Sunday, April 30, 2006

If I only had McCain...

Senator Obama's song (to the tune of "If I Only Had a Brain):

I'm aspiring to greatness, but somehow I feel weightless
A freshman's sad refrain
I could be a great uniter, making ethics rules much tighter
If I only had McCain
I could bring us all together, no storm we couldn't weather,
We'd feel each other's pain
Red and blue wouldn't matter, party differences would shatter
If I only had McCain
Oh why is it so hard, for honest men of good will to agree,
If we ever found a way to strike a deal, would we survive… politically?
When a wide-eyed young idealist, confronts a seasoned realist
There's bound to be some strain
With the game barely started, I'd be feeling less downhearted
If I only had McCain
Still I hope for the better, though I may rewrite my letter
Cause I gotta have McCain

Link to Senator Obama's Gridiron speech: here.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Quotable

"Congressmen are like diapers: You need to change ’em often, and for the same reason."

~ Pete McCloskey, former Congressman and Marine officer challenging Richard Pombo, whom some consider to be the worst representive in the House. Great backgrounder article in the San Francisco Bay Guardian.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Quotable

"At least some good came out of Duke Cunningham's fall from grace. The San Diego Union Tribune grabs a Pulitzer for their investigation of the former congressman. The good news: The prize comes with $10,000. The bad news: That's not even enough to get a contract from Cunningham."

~ The Roundup

Spring finally arrives


Love calls like the wild birds--
it's another day.
A Spring wind blew my list of
things to do...away.
~ Greg Brown

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Doolittle Lawyered Up

Funny what one may notice when looking through a candidate's FEC report. Apparently, back in January, Doolittle paid $10,000 to retain the services of an attorney who specializes in white collar crime.

Doolittle's chief of staff says it was necessary since Doolittle was going to be asked about his connections to Abramobb during his re-election campaign and needed legal advisement to know how to respond. To the casual observer, this may seem pure PR-type bs. To those of us following the beleaguered John Doolittle, this was a last resort expenditure made neccessary by the liberal media's constant hounding of him - a true conservative hero.

Sources: TPM and David Whitney/Sac Bee

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Who looks worse: Doolittle or the Corporations who throw money at him?

The Washington Post has a brief item in today's paper reminding us of John Doolittle's sleazy kick back arrangement. What's different about this story is the use of a contribution by a well-known corporation as an example. In this case it's United Parcel Service.
The United Parcel Service PAC, for example, has given $15,000 to the leadership PAC and $10,000 to the campaign committee, which, in turn, means a commission of $3,750 for Julie Doolittle's company.

The Doolittles' scheme may not be illegal but it is certainly unethical. Why would corporations continue to participate in such a scheme now that it has been exposed? Probably because they never expected their contributions to be exposed for one thing. And, the other reason is belief that the gains from paying off of a high ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee still provide more benefits than negatives.

This is where we, the public come into play. The DoJ may not be able to prosecute the Doolittles for the set up of this scheme alone, but we can publically challenge/question those corporations who are knowingly making deposits into the Doolittles' personal checking account.

So, UPS...what gives?

Write to UPS at:
UPS Corporate Headquarters
55 Glenlake Parkway, NE
Atlanta , GA 30328
United States

Submit general questions to UPS: here.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Doolittle Exposed as Puppeteer

Letter in today's Sacramento Bee:

Placer conservative agenda


Re "GOP jousts in Placer contest," April 4: It is clear to anyone who follows Placer County politics, candidates Jerry Simmons, 2nd District supervisor, and Ted Gaines, 4th District Assembly candidate, are two candidates who have been strategically and financially positioned by Rep. John Doolittle.

Through the precise direction of Doolittle, these two men will wage a dishonest and hateful campaign in an effort to crush their opposition. Look what Simmons and his co-conspirator Aaron Klein accomplished as members of the Sierra Joint Community College District board? They manipulated the truth to force Sierra College President Kevin Ramirez to resign.

Don't be fooled by these conservatives. They have their own agenda and unfortunately it does nothing to benefit their constituents.

