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Archive for the 'Election 2008' Category

Wanna a limo ride to the polls?

Here’s an interesting campaign strategy: Contra Costa Supervisor Federal Glover is offering free limo rides to the polls on Tuesday.

Two voters per ride minimum, presumably to cut down on the carbon footprint of the limousine.

Gee, turnout is supposed to be really low but do have to bribe people with fancy rides to get people to vote?

Posted on Thursday, May 29th, 2008
Under: 2008 June primary, Contra Costa County, Contra Costa politics, Election 2008 | 14 Comments »

Nunn responds to mailer criticisms

Contra Costa supervisor candidate Erik Nunn has reponded via email to my blog entry earlier today criticizing a mailer he funded that targets challenger and incumbent Supervisor Federal Glover.

Here’s what Nunn had to say and I have also included at the bottom my return email:

Lisa:

As a property owner and Section 8 landlord it’s Federal Glover’s responsibility to make sure bills are paid and if his tenants move out, he should obviously be aware of that and take appropriate action, which he has failed to do over and over, for seven years.

One lien, OK, two, fine, but seven and three are outstanding. Either Federal Glover thinks he doesn’t have to follow the same rules as other Section 8 landlords or he is uninformed and doesn’t care.

It sounds like Federal Glover is blaming his Section 8 tenants, the garbage company or the U.S. Postal service for not paying his bills, and they are his bills, he owns the property.

The fact that Federal Glover was alerted to these unpaid bills as a result of a campaign mailer is actually disturbing, especially considering how important of an issue Section 8 is to East County voters.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted on Thursday, May 29th, 2008
Under: 2008 June primary, Contra Costa County, Contra Costa politics, Election 2008 | 12 Comments »

False and misleading mailer targets Glover

An opponent-funded campaign mailer (see images below) targeting Supervisor Federal Glover of Pittsburg contains major misstatements and false impressions.

Erik Nunn of Oakley, one of five people running June 3 for the District 5 seat on the Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors, paid for the four-page glossy brochure.

The Contra Costa Times periodically examines campaign literature and informs voters of the facts.

Here’s a breakdown:

What it says: “Federal Glover makes thousands of dollars a month as a Section 8 landlord.”

Is it true? No.

Glover has tenants in one Oakland triplex unit who qualify for federal housing assistance. The rent on the unit is $1,600 a month. The tenants pay a portion of the monthly rent, usually between 20 to 30 percent, and the Alameda County Housing Authority uses federal funds to pay the difference.

In addition to the triplex, Glover owns three rental properties with addresses in Pittsburg, Sacramento and Elk Grove.

Read on to see the rest of the mailer and the explanations. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted on Thursday, May 29th, 2008
Under: 2008 June primary, Contra Costa County, Contra Costa politics, Election 2008 | 16 Comments »

McNerney to visit Mexico-California border

Rep. Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, will lead a two-day congressional trip to the border of California and Mexico on Sunday and Monday, where he will hear firsthand from federal border patrol agents about efforts to stem illegal border crossings and stop drug trafficking.

The visit will include briefs, his staff said, on various aspects of the border control operation along 66 miles of the border south of San Diego. He will tour several ports of entry, meet with agents and view specialty teams and equipment used to monitor and patrol the border.

“I’d like to hear what kind of trends they are sensing and if they have found any particularly effective strategies to combat illegal border crossings and drug running,” McNerney said in a prepared release.

McNerney will talk from the border with reporters on Monday morning during a call-in press conference.

As a Democrat seeking re-election in a Republican-leaning district, illegal immigration is a subject that will definitely come up during his campaign this year against his expected GOP challenger, former Stockton Assemblyman Dean Andal.

Immigration reform remains a hot button political issue across the nation but Republicans, Democrats and President George W. Bush have been unable to come to an agreement. They disagree on how to handle the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants already living in the country and the formation of a guest worker program that wouldn’t cripple industries that rely on migrants such as the picking of crops.

McNerney, who formed an agricultural advisory committee in his district, is a co-sponsor of a bill in Congress under consideration that creates a federally overseen program to permit immigrants to work in the U.S.agricultural industry for a temporary, specified period of time with a specific job, said McNerney spokesman Andy Stone.

