Iowa Blog Roundup and District Happenings
By Sam Garchik and Other Folks
Denise O'Brien is having a party tonight! The potluck is in Atlantic, Iowa:
Please bring a covered dish, your own table service, drinks and lawn chairs and enjoy an evening of live music and fun! Meat will be provided. Camping on the farm will be available for those of you coming from out of town.
Harris/O'Brien Farm
59624 Chicago Rd.
Atlantic, IA
Friday June 30, 2006
6-10pm
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DIRECTIONS TO THE FARM:
If you're coming on I-80 from the East or the West take exit 54. Go 1 1/2 miles south of the interstate and turn left on Chicago Rd. We are the first house on the left. If you're coming from Atlantic take highway 173 (the Elk Horn Road) 3 1/2 miles north to Chicago Rd. Turn right and we are the first house on the left. |
Denise also got the EMILY's List endorsement. Information about Denise will be up on their web page soon. You can help her in the meantime by giving her a good car: The O'Brien Campaign for Secretary of Agriculture is looking for a fuel efficient vehicle to drive around Iowa for the next 4 months. Please get in touch with us if you are interested in donating a vehicle to the campaign.
Ed Fallon's not gone yet. He sent out an interesting email. I want to print this in its entirety. I read this on my Feedblitz email, but it came to me from Gavin's Journal:
Dear Friends,
While the recent primary election didn't achieve the victory we'd hoped for, it has had significant political impact statewide. Here's an exchange among Kay Henderson, David Yepsen, Jeneane Beck, Mike Glover and Todd Dorman during the most recent edition of Iowa Press. This should give all of us encouragement to keep building our network of reform-minded Iowans.
One thing you can do is send this e-mail to your own lists, and recommend that others sign up for my weekly electronic updates. And be sure to share with them my promise never to inundate recipients with e-mail or sell my e-mail list. That's a promise I've kept for years, and one I continue to stand by. Thanks!
Ed Fallon
Excerpts from Iowa Press, June 23, 2006
Henderson: “Out of this race, I think I see that there is a potential in Iowa Democratic politics for a populist to be successful. Ed Fallon did incredibly well in that election. He had 38,000 people who turned out. And in a low turnout election, he would have been even more competitive. And I think you can argue that his people would have gone to the polls regardless of the type of election year it was. So I think that what it tells us is that Iowa is sort of right for a candidate, like a Paul Wellstone or maybe the former governor of Minnesota who was a wrestler, that if someone crafts a message in such a way, I think a candidate of that ilk could be successful.”
Yepsen: “Jeneane, what about Ed Fallon? What do you think he did right? What did he do wrong? ”
Beck: “Well, I think that his message — I think the CIETC scandal would help an Ed Fallon because he doesn't take PAC money and he — the time was right for him to look at the scandals that we've had in Washington with the corporate lobbyists and the CIETC scandal here in Iowa. For a candidate like that to come forward and say, 'You know, what, I don't play that game. I'm not influenced by money' — and that's what he did well across the state and in debates in talking about that. To me that was his best argument.”
Yepsen: “Mike, is the reason he did so well that the Democratic left is so very angry just about everything and Fallon became sort of the vessel for that anger?”
Glover: “That's part of it. That's part of it. But one of the things that went into Ed Fallon's relatively strong showing, 26 percent of the vote, was Ed Fallon grew as a candidate throughout the course of that campaign. And that's one of the things that — one of the great challenges we face is to measure a candidate who is going to grow into the job. As he was in the race for governor, Fallon grew. He got more thoughtful. He got more focused. He got more — you get better as a candidate. And as a result, he was able to attract that Democratic left that's alienated and angry. He also was able to attract a group of disaffected Republicans who are unhappy with that sort of rightward drift of the Republican Party and looking for somebody to voice their message. He actually can be a key figure in this fall election because the voters who turned out for Ed Fallon are voters that have to show up if Chet Culver is to have a chance for winning this election in the fall. Ed Fallon will be a very important person for Chet Culver come the fall election. And it will be interesting to see how he fits into that whole campaign.” [emphasis mine]
Henderson: “One other point about Ed Fallon. I think when he was on the dais with Culver and Blouin at his side in debate situations, he came off looking pretty good because he didn't have consultants who said, 'In answer to this question, you give this answer.' I mean he looked normal. He looked human. There was a question; he actually answered it. So I think he came off in those settings where people were measuring the candidates against one another, I think he came off rather well.”
