Category Archives: Politics

The States of North Georgia and South Georgia

What if we split the state in half, roughly along the Fall Line?

I wonder what the impact would be on our politics and demographics. 60+ northern counties becoming their own state, 90+ southern counties becoming their own. 

What would the capital of South Georgia be? Savannah? Tifton? Would it be even more agriculturally-dependent than Georgia is right now? 

And what would the impact on Georgia Democrats be when they are split between these two states? Most of the Democratic base is concentrated in Metro Atlanta, but African-American voters who straddle both sides or live even further south of the Fall Line give more geographic breadth to the Democrats outside of the most urbanized areas. So many of these rural Democratic counties in “South Georgia”, especially in Southwest Georgia and the Savannah area, are Black Belt counties where the ancestors of their current African-American residents once toiled the soil as slaves and sharecroppers. “North Georgia”, by comparison, didn’t have as much rich soil to attract plantation owners to such an extent, especially not in Appalachian 

But at the same time, perhaps it would wean the DPG further away from its historic legacy as a party dependent on the agricultural sector for votes, and center the party as a pro-industry, pro-economic diversification party.

Vox: House Democrats don’t need a leader, they need someone to represent them on TV

I’d even push this further: a shadow cabinet or speakers’ bureau of House members as critics of portfolios based on the presidential cabinet and cabinet-level positions. They don’t have to be House Dem leadership or committee chairs, just as long as they are the go-to spokespersons for the House Dems.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, for example, could be the caucus critic for either Labor or the EPA. Seth Moulton could be the caucus critic for Transportation. Adam Schiff could be the critic on either Finance or Intelligence. Ro Khanna could be the critic on Commerce and the FCC. 

And why not include Democratic senators? Bernie Sanders could be the caucus critic on Health and Human Services. 

I think it’s time that Democrats introduced a tradition of shadow cabinets to American politics.

African-Americans Leading State Legislatures

With the upcoming upgrade of Andrea Stewart-Cousins from Minority Leader to Majority Leader in the New York State Senate, New York will become the second state after Nevada to have African-Americans leading both houses of their state legislature at the same time. She will serve at the same time as Carl Heastie, who currently serves as Speaker of the New York State Assembly. 

Nevada’s Legislature is currently led by Senate Majority Leader Aaron Ford and Assembly Speaker Jason Frierson. Ford will vacate his seat when he is inaugurated as the next Attorney-General of Nevada. 

The first time African-Americans led both houses of a state legislature was when Peter Groff led the Colorado Senate in 2008-2009, and Terrance Carroll subsequently served as Speaker of the Colorado House from 2009-2011. 

To date, since Reconstruction, 8 states have had African-Americans lead either one of their chambers.

Campaign Democrats & Party Democrats

Campaign Democrats are not the same as Party Democrats, at least in Georgia. 

These are usually completely different people. The Campaign Democrats are the (paid or unpaid) door-knockers, canvassers and regional staff during election year. They put a strong material, physical investment in their desire to get candidates elected. They are the idealists who want to get involved whether or not their candidate(s) get elected. 

Often, the campaign Democrats want to get involved in the steering of the party in the off-year, and are rudely surprised by how terrible the Party Democrats are at their job. 

The Party Democrats are the ones who are supposed to organize the county/district/state galas, raise money, organize meetings, and have a working knowledge of Robert’s Rules of Order. They usually screw things up despite their best intentions, miss meetings, hold their events rather late, and are rather rude and defensive when they are called out on their crap. But they are the grand old patricians of the party (or the hires of the patricians) who may or may not have paid their dues at some point within the last 40 years.

Party Democrats ignore how dilapidated the party structure is, and won’t ever change the bylaws until the bylaws’ antiquity and poor design bite them in the ass. 

tl;dr:

Love most of our Democratic candidates and our campaigners. 

Hate this party, though. 😤😡🙄

How Far We’ve Swung

The Hill: The political pendulum is swinging back from conservative control in so many ways

Last time Nancy Pelosi took office as Speaker of the House in 2007, it was in the last Congress of George W. Bush’s Republican presidency. She came in on a wave election, gaining the Senate and the House after a long exile of Democrats from the Speaker’s seat dating back from 1994. She would hold the seat for a short four years, losing it in 2010 during Barack Obama’s first midterm. 

This time, Nancy Pelosi has done something that Democrats haven’t done since 1930: flip the House and take the Speakership in an opposing President’s first midterm. Within the same period, Republicans have done this 3 times: 1946, 1994 and 2010. The latter two happened during the post-Civil Rights era described in this article. 

Because this is such a rare event, Pelosi is now garnering comparisons to other Speakers of the House who used their bully pulpit to rhetorically oppose the White House within the last century: Democrats like Tip O’Neill, Republicans like Newt Gingrich and John Boehner. But Pelosi will take office in an era closer to the hyper-partisanship of the latter two GOP speakers, and will have the chance to hew herself closer to or distinguish herself from O’Neill, who managed to find ways to work with Reagan and his Republican Senate. By comparison, Gingrich and Boehner fought desperate knife-fights with their Democratic presidents to make them one-term presidents. 