- Larry S. DuBois, Loomis

Monday, April 10, 2006

Special Election in CA D-50 a Bellwether?

It could be. Although, no other race will have the same factors, especially the same comination of candidates. If Francine Busby is able to garner 50% of the vote tomorrow it shouldn't be taken as a given that every other election that is even remotely similar will follow suit. For one thing, Francine is an amazingly strong candidate who has led a long and well-organized campaign. Every contact I've had with the Busby campaign team has been impressive. The fact that Busby is ahead in the polls is because she is an effective leader and has assembled a hard working and devoted team around her. When the election date suddenly moved up with Duke's resignation, the campaign anticipated it and had the organiziation in place to utilize both local volunteers and people volunteering to help from around the state & country.

In today's Sac Bee:
And so eyes are on the 50th, a district of 600,000 residents stretching along Pacific Ocean, from La Jolla to Carlsbad, and inland to Escondido. The congressional district is suddenly a bellwether on the Iraq war, on illegal immigration, and - most of all - on the alleged "culture of corruption" in Washington.

"It is the first congressional race in 2006 and the first time voters have an opportunity to express their feelings about the direction of the country," said Busby, a school board trustee in the coastal town of Cardiff who, according to polls, is leading all candidates heading into Tuesday's special election. "And it's coming from voters who felt firsthand the effects of corruption."

-snip-

"The environment is an ardent call for change," said Ramona Oliver, communications director for Emily's List, a national political action committee that benefits Democratic women who support abortion rights and that is supporting Busby's campaign. "A compelling candidate like Francine Busby can win."

Even if your Republican-majority congressional district is rocked by scandal, it still takes a candidate of Busby's caliber and long months of hard work by many to seize the opportunity.

Francine Busby for Congress!

Sunday, April 9, 2006

John Doolittle may be a "hysterical GOP partisan" but he's *our* hysterical GOP partisan

And, Doolittle's fast becoming famous for his ethical laspes and challenges...heckuva way to put this beautiful part of California on the map, so to speak.

This my friends, and those of you who unwittingly stumbled here thinking this blog was about REM, is what we're dealing with here in CA's 4th congressional district. John Doolittle, our representative exposes himself as a complete doofus everytime he opens his mouth or, say, writes as a guest blogger on a right-wing blog.

From Jonathan Chait's op-ed "Electoral College Dropouts" in today's LA Times:
In addition to fusty traditionalists, you've got hysterical GOP partisans. Rep. John T. Doolittle of California was sufficiently exercised to write, on the conservative blog redstate.org: "The left in America is nothing if not creative. Knowing that they can't beat us using existing election law, they have started a state by state effort to change the rules so their 'blue' states can unilaterally decide who will win the highest office in the land. The left-wing politicos in America know that turning the national elections into populist referendums will benefit their candidates."

I'm not taking Doolittle out of context here. This is his argument in its entirety. Doolittle seems to think that the blue states alone can impose this change. But, of course, the blue states don't have the needed 270 electoral vote majority, which is why, as Doolittle may have noticed, Republicans occupy the White House.

Or maybe Doolittle hasn't noticed. How else to explain his fear that "turning the national elections into populist referendums" will let the left sweep into power? It's almost as if he thinks the Republicans are some tiny, unpopular faction kept in power only by an undemocratic mechanism.

Cheer up, Rep. Doolittle. Your party did manage to win the popular vote in one of the last four presidential elections, after all.
Dump Doolittle also has a post about Doolittle's stint at Red State dot org.

Tom DeLay's in some hot water

DeLay Caught trying to Switch Identities with Illegal Alien
Texas Congressman Snagged in Border Sweep
By: Andy Borowitz *
Embattled Texas congressman Tom DeLay was arrested last night as he attempted to switch identities with an illegal alien at the Texas-Mexico border, immigration officials confirmed today.

For Mr. DeLay, who earlier this year stepped down from his leadership position in the House of Representatives and who just this week said he would not seek reelection, this brush with the law was just the latest in a series of stunning setbacks.

