Daily Kos

Tag: north carolina

Partisan ICE hack disses Dem Congressman

Sat Jul 26, 2008 at 12:23:46 PM PDT

This is, thankfully, a relatively rare story about a top Homeland Security official injecting himself into a Congressional race.

By dissing the Democratic incumbent, naturally

Jim Pendergraph is a former Mecklenburg County, N.C., sheriff who got a newly created job as executive director of state and local coordination for Immigration and Customs Enforcement late last year.

Pendergraph is a self-described "ultra-conservative Democrat" who is evidently proud to have voted for Republicans like the late, unlamented Jesse Helms and Sue Myrick, the wingnut who represents the Ninth Congressional District in North Carolina (Charlotte and environs).

Pendergraph is also ultra-conservative on immigration (why else would the Bushites create a job for him), and has taken a related, remarkable shot at Congressman David Price, a Democrat who represents the Triangle of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill.

Details, below.

His name: Harry Taylor. Her name: Sue Myrick. My request: A little help? :)

Fri Jul 25, 2008 at 10:26:58 AM PDT

Short form: I need $10 from 100 kossacks (or the equivalent) to help Harry Taylor send Sue Myrick into retirement from Congress.

While I will of course have links (and video!) to introduce Harry Taylor to you, most of this diary will not be about Harry, but rather his opponent, who I believe can raise just as much money on his behalf as I ever could.

So I am giving her that opportunity. :)

With the help of ActBlue, YouTube and a lot of wonderful video help from my fellow North Carolinians, I am here to help Harry Taylor introduce Sue Myrick to her retirement from Congress.

And you are invited to participate in any way you can to help turn another district in North Carolina blue in November. (Waves to Larry Kissell people who I will see tomorrow morning.)

Poll

I can give

21%3 votes
57%8 votes
0%0 votes
21%3 votes

| 14 votes | Vote | Results

Help me prove Stuart Rothenberg wrong

Fri Jul 25, 2008 at 07:08:59 AM PDT

I've met Stuart Rothenberg. He seems like a very nice man. However, like my opponent Robin Hayes, I think that maybe Mr. Rothenberg has been in Washington too long to understand that a people powered campaign isn't an urban legend.

Thus in response to Rothenberg's latest column, For House Races now, It's All A Question of Money, I say he doesn't get it. At all.

Kissell’s fundraising this time has been stunningly inadequate. He may still win, but not because of anything he has done in fundraising.

Obama Video Musical Tribute from Triangle, NC

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 11:43:05 AM PDT

Why do so many of us follow the news of the presidential campaign so closely? (I'm only asking) It's not like you have yet to make up your mind, is it?

Isn't there a better way to spend your time? (lol)

NN08 spurs North Carolina cinema outreach and action

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 10:58:48 AM PDT

The Screening Series at Netroots Nation was awesome.  Listening to the filmmakers and folks promoting new venues for participatory film watching was energizing, to say the least.

In the spirit of conference activism, I used a few moments in Austin to contact our local Obama for America office and set up a campaign event at Galaxy Cinema in Cary, North Carolina, where I'm marketing director.

"Senator Obama Goes to Africa"
Film, postfilm discussion, voter registration canvassing, and volunteer sign-up
Saturday, August 9, at noon
Galaxy Cinema in Cary

Kids in NC Get Thrown Under the Bus

Mon Jul 21, 2008 at 01:41:59 PM PDT

As has been reported the NC Senate's failure to pass anti-bullying legislation in tact despite having the votes is disappointing shows a disturbing and unacceptable lack of courage and compassion. They threw kids in the state of North Carolina under the bus when they had an opportunity to protect them.

I have communicated privately with many members of the NC House and the NC Senate regarding passage of the anti-bullying legislation. In doing so, I made clear to them that mine was a private correspondence written as a parent, not as a politician and not as someone who planned to publicize our discourse so at to subject them to outside pressures. I did so in order to give them an opportunity to round the votes required for passage of bill without feeling as if I were trying to shame or embarrass them publicly. And I did have continued private conversations with members of both houses, Democratic and Republican.

Now that the bill has failed to pass, I'm am not going to break my word to kiss and tell about those conversations. However, am going to comment on the failure to pass this legislation and go on record publicly with my thoughts. First, here is an excerpt of a personal story which I related to them.

