Why Michelle Rhee and Adrian Fenty Lost (Diane Ravitch)
september 2010 by Taryn
In other contests, the pro-charter lobby took a beating in Democratic primaries in New York City. There, the pro-charter group Democrats for Education Reform (DFER) targeted three African-American state legislators for defeat because they questioned the expansion of charters in their communities. DFER raised huge sums for the challengers (Google "DFER Watch"). The highest-profile race was in Harlem, which has more charters than any other neighborhood in the city. Hedge-fund managers and other friends of DFER poured more than $100,000 into the campaign to defeat Bill Perkins, who gained their enmity by seeking public audits of charters. The New York Times, the New York Post, and the New York Daily News ran numerous articles and editorials vilifying Perkins and endorsing his opponent, Basil Smikle. Smikle was supported by New York Gov. David Paterson and Mayor Michael Bloomberg. On Sept. 14, the three state senators opposed by DFER were re-elected by large margins. DFER's main enemy, Bill Perkins, collected 76 percent of the vote. The media referred to the re-election of these state senators as victories for the teachers' union, denying the possibility that black voters exercise personal agency when they cast their ballots.
new_york_city
election
journalism
DC
race
ed_reform_movement
september 2010 by Taryn
Follow-up on the Citizens United case BY GLENN GREENWALD
january 2010 by Taryn
[w/ links = full discussion]
supreme_court
election
politics
lobby
january 2010 by Taryn
What the Supreme Court got right BY GLENN GREENWALD
january 2010 by Taryn
There are several dubious aspects of the majority's opinion (principally its decision to invalidate the entire campaign finance scheme rather than exercising "judicial restraint" through a narrower holding). Beyond that, I believe that corporate influence over our political process is easily one of the top sicknesses afflicting our political culture. But there are also very real First Amendment interests implicated by laws which bar entities from spending money to express political viewpoints [...] while this decision will make things marginally worse, I can't imagine how it could worsen fundamentally. All of the hand-wringing sounds to me like someone expressing serious worry that a new law in North Korea will make the country more tyrannical. There's not much room for our corporatist political system to get more corporatist. Does anyone believe that the ability of corporations to influence our political process was meaningfully limited before yesterday's issuance of this ruling? [...] It's the smaller non-profit advocacy groups whose political speech tends to be most burdened by these laws. Campaign finance laws are a bit like gun control statutes: actual criminals continue to possess large stockpiles of weapons, but law-abiding citizens are disarmed [...] Meaningful public financing of campaigns would far more effectively achieve the ostensible objectives of campaign finance restrictions without any of the dangers or constitutional infirmities.
supreme_court
election
politics
lobby
january 2010 by Taryn
Juan Cole's Top Ten Worst Things about the Bush Decade: The Rise of the New Oligarchs
december 2009 by Taryn
Here are my picks for the top ten worst things about the wretched period, which, however, will continue to follow us until the economy is re-regulated, anti-trust concerns again pursued, a new, tweaked fairness doctrine is implemented, and we return to a more normal distribution of wealth (surely a quarter of the privately held wealth is enough for the one percent?) It isn't about which party is in power; parties can always be bought. It is about how broadly shared resources are in a society. Egalitarianism is unworkable, but over-concentration of wealth is also impractical. The latter produced a lot of our problems in the past decade, and as long as such massive inequality persists, our politics will be lopsided. (10) Stagnating worker wages and the emergence of a new monied aristocracy (9) Health and food insecurity increased for ordinary Americans (8) The environment became more polluted (7) The imperial presidency was ensconced in ways it will be difficult to pare back (6) The Katrina flood and the destruction of much of historic African-American New Orleans (5) The Bush administration's post-2002 mishandling of Afghanistan (4) The Iraq War (3) The great $12 trillion Bank Robbery, in which unscrupulous bankers and financiers were deregulated (2) The September 11 attacks on New York and Washington (1) The constitutional coup of 2000, in which Bush was declared the winner of an election he had lost
election
war
regulation
bank_failure
climate_crisis
food
hurricane_katrina
health_care
inequality
december 2009 by Taryn
The Devil Is in the Digits: Evidence That Iran's Election Was Rigged - washingtonpost.com
june 2009 by Taryn
evidence that the numbers released by Iran's Ministry of the Interior were manipulated
iran
election
statistics
poll
june 2009 by Taryn
Lessig at Google: "Change Congress"
march 2009 by Taryn
http://change-congress.org/ al gore @ 37:00 - "democracy crisis" Q&A 42:00
copyright
law
politics
lobby
election
government
wealth
trust
reform
regulation
silicon_valley
united_states
history
video
al_gore
march 2009 by Taryn
Obama and Religious Voters | Sarah Posner
november 2008 by Taryn
The results of this historic election repudiate narrowly crafted outreach to voters based on their perceived religious preferences. They disprove the idea that voters are comforted by hearing a candidate or his surrogate explain how his policy positions line up with the Bible. They show that Christians across the country have different answers to the question of What Would Jesus Do. And they prove that whether a presidential candidate aligns with a voter's religious viewpoint should be answered by the voter herself -- not by grandstanding mega-church pastors or surrogates with political agendas of their own.
politics
religion
election
2008
BHO
november 2008 by Taryn
President Map - Election Results 2008 - The New York Times
november 2008 by Taryn
click a state, then click "voting shifts"
election
2008
map
november 2008 by Taryn
An answer to Proposition 8: repealing DOMA - Glenn Greenwald - Salon.com
november 2008 by Taryn
The most potent ingredient making Tuesday's election bittersweet is the apparent passage of Proposition 8 in California. It's one thing for a state to decide in advance not to allow same-sex marriages. It's another thing entirely to watch a state strip a targeted group of citizens of the already vested right to marry.
civil_rights
california
election
2008
november 2008 by Taryn
The Silence of Lambs
september 2008 by Taryn
on the bailout of Fannie and Freddie
united_states
economy
election
debt
china
wall_street
mortgage
opinion
bank_failure
september 2008 by Taryn
Jeffrey Zeldman Presents : Tracking Elections From the Ground Up
september 2008 by Taryn
note zeldman's critique, the ubiquity of beta-type launches
election
design
poll
data_visualization
data
september 2008 by Taryn
Taking On Poverty and Inequality
august 2008 by Taryn
sobering numbers - note stupid stupid commentary
poverty
united_states
children
economy
election
katrina_vandenheuvel
inequality
august 2008 by Taryn
Denver Daily - Nader visits, brings celeb friends
august 2008 by Taryn
JELLO BIAFRA. that is all.
election
2008
august 2008 by Taryn
Clinton: It is time to take back the country we love - CNN.com
august 2008 by Taryn
it's long past time for the Hillary bashers to STFU. Between this and the concession speech, she played this campaign perfectly. Obama owes her a tremendous debt, and the creepily fanatical Obama pod people ought to concede that they are the impediment to party cohesiveness - that's you American Prospect. Bunch of windbags.
speech
hillary
election
democrat
women
slavery
new_york
religion
politics
nationalism
august 2008 by Taryn
The Choice - George Packer
february 2008 by Taryn
To Clinton, the Presidency is more about achieving goals than about transforming society.
candidate
democrat
election
hillary
women
february 2008 by Taryn
The New Yorker: Party Talk (Run Al, Run!)
february 2007 by Taryn
Gore’s critiques of the Administration’s rush to war in Iraq and of the deceptions used to justify it were early, brave, and correct. On the issue of climate change, of course, he has exercised visionary leadership.
politics
candidate
2008
election
february 2007 by Taryn
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