, they can’t afford any health care, they can’t afford anything else in terms of putting food on the table.”

Dantona objects to corporations receiving “tax benefits,” as he calls them, despite outsourcing jobs overseas.

Education is another key issue for Dantona, who believes that No Child Left Behind “doesn’t solve one problem in this state.” And, he says, “we need to get rid of it now.”

Getting back to the campaign itself, Dantona was gracious about his Democratic opponent—but makes it clear that he’s out to win: “I have no problem with Hannah-Beth, she’s a wonderful person. This district isn’t drawn for her. She’s way too far to the left and I’m a centrist and I’m the guy who can bring it all together. I have the leadership’s support on this thing and with that, that’s going to be the thing that wins the race, and that’s what I believe is going to happen.”

Categories: 2008 election · California Senate · California Senate District 19 · Conejo Valley · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Jim Dantona · Santa Barbara · Simi Valley · Thousand Oaks · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland · Ventura County · healthcare

McClintock Attacks Gore, Conservationists; Disputes Global Warming Science

October 29, 2007 · 3 Comments

In an October 12 speech to the Western Conservative Political Action Conference, California State Senator Tom McClintock mounted a persuasive, and yet poorly informed attack against Al Gore, conservation, and the most widely accepted scientific theory of global warming.

 

This is fortunate: McClintock’s comments have assured his well-deserved fate of political irrelevance and ignominy.

 

McClintock repeated well-worn Republican jokes about personal jets and Gore’s electricity bill. He mentioned several laughably out-of-date theories about the causes of recent climate change. He even proudly admits that his knowledge about climate change has its most profound roots in his grade school musings.

 

Tom McClintock Al Gore and Earth

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If Tony Strickland, the Republican running for McClintock’s hotly contested District 19 seat, adopts these backward views, any Democrat running for the seat will receive a boost in popularity.

 

The entire text of McClintock’s speech was posted on his blog, Citizens for the California Republic.

 

What is discouraging is that so many loyal Republicans–petulant at the world’s recognition of Gore’s contribution to the fight against man-made climate change–are susceptible to the the alluring but factually erroneous arguments advanced by McClintock.

 

Contrary to what he asserts, McClintock’s arguments are advanced by only a slim minority of scientists, but they are enormously popular among Republicans.

 

This position is damaging to the Republican party and will cause it to lose votes in California and nationally.

 

Democrats, if we can brand ourselves as the party of responsible environmentalism, stand to gain enormously from such Republican foolishness.

 

I urge all Conejo Valley residents concerned about global warming to attend the Democratic Club of the Conejo Valley’s meeting at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, November 14, at the Goebel Senior Center in Thousand Oaks.

 

Speakers will include Perrin Pellegrin, Sustainability Manager at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Gayle Kaufman of the City of Thousand Oaks.

UCSB Sustainability

 

The night’s topic will be sustainability and how to be environmentally responsible.

 

The Goebel Senior Center is located at 1385 E. Janss Road. Click here for a map.

 

All those interested in countering McClintock’s failures of logic should do two things: (1) educate yourself about the facts of climate change and (2) post rebuttals to McClintock’s blog by visiting his post here.

 

Below appears my hastily dashed-off response to McClintock, which I posted on Saturday night:

 

Senator McClintock’s attack of Al Gore is crude and impolite.

His attack of global warming, although beguilingly laced with half-baked science, is incorrect. I quote the “Stern Review: The Economics of Climate Change,” published one year ago by Sir Nicholas Stern, Head of the Government Economic Service for the United Kingdom: “The scientific evidence is now overwhelming: climate change is a serious global threat, and it demands an urgent global response.”

Furthermore, McClintock’s argument that limited man-made global warming is overly burdensome on the economy can be discarded, as Stern indicates:

“The world does not need to choose between averting climate change and promoting growth and development. Changes in energy technologies and in the structure of economies have created opportunities to decouple growth from greenhouse gas emissions. Indeed, ignoring climate change will eventually damage economic growth.”

Shame on you, Senator McClintock, for your seemingly sagacious dissembling. I hope you will change your opinion on global warming and the feasibility of fighting it.

Elected officials should be advocating the best science, not placing obstacles in the way of the best science.

Categories: California Senate · California Senate District 19 · Conejo Valley · DCCV · Democratic Club of the Conejo Valley · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Jim Dantona · Nobel Peace Prize · Nobel Prize · Thousand Oaks · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland · Ventura County · environmentalism · global warming · politics

Jim Dantona Knocks It Out of the Park

October 18, 2007 · 8 Comments

Sure, you knew that Jim Dantona is running for California’s District 19 Senate seat. You might know that he was once a professional baseball player. But did you know that he can fire up a crowd and raise a big pile of money and at the same time?

 

 

Yep. And then some.

 

Cardenas, Townsend, Dantona

 

 

At a fundraiser Thursday night in Simi Valley, former Maryland Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend gave a moving tribute to Dantona, whom she has known for years.

