It's not a nuclear war, yet. But it is the "nuclear option" deployed by Mitch McConnell and the republican Senate. This means taking away the 60 % majority needed to confirm a Supreme Court justice. I'm surprised at how easy it was. Two votes, and that's it. Hello Neil Gorsuch. Goodbye Constitution. Or so it looks.
Hang in there Notorious RBG!
Being a Democrat is tough these days. Not only because of these kinds of machinations by the Republicans and worse by the Orange One. But the divisiveness among my own Party is embarrassing. Time to get over the last election. Time stop petty bickering and time to strategize. For reals. It's only a little more than a year until June 2018 and the midterm primaries when we have a crack at the entire House of Representatives. Can we not fight about how pure someone is? And just try to get some more Democrats elected? Or will we always be the circular firing squad that can't shoot straight.
At least the Republicans seem to be even crazier, but a scary dangerous kind of crazy. One that might go nuclear for real.
Cooking up a campaign? Need a new recipe? You've come to the right place! The Campaign Cookbook offers tips to season your campaign, make the dough rise, and be prepared for when it gets hot in the electoral kitchen. Recipes tried and true, and innovative too, presented by GreenDog Campaigns. www.greendogcampaigns.com
Thursday, April 6, 2017
Monday, February 20, 2017
Thinking of Running? Start Local
Anyone thinking of running for a State or National office (Assembly, State Senate, Congress) needs to think what seats will likely be opening up in their district in the next few years. If you've never run for office before, starting with a higher office can be daunting unless you've got some experience under your belt. So start small. Think of Barbara Boxer, first a local school board activist, then a County Supervisor, next on to Congress and then U.S. Senator. She got some chops under her belt on the local level before making that big leap.
And along the way came the skills and the contacts necessary for running a major campaign. Of course, we all know stories of people who come out of nowhere and have a big upset in a congressional or Senate race. But those are the exceptions rather than the rule. A corrupt incumbent, a very disgruntled voter base and, more often than not, a candidate who's already developed connections and savvy that can be translated into a poltiical campaign.
Think Al Franken, well known comedian and on air personality, won with no political experience for U.S. Senate; or Ro Khanna in California, young entrepreneur beat a long time Democratic incumbent in the Primary, on his second try. (And don't get me started on Donald Trump!)
For most of us, the road is longer and harder. Got an opening on a local school board or City Council? Think about going for that one. If you don't win the first time, consider running again. You will have gained a base and made contacts that will help you the next time, if they believe you are serious, hardworking and represent their values.
Consider applying for a position on a Commission or Board in your town or County. There are often openings and these help pave the way for a political run. Again, it's all about making connections, as well as having knowledge and passion, to get the job done.
And here's the best tip of all, start early. For whatever seat you are running for, get started well before the filing deadline by gathering friends and colleagues to help and make monetary pledges to the campaign. Ask others who've run for their advice. Check financial filing reports (which should all be online with your local elections office or the Secretary of State), to see how much people typically spend running for the seat you are interested in.
Do your homework, whether it's getting up to speed on the issues (attending lots of meets of the board you want to join is a must!), raising money, and just knowing how the political game is played, will put you in a good position to make a strong showing in your race.
And because you must eat, here's a brain food recipe to keep you sharp:
And along the way came the skills and the contacts necessary for running a major campaign. Of course, we all know stories of people who come out of nowhere and have a big upset in a congressional or Senate race. But those are the exceptions rather than the rule. A corrupt incumbent, a very disgruntled voter base and, more often than not, a candidate who's already developed connections and savvy that can be translated into a poltiical campaign.
Think Al Franken, well known comedian and on air personality, won with no political experience for U.S. Senate; or Ro Khanna in California, young entrepreneur beat a long time Democratic incumbent in the Primary, on his second try. (And don't get me started on Donald Trump!)
For most of us, the road is longer and harder. Got an opening on a local school board or City Council? Think about going for that one. If you don't win the first time, consider running again. You will have gained a base and made contacts that will help you the next time, if they believe you are serious, hardworking and represent their values.
