Tag Massachusetts politics

Warren For Senate

Vanity Fair has a profile of Elizabeth Warren in its November issue that is more about the machinations behind the CFPB nomination brouhaha than it is about her individually or about the landscape here in Massachusetts as she gets her campaign underway. If you haven’t heard much about that particular battle, it is definitely worth reading, because it’s a good exploration of power politics in Washington.

Naked Capitalism’s Yves Smith has publicly opined that the whole Senate campaign is a bit of a payoff from the Obama Administration to keep Warren from turning against them and that it’s a mistake on her part to run — even if she wins, says Smith, she is all but powerless as a freshman Senator.

This Daily Beast article is frank about the difficulties female candidates have had making in-roads into the old-boy network of Democratic elected officials in Massachusetts. There are plenty of women in Massachusetts politics, but because this state has a high profile for candidates with national ambitions, the old guard plays hardball — only four women have ever represented Massachusetts in Congress.

It’s very encouraging to see that she came out of the gate already tied in polls with Scott Brown. Even the primary election isn’t until next September, and though her primary opponents are already considered DOA, that was the same position Martha Coakley was in at the same point. Coakley sailed through the primary and then got blind-sided by Brown. Brown doesn’t have the same stealth element he had last year, but time is definitely on his side.

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That Sound You Hear Is America Going Over The Cliff

I really don’t know what is more discouraging: that the Evil Racist Morons are going to win big tomorrow, or that the only alternative to them is a bunch of spineless incompetents who are only marginally less evil.

I have to tell you that I am seriously contemplating not voting tomorrow. My sitting Congressman, John Tierney, whose wife was just convicted of tax fraud, has a comfortable 2-1 lead over the Birther nutbag who is his Republican opponent. I have expressed my opposition to Tierney in the past for his support of things like TARP and the PATRIOT Act. I don’t want to vote for him, he doesn’t need my vote to win, there’s no opposition except a Koch-Sucker, and so that’s one wasted vote if I cast it.

The governor’s race in Massachusetts has been laughably bad. The incumbent Democratic governor is a complete joke. He got off to a piss-poor start by drawing attention to himself for spending a ton of money to redecorate his office after his inauguration, then he got caught making calls in behalf of his former employer, a corrupt mortgage firm. Otherwise, he’s done next to nothing except look like a deer in the headlights with each passing month’s unemployment and budget cut news. The Republican doesn’t seem to be a Koch-Sucker, per se, but he is one of those Republican guys who is a little too cozy sliding back and forth between the public sector (he’s the guy who oversaw the finances on the Big Dig) and the private sector (his last gig was running a major health insurance firm), and seems to excel at lining his own pockets and little else. Even the independent is nothing but a Democratic machine guy who has little to offer and absolutely no chance of picking up any more than 10% of the vote. The Green Party candidate is a woman who is more or less the Harold Stassen of Massachusetts politics and has just about as much likelihood of getting elected. Again, a completely wasted vote, no matter who gets it.

My state rep is a career Democrat who has been in the State House far too long but is too conservative for me to even consider voting for. He’s running against a guy who is on the local school board, who may or may not be a Koch-Sucker, but I ain’t willing to find out.

And I suspect that these scenarios are truer to what is happening across America than the high-profile races that get all the attention in the media: really lame Democratic candidates versus a crop of potentially volatile nutjob Republicans (or else the usual slimeball Republicans), and the really small group of fired-up nutjob Tea Party people can propel their candidates, because there are too many races where NOBODY is a good choice.

The problem is in the aggregate: nobody minds spending a penny on something, but if a few million people all give you a penny, pretty soon you’ve got a lot of money. The entire business model of the Internet is predicated on this very idea, and it works. So the American public is like all those people who bought iFart apps for their iPhones, paid 99 cents for a five-minute chuckle, and turned a bunch of lame-ass “developers” into instant millionaires for SELLING FART NOISES. Next thing you know, every dipshit who can learn how to fart into a microphone and digitize it is trying to cash in, and one of the most revolutionary technology products of the last decade is reduced to being a very expensive whoopie cushion. And that is exactly the state of American politics: offensive-gas-producing lamebrains cashing in on a public too distracted to notice or care that they’re trashing the place.

At least after you’ve gotten your fill of iFarting you can remove the app from your iPhone and pretend it was never there, but all these Koch-Suckers are going to be in place for a minimum of two years, and some of them are here to stay for a long, long, LOOOOOOOONG time. The problem with choosing the Evil Racist Moron Party is that they are already committed to making things worse for the foreseeable future. The problem with choosing the Spineless Incompetent Party is that they can’t do anything at all, for better or for worse. So, while you really wanted your iPhone to do all those cool things like on the TV commercials, you’re stuck with an uninstallable iFart app that forces you to upgrade to iFart 2.0 whether you want to or not, and the new version has found a way to digitize SMELL. But unless you jailbreak your iPhone, you can never get anything better, because Apple is so deeply invested in the status quo.

What worries me is that even though Election Day is Tuesday, on Wednesday the campaign for the 2012 elections will begin promptly at 7:00 a.m. with the morning shows, and the Democrats are going to have learned from the Republicans that you can scrape the bottom of a really deep barrel and still find candidates most Americans will vote for. And that’s exactly what we’re going to get.

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I’d Loan Him My Barf Bag, But I’m Gonna Need It Myself

There will be far too much written and said about yesterday’s election in Massachusetts, 99% of which will not be worth the time or trouble to pay any attention to. So I don’t think I’m going to add my own bloviating, but I will share this clip from Monday’s “The Daily Show” wherein Jon Stewart manages to say the 1% that IS worth paying attention to:

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Mass Backwards
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Health Care Crisis

I’ll also share a quote I saw elsewhere today. An unnamed Massachusetts Democratic Party figure is quoted as saying:

Better Scott Brown for two years than Martha Coakley for a lifetime

That’s probably more indicative of the reality here in Massachusetts than anything anyone in the media (except Jon, of course) has to offer.

