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This belongs to you. Take it back...
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Thu Feb 11, 2010 at 14:33:59 PM EST
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Now that Hiram "Slasher" Monserratte is gone, we can turn our sites on the next glaring waste of flesh in our legislature- Pedro Espada Jr.
While potential challenger Lilliam Perez has waffled on whether she plans on jumping into the ring, the Bronx News Network is reporting that community organizer Desiree Pilgrim-Hunter is considering a challenge:
Desiree Pilgrim-Hunter, a Bronx activist who became the face of last year's strong community push for living wage jobs at the Kingsbridge Armory, is exploring the possibility of making a run at the state Senate seat occupied by Pedro Espada, Jr.
In the past two weeks, in preparation for a possible run, Pilgrim-Hunter has begun assembling a team of advisors and has quietly reached out to potential donors and supporters.
"The next few weeks will basically be a stress test to see what kind of support is out there for me," Pilgrim-Hunter, 53, said in an interview over the weekend. "But I am taking steps to prepare myself should I decide to run. Because one thing is for certain: if I get in, I'm getting in to win. And it's as simple as that."
So far, Pilgrim-Hunter said she has received positive feedback, including this accolade from the head of the retail workers' union.
I like that fire in the belly. Pull the trigger, Desiree- the State needs you.
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Wed Feb 10, 2010 at 15:17:11 PM EST
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There were four special elections to fill vacated Assembly seats yesterday, and the results are not good for the Dems.
Two suburban seats that were Democratic are now Republican -- AD 3 (Suffolk County), where Dean Murray beat Lynn Thoden (it's close, but absentees usually follow the machine vote), and AD 89 (Westchester County), where Robert Castelli beat Peter Harckham by 10 percent.
Details, below.
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Wed Feb 10, 2010 at 14:50:50 PM EST
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(Source Times-Union)
The long drama of Hiram shuddered to an end last night not with a bang, but with a whimper. By 53-8, the Senate voted to expel Hiram Monserrate for bringing, essentially, too much discredit on a body that has altogether too much experience with it.
However, just in case anyone is confused, Hiram stands on the shoulders of giants. More to the point: his fight, in his mind, is not about him. It's actually about you.
I haven't talked to her recently, but I'm not sure god thinks highly of men who beat women bloody.
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 at 21:47:14 PM EST
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By a 53-8 vote. Not sure who the eight were. Chatter about it here.
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 at 19:39:47 PM EST
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Last years NYS tax increases on the richest New Yorkers was met with the gnashing of millionaire teeth and threats to move. How many of them actually moved?
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 at 11:08:03 AM EST
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Governor Paterson's veto of the so-called ethics bill was upheld in the state Senate, as most Republicans voted to uphold it (note: they voted for the bill before they voted against the bill). The fact that politics trumped policy proved that we desperately need an ethics bill.
This bill wasn't it.
This bill created entities that would not have had any real power to require compliance with anything. The financial disclosure requirements had enormous loopholes (dare I say that they were specifically designed to benefit Sheldon Silver and John Sampson?). Overall, this would have allowed our corrupt politicians to claim the mantle of reform while locking in the very corruption they were claiming to end.
I give high marks to Governor Paterson for standing up and saying no, particularly in the face of overwhelming odds that his veto would be upheld.
I also give high marks to the folks at Common Cause, who were willing to call this bill the piece of garbage that it was, when every other self-described "good government group" was unwilling to say that the emperor had no clothes.
I give low marks to Senate Republicans for voting for a bill and then voting against it. If they truly believed that the bill was bad, they should have voted against it from the start. Hypocrites!
I give low marks to Democratic leadership in Albany, on both sides of the capitol, for pushing such rotten legislation. They should be ashamed of themselves, except that they seem to have no shame.
I have a warning to all New Yorkers -- fasten your seat belts. It's clear that our state government has not yet reached rock bottom, and that we will have to endure more corruption, childishness, and other shenanigans, hurting our state even more, before real action is taken.
The message of hope is that governments far worse than New York state's government have failed to bring down a society. We will endure, and we will come out of this with real government reform. It may take a couple more years before the process can truly begin, but it will happen, if only because there will be a tipping point where New Yorkers throw enough of the bums out to send a message to the bums who are left that they had better act like decent human beings.
Let's hope that message is sent this fall.
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Mon Feb 08, 2010 at 12:49:58 PM EST
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Harold Ford of Tennessee, Merrill Lynch, the DLC, NBC and the Park Avenue Regency has hired Tammy Sun, press secretary for Joe LIEberman in his 2006 general election campaign, to fill in while regular flack Davidson Goldin is on his honeymoon.
Sun debuted today with an absurd lie about the excellent Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.
Details, below.
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Sun Feb 07, 2010 at 20:22:25 PM EST
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The twitters seem to be aflame with some rather thinly sourced rumors that the Gov will be resigning tomorrow after that "bombshell" Times story finally comes out tomorrow.
People keep asking me if I have heard anything more than what everyone else has. I haven't.
You?
