Archive for the 'Ernie Fletcher' Category

CONGRESSMAN RON LEWIS, HIS WIFE KAYI LEWIS ALONG WITH KENTUCKY CONGRESSMEN HAL ROGERS AND ED WHITFIELD ARE LOSERS, IN IOWA.

Jim Pence January 3rd, 2008

The Most Reverend Congressman Ron Lewis and his Kentucky Congressional pals Hal Rogers and Ed Whitfield bet on Mitt Romney and lost in Iowa last night.
Ron’s Wife Kayi Lewis, Co Chair For Ernie Fletcher’s re election campaign received a ass kickin’ last November.
These folks are out of touch with reality and it’s really beginning to show.
I’ll bet ol Preacher Ron is ready for a long tall drink of some of that liquor lobby booze tonight.
BTW if you want to buy a house Ron Lewis has his house for sale for about $250,000 more than what I think it’s worth and that’s a conservative, no pun intended, guess.

He Didn’t Win That Either, Sen. McConnell

Terri Whitehouse November 7th, 2007

Regarding Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s defeat, Sen. Mitch McConnell says:

Ernie Fletcher ran a hard-fought campaign that showed a deep commitment to the Commonwealth and to the principles that propelled him into office four years ago. He lost the race, but won our respect by fighting hard to build on the achievements of his term — achievements that will benefit Kentucky for many years to come.

You respect bigots, Sen. McConnell? Do you even believe your own lies any more?

H/T: PolWatchers

Do Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and his ‘mate Robbie Rudolph (R) touch themselves? If so, they’ve committed homosexual acts

Matt Gunterman November 5th, 2007

All this talk by Republicans about other people’s sexuality has got me thinking.Robbie Rudolph (R) touches himself.

First, if a man has sex with a horse BUT while having sex with that horse he closes his eyes and thinks only of a woman, has that man not still committed an act of bestiality?

I’d say the answer is, yes, he has.

Now, similarly, if a man closes his eyes and thinks of a woman and has sex with himself, is he not committing a homosexual act? Are not in this act the hands of a man gratifying the genitals of a man? Does it matter that there’s an imaginary woman involved? Is not a man nevertheless sexually stimulating a man? Isn’t that the definition of a homosexual act?

So, unless Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and his ‘mate Robbie Rudolph (R) are prepared to go on record that they abstain from masturbation and consider the act abhorrent, then I don’t know that these two men [and, heck, let's throw in Rep. Stan Lee (R) for good measure] have much moral authority when it comes to speaking out against gays.

Soon-to-be Gov. Steve Beshear can transform how the world sees Kentucky and how Kentuckians see themselves

Matt Gunterman November 5th, 2007

Yesterday morning a German friend emailed me to say that The New York Times Sunday travel section was running a feature on the finer qualities of bourbon and bluegrass in Kentucky.

He’s read much about Kentucky lately, and it’s intriguing him. Just last week, both the London-based Guardian newspaper and The American Prospect magazine ran pieces on the growth of progressive culture and politics in Kentucky. These follow in the wake of Bob Moser’s monumental cover story on Kentucky for The Nation in September.

When Terence Samuel, who authored the Guardian and TAP articles, interviewed me, he made the comment, “Everyone’s talking about Kentucky.”

People around the world are talking about Kentucky because — right here, right now — Kentuckians are offering them hope. In us they see the potential that the American spirit that has inspired so many generations of the past is finally awakening and is ready to take on the wicked specter that is the creation of hate- and fear-mongers like Pres. George W. Bush (R), Sen. Mitch McConnell (R), Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R), and Rep. Stan Lee (R).

They see it in the workers who are out canvassing neighborhoods today. They see it in the peace demonstrators who are agitating to end a senseless war. They see it in the families who are fighting for their children’s health care. They see it in the crusade to protect and restore our environment. They see it in people of faith who are standing up to the bigots and bullies who have dominated Kentucky pulpits for too long.

The evidence is all around that something is happening in Kentucky, and the world is hungry for that something to be a people who are innovative, bold, tolerant, and progressive.

There is not a thing about McConnell, Fletcher, or Lee that’s any of those things. They are instead calculating, rigid, bullying, and conservative.