According to the official who arrested him, the former House Majority Leader was trying to tempt illegal aliens to switch identities with him in the hopes that he could start over with a new, simpler life as a Mexican laborer.

"Apparently, though, there were no takers," the official said.

One illegal alien who spoke on condition of anonymity said that Rep. DeLay offered him all of his credentials and even his key to the House men's room, but that ultimately his offer was not attractive.

"I would rather take my chances being an illegal alien in America than being Tom DeLay," he said. "At least as an illegal alien I have a chance of being legalized - there's no way that the things Tom DeLay has done will ever be considered legal."

The illegal alien noted another downside of switching identities with Tom Delay: "I would have to admit that I knew Jack Abramoff."
* Satirist

[Graphic: Alicia Morgan]

Doolittle's empire is crumbling...but will it be enough?

On the heels of the Hammer's resignation and all the other signs leading one to believe Doolittle may be next, there's still a question lingering: we will be able to seize the opportunity? Does an opportunity for change really exist? I, along with many others, will be watching the results of this week's special election in CA's district 50 closely.

First, a slew of letters to the editor in yesterday's Sac Bee in response to an opinion piece written in defense of John Doolittle by State Assemblyman (major player in the Doolittle machinery) Tim Leslie. Leslie is being termed out of his seat and some say he is the pick to replace Doolittle when the indictment comes down. Won't post all the great letters but here are a few excerpted highlights:

Leslie writes how in 1980, Doolittle, a hard worker doing what he thought to be right, won an election that some saw as a big upset in California political history. Then Leslie goes on to write that, disturbing to him is how important facts are often left out concerning Doolittle.

Interesting. I've been following California politics since Gov. Pat Brown, and the important facts that Leslie left out was that Doolittle led the most negative and dishonest campaign in 1980 of anyone running in this state. He knew that if he threw enough mud, some would stick. "With a little digging" people will see Doolittle for what he is, a hypocrite and Leslie as someone with a selective memory.

- Don Brown, Sacramento

As a lifelong Republican, I was shocked to learn Rep. John Doolittle pays his wife out of money he collects for running his re-election campaign and his political action committee. Her Virginia-based company, Sierra Dominion Financial Solutions, has received over $163,000 since November 2002.

This is wrong. It's a sleazy way to circumvent our campaign laws. This smells like corruption, and it is not the way I want my representative in Washington to behave.

- Jerol K. Burns, Auburn

Tim Leslie demonstrated the sort of blind loyalty that has become a hallmark of the Republican Party, especially in the Bush administration.

- Paul Raveling, El Dorado Hills

Assemblyman Tim Leslie's comments on the "Questionable practices" editorial reveal a depressing ethical obtuseness.

- Jeff Fine, Sacramento

Assemblyman Tim Leslie's defense of Rep. John Doolittle is full of misleading statements and factual omissions.

- Jeff Ball, Sacramento


Next, we have an article in today's Sac Bee that looks at Doolittle's four challengers and what Delay's resignation may mean for Doolittle's race. Found this amusing:

Doolittle also has ratcheted up his "the liberals are coming" fundraising machinery even as the campaign's public face is one of supreme confidence.

"I don't think he is worried about this race," Robinson said. "He's got a tremendous amount of support - more support in this election than ever before."

Doolittle declined to be interviewed for this story. Robinson said he was too busy on Capitol Hill.

We end with today's Sac Bee editorial in which it is asserted that we have now entered a post-Tom DeLay era:

The Doolittle camp claims that the Federal Election Commission "put its official stamp of approval on such arrangements" in a 2001 advisory opinion. Not true. The FEC ruling referred only to "salary payments," not commissions, and made it clear that a family member must have the qualifications of a bona fide professional. Most important, the contract must conform to "standard industry practice" between paid consultants and candidate committees. That is the crux of the matter.

Does Julie Doolittle have fundraising experience and expertise? Where is the record that she is doing or has done fundraising for other political campaigns? We don't see it. She set up her business, Sierra Dominion Financial Solutions, just two months after her husband won a seat on the Appropriations Committee.

