This isn’t quite a “Meet your legislature” quality post, but here’s what I’m hearing about some legislative Republicans:
David Deyoe: Dumb.
Polly Granzow: Drunk.
Pat Grassley: Likes to hit on 17-year-old pages. Also dumb.
This isn’t quite a “Meet your legislature” quality post, but here’s what I’m hearing about some legislative Republicans:
David Deyoe: Dumb.
Polly Granzow: Drunk.
Pat Grassley: Likes to hit on 17-year-old pages. Also dumb.
The Washingtonian has an interesting article written by Kim Eisler about his old friend Jack Abramoff, with a lot of interesting inside information and quotes from the convicted felon:
Of Iowa senator Charles Grassley, chair of the Senate Finance committee, who had been critical of Abramoff, Jack said: “You can say you have a good source that Grassley not only carried my water on the Bear Council issue [a fight over tribal recognition in Grassley’s state] and received a ton of contributions in return, but he also did one of the biggest asks from Abramoff ever, taking Tyco out of the tax bill. . . . They would have been hit with a $4-billion tax bill.”
Last year, the Sioux City Journal reported that Senator “Aw Shucks” and the rest of the Republican delegation were tied in well with Abramoff:
According to Federal Elections Commission documents, Grassley received a $1,000 campaign contribution from Abramoff in March 2003.
Abramoff also gave $5,000 to the Hawkeye PAC, which Grassley uses to raise money for other House and Senate candidates.
The Meskwaki, Choctaw and Saginaw Chippewa tribes gave $13,000. Another $3,500 came from co-workers at Abramoff’s lobbying firm.
Recipients of Hawkeye PAC funds included Reps. Nussle, Tom Latham and Steve King, who got $10,000 each in 2004.
Des Moines lawyer Stan Thompson, who unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Leonard Boswell, D-Iowa, for a second time in 2004, received $15,000 from the PAC.
Latham gave the $1000 he received directly from Abramoff to charity (whatever that means), but Grassley stubbornly refused.
Do you think the Iowa press will follow up on this story? I don’t either. But it would be nice if some embarrassment in the press and the prospect of riding out the rest of his career in the minority would encourage Grassley to hang it up in 2010. I would love to see him hop on his lawn movers and head west, back home, into the sunset.
Continue Reading...With a new General Assembly comes new legislators and I thought I’d take the opportunity to post once a week about some of our new incoming leaders. In particular, I thought I’d focus on the new “youth movement” that the Iowa House Speaker Pro Tempore Polly Bukta talked about during the opening of the 2007 session:
Continue Reading...Today, we celebrate a new youth movement in the House with a record number of eight members who are 30 and under. Think of the energy and fresh ideas these folks are bringing to our assembly!
Today we truly celebrate the fact that the People’s House looks more and more like the PEOPLE we represent.
Today, the Hotline blog ponders rematches for House races in 2008, particularly GOP incumbents who got the boot that want to get back in.
It’s probably an appropriate time to start ponder 2008 House races in Iowa. Since IA-01 and IA-02 are pretty solid, I’ll put my “races to watch” on IA-03 and IA-04.
Continue Reading...As far as I can tell – Bleeding Heartland is off to a great start. A big thank you goes out to Drew & Chris and anyone else who contributed to getting this off the ground.
Many of the ‘national’ community blogs (i.e. Daily Kos, MyDD…etc) have thriving “meta” discussions and collections of link resources.
In the interest of facilitating informed blogging about the Iowa Legislature I thought I would post some helpful links to resources available for bloggers…
Continue Reading...I went to the Hillary Clinton rally at East High School in Des Moines today. By the time I got there an hour and a half early it was already filling up. The media section was massive, taking up an entire wall and a half of the gymnasium. I would estimate about 30-40 news cameras showed up.
The approach to the event was a bit different than what I had expected. Hillary’s current slogan is “Let the Conversation Begin,” which is more or less what she ended up doing with the audience for an hour and a half. Leonard Boswell helped give the introduction and Hillary took the stage in the center of the gym, with audience surrounding her 360 degrees.
I was pleased to see that she didn’t really stump too much. Basically she gave a ten-minute introduction and then opened the session up to Q & A. Because her answers were fairly long, there were only about eight or so questions, but there was a pretty wide variety of issues. A decent number were on education issues. She got a veterans-issue question and a question on foster care. Basically she came out in support of more consistent rules on foster-family care from state-to-state.
Hillary also got hit up by a high school student on global warming, which she managed to spin into an ethanol endorsement.
Noticeably absent was any questioning on Iraq. I would have thought that one of the most visible issues of the decade would have had at least one solid question, but it didn’t happen.
I’ve been pretty lukewarm towards Hillary for a while, but she did seem rather personable and decent at this rally. That helped my perception of her. I still don’t think I am 100% behind her on most things, and as it stands now I won’t likely caucus for her, but this rally did help my perception of her a great deal.
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s biggest challenge in Iowa may be the Iraq War and her reputation as a hawk. She tries to dodge the single most important issue in the 2008 race; she knows it is her Achilles heel. When asked at the IDP Central Committee meeting this morning, she almost apologized for her 2002 vote authorizing Bush to use force against Iraq. Almost. She said she takes “responsibility” for the vote and said she would not have voted that way had she’d known what she does now. But she added that there are no “do-overs” in life, and we need to discuss what to do now.
It was just dumb luck that I got to have a personal, 5-minute conversation with Hillary. I just happened to be by the coffee machine as she was exiting the building, and I struck up a conversation over her hawkish reputation as she shook my hand. To tell you the truth, I was surprised at how personable she is in conversation, unhurried and very at ease (I think JoDee Winterhof is not yet confident enough with Hillary to pull her away from worthless conversations with party activists like me).
