Daily Kos

Republican grassroots in a Buffalo Suburb

Sun Nov 13, 2005 at 08:26:59 AM PDT

A professor from the University of Buffalo ran for town supervisor (mayor) of Buffalo's biggest suburb, Amherst, and won, largely by eschewing his political party and adopting a grassroots approach. Here's the story:

Politics is local

Whatever the man's politics, I'm most impressed by the fact that his cerebral appeal to the voters worked. He also professed to be one of of them, a non-politician. Although Amherst is suburban, white and wealthy, it managed to perceive an Indian immigrant as "one of them" especially in relation to his politically connected white opponents. I mention this why? Well, I hope Democrats do not underestimate the public's suspicion of politicians next time around.

But back to my main point for writing this diary: Mohan's advertisements in the newspaper were lengthy, ponderous and yes, even, boring. But since they proscribed what he would do as supervisor in detail, they had great effect. Too often in this region of NY, we let the political machines do our thinking for us. Buffalo and environs is in fact operated by one enormous political machine, through which politicians switch parties simply to oppose the incumbent. Many are bought and paid for, seemingly, by each party's interest in patronage and bloated government. Even the unions are a problem here. Normally I'm as left as you can imagine but Buffalo is an interesting case. The city used to have 1 million residents. It's now down to 270,000, and yet our social services have not declined to track its population loss. The Republican Party is also involved in patronage hires. Our unions refuse to deal with the need for layoffs even at the expense of certain new burgeoning city needs (Medicare, Medicaid costs, our declining cultural arts which have always defined Buffalo as a city of music, theater, visual arts, and literature). The unions are even protecting health coverage for elected plastic surgery for city employees and their families, a fact recently unearthed in the local newspaper.

Along comes Mohan and he simply says government will become more accountable. That was his simple message. Our politicians are no longer serving the public. In Buffalo, it doesn't matter that the man is a Democrat, Republican, or a member of the Pirate Party. The message resonates. And it works mostly because it doesn't talk down to the voters with sly specially designed sales pitches which are long on slogans and short on detail.

Good for Mohan.

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Permalink | 5 comments

  •  I hope some Upstate Dems are listening (none / 0)

    because they're in districts where the Republicans are representing a lot of Kerry and Gore voters, and I guarantee you those Republicans aren't representing them, they're representing DeLay in Washington.

    Remember, Representatives are supposed to represent their districts first.

    "Our country right or wrong. When right, to be kept right; when wrong, to be put right" - Carl Schurz

    by RBH on Sun Nov 13, 2005 at 08:31:14 AM PDT

    •  Forget Upstate NY... (none / 0)

      ...I hope Dems are listening everywhere. It seems to me that the most effective way of taking back the House and the Senate is to run against DeLay and Company's record of cronyism, incompetence, corruption, and ideology over empiricism. The Rethugs aren't representing anyone other than their crony billionaires and Christofascists.
  •  My mother (none / 0)

    lives in Williamsville, which is the square mile largely surrounded by Amherst.

    Mohan did one other thing.  He campaigned extremely vigorously with lawn signs, sign that had his names and issues, going _all summer_ so that everyone knew who he was.

    Now, really large-scale lawn sign purchases are remarkably cheap, but you also need people who will put them up and take them down.

    From your description, his issues statements will serve as encouragement for thousands of libertarian candidates across America.

  •  Argh! (none / 0)

    It's University AT Buffalo.
    •  LOL, hilarious. (none / 0)

      Well, it should be OF Buffalo. That SUNY naming thing is a real problem.

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Sun Nov 13, 2005 at 04:56:29 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

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