Showing posts with label Terry McAuliffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry McAuliffe. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2013

VIRGINIA PICKS A GOVERNOR: THE AFTERMATH


Who elected Terry McAuliffe Governor of Virginia?  If the exit polls can be believed it was Government workers, Black people, single women, the 1% and the disgusted (aka “the Marash voters.”)
 
Tracking polls over the last month of the campaign suggest, the issue that seemed to turn this wretched race the Democrat’s way was the shutdown of the Federal government.  Before the shutdown, Republican Attorney General Ken Cucinnelli was ahead.  After it, he was so far behind, even the subsequent public outrage over the incompetent mis-launch of Obamacare could only close the gap. 
 
“The shutdown demoralized a chunk of the Republican base and really energized a chunk of the Democratic base,” GOP pollster Wes Anderson told Politico’s James Hohmann.  “Terry McAuliffe had not found any way to energize the Democratic base prior to the shutdown.”
 
McAuliffe’s paltry margin, 55,000 votes out of 2.2 million cast has enabled all sides to claim to see something they liked about the results, especially pundits, who could, in the empowering words of Roanoke College political scientist Harry L. Wilson, quoted in the NY Times, “spin this any way you want.”  
Cucinnelli’s spin has emphasized two main points, neither of them really good news for the Republican Party.  The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported the first: “This race went down to the wire because of Obamacare,” Cucinnelli said in his concession speech.  “That message will go out across America tonight.”
The national news wires contain a lot of evidence that a lot of Republicans believe this is true, but for how long will the GOP assault on the Affordable Care Act resonate?  My guess is, hostility to Obamacare and to Obama himself is at a peak, and as the inevitable fixes are made, and people understand that for most them, Obamacare is a pretty good deal, the issue will lose potency.
Cucinnelli’s second point is even more incontrovertible: he was left high and dry by the Republican establishment, insiders and fellow-travelers alike.  Although the Republican Governors Conference tried to make up for it, the GOP National Committee dropped their Virginian gubernatorial candidate like a burning coal. The RNC, Politico reported, “spent about $3 million on Virginia this year, compared to $9 million in the 2009 governor’s race,” while usually loyal GOP retainer the US Chamber of Commerce, “spent $1 million boosting [Republican Governor Robert] McDonnell in 2009 and none this time.”
In 2013, a lot of big-money donors went Democratic, giving the fixer's fixer a huge edge, -- “$34.4 million to $19.7 million,” the NY Times’ Trip Gabriel reported.  On the short end, this is another manifestation of the Disgust Factor (of which, more later), but on the weighty side of the money scale, what is seen as opportunity by the 1% is often winds up being viewed as waste or corruption by the less-favored.
Gov.-elect McAuliffe’s career contains ample proof of that embittered proposition.
His success with a few rich normally-Republican contributors seems to have confused the winner.  Politico’s Hohmann reported, ‘McAuliffe declared in his victory speech that ‘a historic number of Republicans’ supported him. But that’s just not how it happened.
“The Democrat won only 4 percent of self-identified Republicans, according to exit polling,” Hohmann reported. “His key was getting more of his people to the polls — 37 percent of voters self-identified as Democrats and 32 percent self-identified as Republican.”
In other words, one big reason Cucinnelli lost is that he was rejected by many of his own party's rank and file, as well as by a few renegade Republican McAuliffe investors.  This is seriously bad news for the GOP, showing as it does, how deep are the existing splits within the party between so-called Moderates and far-right radicals.  But there is far worse news in the details of the exit polling data.
Virginia, like the rest of the United States, is getting more diverse by the year.  In Virginia, the most important minority group by far is African-Americans, and as they did a year ago for the African-American Obama, they went 90-10 this year for the White Democrat McAuliffe.  Blacks make up 20% of the voters in Virginia.  If you win them 9 to 1, you can lose by a 3 to 2 margin with everyone else and still have a majority.
Cucinnelli lost to McAuliffe by 9 percent among women 51% to 42.  But among married women, the Republican won by exactly the same margin.  Single women did him in.  67% favored McAuliffe to 29% for Cuccinnelli.  The issue for most of them, one guesses, was access to abortion without humiliation.  But, politically, here's the frightening bottom line for the GOP, single women are, by and large, younger than married women.
A longtime Virginia Republican, wformer State sen. John Chichester, ho is serving as part of McAuliffe's transition committee summed up that issue perfectly: "“The Republican Party wasn’t put here to be the traffic cop of our personal lives, and that needs to be changed.” 
According to the NY Times’ exit polls, the only age groups Cuccinnelli won were those 45 and over.  What does this mean for 2014, 2016, 2020?  A harder road for Republican candidates.
The other interesting age-related statistic was that voters under 30 were more than twice as likely to reject both so-called “major party” candidates, to vote for, in this case, Libertarian Robert Sarvis.  He took 15% of the youth vote, 6.5% overall.
If this data is part of the trend analyst Peter Beinart said he’s seen in the NYC Mayor election and in polling data from all over the country over the past several years, the road to the future may be bumpier for both Democrats and Republicans. A lot of young people, "the Millennials," think they both suck. 
But maybe this election choice, as University of Virginia political scientist (and King of the Old Dominion political oracles) Larry Sabato put it, “between a heart attack and cancer,” will be a one-time nightmare.  Maybe we will never again see an election in which only 13% of voters exit polled by the NY Times believed both candidates to be “ethical” people.  54% split down the middle, 27% calling McAuliffe ethical, 27% applying the label to Cucinnelli.  But 30%, the plurality of Virginia voters, rejected both men as ethically deficient.
If McAuliffe mischaracterized Republican voters, Cuccinnelli’s people did the same for Sarvis voters, claiming, if the Libertarian had not stolen votes from him, the AG would have won.  Not according to exit polls analyzed by the Washington Post’s Chris Cilizza.  If Sarvis voters had gone with their second choice, he wrote, “Cuccinelli would have gone from 45 percent to 46 percent. McAuliffe would have stayed at 48 percent — and won.  Perhaps the most interesting thing,” Cilizza said, “is that the vast majority of Sarvis supporters said that if he were not in the race they simply wouldn’t have voted.”
Can we give a shout out to The Disgusted?”
And for fans of happy dust, we have the editorial writers of the Washington Post, who see McAuliffe’s victory as “a watershed moment for Democrats.”
The good news” for Mr. McAuliffe, they crowed, is that his campaign “was relatively gaffe-free, [which] suggests that, Mr. McAuliffe may also possess a degree of discipline for which he has not been celebrated to date.”
The Post’s lead reporter, Marc Fisher picked up this theme in his coverage.  This campaign presented a different McAuliffe,” he wrote, "his message disciplined, and his opportunities to improvise sparse. He barely spoke in his own TV ads, rarely gave news conferences and stuck to his talking points in public appearances.”
What Fisher and the editorial board see as “discipline,” the Post’s political analyst Robert McCartney saw, more accurately, I think, as “fear he’ll say something ignorant or inaccurate.” 
After winning a long and bitter campaign, which produced results much closer than almost anyone, especially the political pollsters, expected, McAuliffe’s victory news conference consisted of 6 questions, and then was shut down.
McCartney was able to get in a prized question, and got in return, not much.  “Given the outsize role that scandals played in the campaign, the state is crying out for a crusade for honest government," he said. "That’s especially important because of the numerous questions raised over the years about McAuliffe’s own business dealings and campaign fundraising.
“McAuliffe chuckled nervously when I asked him about this at the news conference. He repeated his pledges to decline gifts of more than $100 and to propose an independent ethics commission with “real teeth,” including subpoena power, to help clean up Richmond.” 
Then it was time to party.
Before we go, let’s try to remember two things, a Republican candidate who staked out the most extreme positions against women’s rights (think trans-vaginal probe), gay rights (he tried to ban the concept from the University of Virginia), and the science behind global warming (he wasted his publically-paid time and taxpayers money “legally” harassing a UVA environmental scientist), who campaigned with Sen. Ted Cruz, Mr. Federal shutdown, and who admitted taking money from a political favor-seeker, failing to report it, and only belatedly confirming the full amount he had taken, still only lost by 2 percentage points.
And, had the election been delayed a week, as Obamacare outrage continued to fester, he might actually have won.
And the second thing to remember: as Virginia Senate Minority Leader Richard L. Saslaw (D-Fairfax) said in the best line of the election, “You know what they call a guy who wins the governor’s race by only one point? Governor.”
God help us.
 

