Archive for July, 2008

Cecil Young Democrats Hold Initial Meeting

Posted in Maryland Political News, Events by Administrator on July 30th, 2008

Cecil Young Democrats Hold Initial Meeting

Under the leadership of 25-year-old Patrick Tuer, the Cecil County Young Democrats club held its first meeting July 1 at Cecil College’s Elkton Station campus on Railroad Ave.

Guests included Jake Weissmann of the Young Democrats of Maryland, who provide support and organizational assistance for about a dozen YD groups throughout the state. Also in attendance was Travis Talezar, the MD Democratic Party field organizer for Cecil and other counties.

Future plans include periodic “sign waves” throughout Cecil County on behalf of our Democratic candidates, and “Rock ‘n Register,” a concert / voter registration drive to be held along with the Harford County Young Democrats at Harford Community College on September 13th. See http://www.rocknregister.com. For more info contact Patrick at ptuer1@umbc.edu.
—————————
Reprinted from the Cecil Democratic Herald newsletter of the Cecil County Democratic Club.

The Myth of a Toss-up Election

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 26th, 2008

By Alan Abramowitz, Thomas E. Mann, and Larry J. Sabato

“Too close to call.” “Within the margin of error.” “A statistical dead heat.” If you’ve been following news coverage of the 2008 presidential election, you’re probably familiar with these phrases. Media commentary on the presidential horserace, reflecting the results of a series of new national polls, has strained to make a case for a hotly contested election that is essentially up for grabs.

Signs of Barack Obama’s weaknesses allegedly abound. The huge generic Democratic Party advantage is not reflected in the McCain-Obama pairings in national polls. Why, according to the constant refrain, hasn’t Obama put this election away? A large number of Clinton supporters in the primaries refuse to commit to Obama. White working class and senior voters tilt decidedly to McCain. Racial resentment limits Obama’s support among these two critical voting blocs. Enthusiasm among young voters and African-Americans, two groups strongly attracted to Obama, is waning. Blah, blah, blah.

While no election outcome is guaranteed and McCain’s prospects could improve over the next three and a half months, virtually all of the evidence that we have reviewed–historical patterns, structural features of this election cycle, and national and state polls conducted over the last several months–point to a comfortable Obama/Democratic party victory in November. Trumpeting this race as a toss-up, almost certain to produce another nail-biter finish, distorts the evidence and does a disservice to readers and viewers who rely upon such punditry. Again, maybe conditions will change in McCain’s favor, and if they do, they should also be accurately described by the media. But current data do not justify calling this election a toss-up.

Consider the following……..

(Click on link below to read the rest of this article)

http://www.centerforpolitics.org/crystalball/article.php?id=AIA2008072401

In difficult economy, ConocoPhillips rolls in cash (and donates to Republicans)

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 26th, 2008

In difficult economy, ConocoPhillips rolls in cash (and donates to Republicans)

http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/alerts/433

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
by Amy Weiss

In its second quarter earnings statement released Wednesday, Houston-based ConocoPhilips revealed a significant profit increase due to high gas prices. The AP reported:

Record crude prices helped oil giant ConocoPhillips’ second-quarter profit climb 13 percent from adjusted results a year ago, beginning what is expected to be a string of robust earnings announcements from major oil companies.

Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) had a harsh response to these “robust earnings”:

While ConocoPhillips executives rejoice in today’s announcement that their profits soared 13 percent over the same quarter last year, the American consumer has nothing to celebrate. We are not opposed to companies making money, but are opposed to them doing so on the backs of hard-working Americans as the cost of living continues to break records. Big Oil rakes in billions in profits, but refuse to drill on 68 million acres they already lease from the government, including Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve, or to make significant investments in producing clean and affordable alternative fuels here in America. Nevertheless, Bush-McCain Republicans continue to reward them with unnecessary giveaways and tax breaks.

ConocoPhillips CEO Jim Mulva and his wife Miriam each contributed the maximum $2,300 to Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign. CFO John Carrig made several contributions to the Republican National Committee.

According to the Center for Media and Democracy’s Source Watch, the ConocoPhillips Spirit Political Action Committee (PAC) contributed $313,000 to candidates in the 2005-2006 election cycle — 90% to Republicans. Reports for the 2007-2008 cycle indicate similar patterns so far.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT

The right to unionize- Make it a constitutionally guaranteed civil

Six little words

By David Sirota

http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_9988069

History books teem with six-word phrases, from the comforting (”Nothing to fear but fear itself”) to the inspiring (”Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall”) to the embarrassing (”Read my lips: no new taxes”). But the six words “on the basis of union membership” could be more momentous than any of those. Though hardly Roosevelt’s rhetoric, Reagan’s bluster or Bush’s clumsiness, the clause could solve America’s wage crisis.