Dorman: “There's a hunger among voters for candidates that seem genuine, and he fit that bill. Like Kay said, a lot of times the other candidates would look, you know, preprogrammed, kind of robotic. And he didn't look that way. He looked like he was answering questions honestly, and I think that built a lot of appeal to him.”
And yes, I do read the JCR blog. They pointed me to this article about a new, scary group in Iowa. This is the group that dumped three Republican incumbents this spring. Beware! You may be able to fight them off with facts from Nussle and Flow. It's hard for a pimp out there, aint it, Jimmy?
District 1
Alta Price says:
I found this at DailyKos. It is long, but well worth reading, especially with the upcoming elections. The diarist discusses tactics used by the Republicans, and why the Democrats have trouble countering them. Running against Bush is not enough. Just this discussion is worth the read.
I really like the discussion on Republican “ideology”. The basic idea is the conservatives have spent 40 years and millions (billions?) of dollars promoting their ideology of “government is bad” and we need “less government”. This is nonsense, of course, but is accepted unthinkingly by the people. We need our own ideology to counter their ideology (the diarist also explains what an ideology is, and why we want to be ideologues!) http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/6/28/22312/3713
If you click on the links towards the end, you get more information about the ideology this diarist suggests, which is “cheap labor conservatives”, as opposed to “big government liberals”. I think it is pretty good, actually.
Alta also recommends the July Linkup and Drinking Liberally in the QCA. You can email her at altaprice@yahoo.com
District 2
Dave Loebsack keeps working the phones. Two more major fundraisers were announced for this week: one with John Edwards (July 7, Cedar Rapids), and one with Evan Bayh (July 8, Iowa City).
Speaking of events this week, the Draft Gore in 08 movement (email me for my take on how this could turn into a victory ala Nixon in 1968) is hitting its stride. Martha Smithback writes:
Draft Gore 2008.org will have its national kickoff event in Iowa City July 1st. The theme is “If we build it, He will run!” Everyone is invited to this family friendly BYO picnic event at City Park From 3:00 p.m. – dark.
Covered sites (#2 & #3 on map here) have been reserved. They're next to the pool, so bring your suit. Plan to attend and help to plan! Go to DG08 to offer suggestions or order a picnic basket (includes: ticket to AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH, T-shirt, and supper for $30.) The park is about a half mile from the theater.
And if your looking to help the state party, you can canvass for the IDP!
The Iowa Democratic Party is accepting applications for the position of Canvasser in Iowa City. The Canvasser job description includes the following staff functions and is a temporary full-time position from June 1 – August 18.
Contacting registered voters by canvassing door-to-door in assigned regions of Iowa
Making phone calls to registered voters
Recruiting volunteers in assigned counties
Assisting in campaign activities as assigned
Application Requirements
Strong verbal, written and interpersonal communication skills required
Computer skills required
Extensive travel within Iowa is required
U.S. citizenship desirable
Active voting status desirable
Reliable transportation required
The Iowa Democratic Party is committed to diversity among its staff, and recognizes that its continued success requires the highest commitment to obtaining and retaining a diverse staff that provides the best quality services to supporters and constituents. The Iowa Democratic Party is an equal opportunity employer.
For more information or to apply contact the Iowa Democratic Party at (319) 337-2405 and ask for Chris Bowen, Regional Field Director.
District 3
Christina Butts sent me a link to the funniest Bumper Sticker I've ever seen. Meanwhile, Mr. Lamberti, if you need 6 debates to explain on federal issues, you should probably stay away from government.
District 5
This explains itself. I also updated our blog links on the right side of the page. Check those out also.