Posted on Friday, January 11th, 2008
Under: Election 2008, congress, congressional district 11 | 3 Comments »

Will trade beard for cash

Nicholas GerberGOP congressional hopeful Nicholas Gerber says he is already listening to his constituents.

And they apparently prefer him clean-shaven. Gerber says folks are telling him to ditch the beard.

“Polls even show that voters prefer candidates without beards,” Gerber says.

But there’s no free shave for Republicans who can’t abide the sight of a 5 o’clock shadow. Gerber says he will lather up and remove that unsightly facial hair if Contra Costa’s Republican womens groups donate $100,000 to his campaign against incumbent Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Alamo.

Gerber told the San Ramon Valley Republican Women on Tuesday that he needs $1 million to run against Tauscher in 2008. (She has already raised nearly $500,000 as of Sept. 30.)

“If each of you writes a $35 check and you persuade 10 of your friends to write $35 checks and we do this in all the Republican women clubs, we will have raised $100,000,” Gerber said.

Gerber says he has contributed $100,000 of his own money and if the women pony up, that still leaves him $800,000 short. Well, not quite. As of Sept. 30, he reported $1,350 in contributions to the Federal Election Commission, so he’s $798,650 shy of his target.

At this rate, he’ll have to sell his beard quite a few times between now and November 2008.

But all is not lost. According to “Presidential Trivia” by Richard Lederer, from Abraham Lincoln to Benjamin Harrison, every U.S. president to have a beard has been a Republican.

Posted on Wednesday, November 28th, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | 3 Comments »

Bob Dole endorses Assembly candidate Lloyd

Judy Biviano LloydEndorsements don’t often get my attention; they’re usually predictable and ubiquitous.

But here’s one that popped into my e-mail box this morning that may interest you: Ex-GOP presidential nominee and former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole will serve as the honorary campaign chairman for Republican Assembly District 15 candidate Judy Biviano Lloyd.

Whether or not this means Dole will actually set foot in District 15, which stretches from Walnut Creek to Livermore, is an open question that may or may not matter given Dole’s stature as a conservative statesman. (Click here to see a map of the district.)

Lloyd has come under some criticism for relying too heavily on endorsements of people who don’t live in the district. She also doesn’t live in the district yet, although she has put her Pleasanton house on the market and plans to move.

On the other hand, Lloyd is in a fierce, five-way race for the GOP nomination in June 2008 and clearly intends to use every political arrow in her quiver to distinguish herself from her male challengers: Scott Kamena, Robert Rao, San Ramon Mayor Abram Wilson and Joe Rubay. And Lloyd’s ammunition now includes Dole, the man she worked for as a special assistant when he was the U.S. Senate Majority Leader.

Posted on Wednesday, November 14th, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | 3 Comments »

Alameda County registrar messes up

The Alameda County Registrar of Voters mistakenly sent letters to 234,000 permanent absentee registered Republicans, Democrats and members of other parties advising them that they had failed to select a qualified political party for the Feb. 5 presidential primary election.

The county meant to send the letter to about 60,000 voters permanent absentee voters registered as “decline to state” but a staffer sent the wrong mailing list to the out-of-state printing company.

In this climate of suspicion about the integrity of voting equipment and systems, hundreds of voters have deluged the registrar’s office with angry phone calls and complaints.

But no voter has been stripped of his or her party registration, nor has there been any nefarious activities on the part of any county employee, said Alameda County spokesman Guy Ashley.

“It was a mistake that we regret and we are doing everything we can to clear up the confusion,” Ashley said.

Next week, the election department will send out a follow-up letter of explanation to those who received the letter in error and it will send the original letter to the correct list of “decline to state” voters.

Why did the letter go out in the first place?

It was intended to let “decline to state” voters know that they cannot vote in the presidential primary for the candidates of registered parties except for the Democrats and the American Independents. In contrast, the California Republican Party restricts voting in its primary to members of its party.

This means that a “decline to state” permanent absentee voter may request a nonpartisan, Democratic or American Independent ballot for the Feb. 5 presidential primary. He or she may not ask for a Republican ballot.

But the letter did not mention the GOP or spell out the Republican Party’s rules. It simply said, “We are sending you this notice because you did not choose a qualified party when you registered to vote.”

“People are confused and angry,” said Ryan Hatcher, executive director of the Alameda County Republican Party. “We don’t think there was any voter fraud here. It was an honest mistake. But people are vigilant these days about the voting system and a lot of Republicans think this is a move against them.”

