Wednesday, December 04, 2024

The Race for DNC Chair

DNC Chair Jaime Harrison has said he is not running for reelection. Which set off something of a footrace.

 

The 4th One (So Far)

Ben Wikler


Ben Wikler of the Wisconsin Democratic Party announced very recently for the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee (DNC). He's the 4th to announce (see below). He's chaired the Democrats of Wisconsin only since July of 2019. Before that he was a senior advisor to MoveOn. January 2012, Wikler and a single collaborator launched a radio show and podcast, The Flaming Sword of Justice, but it didn't take off. In November 2013, he relaunched his show as The Good Fight, an hour-long weekly podcast and radio program (which MoveOn sponsors). According to its website, The Good Fight "brings you a mix of comedy, activism, and David versus Goliath battles told from the behind-the-slingshot point of view." 

Wikler also has a track record as organizer and money-raiser. In March 2007, he became Campaign Director for Avaaz, "the globe's largest and most powerful online activist network" (according to The Guardian). He helped grow the org to over ten million members. He ran campaigns on climate change, poverty, human rights, and also managed the technology and communication teams. 

And before Avaaz, he was the start-up producer for the short-lived talk radio Al Franken Show, and he helped write a couple of Franken's books. Served as press secretary for Sherrod Brown's U.S. Senate campaign and was the first editor-in-chief of Comedy 23/6, a comedy news website. 

His understanding and experience in mass media is obviously both extensive and desirable in a national party chair. Plus he's credited with keeping the Trump wave in Wisconsin from swamping down-ballot Dem candidates. (After Wikler won the Wisconsin party chair election in 2019, he dived into grassroots organizing, developed a field team of 13 regional organizers "to get volunteers out on doors.") Trump won Wisconsin this year under Wikler's leadership, though Democrat Senator Tammy Baldwin won reelection. Wikler's running on a platform of "It Could Have Been Worse" might not be a winner, but his emphasis on boots on the ground would be a good trait to have in a DNC Chair. Plus he sounded a lot like the sainted Howard Dean in his announcement:

"When the polls are within the margin of error, we win by the margin of effort," Wikler said in a video launching his campaign. "And what has made a difference in Wisconsin can make a difference everywhere. We need a nationwide permanent campaign, a 50-state strategy in every state and every territory across the United States."

Most recently, NYTimes columnist Michelle Goldberg called Wikler "the obvious candidate to rebuild a broken and demoralized Democratic Party."


The First 3 

Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL) chair Ken Martin. The longest serving chair in the 75-year history of the DFL. The Minnesota DFL has won every statewide election since Martin was elected chairman. Martin was only a senior at Eden Prairie High School when he joined Paul Wellstone’s campaign for U.S. Senate. Wellstone inspired Martin to pursue a political career dedicated to the principle that “we all do better, when we all do better.” According to Politico, Martin is the current front-runner for the job, considered "a safe pair of hands." Just what Democrats need: someone safe. Ugh.

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley. 48th Mayor of Baltimore, 1999 to 2007. The 61st Governor of Maryland, 2007 to 2015. Served as the 17th Commissioner of the Social Security Administration, 2023 to 2024. O'Malley is about as "establishment" as you can get. 

New York state Sen. James Skoufis. The youngest, 37, of all the announced candidates (at the moment). Currently representing the 42nd District of the New York State Senate since 2023. Skoufis previously represented the 39th District (2019-2022) prior to redistricting. Attractive for his youth, Skoufis may be waaaay too provencial and without national profile for this job.


Who might join the race?

Chuck Rocha

 

Chuck Rocha. A cowboy-hat-wearing Democratic strategist from Texas, Rocha has been teasing a run for DNC chair on social media. In 2020, he advised the presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders, and he founded a political action committee to turn out Latino voters. In an appearance on CNN on Nov. 20, Rocha called himself “the only senior national Democratic operative without a college degree” and said he wanted the party to return to representing “the common man.” His goal, he added, was to make Democrats “fun again.” (Source: Simon J. Levien)

Michael Blake. Blake is already a candidate for Mayor of New York City in a crowded race, but sez he might switch over to this race. A former New York State assemblyman, he lost a U.S. congressional race in 2020. Served as a party vice chair from 2017 to 2021. Obscure and a New Yawker too boot. No chance in hell.

Max Rose. Former Army officer who earned a Purple Heart in Afghanistan. Former U.S. representative from Staten Island, New York. Served one term, voted as a moderate. Failed twice to retake his Congressional seat. Nope. 

Mallory McMorrow. A rather glamorous Michigan state senator. She earned viral fame in 2022 when she gave a fiery senate floor speech denouncing the Republican treatment of the LGBTQ community as a “hollow, hateful scheme” after a colleague accused her in a fund-raising email of wanting to “groom and sexualize” children (see the video below). That speech earned her a speaking slot at the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where she was one of a number of officials to brandish an oversized prop book of Project 2025, the conservative policy playbook developed by Trump.