Say what you mean, do what you say

Mon Jul 21, 2008 at 07:07:11 AM PDT

"Some men change their party for the sake of their principles; others their principles for the sake of their party." ~Winston Churchill

Three years ago today on July 21, 2005, the spokesperson of my opponent Robin Hayes told the Winston-Salem Journal,"Congressman Hayes is extremely pleased to create a fair and level playing field, but it still does not change the fact that CAFTA is not a good deal for 8th District businesses."

The week before on July 14, 2005, the Associated Press reported Hayes insisted he would vote against CAFTA: "I know there is no way I could vote for CAFTA." That same day in 2005, the Raleigh News and Observer reported Hayes said, "What does CAFTA sound like? NAFTA. It's not in the best interests of a core constituency I represent."

Despite recognizing in advance that the CAFTA deal was contrary to the interests of his constituents, Hayes broke his promise and supported the measure anyway. Hayes had then actually cast the deciding vote both in favor of the Central American Free Trade Agreement and Fast Track Trade Authority for President George W. Bush after saying he wouldn't support either of the trade deals.

Progressive Democrat Newsletter Issue 176

Sun Jul 20, 2008 at 02:35:43 PM PDT

Even Bush is sick of the Iraq fiasco...he has been mumbling about pulling out troops and about a "time horizon"...yes, "HORIZON," not a timeline, for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. Don't know about you, but I have never heard anyone talk about "time horizons" before. Makes me think of an event horizon around a black hole...which is an ominous comparison.

Remember, though, Bush's shifting to withdrawal is not by any choice of his. The Iraq government has told him in no uncertain terms that we have outlived our welcome and they do not want us there permanently.

Rasmussen North Carolina Poll:  45 M 42 O

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:48:24 AM PDT

Rasmussen has released a poll today for North Carolina showing the state is still very much in play.

Rasmussen 7/17/08 (6/12 numbers in parenthesis)

McCain  45 (45)
Obama   42 (43)

Rasmussen also then asked those still undecided which way they leaned, with leaners the numbers are

McCain 48
Obama  45

NC Rasmussen: McCain 48, Obama 45

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:39:07 AM PDT

It's more official than ever: the Tar Heel State is a legitimate battleground:

The race is still close between John McCain and Barack Obama in the traditionally red state of North Carolina. The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds McCain ahead 45% to 42% in the Tar Heel State. When "leaners" are included, McCain leads 48% to 45%.

This represents a statistically insignificant change from last poll, which had McCain up 2 points (note: Bush won the state in 2004 56-44).  Some interesting cross-tabs show room for growth for Obama as well:

Roadtrip Observations

Wed Jul 16, 2008 at 01:46:47 PM PDT

Having just returned from a roadtrip "home", I feel a need to share some observations between where I currently live, the suburbs of Research Triangle Park, NC, the city of Lansing, Michigan, where I grew up, and Myerstown, PA, where my sister currently lives.  Taken together, they make at least an interesting "slice" of America, if not a series of cautionary tales.

NC-11: GOP finds itself Mumpowerless

Wed Jul 16, 2008 at 08:20:27 AM PDT

At one point, the GOP was bursting with enthusiasm about gaining back their long-lost and well-deserved House majority, and high on their target list for this goal were seats like North Carolina's Republican-leaning 11th District, now represented by freshman Democrat Heath Shuler.

Except that their candidate has now suspended his campaign.

Republican Congressional candidate Carl Mumpower has suspended his campaign to unseat incumbent Heath Shuler, saying he’ll eliminate about 80 percent of formal campaigning until at least half of the Republican leaders in the 15 counties in the 11th Congressional District commit to core party principles.

"I’m not going to be doing any fundraising or advertising—there won’t be any active campaigning for the Republican Party," Mumpower said this morning. "I’ll put things on hold until I get party officials to commit to the principles and to the process of holding elected officials accountable."

"Core party principles".

And let no man be so churlish as to assert that the real reason Mumpower dropped out was because he had a lofty $906.90 cash-on-hand. That's nine hundred and six dollars, ninety cents.

Another GOP recruiting debacle.

Race tracker wiki: NC-11

Jesse Helms' Shameful Legacy Can't Be Whitewashed

Sun Jul 13, 2008 at 09:00:21 AM PDT

The urge to speak no ill of the dead is a powerful one.  And it was on full display this week as former Senator Jesse Helms was laid to rest.  