Of course, when Tom Geoghegan told me this in a Chicago park two weeks ago, I almost snarfed my coffee through my nose. Solving major social problems typically demands more than six words. But as the longtime labor lawyer and author explained his idea to me on a muggy afternoon, it started making sense.

Geoghegan reminded me that data show the more union members in an economy, the better workers’ pay. The problem, he said, is that weakened labor laws are allowing companies to bully and fire union-sympathetic workers, thus driving down union membership and wages.

Enter Geoghegan’s six words. If the Civil Rights Act was amended to prevent discrimination “on the basis of union membership,” it would curtail corporations’ anti-labor assault by making the right to join a union an official civil right.

“Hang on,” I interrupted. “Joining a union isn’t a civil right?”

Correct.

Under current law, if you are fired for union activity, you can only take your grievance to the National Labor Relations Board — a byzantine agency deliberately made more Kafkaesque by right-wing appointees and budget cuts. Today, the NLRB takes years to rule on labor law violations, often granting victims only their back pay.

Union leaders are now focused on reforming the NLRB — an admirable goal — but Geoghegan’s plan implies that workers are harmed by being legally leashed to Washington in the first place. His proposal says rather than being forced to rely on an unreliable bureaucracy for protection, workers should be empowered to defend themselves.

The six words would do just that. Regardless of whether the NLRB is strengthened or further weakened, persecuted workers would be able to haul union-busting thugs into court. There, unlike at the NLRB, plaintiffs can subpoena company records and win costly punitive damages.

Bolstering his argument, Geoghegan told me to consider variations in corporate behavior.

For example, because the Civil Rights Act bars racial discrimination, businesses are motivated to try to prevent bigotry — they want to avoid being sued. But when it comes to unions, there is no such deterrent. The lack of civil rights protection effectively encourages businesses to punish pro-union employees — and publicize the abuse to intimidate their workforce. By making the six words law, the dynamic would shift. Companies would have a reason — fear of litigation — to respect workers’ rights.

When Geoghegan and I finished chatting, I remembered why I believe he is America’s most talented writer and thinker on labor issues. His relative anonymity is a tragicomic commentary on the media and the American left. The Milton Friedmans are celebrated by pundits and cast in bronze by conservative think tanks, while the Geoghegans are dismissed by the chattering class and ignored by a progressive movement that regularly venerates Hollywood celebrities as its heroes.

Perhaps, though, this proposal will change things. In developing a way to shift incentives, Geoghegan has discovered a solution that both unionists and economists can love. It cribs the best from liberals’ pro-union sympathies and conservatives’ distrust of Big Government, and should make him famous (or at least a cabinet secretary).

After all, anyone who can bring such disparate ideologies and adversaries together is worthy of serious consideration — as is his six-word stroke of genius.

Denver political analyst David Sirota (http://www.credoaction.com/sirota) is author of “The Uprising,” published in June. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America’s Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network.

Websites that help Americans buy union-made, American-made products and services

Posted in Uncategorized, Labor union news & views by Administrator on July 23rd, 2008

BUILD UNION, BUY UNION, SHOP UNION, BE UNION!

www.unionlabel.com Miscellaneous

www.allamericanclothing.com Clothing
(Formerly Union Jean Company)

www.unionhouse.com Clothing

www.justiceclothing.com Clothing

www.unionmade.com Miscellaneous

www.kinglouie.com Clothing

www.legendaryusa.com Leather Jackets
(All Jackets Made in USA, Schott Jackets are Union Made)

www.tigereyedesign.com Promotional Items – Bumper Stickers, Buttons, Pens, Etc.

www.unionvacations.com Air, Hotel, Car, Cruises

www.unionsales.com Miscellaneous

www.unionwear.com Miscellaneous

www.atc-ny.com Watches, Clothing, Clocks, Etc.

www.buyunion.us Clothing, Specialty Items, Promotional Items

www.backdraftproducts.us Specializing in IAFF Products

Union Retail Stores
Greater Lehigh Valley Area

Wines & Spirits Shoppes Rite-Aid Super Fresh Shop-Rite Strauss Auto
Mailroom Copy & Print Center

K-Mart
T.J. Maxx Distribution Centers are Union, Retail is Not
Marshall’s

Do Not Shop!