Soon-to-be Governor-elect Steve Beshear (D) will have the opportunity to communicate to the world what the new Kentucky is all about.

Ernie Fletcher saw “selling” Kentucky as a mere re-branding exercise. Nothing of the substance changed, and the discerning public could see through that. Fletcher’s take on “unbridled spirit” was anything but.

But Beshear can change the substance because he is not beholden to the baser elements of Kentucky society; his opponent will win the vote of every sort of bigot our state has to offer. With Kentucky’s urban center of Louisville poised to enter a sort of renaissance (barring the next Bush recession undermining its growth), Kentucky can become part of a new face for the United States to the rest of the world, one that is dynamic and provocative, welcoming and welcomed.

Kentucky can’t move forward on jobs, education, or other quality of life issues if it doesn’t tackle those elements of its culture that are holding the state back, and Beshear is well positioned to change the conversation and move down a different path.

LIAR, LIAR PANTS ON FIRE! YOUTUBE VIDEO.

WE WILL ROCK YOU!

BYE BYE ERNIE!!!!!!

Jim Pence October 30th, 2007

erniefletcher.jpg

Is This Land Made For You and Me?

Terri Whitehouse October 30th, 2007

I don’t read DailyKos very often, but happened to look at it today and saw a great article about Appalachian coal frontpaged there.

Being a Western Kentuckian and not much of an environmentalist, I’m embarrassed to admit that I really haven’t known just how bad of a problem some mining tactics are for the communities in which they occur.

Incidentally, Sen. Mitch McConnell’s good budies over at Peabody Energy have just confirmed that they will build a coal gasification plant in the western part of the state. Good work, guhvnah.

McConnell is Shameless

Shawn Dixon October 28th, 2007

The good folks at WestKYPolitics just forwarded me an email that contained a media advisory from the Fletcher campaign.

If you want to see hypocrisy at its worst, it will be on display tomorrow in Louisville. Mitch McConnell and Ernie Fletcher will hold a campaign stunt at Kosair Children’s Hospital in Louisville.

The advisory doesn’t say why they are going. However, you can guess what they won’t be doing: offering to make healthcare more available to our state or the country’s poorest children.

This visit comes while Mitch McConnell continues to lead an effort against expanding the SCHIP program to cover 10 million uninsured and low income children in our country.

This kind of political theater is shameless. I hope someone at the hospital asks McConnell why he won’t vote to make healthcare available to those children in our country who need it the most.

For Immediate Release

October 28, 2007

Governor Ernie Fletcher and U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell to Visit Louisville’s Kosair Children’s Hospital TOMORROW

FRANKFORT, Ky. – Governor Ernie Fletcher and U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell will be in Louisville tomorrow afternoon to visit Kosair Children’s Hospital at 1:00 p.m. Kosair, which is located at 231 East Chestnut St., is Kentucky’s only free-standing, full- service pediatric care facility dedicated exclusively to caring for children.

WHO: Governor Ernie Fletcher and U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell

WHAT: Visit to Kosair Children’s Hospital

WHEN: TOMORROW, October 29, 2007, at 1:00 p.m. ET

WHERE: Kosair Children’s Hospital

231 East Chestnut St.

Louisville, KY

SATIRE: SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL’S AD FOR GOVERNOR ERNIE FLETCHER. YOUTUBE VIDEO

Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s approval numbers continue to fall

Matt Gunterman October 18th, 2007

Not that it really much matters at this point, as this election is done except for the voting, but it appears that Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) “peaked” a bit too soon in his campaign.

You’ll recall that two months ago Fletcher hit 40 percent approval for the first time in over two years. Last month, his approval dipped to 38 percent.

The Survey USA numbers for October are now out, and they show Fletcher continuing to fall. Currently, his approval disapproval stands at 36/60, worsening from 38/58 in September.

The biggest story in these figures, however, is that Fletcher’s support among Republicans, conservatives, and in western Kentucky is collapsing.