Consider applying for a position on a Commission or Board in your town or County. There are often openings and these help pave the way for a political run. Again, it's all about making connections, as well as having knowledge and passion, to get the job done.
And here's the best tip of all, start early. For whatever seat you are running for, get started well before the filing deadline by gathering friends and colleagues to help and make monetary pledges to the campaign. Ask others who've run for their advice. Check financial filing reports (which should all be online with your local elections office or the Secretary of State), to see how much people typically spend running for the seat you are interested in.
Do your homework, whether it's getting up to speed on the issues (attending lots of meets of the board you want to join is a must!), raising money, and just knowing how the political game is played, will put you in a good position to make a strong showing in your race.
And because you must eat, here's a brain food recipe to keep you sharp:
Spinach, Goat Cheese & Chorizo Omelette
Recipe type: Breakfast
Cuisine: Omelette
Serves: 2
Ingredients
- 4 ounces chorizo sausage
- ½ Tbsp butter
- 4 eggs
- 1 Tbsp water
- 2 ounces crumbled fresh goat cheese
- 2 cups baby spinach leaves
- sliced avocado (optional)
- ¼ cup salsa verde (optional)
Instructions
- Remove chorizo from the casing and fry in a medium saute pan until fully cooked.
- Meanwhile beat the eggs and water in a small bowl.*
- Take the chorizo out of the pan with a slotted spoon and set aside. Wipe the pan of the remaining grease with a clean paper towel.
- Melt the butter in the same pan over low heat. Add the beaten eggs to the pan, then put the Chorizo, spinach, and crumbled goat cheese on half the egg mixture. Cook on low heat for 3 minutes until slightly firm, then fold the empty side over the side with the filling on it. Cover the pan with foil or a pot cover and leave on low heat for another few minutes until the eggs are cooked through. If your bottom is browning too quickly, turn the stove off and leave the pan covered for up to 10 minutes and the residual heat should "bake" it until the center is fully cooked.
- Serve with avocado slices and salsa verde. So good you won't even miss the toast or hash browns!
Friday, January 27, 2017
Poem for These Times
And now for a little culture:
When I Hear Trump
When I Hear Trump
When Trump says “carnage” I think “martial law”
When he says “millions of illegal votes cast” I think “mass
deportations”
When his spokesperson says “alternative facts” I think
“propaganda, lies, Nazi Germany”
When he says “My crowd is bigger than your crowd” I think
“schoolyard bully”
When he cuts off funding for abortions for poor women I
think coat hangers, back alleys, barefoot and pregnant.
When he says “Let’s build the wall” I hear Ronald Reagan
saying “Tear down that wall!”
When he says build that pipeline I see bodies lined up end
to end, border to border.
When I hear people say “Let’s give him a chance” I think of
frogs slowly simmering in rising water, until the time of their devouring
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Women (and men) marching together
Call it a rally against the Orange scourge, or against tyranny, or misogyny or racism or for women's rights, human rights, the environment. Everyone had their own cause, and they all go together.
I wore my resistance button from 1969.
The omega for the ohm, the symbol of electrical resistance that symbolized the Resistance in those days, to the War in Vietnam, to the war at home. I did not wear a pink pussy hat. But there were plenty of those in evidence.
Here are some pictures. Were you there?
Share.
What to eat on a march in the rain: energy bars, chocolate with berries, nuts, and apres march? A quick stop at the pub for some pinot noir and potstickers. Yum!
I wore my resistance button from 1969.
The omega for the ohm, the symbol of electrical resistance that symbolized the Resistance in those days, to the War in Vietnam, to the war at home. I did not wear a pink pussy hat. But there were plenty of those in evidence.
Here are some pictures. Were you there?
Our Marin Women's PAC group |
What to eat on a march in the rain: energy bars, chocolate with berries, nuts, and apres march? A quick stop at the pub for some pinot noir and potstickers. Yum!