She may have to find a way to use all of those three examples, but her prior experience in the Speakership – with a weakened President on his way out as well as a Senate in her party’s grasp – will be less useful. She has a creepy President who values loyalty, uses his opponents to shield himself from scrutiny, and abuses his authority flagrantly. Can she milk this President, or will she have to get into a knife fight for the next two or more years?

That may be a good measure of how intense the swing away from this party era’s conservatism may be.

You don’t work together from a position of allowing yourself to be walked over. Al Franken didn’t let himself be walked over in the 2008 Senate race in Minnesota, and he fought for every vote until he won by 225 votes over Norm Coleman.

At this point, I’d have less respect for Abrams, Gillum and Nelson if they walked away from this fight, if they allowed themselves to give up on the vote count. Sinema is sticking to her guns in Arizona, and now she’s ahead of McSally. 

Republicans understand that the goal is to win by any means necessary and govern by strength, and I respect that belief enough to duplicate it. Is it petty? Is it bitter? So what. It’s also smart. 

#CountEveryVote

The Taiwanese Debate on Marriage Equality

Taiwan News: Live-stream debate on marriage equality referendum commenced Nov. 4

If you’re interested in ballot initiatives and their impact on civil rights, there is another referendum on the ballot in Taiwan on November 24. There will be at least 4-5 competing questions regarding LGBT rights, 3 of which will deal with whether or not to legalize same-sex marriage or partnerships, and 2 on whether or not to legalize LGBT-inclusive education in Taiwanese schools. 

This could be as big as #Prop8 in 2008, as one-on-one debates on same-sex marriage have been live-streamed to Taiwanese audiences. One in particular, a debate on Nov. 4 on #Question14 involving a pro-equality member of the Taiwanese Parliament (or “Legislative Yuan”) vs. an anti-marriage equality professor, drew praise from online commenters to the MP for his use of evidence and charts to prove that same-sex marriage does not correlate to declining birthrates. 

All of this only became necessary because the DPP government of Tsai Ing-Wen dragged their feet after Taiwan’s High Court ruled in 2017 that same-sex marriage should be legalized by parliament or automatically within the next two years (despite the DPP campaigning on a platform to legalize marriage equality), and the religious right took advantage of a new referendum law to put anti-LGBT questions on the national ballot during Taiwan’s midterms. LGBT activists put their own competing questions on the ballot before the deadline. 

Washington Post Suggests Stacey Abrams Take Consolation Prize of U.S. House Speaker Instead

This is a novel and grandiose idea, but it comes from the same “Pelosi is old and unpopular so chuck her out” narrative that ignores what just happened on Tuesday and that no one is currently challenging Pelosi for the speakership, or Hoyer for Majority Leader, or Clyburn for Majority Whip. In spite of the “move fast and break things” ideology of the White House, seniority and experience still matter in Congress, and the younger, more hardcore or more ambitious Dems are jockeying for Caucus Chair and Assistant Leader. 

Also, it ignores the fact that governorships and control of power in the states is and has long been just as important as what happens at the federal level. The governors hold a crucial bit of power over redistricting of Congress. Don’t dole out the consolation prize while the counting is still going on in Georgia and several other states. 

But I’m really surprised that this article mentions nothing of Stacey Abrams‘ big role as House Minority Leader in the General Assembly. Nowhere in this article! If you’re going to talk about why Stacey should be the next speaker of the U.S. House, how are you not going to mention her own state-level experience equivalent to Nancy Pelosi’s experience???

Some Notes on Black Women in the 116th Congress

Lucy McBath for Congress in CD-06 will be the first black woman to represent Georgia in the House since Cynthia McKinney last held CD-04 and turned it over in 2007 to current incumbent Hank Johnson. She will also be only the third black woman to represent Georgia in the House, after Denise Majette and McKinney. 

Also, Maxine Waters of California will likely be the first woman and first African-American to chair the House Financial Services Committee. 

Some history: Yvonne Braithwaite Burke (who currently serves on the board of Amtrak) was the first black woman to chair a congressional committee, twice chairing the Select Committee on the House Beauty Shop in the 94th and 95th Congresses. The other black women to chair House committees were both in the 110th: Juanita Millender-McDonald, who chaired the House Administration Committee, and Stephanie Tubbs Jones, who chaired the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct (now known as the Ethics Committee). 

So #AuntieMaxine will be the first to chair a higher-tier committee, one with impact outside of Congress. It’s not one of the four great committees – Appropriations, Ways and Means, Energy and Commerce, and Rules – but if you’re angry about “CREAM” and the excesses of the banking and financial industry, you want a regulator like Waters in charge of this committee. You want the bankers to be scared and to not get away with so much.