October approval/disapproval numbers for Gov. Ernie Fletcher

October approval/disapproval numbers for Gov. Ernie Fletcher

October approval/disapproval numbers for Gov. Ernie Fletcher

With less than three weeks left until the election, I can only imagine that Republicans are going to be absolutely demoralized by November 6. Why even bother turning out to the polls?

That’s bad news for down-ballot Republicans like Secretary of State Trey Grayson, especially when lazy people like me (who voted several weeks ago) just ticked the straight Democratic ticket box.

Same-sex marriage will one day be the law of the land, and it will happen with a whimper

Matt Gunterman October 11th, 2007

Did you see where Dear Abby endorsed gay marriage this week?

And what happened? The nation — or the national majority — just yawned.

Yes, I know, the right-wing, conservative fringe probably got upset.

Once upon a time, conservatives believed that ethnic minorities and women weren’t whole or rational people. In fact, the proud fascist and anorexic Ann Coulter recently reiterated that she still strongly believes so (and just today said that the nation would be better off without Jews).

Many, many conservatives still believe these things, but they are shunned as a dangerous fringe. Such views were, sadly, mainstream back in the day. Yet, happily, our nation matures and such views don’t inform how we forge a common future.

Today’s conservatives — Republicans and some Democrats — are still hung up on same-sex marriage, but the nation as a whole is waking up to how conservative arguments about marriage don’t make sense. Marriage in the United States is a secular, legal arrangement.

Yes, conservatives will scream louder and louder about same-sex marriage as it increasingly but gradually becomes a reality across the nation. Kentucky will probably not be at the forefront of that movement, but it will happen. Soon-to-be governor Steve Beshear will not be the one to legalize it. This movement will be one that comes from below, as movements for justice almost always are. It will take a half generation or so.

What conservatives don’t realize is that, even though they’re screaming louder, fewer and fewer people will be screaming with them.

Today’s homophobe will one day soon occupy his or her place among the dark annals of American history where slavery proponents, suffrage opponents, and segregationists reside.

Until then, however, we’ll have more of what’s below from desperate conservatives, like Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and Rep. Stan Lee (R).

From the always insightful Pat Crowley:

How low can you go

I thought I had seen about everything in a politics, but the Fletcher campaign is hitting a new low in gay bashing. Check out this release; I’m waiting for a response from the Beshear campaign.

In spite of the fact that 75% of Kentuckians voted for a 2004 amendment defining marriage in the Commonwealth as an institution between one man and one woman, Steve Beshear’s latest campaign finance report listed two male individuals as spouses to one another.

“Steve Beshear’s liberal agenda for Kentucky has been exposed yet again,” said Jason Keller, Communications Director for Governor’s Fletcher’s campaign. “While Beshear likes to talk about his conservative roots, it’s clear he departed from that course long ago.”

Keller continued, “Steve Beshear’s recent finance report shows two things; one, that it sure takes a lot of money to hide a liberal record from Kentuckians, and two, that Steve Beshear and his cronies obviously believe that the marriage amendment was a farce.

“Beshear signed his name to a document, under the penalty of perjury, swearing that he believed the contents of the report were accurate. When he signed that document, he violated the Kentucky Constitution’s definition of marriage in the Commonwealth,” concluded Keller.

A quite legitimate question for Steve Beshear

Matt Gunterman September 24th, 2007

KYWomen, the blog dedicated to women’s issues and empowering women’s voices in the Kentucky progressive blogosphere, joins the chorus of progressives asking a very legitimate question of Steve Beshear (D):

Steve Beshear, in a September 21 debate at the Herald-Leader’s PolWatcher blog, you asked Ernie Fletcher, “What abortion restrictions have you had enacted as Governor?” In doing so, you insinuated that Fletcher had the opportunity to further restrict access to abortion in his term and that he should have taken that opportunity. I think the question on the mind of progressives in Kentucky today is, in the coming four years as governor, how will you work to make up for Fletcher’s deficiencies in this area? What will you do to restrict abortion as governor?

Steve Beshear giving us reason to worry he won’t finish strong

Matt Gunterman September 22nd, 2007

When you’re a Democrat who’s 15-20 points up in all the reputable polls with barely more than a month to go in the campaign, momentum is yours as the state electorate rallies around you as the level-headed candidate in the race, and your base is energized after years in the wilderness, what do you not do?