The wording of the letter also bolsters critics of the GOP’s decision to exclude “decline to state” voters who say the party’s policy will push the growing numbers of independent voters into the arms of the Democratic Party.

Hatcher plans to meet with the county election staff this afternoon to discuss the wording in both the apology letter and the notice “decline to state” voters.

For a link to today’s story on the issue in the Oakland Tribune, click here.

Posted on Tuesday, October 30th, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | No Comments »

Contra Costa Democrats to host debate party

Democrats will gather at A.J.’s Sports Pub in Concord on Oct. 30 to watch the televised Democratic presidential candidate debate.

MSNBC will air the debate, which will take place from 6-9 p.m. PST from Drexel University in Philadelphia. Click here for a link to the network’s debate page.

I’m planning to attend and cover the local reaction to the candidates’ views and performance. I’ll file a blog entry after the speech and a story for publication on Nov. 1. (It will go too late to meet our print deadlines Tuesday night.)

If it seems too early to think about the presidential options, keep in mind that even though California’s presidential primary election is on Feb. 5, its residents will start voting on their choices for the GOP and Democratic nominees on Jan. 7.

That’s when the counties will send out the ballots for permanent absentee voters, or those who choose to vote by mail every election. In some counties, half of its voters vote by mail and roughly half of those ballots are returned to the registrars’ offices in the first three weeks. The remaining ballots usually arrive in the final week as voters wait to see if any new information crops up that might influence their decisions.

A.J.’s Sports Pub is located at 4633 Clayton Road in Concord. Click here to link to Google maps.

Posted on Thursday, October 25th, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | No Comments »

February voter guide available on-line

The Secretary of State has posted the draft February 5, 2008, “Presidential Primary Election
Official Voter Information Guide” on-line for public review. Click here to link to the political party statements and information for propositions 91, 92 and 93.

Posted on Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | No Comments »

First Senate race debate set for Friday

The first debate between the two presumed candidates for state Senate District 7 is set for Friday at the Lamorinda Democratic Club’s monthly evening meeting.

Former Assemblyman Joe Canciamilla of Pittsburg and Assemblyman Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, will take questions from club members starting about 8 p.m. at the Orinda Community Church, 10 Irwin Way in Orinda.

The men are likely senate candidates but the outcome of a term limits measure on the February 2008 presidential ballot could dramatically alter the political landscape in this race and many others.

Here’s why: The February measure would allow lawmakers to serve up to 12 years in either the Senate or the Assembly, a shift from the current law which restricts officeholders to eight years in the Senate and six in the Assembly. More relevant to the upcoming election, however, is a special provision in the proposed law that would allow incumbents who would have termed out under the old law to remain in office.

The incumbent senator in District 7 is Tom Torlakson of Antioch. If voters change the law, he says he will run for re-election. If law remains intact, Torlakson will run for his former Assembly seat now held by his friend, DeSaulnier. (Torlakson only served two terms in Assembly District 11 prior to running for the Senate, leaving him one term.)

Torlakson’s move to run for the Assembly forces DeSaulnier to seek the Senate seat in order to remain in the Legislature. The new law would also permit Canciamilla to run for his old Assembly seat, where he would most likely have to run against DeSaulnier.

Regardless of whether DeSaulnier and Canciamilla face off in the Senate or the Assembly primary, Friday night’s debate at the Lamorinda Democratic Club serves as the unofficial kick-off the contest between the two men.

It’s also an important event because this race will be very likely be decided in the June primary. Democrats vastly outnumber Republicans in this district and it’s unlikely that a member of the GOP could win here.

The members of the Lamorinda Democratic Party are generally liberal in their politics. Led by progressive advocate Terry Leach, former director of the Rockridge Institute, the well-attended club opposes the Iraq War and favors universal health care. The environment could feel friendlier to DeSaulnier, who is the more liberal of the two candidates, as Canciamilla is widely known for his involvement in the “Mod Squad” in the Legislature, a coalition of moderate lawmakers of both parties.

The debate is open to the public. Admission is $5 and free for students. For more details, call
925-210-7337 or visit www.lamorindademoclub.com.

Posted on Monday, October 15th, 2007
Under: Election 2008 | No Comments »