Monday, November 4, 2013

THE WORST CHOICE EVER: VIRGINIA'S GOVERNOR'S RACE


Stark contrast for voters in Virginia governor’s race.”

That’s the headline on the Washington Post’s Guide to the Governor’s Race in the Old Dominion.

And the lead paragraphs of Ben Pershing’s article


go like this:

They’re both Catholic men with large families who live in Northern Virginia and want to be the commonwealth’s next governor. That’s essentially where the similarities end between Attorney General Ken T. Cuccinelli II and businessman Terry R. McAuliffe.

“Elections are about choices, and Virginians will be presented with very stark contrasts on their ballots Nov. 5. … From résumé to ideology to governing style, the two hopefuls present strikingly different visions of how they would lead the state.”

It is not until the 19th paragraph (of 24 in the story) that Pershing gets to the crucial contradiction of his “contrast” angle.  Both Cuccinelli and McAuliffe are simply unacceptable.

As Pershing most decorously puts it: “Cuccinelli and McAuliffe do have one other thing in common — ethics problems.”

Let’s start with Terry McAuliffe.  For most of his life, McAuliffe has been increasingly gainfully employed as what is known at the track as “a tout,” or more precisely at courthouses and capitols, “a fixer.”

Using his political connections, McAuliffe has connected politicians with funders (many of them simply buyers), and entrepreneurs or service providers with projects, many of them publically-funded, publically initiated projects.  For his work, McAuliffe takes a fee of the sort that has increasingly become a “price of doing business.”

It is probably only a slight exaggeration to say, a lot of the “Terry McAuliffe tax” comes right out of our pockets before being laundered in this “doing business together” way.