You do not thumb your nose at your base. You do not deflate them, and — more importantly — you do not deflate them in a futile effort to attract the affections of your opponent’s conservative base. First, that base hasn’t lifted a finger to make your campaign and eventual victory possible. Second, that base isn’t going to vote for you no matter how much you court them. Third, that base and its ideology aren’t the sort of things we need to embrace as a state to get ahead and make up for all the ground we’ve lost in recent years.

What has provoked all the above? Read below (from the Herald-Leader’s Polwatcher blog):

September 21, 2007

Gubernatorial Debate: More on abortion

In this installment of our gubernatorial debate, the candidates ask the questions.

Each campaign crafted their own question for the opposing candidate with two rules in mind: the question had to somehow relate to abortion, our topic of the week, and it had to be 50 words or less. Answers to the questions had to be 100 words or less.

Here’s what Republican Gov. Ernie Fletcher and Democratic challenger Steve Beshear had to say.

Beshear’s Question:

As a legislator, Steve Beshear voted to add abortion restrictions, including: parental consent, a requirement that women be informed of abortion’s physical and mental consequences, and a ban after the first trimester except when a mother’s life or health is threatened. What abortion restrictions have you had enacted as Governor?

Fletcher’s Answer:

Steve, your half-truths won’t allow you to be someone you’re not. You voted for legislation then turned around and called similar legislation unconstitutional as Attorney General. You have a long record supporting abortion, such as when you said you’d oppose legislation like the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 because it didn’t contain sufficient loopholes for the pro-abortion lobby. I voted for that ban.

Unlike you, I have been a consistent protector of the unborn. The first bill I signed was Fetal Homicide legislation. I support a requirement for informed consent, which was blocked in the House by your allies.

[...]

Now, I realize that good help is hard to find these days, but one has to wonder who and how many hands gave the green light to that question coming out of the Beshear camp. They could have made essentially the same point by framing Fletcher as the radical in the equation. For example, it could have been written so:

Steve Beshear’s record on abortion accurately reflects the complex and balanced views of Kentuckians on this controversial issue. As a legislator, he supported parental consent, expanded counseling for women seeking abortions, and regulation of abortions after the first trimester. Why does Governor Fletcher expect Kentuckians to endorse his extremist agenda?

Instead what we have is the appearance of Beshear trying to out radicalize the radical conservative. Beshear is essentially saying that the place where he wants to be is the radical conservative in the race, and that Fletcher’s credentials as a radical conservative aren’t legitimate. Thus, Beshear has just legitimized Fletcher’s campaign strategy of painting him as a loony lefty, when all Beshear had to do was paint Fletcher as a loony righty.

Bleh. There’s no way the SS Beshear sinks at this point in time, but it well could limp into port.

Fletcher’s slow, slow march of increasing popularity comes to an end

Matt Gunterman September 20th, 2007

Recall that last month’s Survey USA tracking numbers for Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) placed the embattled incumbent’s popularity above 40 percent for the first time in over two years.

Since the spring of 2007, Fletcher’s approval numbers had been slowly increasing by the smallest of increments. The improvement wasn’t what Fletcher needed to pull out a win in November, but at least he and his rabid supporters could wrap their delusions of eventual triumph and vindication in the knowledge that the trend here was in the positive direction.

That’s the case no more, however.

According to SUSA, Ernie Fletcher’s approval falls this month. If one could ever speak of any momentum on Fletcher’s part in this survey, it is now most certainly lost.

At this point, Fletcher’s political coffin has so many nails in it that all that’s left is for the voters to weld it shut on November 6 and toss it into the depths of the Kentucky River.

Ernie Fletcher: approve/disapprove

Aug. 2007: 40/57
Sep. 2007: 38/58

September 2007 breakdown:

Rep.: 57/39
Dem.: 25/72
Ind.: 29/61

WKY: 52/43
LOU: 31/64
NKY: 36/59
EKY: 34/62

Novel Idea for Kentucky: Education & Economic Growth

Terri Whitehouse September 5th, 2007

Dan Klepal, in today’s Courier-Journal reports on gubernatorial candidate Steve Beshear’s plan to create economic growth and educational attainment within Kentucky:

“My goal is to double the number of degree-holders by the year 2020,” Beshear said, adding that would bring the total to about 800,000. “To do this, we must make higher education more affordable.”