The media glossed over almost all of Helms' ugly history as the last unapologetically racist politician of the segregation era.  Largely ignored was how Helms stirred the pot of bigotry and hatred to win elections and further his political goals.  The people Helms hurt throughout his career deserve better.

More after the jump.

Progressive Democrat Newsletter Issue 175

Sat Jul 12, 2008 at 06:23:05 AM PDT

I hope everyone had a great 4th of July. Jacob saw his first real fireworks display and loved it at first. We were watching from the 12th floor of a building right on the waterfront, so it was spectacular. Unfortunately, he was coming down with a fever and by the end was pretty unhappy. He is fine again now.

This was a big week, both locally where my friend qualified for the ballot for NYC's Sept. 9th primary election, and nationally where Obama's surge continued even as the Democrats once again showed less spine than we would like them to. More below.

DSCC sandbagged Jim Neal and Steve Novick?

Fri Jul 11, 2008 at 01:33:42 PM PDT

In the North Carolina and Oregon Democratic US Senate primaries this year, two great progressive candidates ran for the nomination: Jim Neal (NC) and Steve Novick (OR).  The DSCC, who is not supposed to pick sides in a primary, appears to have secretly funded their preferred candidates anyway (Kay Hagan (NC) and Jeff Merkley (OR)).

If the DSCC leaders personally had a preference, that’s fine.  BUT IT IS NOT OK TO FUNNEL MONEY TO ONE CANDIDATE OVER ANOTHER IN A DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY!!!!  That's unfairly taking sides and deliberately influencing an election, and that is not what the Democratic Party is about.

Poll

Do you think the DSCC was justified in preferentially funding Kay Hagan and Jeff Merkley over Jim Neal and Steve Novick?

34%32 votes
65%61 votes

| 93 votes | Vote | Results

Jesse Helms and Our Other North Carolina

Wed Jul 09, 2008 at 09:54:18 PM PDT

As someone who grew up in North Carolina during the 80's and 90's, it is hard to find words to convey the role has Jesse Helms played in my worldview. One of the first memories I have of Helms is being told that he had said "vulgar and common" things about my grandfather, Thad Stem, a poet who wrote liberal columns for the Raleigh News & Observer at the same time Helms was a political commentator on a Raleigh television station.

Integrity: He quit his job, rather than lower the flag for Jesse Helms

Wed Jul 09, 2008 at 11:18:49 AM PDT

I've been fairly well appalled at the hagiography of Jesse Helms in the wake of his death.  The man was a racist and a homophobe.  

They're saying he was a "gentleman" - which is utterly wrong.  Would a gentleman have greeted Senator Carol Mosely-Braun (D-IL), the first black woman in the U.S. Senate, by entering the same elevator and literally whistling "Dixie" through the ride?

Which is why I'm so impressed with a man in North Carolina named L.F. Eason.  From the Raleigh News-Observer:

L.F. Eason III gave up the only job he'd ever had rather than lower a flag to honor former U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms.

Eason, a 29-year veteran of the state Department of Agriculture, instructed his staff at a small Raleigh lab not to fly the U.S. or North Carolina flags at half-staff Monday, as called for in a directive to all state agencies by Gov. Mike Easley.

When a superior ordered the lab to follow the directive, Eason decided to retire rather than pay tribute to Helms. After several hours' delay, one of Eason's employees hung the flags at half-staff.

Obama, race, and white privilege

Tue Jul 08, 2008 at 02:00:51 PM PDT

I work for a national nonprofit called Everyday Democracy, and we're busy these days. For more than 15 years, our organization - formerly known as the Study Circles Resource Center - has helped communities organize large-scale, inclusive dialogues about racism and then take action to create positive changes in the ways their communities address race. But this year is proving to be one of our most fruitful years ever, as news headlines (Barack Obama's success, the Jena 6, the Rev. Wright saga) and media events (like the recent PBS film Traces of the Trade) have more people than ever ready and willing to talk about race.

If this is an area of special interest to you, I invite you to check out our anti-racism resources at Everyday Democracy, as well as our DemocracySpace blog, which is becoming a hotbed of civil, nonpartisan discussion about issues of race. Read below the flip to learn about some recent thought-provoking posts, as well as an upcoming (July 23) online discussion of some subtle ways white privilege stands in the way of real racial progress in our country.


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