Wal-Mart Sam’s Club

Union Web Sites

• Bakery Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM)
www.bctgm.org Food Products

• UNITE-HERE (UNITEHERE)
www.unitehere.org Textiles, Hotels, Casinos, Etc.

• International Association of Machinists (IAM)
www.goiam.org Motorcycles, Miscellaneous

• United Food & Commercial Workers (UFCW)
www.ufcw.org Retail, Miscellaneous

• International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT)
www.teamster.org Truck Drivers, UPS, Misc.

• United Food & Commercial Workers Local 1776 (UFCW 1776)
www.ufcw1776.org Eastern Pennsylvania

• AFL-CIO
www.aflcio.org

• Change to Win
www.changetowin.org

If you cannot find a Union Made product, please contact me at 610-217-5123 or at schlen@union-america.com

In Solidarity,

James S. Schlener
IAFF Local 735
UFCW 1776
Lehigh Valley CLC. VP.

—————————————————————
EDITOR’S NOTE: Call me at 443-907-2367 if you need a union printer. Thanks, Stephen Crockett.

FUNDRAISING REPORTS SHOW BIG MOMENTUM SHIFT IN FIRST DISTRICT CONGRESSRIONAL RACE

Posted in Maryland Political News by Administrator on July 15th, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 15, 2008
Contact: Tim McCann

(410) 643-8201 or tmccann@kratovil.com

FUNDRAISING REPORTS SHOW BIG MOMENTUM SHIFT IN FIRST DISTRICT CONGRESSRIONAL RACE

Kratovil raises within $60k of Harris; Harris falls short of public goal, forced to loan his campaign $100k to inflate sagging numbers

STEVENSVILLE – Campaign fundraising reports filed today with the Federal Election Committee showed a huge shift of momentum in the 1st District Congressional race, as Democratic nominee Frank Kratovil erased most of his opponent’s previous fundraising advantage and finished the quarter just $60,000 back from Sen. Andy Harris in funds raised. Harris, struggling to meet the public fundraising goal he had announced earlier in the quarter, was forced to loan himself $100,000 on the final day of the quarter to inflate his sagging totals.

Kratovil raised $375,985 between April 1 and June 30 and closed the period with $454,027 cash on hand. Andy Harris raised $431,550 for the quarter.

Earlier in June, Harris had publicly stated that he was already “about halfway there” to banking the $1.2 million he thought he would need for the race.[1] In truth, he was still a good deal short of $600,000 cash on hand at the time he made that claim. Lagging far short of this public goal, Harris was forced to loan himself an additional $100,000 on June 30 to hit the $600,000 mark.

“Momentum is shifting,” said Kratovil spokesman Tim McCann in response to the filings. “Frank raised more in the last quarter than he had raised in the previous 3 quarters combined. Meanwhile, Andy Harris was caught lying about his fundraising strength and needed a last-minute loan to bail himself out. He’s starting to panic. When the so-called ‘favorite’ in a top-tier race starts missing his fundraising goals, he’s in real trouble.”

McCann also pointed out that Kratovil wasn’t even added to the DCCC’s “Red To Blue” program until the final two weeks of the quarter. Being added to this list of top-tier competitive races will further aid Kratovil’s fundraising moving forward.

[1] http://www.politickermd.com/kevinagnese/2573/harris-fundraises-harford-county-says-campaign-halfway-12-million-goal-and-claims-g

Oil companies have lots of leases to drill

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 11th, 2008

http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008807090315

Oil companies have lots of leases to drill

By Senator Joe Biden

When you first hear the idea “let’s allow offshore drilling and it will cut gas prices,” it sounds like it makes sense, especially when gas is more than $4 a gallon. But the facts say otherwise.

The only way we can achieve energy and climate security in this country is to reduce our dependence on oil.

Unfortunately, President Bush and Sen. John McCain are trying to sell us on the oil companies’ old argument that repealing the 27-year old moratorium on drilling in protected areas offshore will lower gas prices. Americans need to put this tired debate to rest. Our security — both here at home and abroad — depends on it.

First, the oil companies in this country now hold 7,000 leases to drill offshore, yet only 20 percent of those leases are producing oil. That is 68 million acres for which they already have the rights to drill. Nearly 80 percent of our offshore oil is already available for leasing — approximately 54 billion barrels total. They could be drilling in these areas, but they are not.

Assuming oil companies drilled in new areas, it would take at least a decade for new production to begin. Just last week, the U.S. Energy Information Administration concluded new drilling would have no impact on oil prices before 2030.