Beshear, a former lieutenant governor and attorney general, also has a plan to keep college graduates in the state. It’s called the Kentucky First Scholarship Program and would forgive one year of state loans for every year a graduate works in Kentucky.

The program would cost about $27 million in its first year, a Beshear spokeswoman said.

Those state loans would be granted only after all other available assistance — such as scholarships, grants and student loans — are used. The program would apply to all students, whether from Kentucky or out of state.

Though some data suggests that Kentucky is experiencing a “brain gain,” there is a general consensus that the state, along with others in the region, ranks quite low when it comes to education. Poverty here remains high. (More on reasons why here.) Meanwhile, our sitting governor advocates phony science and appeasing his fellow neocon hypocrites above making real progress in the state.

NEED A PARDON, SHOW US THE MONEY

It’s time for Gov. Fletcher to denounce the biggest benefactor of casinos in Kentucky: Sen. Mitch McConnell

Matt Gunterman August 22nd, 2007

The Hound Dog had this revealing post about Senator Mitch McConnell’s addiction to casino contributions to feed his controversial and unrepresentative politics.

It’s time for Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) to denounce him for it.

Senator Mitch McConnell is in the pocket of the casino industry.

ERNIE FLETCHER’S TEN COMMANDMENTS IN A STATE OF EVOLUTION!

Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and his goons are behaving like bloggers, and that’s a problem

Matt Gunterman August 20th, 2007

I’m pasting today’s Political Notebook from the Courier-Journal’s Joseph Gerth below. It’s especially fun to read today, and he even offers a contest at the end: email him your ideas for doctored photographs of Ernie Fletcher.

Okay, very briefly, let me tell you how I see the world of politics, political journalism, and political blogging evolving in Kentucky.

First, professional political journalists now produce (and will continue to produce in the future) the vast majority of raw factual, objective materials that bloggers use. That’s the case because journalists are trained professionals, they get paid to do what they do full time, and they build up the networks needed to get the information they need to produce their craft.

Second, bloggers — on the left and the right — take the raw material that journalists produce and put it in a partisan context. Now, of course bloggers do upon occasion produce news of their own, but that’s the exception and not the rule. As an aside, I would never, ever, ever want to blog full time. I enjoy my day job too much, which is probably what these journalists would tell you about their experience with blogging, too. There is a real need among political junkies for our partisan context, however. We also spur dialog and provide a platform that allows for ideological issues and differences to be vetted.

In the end, with all this talk in the national media and traditional press about the inherent friction between bloggers and journalists, I think the biggest threat to political journalists, their profession, and trade is apathy among the public and a population that is so disconnected and uninformed from politics that it can’t digest and engage with it at the level of complexity that is needed in an increasingly complex American society.

In short: political bloggers number among political journalists most ardent readers, and political blogging has introduced me to the work of several journalists that I was previously very unaware of. Political blogging and political bloggers, as they both mature as a medium and community, might well serve to strengthen and broaden the impact of political journalism.

That having been said, I want to say that I’m a little bit disturbed by the behavior of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) and his goons as of late. This altering of the image of Democratic candidate Steve Beshear takes the cake. Why?

As a transparently and viciously partisan and vicious blogger, I can and do say very ornery things about incompetent Republicans in Kentucky. That’s the luxury of being a blogger, especially one sitting a thousand miles away in the quiet seclusion of Yale’s Sterling Memorial Library, where the only thing distracting me at the moment is a beautiful creature standing a few feet away from me and looking at the New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia.

I doctor photographs, like this one and this one. I say things like, “Ernie Fletcher has a vagina up his asshole,” and, “Robbie Rudolph is a redneck idiot with no formal education,” and, “Stan Lee mixing his Christian fundamentalism with our politics makes him no better than a radical Islamicist.” I say these things because there’s a lot of truth to them and I say these things because I can. If you don’t like it, you don’t have to read my blog.

