This article is from the New York Times and is a wonderful example of why McCain can’t be president!
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thesocialchameleon is making a cheesecake and playing WoW
Come on Obama…we need you
TajLV is campaigning flat out till Nov. 4
When the Clark County Democratic Convention reconvened on April 12, I was upgraded from alternate to delegate. I’m not particularly happy with the tone and manner of the Obama and Clinton campaigns as they’ve headed into the home stretch. I’ll still work to get either one of the Democratic candidates elected in the fall, but when it came time to cast my vote, I chose the third option: undecided. Let’s quickly sort out who our candidate is so we can stop slinging mud at ourselves and take on the real threat: John McCain and the GOP.
TajLV is campaigning flat out till Nov. 4
Pretty cool music video based on Barack Obama’s speeches: http://www.youtube.com/v/2fZHou18Cdk
nes311~2008-Obama-YES WE CAN! is sleeping!
I do not trust her or Bill to do what is right for the United States.
TajLV is campaigning flat out till Nov. 4
We blew it. The Clark County Democratic Convention on Saturday 2/23 was a complete mess. (News article here.) The room the organizers had booked was far too small to hold all the 10,000 delegates, alternates and guests who showed up. The fire marshall threatened to shut the whole thing down. In an attempt to avoid that, the county officials tried to conduct early voting to move delegates in/out of the main convention hall, which had a capacity of only 5,000. Fights broke out. Metro police and additional security guards were called in. The DNC threatened to reduce Nevada’s delegates to the national convention if the process was found to be unfair. The convention chair, Bill Stanley (pictured above), called for a recess and to reconvene for voting at a later date. The motion was strongly voted down by the delegates, who had given up work and other obligations and traveled long distances, enduring long waits in line, to attend.
So the party leaders came up with a divide and conquer strategy. They split the attendees into two separate caucuses for Obama and Clinton, whose candidate representatives convinced their delegates to vote for a recess. The argument: some of their delegates were being left out of the voting process and they wanted every vote to count. The strategy worked. In a voice vote, the second motion to suspend the convention carried and everyone went home. No state delegates elected. No platform ratified. No business accomplished. It was a waste of time, money and goodwill.
My role during all this was as a staff volunteer. I worked in registration with the Credentials Committee from 7am till 10am. I collected first alignment ballots from the convention floor with the Voting Committee between 10:30am and 1pm. When it became clear that the whole convention was going south, I just went back to the hall to listen to the remaining speeches and talk to other volunteers and delegates. The only really positive aspect was Al Franken’s keynote address, which was funny, to the point, and a bit inspiring. Too bad he’s not running for office here.
By 4pm, most of the delegates had left, but I stayed around to talk to party officials and get their take on what had happened and what might happen next. The troubling fact is that they misplanned and booked a facility far too small. They didn’t recruit enough volunteers, either. Looks like we will be having a do-over in April sometime.
This fiasco could have been avoided if representatives of the Clinton and Obama camps had been in on the planning process from the very start, but the county party leaders tried to do it all themselves. Many are saying they should be held responsible for the chaos and step down or else be impeached. That would be a shame, since many of them are really good leaders, otherwise. But there are some bad eggs, too, and a complete house cleaning might do us good. As I’ve written before, a flood of change is coming. We can either ride it or get swallowed in its wake. On Saturday, the local organization virtually drowned. There is a lot of work ahead to set this right, and I intend to be part of the solution.
TajLV is campaigning flat out till Nov. 4
This afternoon I attended a meeting of the Clark County Democratic Party’s Platform Committee in preparation for our County Convention coming up next Saturday. In three hours of deliberation, we only managed to finalize the wording for the planks on one of eight sections of the county platform. An additional session is being held on Tuesday evening, but before that I’m attending a training for convention volunteers on Monday and will need to read through all the proposed planks on the other seven sections. On Wednesday, there’s a rally for the congressional candidate I’m working for. On Thursday, there’s a meeting of the Credentials Committee that I’m supposed to attend. Then, registration begins late Friday afternoon. On Saturday, I’ll be at the convention all day, followed by a reception for Senator Reid. Whew!
I think most people believe Democracy is all about one person, one vote. In reality, it’s about the person putting in the most hours having the greatest effect. It’s all well and good to talk about “change,” but unless someone steps up to volunteer and do the work, inertia wins.
TajLV is campaigning flat out till Nov. 4
Today I received all the necessary information and forms to register for our county’s Democratic Party Convention on 2/23. I’ve been recommended as a member of the Credentials Committee for Clark County, and I’ve volunteered to help at registration. We are expecting nearly 8,000 precinct delegates, alternates and guests to attend, followed by a gala tribute to Senator Harry Reid (D-NV).
The main purpose of the county conventions is to elect delegates to the State Convention in Reno in April, and also to review resolutions to recommend as part of the state platform. This is an important step in the process of getting delegates to the National Convention in Denver in August, and toward electing a Democrat to the presidency in November. It’s a slow, complicated process, but very inclusive. Lots of politicking ahead.