Pete Buttigieg. We couldn't hope for anyone more articulate, logical, calm. But he hasn't said he was interested.





POSTSCRIPT 

Very interesting and revealing taped interview with "frontrunner" Ken Martin of Minnesota, interviewed by Simon Rosenberg, The Hopium Chronicles. I was distracted by his hair. Looks like such an obvious toupee, and why should I care? I shouldn't. I'm a bad person.

Tuesday, December 03, 2024

The New Watauga CoCommish A House of Cards?

 

Last night, two new Republicans were appointed to fill the empty seats on the Watauga CoCommish created by Big Daddy Ralph Hise's gerrymandering local bill: Tim Hodges and Emily Greene. Tim Hodges lives in current Commish Dist. 4, so he's double-bunked with Ronnie Marsh, who was just elected in November. Emily Greene lives in current Commish Dist. 5, so she's double-bunked with Todd Castle who also just won in November. In other words, these two appointments could almost be considered "honorary," since their appointments can only last for two years, and neither Hodges nor Greene will run (we assume) a primary against the very people who appointed them last night.

Newly appointed County Attorney Nathan Miller tried to explain away the stupidity of provisions in the Hise restructuring bill, asserting to the packed house in the Commish Boardroom that the two appointments must come from the old commissioner districts formerly represented by Braxton Eggers and Todd Castle and that they also must belong to the same political party. In other words, "We get to run for election under the new Hise districts, but we get to appoint new commissioners under the old district map." Which is on its face absurd.

Whatever. The point remains that current Commish districts 1 and 2 have no representative on the board and districts 4 and 5 have two each. The voters of districts 1 and 2 have been egregiously harmed, and any one of them, or a group of them, would have standing to sue to bring down this house of cards.


Monday, December 02, 2024

The Braxton Eggers Era In Watauga Gets Worse

 

Nathan Miller, 
County Attorney to be


When Big Daddy Ralph Hise gerrymandered the Watauga County Commission, he simply vacated two office-holders in Commish Districts 1 and 2 while allowing new elections in Districts 3, 4, and 5. Those elections were won by lopsided Republican majorities, and now those three Republicans get to appoint the reps for Districts 1 and 2 tonight.

We have learned that the Republicans intend to appoint two more Republicans to the other two seats. Neither lives in the commissioner district they are being appointed to represent. District 1, which is largely downtown Boone and the campus of AppState, is majority Democrat. It gets as its county commissioner a Republican who doesn't live in Boone. District 2, which leans Democratic, gets a Republican who doesn't live in that district. Representative government?

It gets worse. The two new Republicans who will be appointed tonight are actually double-bunked with incumbents Ronnie Marsh and Todd Castle, respectively, in Districts 4 and 5. While Districts 1 and 2 will have no resident reps, Districts 4 and 5 will each have two. Among other things, this seems plain screwy.

Democrats, who up until 5 p.m. today, held a 3-2 majority on the County Commish, will now be shut out entirely. How is that fair? How is that not simply an abuse of power?


Sunday, December 01, 2024

Braxton Eggers Will Be the Next Chair of the Watauga County Commission

 

The Watauga Board of Commissioners will have a complete turnover of power on Monday, December 2nd, at its regular evening meeting, when returning Republican Commissioner Braxton Eggers will be formally elected chair of the board by the other returning Republican Todd Castle and newly elected Republican Ronnie Marsh.

The new Republican board will also be appointing Nathan Miller as county attorney, and they plan to pass a resolution giving Miller some eyebrow-raising powers of his own. Miller is well known to the authors of this blog for the lawsuit he initiated targeting the voting rights of AppState students (and see here), for the long-running harassment of elections expert and AppState professor Stella Anderson, and for exacting retribution against the town of Boone by unilaterally changing how sales tax revenues are distributed -- among other public and legal activities he engaged in while chair of the County Commission and then as a lawyer for the Watauga GOP. According to the board packet for Monday's commissioner meeting, the Republicans intend to pass a resolution granting Miller what looks like a free hand to act like a member plenipotentiary of the commission, with no guardrails.

The language in the resolution granting Miller a free hand:

The County Attorney is authorized to initiate and pursue legal action for the County on any matter, including but not limited to imminent domain, contractual breaches, declaratory action, and such other matters as the County Attorney deems advisable and in the best interests of the County, without need of further Resolution or Ordinance to be adopted by the Board of Commissioners....

"...and such other matters as the County Attorney deems advisable...." Whoa! From his recent history, we know that Nathan Miller deems a lot of stuff very advisable for his particular partisan disposition.

That's where we're starting the Braxton Eggers reign. Can't wait to see the additional chapters.