Yet, when our governor and his campaign start behaving like me, I think it betrays a great deal–that we already knew–about why the Fletcher administration is where it is. Ernie Fletcher and his goons never really understood the gravity and responsibility of the office and the unique opportunity they’ve been given. They still don’t understand it, and they never will understand it. But the people of Kentucky do understand it, and that’s why they’ll elect Steve Beshear this November.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Joseph Gerth | Political Notebook
Look before you leap

State Auditor Crit Luallen recently produced an audit mildly critical of the way state tourism funds have been spent, saying that Kentucky needs to develop a better strategic plan for spending new marketing money and determining if the money was spent wisely.

That upset at least one Republican blogger, Jessamine County Attorney Brian Goettl, of Conservativeedge.com, who asked in a headline: “What does LuAllen know about tourism?”

In the blog report, Goettl goes on to ask, “What does LuAllen know about tourism or marketing? What does her audit staff know about it? I would venture to say very little … LuAllen has no business making such pronouncements unless she can demonstrate her competence in the area or show that she relied on competent experts.”

Well. Luallen, a Democrat, points out that she served as tourism secretary under former Gov. Brereton Jones and continued to work on tourism projects as executive cabinet secretary under former Gov. Paul Patton.

During her time in those two roles, the state expanded or built convention centers in Louisville and Northern Kentucky, passed a $100 million bond issue to upgrade state parks and saw the private development of numerous attractions, including the Newport Aquarium, Louisville’s 4th Street Live and Kentucky Speedway, which she said were partly the result of changes she and the administrations she worked for sought in state law.

“The record is there,” she said. “I have a strong background in marketing, in economic development and in tourism and that was one reason we looked at this issue.”

Goettl said in an interview that he would like to review Luallen’s record as tourism secretary more closely before determining whether she and her office are qualified to make such recommendations.

The doctoring is in

Last week state Republican Chairman Steve Robertson said that doctoring photos is fair game in the governor’s race between Gov. Ernie Fletcher and his Democratic opponent, former Lt. Gov. Steve Beshear.

In its first salvo, the party unveiled brochures that have Beshear’s head Photoshopped onto a body wearing a white blazer, a white, open-collar shirt and a necklace, leaning against a roulette table and holding a glass of what looks to be white wine.

“Easy Money Steve” they call him because of his proposal to bring casino gambling, and $500 million annually in revenue, to Kentucky.

But we were a bit surprised by Democratic Party Chairman Jonathan Miller’s response condemning the practice. We figured the Democrats would view the Republican attack as tacit approval for such shenanigans if they chose to do the same.

If you were running Beshear’s campaign, how would you doctor a photo of Fletcher? And if you were running Fletcher’s campaign, how would you follow up the “Easy Money Steve” brochure?

E-mail me at jgerth@courier-journal.com, and we may run some of your responses in upcoming weeks.

Poll dancing

Last week we led with a couple of items about a poll by the Lexington public relations firm of Preston-Osborne, which drew questions on the Courier-Journal Web site from some readers who wondered if we had been “snookered.”

The poll, commissioned by The Lane Report, a Lexington business journal, dealt with issues ranging from the governor’s race to casino gaming and seemed to give Democratic gubernatorial nominee Steve Beshear an edge on several fronts.

The basic argument that we had been “snookered” is that Preston-Osborne was founded by Tommy Preston, a longtime friend of Beshear, and the firm also has a contract to do public relations work with the Kentucky Equine Education Project, which supports casinos.

The fact of the matter is that Preston sold his interest in the firm to Phil Osborne in 1997 and hasn’t been involved in the company since (although he and Osborne are friends and still talk regularly). As far as the KEEP connection, Osborne notes that if he fudged numbers for one client to benefit another, he wouldn’t be in business very long.

I don’t doubt he’s correct on that. But what ultimately led us to run the Lane Report results was the fact that the numbers were right in line with other polling data we’ve seen, which gives them some measure of reliability.
Outta here

I’ll be taking some much-needed vacation over the next two weeks. The column should return Sept. 10 but keep the cards and letters coming. I’ll be checking e-mails while I’m away.