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Either Way We’re Screwed

Mercifully, there are less than 24 hours to go before the special election between Martha Coakley and Scott Brown. Between the robocalls and the TV commercials, it’s reached the point that I am totally turned off to both candidates and really don’t want either of them to win. And, quite frankly, neither of them deserve to win: Coakley has proven that she does not have what it takes to be a national-level politician by blowing what should have been a no-brainer election, and Brown is an empty suit who got lucky to be able to cash in on the anti-Obama vibe at exactly the right moment. Neither of them could carry Ted Kennedy’s bags let alone succeed him in the Senate.

Back in December, as we wound up the primaries, I said that I thought Coakley would turn out to be a weak candidate, easily targeted by the Republicans, except I was looking down the road at the seat’s general election. Who would have believed she wouldn’t even be able to seal the deal on this? She ran a stealth campaign in the primary, but was lucky that her opposition was so divided among three candidates. Not so lucky when it was whittled down to one guy who had nothing to lose by blowing all his cash early on TV spots. Whether it’s a case of her campaign thinking they didn’t have to do any work, or a case of the candidate herself not really being up to the challenge, they’ve blown this fair and square.

A win by Brown tomorrow won’t really change much here in Massachusetts. Don’t expect to see a surge of Republican candidates sweeping the well-entrenched Democrats of the House delegation or the state legislature. The Democratic governor is toast anyway, and Massachusetts does have a tendency to elect Republican governors despite the Democratic legislature. Brown himself is not terribly substantial; I wouldn’t expect him to hold up well against a better Democratic candidate when the seat comes up, even if the GOP gave him all the money in the world, and you can be damn well sure that the Democrats won’t let someone like Martha Coakley on the ticket again.

If Coakley does manage to pull a rabbit out of a hat tomorrow and win, she goes into the Senate already wounded at home. No doubt she stands ready to be a good soldier for Harry Reid, but with such a stunning lack of support among the most liberal constituency in the country, she won’t hold the line on anything tough. And she won’t survive into a full term if she doesn’t radically alter her style as a candidate. If she has come this close to defeat at the hands of a total nobody, imagine the drubbing she would get if the Republicans came up with a serious contender.

I’ll hold my nose and vote for Coakley tomorrow, but frankly I am disappointed by the entire turn of events of this process. Obviously, a lot of other Massachusetts voters are, too, which is why nobody should be surprised to learn on Wednesday morning that Scott Brown is the new junior senator.

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Sounds Like A Republican Scheme To Me

Yesterday I posted about “None Of The Above” being the leading choice among Republican candidates for President.

Today, the Boston Globe reports that the Massachusetts legislature is considering a bill that would make “None Of The Above” a valid ballot option in state elections.

I know Massachusetts Republicans are a pretty desperate crowd, but this is just frosting on the cake!

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Stick A Fork In Him

devalpatrick.jpg

Jeebus, that didn’t take long. Deval Patrick hasn’t even been governor for two months, and he’s already a complete and utter joke. First it was the Cadillac SUV, then the drapes, then giving his wife a secretary on the state payroll and now he’s in Dutch for making an ill-advised phone call trying to score a loan for a company he used to serve on the board of.

What a political embarrassment this guy is. Politicians are always a bit on the self-aggrandizing side, to be sure, and if you look around it’s not hard to see plenty of pols who have secured themselves, their families, and their assorted followers all manner of personal perks and luxuries. It is part of the game we play with our elected officials — we overlook some petty (and sometimes not-so-petty) self-enrichment as long as they give the appearance of working for some useful purpose and occasionally pass the spoils on down to us once in a while. In fact, people seem to prefer a degree of embellishing — anyone old enough to remember when Mike Dukakis was governor will recall that he was ridiculed for riding the T to work and mowing his own lawn. But people cannot bear a politician who sets out to gild his own lily before he does anything to merit it.

What’s all the more disappointing, though, is that this guy pulled off one of the most unlikely outsider campaigns in Massachusetts political history and carried the mantle of being “not like the rest of them” right through the election. That means quite a lot in a state like this, where the Democratic party is so thoroughly entrenched at every level of power in government that most of the regular politicians are simply content to wait for their “turn” for the top of the pyramid.

At least a machine pol would have learned a few lessons about public humility and discretion. Even non-stop self-promoters like Bill Galvin know when to shut up and keep quiet about certain things. And Galvin was smart enough to back out of the governor’s race early in the face of the groundswell of support Patrick was able to muster, figuring that he would be better off not going up against such anti-incumbent sentiment.

What makes Patrick look especially greedy and stupid through all of this is that everybody has fairly fresh memories of Republican Jane Swift doing the exact same sort of bonehead things during her worthless occupation of “the corner office”. Her desire to pluck the big shiny ring of executive privilege cost her entire political career in the end, left to be an asterisk in the history books. Luckily, as far as Jane Swift goes, she was only temporary. This guy is just starting a full term and has already turned himself into a complete laughingstock.

I really wanted this guy to be different. To be the one who gave the Democrats a new direction and the chance to reclaim some semblance of a legitimate platform from which they could restore the devastation that the Republicans have wreaked on American government and free society. Instead, he’s managed to prove that the allure of the perks held greater appeal for him than any real agenda for governing, putting him squarely in the same league as generations of worthless political hacks.

Somebody give me a recall petition to sign.

Comments:
Clearly Mass needs to have a governor’s employment manual all ready for first day reading on the desk.
Posted by Karan [URL] on 03/08/07

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