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Find an Issue and Run on it
Campaigns are about issues. Not about personalities. At least most of them. Even this nasty last Presidential race. Issues. Mr. Orange hair with the foul mouth and grabby little hands won because he tapped into the core of middle America's pain. What he does with it is another question altogether.
Even on the local level, candidates and their consultants need to look for the issues that differentiate them from the competition and that tap into what the people care about. One of my first campaigns was won on the single issue of whether or not to bring a new pipeline from the Russian River in Sonoma County to Marin County (California) to increase the water supply.
My candidate was an environmentalist, a fervent one.He wanted to protect the fish upstream, whose habitat would be damaged if not decimated by removing more water. Other environmentalists agreed with him. But there's more to it than that.
Building the pipeline would be costly. Our job was to take those realities - pipeline kills fish and costs taxpayers money, and craft them into a message that both environmentalists and more conservative taxpayers could get behind.
Our opponent had all the endorsements of the establishment. She had the money. She had TV ads. She was for the pipeline.
Logically, she would have been able to leverage that support into votes and win handily. But our client had a solution to the problem, need for more water, that didn't cost a dime and didn't kill a fish - Conservation.
It turned out to be an easy sell, once people heard the message, and realized it did not involve any great sacrifice, just a few adjustments to water usage on a personal level, and stopping waste on an institutional level. Getting this message out took both good mail, attractive, dynamic (if small) postcards sent to a carefully selected universe of frequent voters, and old fashioned shoe leather and telephone calls.
The week before the election our team was calling into a very conservative part of the district. I was talking to older Republican men, when I had a revelation. I turned to the candidate and said "We're going to win!"
We won. Big. Because we had the right issue, the right message and the right delivery. How you say what you have to say and who you say it to are key.
A lesson our Democratic Party needs to learn before the next midterm election if we want to take back the Congress.
Even on the local level, candidates and their consultants need to look for the issues that differentiate them from the competition and that tap into what the people care about. One of my first campaigns was won on the single issue of whether or not to bring a new pipeline from the Russian River in Sonoma County to Marin County (California) to increase the water supply.
My candidate was an environmentalist, a fervent one.He wanted to protect the fish upstream, whose habitat would be damaged if not decimated by removing more water. Other environmentalists agreed with him. But there's more to it than that.
Building the pipeline would be costly. Our job was to take those realities - pipeline kills fish and costs taxpayers money, and craft them into a message that both environmentalists and more conservative taxpayers could get behind.
Our opponent had all the endorsements of the establishment. She had the money. She had TV ads. She was for the pipeline.
Logically, she would have been able to leverage that support into votes and win handily. But our client had a solution to the problem, need for more water, that didn't cost a dime and didn't kill a fish - Conservation.
It turned out to be an easy sell, once people heard the message, and realized it did not involve any great sacrifice, just a few adjustments to water usage on a personal level, and stopping waste on an institutional level. Getting this message out took both good mail, attractive, dynamic (if small) postcards sent to a carefully selected universe of frequent voters, and old fashioned shoe leather and telephone calls.
The week before the election our team was calling into a very conservative part of the district. I was talking to older Republican men, when I had a revelation. I turned to the candidate and said "We're going to win!"
We won. Big. Because we had the right issue, the right message and the right delivery. How you say what you have to say and who you say it to are key.
A lesson our Democratic Party needs to learn before the next midterm election if we want to take back the Congress.
Thursday, January 5, 2017
Planning to run for office in November? Start now!
It's never too soon to start planning for that City Council, College Board or special district campaign coming up in November. You'll want to get endorsements and donation pledges from community members and thought leaders soon so when you file you'll hit the ground running, with a head start on the competition. Are there big issues coming up? Write an op-ed or two in the local paper on the subject. Differentiate yourself from the incumbent or other opinions that will be represented. And face it, you feel differently, or you wouldn't be running. If everything is hunky dory, just let the incumbents do their job.
If there's an empty seat, get an idea who the early competition is likely to be. They may start coming out of the woodwork as the August filing deadline nears. Make sure your friends and family are on board early. No surprises for the spouse! And assess how much you can personally contribute to the campaign effort in terms of money and time. If you invest in yourself, others will be more likely to take your seriously and invest as well. Can you take time off work as the crucial fall time for walking precincts, making phone calls, filling out questionnaires and attending coffees and debates approaches? Plan for it now.