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Sun Feb 07, 2010 at 15:09:48 PM EST
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Harry Reid is in trouble. He is a top target of the Republicans this year, and may become the second Democrat to hold the Senate Majority Leader's spot and be defeated at the polls.
It's time we learned a lesson.
Reid, like his most recent Democratic predecessor Tom Daschle hails from a moderate state and is thought of as a moderate Democrat. The idea in making him (and Daschle) Majority Leader may have been to appeal to a broad range of Senators in a misguided attempt to forge bipartisan relations.
It is misguided, of course, because those Republicans who are still around have no interest in bipartisanship; the party has been hijacked by right-wing extremists. The result is that any moderate Democrat is going to hear extremist views from across the aisle, while being prodded to provide something from the left wing of his own party.
This is why nothing gets done without an extraordinary amount of dealmaking, mostly to appease right-wing interests. The leader looks weak, because he is unable to succeed at bringing people together. Then the Republicans target the moderate Democratic leader at election time. They were successful the last time, and may be successful again.
The solution is to abandon the failed policy, and replace Reid with a much more left-wing Democrat in the Majority Leader's position. Republicans will know that they can't get much of anything from such a leader, while left-wing Democrats will be more accepting of compromises made with moderate Democrats. After all, if we start way over on the left, a fair amount of movement toward the center will be far better than if we start near the center and move even a little bit to the right.
There are some who say that Chuck Schumer should (and could) be the next Majority Leader. It's possible, but I think we still need someone from a state that isn't safely blue. That's why I suggest Carl Levin. Aside from his loyalty to GM, he has proven to be a pretty progressive Democrat, smart, willing to crack the whip when necessary -- and being from Michigan he can help shore up Democratic support in that increasingly Republican state.
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Sun Feb 07, 2010 at 12:46:43 PM EST
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Welcome to the return of Soundpolitic. I began blogging here nearly two years ago to the day to cover Democratic politics in NY-21 and SD-46. Back then, I would pompously opine most of the time, and other times engage in what I egotistically called "citizen-advocacy journalism."
Nowadays, after a years' worth of depression "due to" unemployment in my chosen field of paralegal studies and growing and frustration for lack of professionalism in indie rock, I've got the writing bug again. Out of respect for all living beings, I refuse to swat it. I've been feeding it like a fiend.
I had big plans for my return. Summarizing the Talking Heads shows, going topical again, ect., ect., ect....but this proved to nothing more than some intangible idea to make a move back to wind-baggery. It wasn't real.
What follows below the fold certainly is: I just starting writing an e-mail to a very dear friend of my father while he generously offered use of his computer to compose a freelance piece on traditional-string-based contemporary rock. The two of us had gone to dinner last night and spoke a bit about the Big Game coming up today. Naturally, we talked more about commercials than about football.
I decided to shoot her a quick e-mail link to the famous Apple 1984 commercial on YouTube. Then I added a couple of blurbs from the web to give more information. Then I kept writing and, voila! I was blogging again, just for the love of putting words together. I blind-copied it to a bunch of friends, but then decided if I left it at that, I'd have left all of you guys out. So no fair...read on for the first installment of Soundpolitic Sundays.
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Sat Feb 06, 2010 at 19:32:14 PM EST
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FireDogLake is having a vote to determine which of their nominated representatives should get a spot on the FDL fundraising page to the tune of $10,000. One of those nominees is our own Eric Massa--the sole Democrat from a Republican district who pledged to only support a healthcare reform bill with a public option.
In support of one of our hardest fighting upstate Dems, I'm asking you to help me stuff the ballot box. Simply fill out the form, select "Massa, Eric (NY-29)" in each of the drop down boxes, and hit submit. Then you're done--and hopefully so is Massa's Republican challenger.
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 at 22:13:33 PM EST
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Former Gov. Eliot Spitzer has lately emerged from his time-with-the-family decent interval with online and cable TV commentary about the need for better regulation of Wall Street.
And Spitzer is also dropping hints that he may join Harold Ford of Tennessee, Merrill Lynch, the DLC, NBC and the Park Avenue Regency in challenging the excellent Senator Kirsten Gillibrand this year.
According to Lloyd Grove of the Daily Beast, "Spitzer is making fresh noises about running against Senator Kirsten Gillibrand in New York."
Grove notes that Spitzer is trying to exorcise his prostitute-ridden past by talking somewhat openly about it in a Big Think interview, and that his media profile rose with his appearance this week on The Colbert Report.
Details, below.
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 at 17:10:33 PM EST
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I've been holding off on writing about this, because it seems to come drip by drip. There are more of them appearing lately, though - Liz Benjamin, NGD, and now Capitol Confidential. The New York Times seems to be the journalistic epicenter of the story - we'll see what happens, I guess.
Destiny may not always be what it seems. If this turns out to be real, I fear for New York State going forward.
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 at 14:50:39 PM EST
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Special elections are usually given little attention so I figured I'd make a short diary informing everyone that there will be a few elections on Tuesday to fill Assembly seats in the 3rd, 15th, 24th, and 89th Assembly districts. Here is a good explanation why there are vacancies (basically the former assemblypeople moved on to other positions). Below the fold I lay out the candidates for the seats and give you their websites.
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