Prices would still be determined by the world market, which will be adding billions of new consumers from growing economies in China, India and other countries.

OPEC countries control two- thirds of the world’s oil reserves. If we add a bit more oil to the market, they can cut their own output to keep prices high.

Moreover, the majority of the world’s oil is in unstable regions. Prices surge when officials threaten to attack Iran or raids shut down production in Nigeria.

Here in Delaware, we are paying $10 more a day for gas — around $3,600 a year — than we were seven years ago. That is a bite out of a family’s budget.

During the same period, permits for new oil drilling leases increased by 361 percent. Put simply, allowing more drilling does not equal cheaper gas.

Instead, we should be talking about a cleaner, more fuel-efficient future. Oil companies have the money to make new investments. In the first quarter of this year, the five largest domestic oil companies made $37 billion in profits. Since 2001, the number is close to $600 billion.

We should take back tax breaks for big oil companies, which total more than $2 billion over 10 years, and invest in green energy technology. We should have a windfall profits tax to fund everything from mass transit to high-speed rail to the next generation of safe, efficient cars. Finally, we should restrict speculation and price-gouging, and stand up to OPEC’s monopoly.

We need solutions of the future, not drilling ourselves deeper into dependence on oil.

U.S. Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, a Democrat, serves on the Foreign Relations and Judiciary Committees.

NYT: Why Oil and Wages Don’t Mix

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 2nd, 2008

NYT: Why Oil and Wages Don’t Mix

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/29/business/29every.html

By BEN STEIN
Published: June 29, 2008

Oh what a circus, oh what a show,

America has gone to town,

Over the death of a mineral called cheap gasoline.

We’ve all gone crazy,

Mourning all day and mourning all night,

Falling over ourselves to get all of the misery right. …

WITH great apologies for the above to the greatest librettists and musical show composers of all time, the guys who brought us “Evita,” let us sit down upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of a beloved hydrocarbon.

Now, what I am about to say may shock you. As of this spring in our country, before the immense climb in gasoline prices, the purchase of gasoline and oil amounted to barely 2 percent of national income. Barely 2 percent. Suppose the prices have risen by one-fourth since then. Now gasoline and oil would be roughly 2.5 percent of the total.

Or look at it another way. As of this spring, gasoline and oil and heating oil together amounted to about 2.5 percent of total personal consumption expenditures in this great country. Considering the recent price increases, these goods might account for slightly more than 3 percent of such expenditures now. (All of these calculations come from numbers in the March report to Congress from the Council of Economic Advisers.) We are talking about several hundred billion dollars here. I could have a lot of fun with that money, rescuing lost dogs and cats, but it’s not enough to shake the foundations of the nation, at least not a nation of this size.

Certainly, it’s not enough to affect even vaguely the incomes of upper-class or upper-middle-income people. The average driver travels about 12,000 miles a year, and if he or she gets 15 miles per gallon (not good mileage at all), the annual gasoline bill would have been about $3,200 a month ago and maybe $3,600 now (if the vehicle uses premium). For people who make a half-million dollars a year, that’s pennies. The increase from a year or two ago also means little to them.

The problem comes in another, staggering set of government numbers. (Economists argue about the validity of using these numbers over long periods, but they capture the sorrow of the situation.) Get this, friends: from 1947 to about 1973 — from the days from the great Harry S. Truman to the great Richard M. Nixon — real hourly pay for nongovernment workers rose by about 40 percent. The peak year was the one before R.N. left for San Clemente in 1974. Since then, real wages both hourly and weekly for all nongovernment workers, on average, have fallen by about 5 percent, very roughly.

There are all kinds of reasons for this, ranging from the larger size and different composition of the labor force to the devastating foreign competition in manufacturing, which tends to set a limit on other wages as well.

FULL story at link.

“Attacking” McCain’s Military Record

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 1st, 2008

http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/attacking_mccains_military_rec.php?page=all

Campaign Desk

“Attacking” McCain’s Military Record
What Wesley Clark really said; how the press missed it

By Zachary Roth
Mon 30 Jun 2008 03:54 PM

So: The latest round of mock outrage—in a presidential race that has turned the tactic into an art form—now comes in response to comments made by General Wesley Clark. Appearing as a surrogate for Barack Obama on CBS’s “Face the Nation”, Clark, in reference to John McCain, said:

I certainly honor his service as a prisoner of war…But he hasn’t held executive responsibility. That large squadron in the Navy that he commanded—that wasn’t a wartime squadron. He hasn’t been there and ordered the bombs to fall.
When moderator Bob Schieffer interjected that “Barack Obama has not had any of those experiences, either, nor has he ridden in a fighter plane and gotten shot down”, Clark responded: “Well, I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be president.”