Does her 15 percent commission conform to standard industry practice? In 2004, Doolittle's opponent raised only $2,300 and won only 35 percent of the vote. For that kind of race, a paid fundraiser is hardly necessary. Yet Doolittle amassed more than $1 million in contributions. Were the Doolittles driving up contributions to benefit the family income more than to thwart an underfinanced opponent?

-snip-

Campaign contributions are supposed to help candidates win elections, not line their pockets. In this post-Tom DeLay era, Doolittle needs to show ethical leadership by example and end this unacceptable practice.

Wednesday, April 5, 2006

Doolittle's Hammermania

With Tom DeLay's dramatic exit from Congress, I've been thinking about those little golden hammer lapel pins. They might be worth something. Maybe ol' Hot Tub Tom could sell off a couple on EBay to go toward his legal defense fund.

Excerpted from Roll Call this past October in much more confident times:
In a show of solidarity with the one and only Hammer, many GOP Members donned little gold hammer lapel pins and began hammering away at each other on the House floor. Fine, the last part didn't actually happen, but they did wear their pins to the floor for votes to show some love for Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas).

Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.) is responsible for hammermania. He bought more than 100 of the lapel pins and handed them out. "Tom DeLay is an outstanding man and a great Republican leader," he told HOH. "By wearing this pin we wish to demonstrate our unified support of Mr. DeLay and the high esteem in which we hold him."

The Hammer apparently loved the gesture. "I'm sure they will result in a reservoir of good luck for Mr. DeLay, but we won't need luck since the facts and the laws are on Mr. DeLay's side," DeLay's spokesman, Kevin Madden, said.

The easiest thing in the world

From June Casagrande:

Kurt Vonnegut changed my life in a few sentences. I don't remember the exact wording but I believe it was in Slaughterhouse Five that Vonnegut wrote about an alien who came to visit planet Earth. The alien reported back to his superiors that Americans were the most miserable people in the galaxy because they're told constantly that getting rich is the easiest thing in the world to do when in fact it's next to impossible. They blame themselves and hate themselves for failing at what's supposed to be the easiest thing in the world.

Tuesday, April 4, 2006

Quotable

"I think I could have won this seat but it would have been nasty. It would have cost a fortune to do it," DeLay said."

~ Mr. Play-by-the-Rules, nice guy, aka "the hammer" Tom DeLay, King of GOP Sleaze.

The King is dead. Long live the King!

Sunday, April 2, 2006

Doolittle Old Chap, You Have Some Mail (vol.7)

In the Sac Bee:

Doolittle's practices
After reading the March 25 editorial "Questionable practices," it should be glaringly obvious to Rep. John Doolittle's constituents that it is now time to retire him from Congress. His words and deeds have shown him to be one of the more corrupt members of Congress. He has lost sight of why he was sent there.

By calling his shady dealings with Jack Abramoff "just friends helping out friends," Doolittle revealed his moral and ethical bankruptcy. Now with talk of an Auburn dam revived, he is no doubt licking his chops at the prospect of steering billions in federal funds into his district, with possible "fees and commissions" to garner for his own coffers.

Every American should be appalled by the corruption gripping Washington, and one tool we all have to correct it is to vote out Doolittle and his ilk.

- Stephen Farr, Sacramento

Doolittle's history of scandal
The March 25 editorial "Questionable practices" brings up an old problem. Rep. John Doolittle is no stranger to corruption.

In 1983, after legislative districts were redrawn, Republican leaders backed a Senate reapportionment plan designed to sacrifice Ray Johnson to save a then-Sen. John Doolittle. Johnson left the GOP and re-registered as an independent. Doolittle and friends, in an effort to defeat Johnson, sent out a mass mailing to 60,000 Democratic households as a tactic to draw votes to Jack Hornsby, a Democrat, thus pulling votes away from Johnson and electing Doolittle. The Fair Political Practices Commission fined Doolittle and his aide for failing to disclose that the Doolittle campaign aides prepared and obtained money for the mailer in violation of the Fair Political Practices Act.

The total fine of $6,000 was a very small price to pay.

- Theo Samuels, Sacramento