Continue Reading...During the early stages of the caucuses we see a lot of names of various “nice catch” staffers, but unless you are even more of an IDP molester than me you probably don’t know what they look like. So imagine my surprise when Tom Vilsack put his January staff meeting online! My connection at the hotel here is too slow for me to actually watch it, but I was able to see that Jesse Harris apparently lost his razor. Let’s see if this sucker works:
I found it on Myspace – it apparently still isn’t on the Vilsack website. I dig the semi-exclusive content, especially from my top 8 buddy Vilsack. I also definitely dig giving the staff some face time. I hope other campaigns follow suit!
UPDATE: It’s now on his website, too. I guess there aren’t any perks to being top eightsies. 🙁
At the beginning of the year, a lot of prominent liberal bloggers and activists noted the passing of Maria Leavey, an amazing Democratic force who helped push our message in DC and throughout Democratic and media institutions. You can read her obituary here in the Washington Post. Matt Stoller offers a fantastic memorial post here at MyDD.
In all of Maria’s work, there is a unique Iowa connection which, probably because of my age, I never truly got to know about or understand until now. Kay Henderson over at her Radio Iowa blog tells us that for almost ten years, Leavey worked for Senator Tom Harkin. She truly was a champion for liberal causes, just like Harkin still is today. I hope that DC and the Democratic establishment never forget what kind of a force Leavey was and I know that DC will likely feel quite empty without her presence.
Hotline dishes some info about the Edwards campaign.
The highlights:
Continue Reading...Advisers Nick Baldick and Caroline McCauly and other Edwards staffers may have more overall NH experience than any other team.
Jennifer O’Malley, who was Edwards’s IA field director in ’03-’04, will serve as his state director this cycle. O’Malley is engaged to Patrick Dillon, who is slated to become Gov. Chet Culver’s chief of staff. Dillon was Culver’s manager and worked on Edwards’s ’03-’04 field and press staffs in IA.
In South Carolina, John Moylan is running the show again, and ex-party executive director Lachlan McIntosh is recruiting field, political and communication staff. Edwards’s communications team is in fighting shape.
Finally, money. We can’t say for sure, because nobody who knows will tell us, but aside from a little bit of cut-in from Sen. Joe Biden’s courtship of the trial bar, the signals emanating from Edwards’s universe suggest he’s on track to beat expectations in the first quarter.
When candidates are attacked unfairly, it makes me much, much more supportive of them. By the end of the 2004 campaign Dean was like a god to me, thanks to all the ridiculous smears peddled by the other campaigns and usually repeated verbatim by the media. This time around, it looks like Obama is heading down that track.
In addition to the factually wrong smear from the previous post here, Obama is getting attacked for not being black enough (because he hasn’t suffered the drawbacks of slavery, having instead benefited from his father’s privileged life as a Kenyan goat farmer). Or for apparently not being black at all. Or for changing names and combining characters in his first book, after he said he was doing exactly that in the introduction to said book.
The main thrusts of these articles are all insulting, but it’s the tone of the last two and the throwaway lines that bother me the most. One example:
And then there’s his support for ethanol, which, strangely enough, comes mainly from corn-rich Iowa — site of the first presidential caucus, if I’m not mistaken.
Or it could be that he’s from Illinois, which is 2nd in overall corn production in the country. These people don’t know a damn thing about the guy and still feel qualified to attack him. Well fuck em, it only makes me like him more.
Continue Reading...IowaPolitics.com has the press release from the Clinton campaign.
In addition to her work for Senator Harkin and other campaigns in Iowa, Winterhof served as the first Political Director of America Coming Together (ACT) during the 2004 election cycle, executing the largest progressive voter mobilization in history. She will take a leave as a principal at Grassroots Solutions, a firm that specializes in grassroots advocacy, political field consulting, training, and targeting.
Before that, Winterhof was the National Project Director for The White House Project, a non-partisan public education campaign working to see women at the highest levels of leadership in the country and served in the political operation of EMILY’s List. Additionally, she served as a political appointee in the Clinton-Gore administration at the National Women’s Business Council.
Here’s a story (not really, it’s total trash) hopefully everyone will forget before too long. Apparently, someone in “somebody’s” campaign is spreading a lie that Barack Obama was at one point a Muslim.
Here are a few points to think about.
1) Barack Obama has always been a Christian.
2) Who cares?
Continue Reading...Apparently the problems with the Republican Party of Iowa will be solved by reimbursing mileage at a higher rate and giving the central committee members expense accounts. I can only suspect that this is reverse psychology aimed at the Democrats, because the Republicans can’t really be that myopic… can they?
House Democrats in the Iowa House have approved a minimum wage increase. The bill, House File 1, raises Iowa’s minimum wage by $2.10 per hour and will be the first increase in nearly a decade.
Continue Reading...The Boston Globe says Kerry will not run again in 2008.
Continue Reading...As you can see, there is now a calendar on the left side of the page. If anyone officially from the campaigns wants to get in touch with me about being able to put events up on it, it would make my life a lot easier. 🙂
In response to this: Clinton actually did buy ads in Iowa – check out Political Forecast right now. This site just doesn’t have any ads. Crazy, I know. There isn’t like a blanket policy against advertisements, I just haven’t set any up yet. I can eat a $15/month fee from soapblox though, and I don’t want to mess up the aesthetic of the site. 🙂
He took that picture to bed with him every night? Who approved that line?
This is pretty much the steroids/Mars part of the state of the union, where Bush brings up a bunch of shit that no one cares about. Seriously, Baby Einstein? It’s also kind of sad that they could only get a benchwarmer for their little immigration blah blah.