The McCain camp, sensing an opportunity, complained that Clark had “attacked John McCain’s military service record.” Of course, Clark had done nothing of the kind. He had questioned the relevance of McCain’s combat experience as a qualification to be president of the United States. This is a distinction that you’d expect any reasonably intelligent nine-year old to be able to grasp.

But many in the press have been unable to. ABC News political director Rick Klein led the outrage, writing in a blog post on ABCNews.com:

Find me a single Democrat who thinks it’s good politics to call into question the military credentials of a man who spent five-and-a-half years as a prisoner of war.

This is the perfect embodiment of the press’s unbelievably destructive habit of assessing every piece of campaign rhetoric for its political acuity, rather than for its validity and accuracy. Clark’s comments may (or may not) have been impolitic. But that has no bearing on their validity or lack thereof—which is how the news media should be evaluating them.

To be fair, Klein does get to that, eventually. Later in the post, he writes:

Clark’s comments seem to miss a vital point about the McCain campaign: Yes, his military service is part of his stock campaign biography, but McCain is not running on that record nearly as much as he’s running on his service in Congress.

Clark is right that “getting shot down” isn’t a qualification to be president, but McCain isn’t saying that it is.

Ads like this just slipped through, I guess. Even if McCain weren’t running on his military record, it’s undoubtedly something that could convince many voters, rightly or wrongly, that he has the experience to be commander in chief. Why should it be out of bounds for Democrats to argue that McCain’s particular military experience has done little to prepare him for the decisions he’ll have to make as president?

Klein wasn’t alone, of course. NBC’s First Read, written by Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Domenico Montanaro, noted that “American politics can’t quite get beyond this question: Just how big a military hero were you?” before summarizing Clark’s comments—as if Clark was questioning McCain’s claim to military heroism, rather than pointing out that that heroism isn’t a qualification for president. Like Klein, the NBC team couldn’t resist playing political consultants, pronouncing that Clark’s comments “weren’t helpful at all to the Obama campaign,” without bothering to consider whether Clark’s argument might make sense.

Gerald Seib and Sara Murray of The Wall Street Journal arguably do even worse. They write: “The one certainty of the 2008 campaign, it might have seemed, was that Sen. John McCain would be acknowledged all around as a war hero for his service in Vietnam—but apparently not.” Did Seib and Murray even read what Clark said? Where did Clark say anything about McCain not being a war hero?

And in a piece headlined “Clark Hits McCain’s Military Credentials”, Josh Kraushaar of The Politico says that Clark “invoked McCain’s military service against him….” Huh? By this bizarre standard, if Clark were to point out that my record of writing for Columbia Journalism Review is not a qualification to be president, he would have invoked my writing for CJR against me.

It’s crucially important that we have a political debate in this country that’s at least sophisticated enough to be able to handle the following rather basic idea: Arguing that a person’s record of military service is not a qualification for the presidency does not constitute “attacking” their military credentials; nor can it be described as invoking their military service against them, or as denying their record of war heroism.

That’s not a very high bar for sophistication. But right now it’s one the press isn’t capable of clearing.

CJR
If you enjoy this kind of press criticism please consider a subscription to our magazine, Columbia Journalism Review—a deal via the Web site at $19.95.

Obama Asks His Top Donors To Help Clinton With Debt

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on July 1st, 2008

Obama Asks His Top Donors To Help Clinton With Debt
Washington Post
June 25, 2008

LOS ANGELES — Two days ahead of his meeting in Washington with Hillary Clinton’s top donors, Barack Obama has urged his own biggest givers to help retire her $10 million vendor debt.

Obama used the occasion of a conference call Tuesday afternoon to ask members of his national finance team to contribute to the Clinton cause “if they had the means to do so,” a campaign aide said.

Clinton ended May more than $22.5 million in debt, with the majority of that money owed to herself. According to campaign finance filings, the vendors the campaign used most heavily included a number of firms run by longtime Clinton loyalists: Denver-based Media Strategies & Research, which bought advertising time; the polling firm Penn, Schoen & Berland; the voter-database firm Catalist; and Grunwald Communications, a media consultant.

She dropped out of the Democratic race in early June, and Obama donors have been seeking cues from his campaign ever since.

Clinton will have a chance to return Obama’s favor Thursday night, when she introduces Obama to her most generous supporters at the Mayflower Hotel.– Shailagh Murray


« Previous entries ·