 

 

The two are such close friends that Dantona even helped her find a used car for her daughter years ago. And the car still works, she said.

 

Dantona’s son, he said, is named after Robert Kennedy, Townsend’s father.

 

 

Los Angeles City Councilman Tony Cardenas spoke highly of Dantona.

 

“I have had the pleasure of meeting Jim Dantona is somewhat of an awkward way,” he said. “There was a heavyweight-middleweight fight in the San Fernando Valley in 1996 and Jim and I ran for the state assembly.”

 

“The problem was we were running for the same seat….I got to know Jim during that race and believe it or not, on election night, we realized that we were friends. I was blessed to be the elected assemblyman that night and Jim called me and he said, ‘Tony, if there’s anything you need, you let me know.’”

 

“I’ve run in various races and I’ve received those phone calls many many times, but this is the only person who actually meant it and has lived it. That’s the character and integrity of Jim Dantona.”

 

Dantona, it seems, is both a loyal friend and a fighter.

 

 

Townsend, Dantona, Cardenas

 

And he’s out to win.

 

Dantona faces two hurdles in his bid to win a seat on the California Senate: Hannah-Beth Jackson and Tony Strickland.

 

Jackson announced her candidacy for office Wednesday in Santa Barbara. Tony Strickland is the lone Republican candidate for the office, and is said to have raised about $400,000.

 

Tom McClintock, the current conservative Republican officeholder, might even get to run for the seat again if an ill-conceived ballot measure passes in February.

 

But despite these obstacles, Dantona is squared up to the plate and ready to swing. And now he has the strength of a little money in his campaign coffers.

 

“The major difference between myself and Tony [Strickland], McClintock, and any of the Republicans is that I can work with both sides now,” said Dantona. “I can work with the pro tem and the leadership of the party, and that’s what we need.”

 

“You elect Strickland or anybody else including McClintock and they could never work with the leadership.”

 

“This district was unrepresented for 8 years under McClintock. It will be unrepresented if another Republican takes over.”

 

Go get ‘em Jim. We need you out there hitting for us.

Townsend, Dantona, Supporters

 

 

 

Categories: California Senate · California Senate District 19 · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Kathleen Kennedy Townsend · Robert Kennedy · Santa Barbara · Simi Valley · Thousand Oaks · Tom McClintock · Tony Cardenas · Tony Strickland · Ventura County · politics · westlake village

Hannah-Beth Jackson to Announce Candidacy Wednesday in State Senate Race

October 16, 2007 · 1 Comment

Blogger Brian Dennert reports that former state assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson plans to announce her candidacy tomorrow for the California State Senate District 19 seat being vacated by Republican Tom McClintock.

 

Dennert wrote that Jackson will make her announcement Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Mound Elementary School in Ventura.

 

The announcement comes right before Jim Dantona’s fundraiser, which is taking place Thursday.

 

The guest list, according once again to Dennert, who received an invitation to the event, includes former Maryland Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, and California Senate President Pro Tempore Don Perata.

 

It is clear that Democratic heavy-hitters are strongly behind Dantona in this race. Will Jackson’s entry into the race rain on Dantona’s parade?

 

It depends, I think, on how Jackson positions herself.

 

District 19 has a narrowing gap between Republicans and Democrats, 40.71% of people support the GOP, whereas 36.09% support Democrats. If Democrats can turn out the vote, especially if Republicans are as unmotivated as they seem now, the Democratic nominee has a good chance of winning the Senate seat.

 

But if Jackson is seen as too liberal in this conservative district, she will not win. Dantona seems to be the most moderate of the two. Neither Jackson nor Dantona have had much coverage in the press lately. This will likely change in the near future.

 

Dantona told the VC Reporter in a September 13 cover story that his main issues include jobs, education, and healthcare. He supports labor and opposes the war in Iraq.

 

This is all very sensible.

 

In the same article, Jackson outlined her primary issues: “I would be running on the basis of my past record, the issues I feel very deeply about, which include reforming our healthcare system, which is in desperate need of reform, protecting the environment, protecting public health, public education. I have a long track record of working with local law enforcement in issues of public safety.”

 

Also very sensible.

 

How is a Democrat to make up his or her mind? The answer, I suppose is that we wait and see. We get the candidates to spell out their positions more clearly. Maybe we’ll even get a debate.

 

Stranger things have happened.

 

Mound Elementary is located at 455 South Hill Road in Ventura. The school’s website does not list the event, and there is no indication as to whether it is open to the public, but if you would like to attend, you should call the school first. The school’s phone number is 805-289-1886.

 

 

Categories: Brian Dennert · California Senate · California Senate District 19 · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Jim Dantona · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland · Ventura County

Jackson Won’t Tell…Yet

September 26, 2007 · Comments Off

Hannah-Beth JacksonAn open, accessible democracy is an amazing thing. A humble blogger like me can put questions to politicians, candidates, and potential candidates and get answers…well, sort of.