Look at past election results for how the vote tends to break down, and check the past online filings for how much others have spent in your race. Are there people who gave to others who you know and can approach for your campaign? Do it now. All they can say is no, right? And you'll have some good practice "asks" under your belt when fundraising gets hot and heavy.
Find out who the local consultants are who have done races like yours and interview a few. Lock up the one you feel most comfortable with early. Getting advice now from a seasoned professional is invaluable. Good luck with your campaign! You are well on the way to a successful race!
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Alligators in charge of the swamp - Life in the time of Trump
Welcome to our swamp, citizens! We have it fully stocked with gators, just waiting to thrash their tails and sharpen their teeth. This swamp is a particularly nice one, with a whole new crew of critters moving in. Here are some of the Swamp Monster's Cabinet picks:
Secretary of Corporations, formerly Department of State – Rex Tillerson, former head of Exxon Mobil, who was overheard speaking into a cell phone as he boarded the Trump Express for Russia, "I'm checking on my holdings there, Vlad. Chill the vodka."
Secretary of Public Lands Mining and Drilling, formerly the
Dept. of the Interior - Ryan
Zinke, former Navy Seal, who wants to keep those contracts in Donald Trump’s,
eh, the public’s, hands.
Department of Nuclear Proliferation, formerly Department of Energy – Rick
Perry, former Governor of Texas who has stated he wants to get rid of this
department altogether. “Energy smenergy” said Perry. “We should sell those
nukes to the highest bidder, now.”
Department of Worker Management, formerly Department of Labor – Andrew Puzder,
fast food CEO. Says Mr. Puzder, “This is a great opportunity to
put a stop to higher wages and those pesky unions, so the great unwashed can
enjoy a cheap Hardee’s roast beef sandwich, while I get richer, and can make
more donations to Trump, as God meant things to be.”
NBA, formerly SBA – Linda McMahon of World
Wrestling Entertainment, who said, “What do you mean it’s not about basketball?
Who wants to watch small businesses on TV?”
Department of Fossil Fuels, formerly
Environmental Protection Agency – Scott Pruitt – former Oklahoma Attorney General,
who says, “Drill baby drill, get every last drop out of the ground. Climate
change is just a hoax by those tree hugging, polar bear loving, organic foods
eating liberals. Be a man and eat smog.”
Show me the Money Department, formerly Department of the Treasury – Steve
Mnuchin former Goldman Sachs executive, who
loves him some Hollywood movies. “Get your hands off my cash,” said Mnuchin,
when asked how he’d advise the government in matters of money.
Department of Privatize This, formerly
Health and Human Services – Tom Price, leader of the opposition to the
Affordable care Act, which he called “a commie plot to let poor sick people off
the hook, and impoverish insurance companies. That’s just wrong,” when asked
his opinion of Obama’s signature health policy.
Department of Charter This! formerly
Department of education – Betsy DeVoss, charter school advocate who says kids
appreciate education more when they have to pay for it, instead of us paying
for those damn teachers unions always wanting better pay at the expense of administrators.
Secretary of Homelessness and Blight,
formerly Secretary of Housing and Urban Development – Ben Carson, neurosurgeon
and former candidate for President. Mr.
Carson said, “I think Section 8 is a part of the brain we can just cut out
because it doesn’t fit anymore. It’s not brain surgery. Poor people just cost money.
If you can’t afford a house, live in a box; that's why God made cardboard.”
CIA director, formerly CIA Director –
Mike Pompeo, former Army officer, who said, “Benghazi, Benghazi, Benghazi!”
Border Wall Department, formerly Attorney
General – Jeff sessions. “Get them wetbacks out of here!” said Mr. Sessions, wielding
a Confederate saber which he rattled meaningfully.
Court Jestor, formerly Chief of Staff –
Rience Priebus, GOP stooge in charge.
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