On the rare occasion upon which McAuliffe placed himself in a position of corporate responsibility, as Chair of GreenTech, the electric car company he co-founded, he had to resign, last December, with investigators from the SEC in hot pursuit.

Compared to McAuliffe, Cuccinelli is much more a common thief.  He got caught up in a more McAuliffe-sized caper tied to his boss, present Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell.  As Pershing reports, “Cuccinelli took $18,000 in gifts” from Star Scentific, a maker of food supplements, which, Federal Prosecutors say, was “seeking favors” from the Governor, his wife and his Attorney General, Cuccinelli.   Cuccinelli tried covering this up, but after he was embarrassed, Pershing notes, he “eventually wrote a check for the amount to charity.”

But Pershing has more: "Separately, the attorney general’s office is being investigated by the state inspector general’s office, which is probing whether a lawyer in the office gave improper legal help to out-of-state energy companies being sued over gas royalties by Southwest Virginia landowners."

Elsewhere, Pershing says one of the big “contrasts” between the candidates is that McAuliffe wants to push climate change reform and investment in “green” energy, while Cuccinelli calls this “attacking the coal companies,” whom he passionately defends.

The effect of this economically as well as environmentally significant issue on McAuliffe or Cuccinelli’s campaign treasuries is not mentioned in the article.

But there is something much more decisive that is completely absent from Ben Pershing’s Washington Post Guide to the Governor’s Race: the words “trans-vaginal probe.”

Oh yes, Pershing lists “abortion” (in as many words) as something the Democrat and the Republican disagree on, but here’s how Cuccinelli’s political persona is summed up:  “He wants lower taxes, slower growth in spending and a more efficient, less intrusive government.”

A man whose version of “less intrusive government,” includes government-mandated use of a trans-vaginal probe on pregnant females is intellectually, politically and morally unacceptable.

For the Post, the dominant newspaper of Northern Virginia, to go silent on this issue is also unacceptable.

And McAuliffe, is at least as bad.

Between the 2 of them, Cuccinelli and McAuliffe exemplify the failure of today's American politics and the utter worthlessness of both the Republican and Democratic Parties.

Real political reform should begin with outright rejection of both these assholes.  Virginians have a third choice, a lawyer named Robert Sarvis, running as a Libertarian.  Pershing says, “Sarvis has positioned himself as more fiscally conservative than McAuliffe, more socially liberal than Cuccinelli and more likable and scandal-free than both.”  Then he blows him off by noting, third-party candidates have never done well in Virginia.

Well, never before in Virginia history have the two-party choices been so reprehensible.

I would say, “Never in American history,” but some would argue, the choice in Louisiana in 1991 between famously corrupt former Democratic Governor and future Federal prisoner Edwin Edwards and Republican Ku Klux Klan-front man David Duke was even worse. To me, Edwards was, and amazingly, still is immensely entertaining, even if he imposed costs to his taxpayers of McAuliffian proportions; while Duke seemed not to take his malevolent racism anywhere near as seriously as Cuccinelli embraces his fundamentalist agenda.

And besides, the Edwards-Duke race and its unforgettable Edwards bumper sticker, “VOTE FOR THE CROOK, IT’S IMPORTANT” were a sideshow of contemporary politics, not as the Virginia race is, the epitome.

McAuliffe is the guy who helped sell America on “change is your friend,” as if Bill Clinton and Robert Rubin were any more of a change from Ronald Reagan and Donald Regan or George H.W. Bush and Nick Brady than Barack Obama and Tim Geithner would be.  Publically disgraced many times over, he sticks like a barnacle to the dead-in-the-water Democrats.

Cuccinelli is the guy who does not want government to tax private citizens or regulate large corporations, but thinks the privacy of the bedroom or birthing room is just where government should insert its probing nose.

And these are the best either party could do?!!

Wait till you see the choices for President in 2016: an aged, amiable gaffe-machine, a ruthless, perpetual self-promoter whose Senatorial and State Department careers are absolutely empty of definable achievements in original legislation or policy, versus a much younger, amiable former Fat-joke (who, as a Federal prosecutor steered an important contract for labor union oversight to the completely inexpert John Ashcroft as a reward for his service in the G.W. Bush Cabinet), or the Texas Governor who majored in memory loss, or the Florida Senator of lived on the edge of the law for years, living off expense money from his home state GOP organization.

Yikes!

If this isn’t a crisis, if this isn’t a death spiral of leadership whose consequences cover the earth from Iraq to Afghanistan to Syria, and everywhere else the NSA gathers up data (which is everywhere else), I don’t know what you’d call it.

Does anyone doubt, both in coping with foreign competition and the realities of the 21st Century, that American government, America is failing?   

Can you name two political parties who are responsible for this egregious failure? 

I’d say the same 2, the Republicans and the Democrats, who defecated on the governor’s ballot in Virginia.

Stop them!

Virginians within ear or eyeshot, spoil your Governor ballot, or vote for Libertarian Sarvis (with his 2-party legislature, he can, at worst, do little harm).

But say NO to the Devils…and withdraw your registration from either of the mainstream parties.  The country has lain with these dogs long enough.  The fleas are coming home to bite.