 

 

I contacted Hannah-Beth Jackson on Monday to find out whether she would run in the California State Senate race for District 19 against current Democratic front-runner Jim Dantona and Republican Tony Strickland.

 

 

She responded quickly and courteously.

 

 

And she was cagey.

 

 

“I will have more information for you in the coming weeks and will be happy to answer any questions at that time,” said Jackson.

 

 

Hmm. I knew that already.

 

 

The Ventura County Star has reported that she will decide whether to run in early October.

 

 

So hold your breath, folks. We’re still waiting.

 

Categories: California Senate · California Senate District 19 · Democratic Party · Democrats · District 19 · Hannah-Beth Jackson · Tony Strickland · Ventura County · Ventura County Star · politics

Congressman Waxman Speaks in Thousand Oaks about Oversight and the War

September 17, 2007 · 2 Comments

Congressman Henry A. Waxman visited Thousand Oaks Sunday morning to speak about the Iraq war and his efforts as chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee to monitor the Bush administration’s handling of activities related to the war.Congressman Henry Waxman

 

Waxman bemoaned the administration’s prevarication about the reasons for entry into the war.

 

“We were told we had to fight in Iraq to stop Saddam Hussein to get weapons of mass destruction. We were told we had to fight there to stop terrorism. We were told we had to fight there because we were going to have a model of democracy that’s going to change the whole Middle East. Then lately we’ve been told we were going to have a surge, and the purpose of the surge is to give the Iraqi government a chance to make a stable country. We’ll settle for a stable country.”

 

Waxman said that Iraq was “decimated” and that “as soon as we leave, they’re going to blow altogether, unless there are areas where the Sunnis are gone or the Shiites are gone and so there’s no one to fight anymore.”

The audience listens to Congressman Waxman’s speech

“I thought the best answer to why we’re fighting in Iraq was in a New York Times cartoon today where President Bush was asked, ‘Why are we fighting in Iraq?’ and he said, ‘So we can kick this over to the next administration and we can blame them for Iraq.’ But how many people are we going to kill and lose in the meantime?”

 

Waxman emphasized the role of the Congress in providing oversight of the executive branch, and chastised the formerly Republican-controlled Congress for failing to perform this task.

 

“They [Republicans in Congress] wouldn’t hold a hearing on the misuse of intelligence by this administration to trick us into going into war. They wouldn’t even look at the issues of the waste of money in the reconstruction, so called, of Iraq. They wouldn’t do anything that might embarrass President Bush, which meant they chose to be good Republicans first, and to be leaders of an independent branch of government second.”

 

“They have refused to answer questions of the press, of those of us in Congress who have asked them questions. They’ve tried to operate without transparency, without openness, and of course without accountability. Their attitude is that the government belongs to them, not to the American people. That’s what happens when you get so powerful and you think it all belongs to you.”

 

Waxman criticized “fraud, waste, and abuse” in the conduct of the war, and emphasized the role of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in investigating these issues.

 

“Our first hearing was on the shipment of $12 billion in cash to Iraq. In hundred-dollar bills, put together in brick form, put onto pallets, forklifted onto airplanes, and flown into a war zone. And then our man in charge, Ambassador Bremer, handed out $8.8 billion that he can’t account for. We asked him, where did that money go? Well, he said, well, I gave it to the Iraq ministries so they could pay their payroll. And we found out that some ministries said they had thousands of employees when they had maybe a hundred. So money was passed out without any accounting for it. Did it end up in the pockets of those that received it? Of course. Did it end up in Swiss bank accounts? I wouldn’t be surprised. Did it end up funding the insurgents? Probably. So we ended up funding both sides in Iraq.”

 

The crowd listened in respectful silence to Waxman’s speech, but grew animated during the more than half-hour question-and-answer session. It was clear that the group of mostly Democrats was largely anti-war and highly critical of the Bush administration. The dominant theme was one of concern that Democrats aggressively pursue investigations into the misdeeds of the president and his cabinet.Jim Dantona

 

Local Democratic party luminaries attended the event, notably Jim Dantona, who is running against Tony Strickland for the seat for California Senate’s 19th district that is likely to be vacated when State Senator Tom McClintock’s term expires, and Ferial Masry, who is running for the 37th district assembly seat currently held by Assemblywoman Audra Strickland, wife of Tony Strickland.

 

Waxman appeared at the invitation of the Democratic Club of the Conejo Valley. The eventwas held at the Conejo Recreation and Parks Community Room.

 

Be sure to check this website later in the week to read the full transcript of Waxman’s speech.

 

Future Democrat

Categories: Audra Strickland · Bush administration · California Assembly District 37 · California Senate District 19 · Congress · Congressional oversight · Democratic Party · District 19 · Ferial Masry · Henry Waxman · Iraq · Iraq war · Jim Dantona · Paul Bremer · Petraeus · Republicans · Saddam Hussein · Thousand Oaks · Tom McClintock · Tony Strickland · Ventura County · politics