Kentucky in 2007 is the national GOP’s canary in a coalmine

Matt Gunterman August 19th, 2007

With all the tragedy as of late in our nation’s coalmines and with Kentucky’s Senator Mitch McConnell and his wife Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao at the center of a web of money-grubbing and influence-mongering in Washington that has left these many coalmines the deathtraps that they are for the sake of the almighty campaign contribution and a few ticks on the profit margin, I think the analogy of Kentucky’s gubernatorial election this year being the GOP’s canary in a coalmine is a fitting one.

Watch this latest video from Jim Pence of DitchMitchKY and the HillbillyReport. What’s going on in the video with security personnel at the Kentucky State Fair trying to end an anti-war protest (until they’re set straight by the State Police) is fascinating enough, but what’s even more fascinating is what’s going on in the background: all those cars honking in support of the protest.

Recall that thirteen years ago in 1994, on the cusp of the so-called Republican Revolution, Kentucky served the Democrats in a similar capacity. Then the death in March of that year of Democratic Congressman William H. Natcher (KY-02)—who had represented the district since 1953 and who continues to hold the all-time record for consecutive votes in Congress at 18,401—set up a special election for the seat.

I was only 17 years old at the time, but I had been politically aware since the 1988 presidential campaign, when a longtime Democratic activist in my church started hauling me to rallies, the biggest of those being Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen’s appearance at the Big Tobacco warehouse in Owensboro, today the largest city in the Second District. I don’t remember anything about the substance of what was said there, but I remember the energy, the pomp, and the confidence among the Democrats gathered.

Yet, a mere six years later the entire region of the Second District was seething against the political establishment and its status quo, its distance, and indifference. That establishment was Democratic.

Perhaps that environment is best encapsulated in a scene that has now been immortalized in Michael Moore’s latest film SiCKO. On August 29, 1994, at a rally in Owensboro, “Tobacco Rights Activists” burned an effigy of then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in protest of President Bill Clinton’s health care plan. With a bluegrass band playing the back ground, Stan Arachikavitz, president of the Kentucky Association of Tobacco Supporters, chanted “burn, baby, burn,” as the effigy was doused in gasoline and two women set it ablaze. When asked for comment by a reporter, Arachikavitz replied, “Hillary didn’t last as long as my Marlboro.” The nation was outraged, but there was a quiet satisfaction among many across western Kentucky.

At that rally was Ron Lewis, the Second District’s newly elected Republican congressman. In what had been a shock to Kentucky’s political establishment—if no-one else—Lewis had defeated longtime Kentucky State Senator Joe Prather in the May special election to succeed Natcher. Lewis had won with 55 percent of the vote on a turnout of less than 20 percent. A fundamentalist Christian, Baptist minister, and religious bookstore owner, Lewis had been recruited to the race by Senator Mitch McConnell, who had been narrowly elected to his own seat ten years earlier in 1984 on the coattails of Ronald Reagan.

You may recalled that Lewis’s campaign commercials in the special election had famously morphed Prather’s head into that of Bill Clinton, who was then near the height of his unpopularity. The national GOP considered the technique a success and went on to use it widely in the general election that year. Meanwhile, rumors had circulated in the district that Joe Prather was in Washington to look for a house. Perhaps it was just a rumor spread by the McConnell machine, but it might as well have been true, such was the arrogance and sense of entitlement of Kentucky Democrats of the day.

McConnell went on to recruit Republican Ed Whitfield—who had just as much personal dynamism as Lewis—to run in the First Congressional District in the fall. Both Lewis and Whitfield won; Whitfield became the first Republican ever elected to the First District.

My point with all this is that the political establishment in Kentucky at that time—conservative Southern Democrats—was a bloated and opaque bubble. Its bloated-ness allowed the good old boys to make room for more of their own inside and its opaqueness kept their less-than-altruistic dealings hidden from the masses, but those very same qualities kept the good old boys from witnessing the trouble that was brewing for them on the outside–in the real world.

Mitch McConnell burst their bubble.

Unfortunately, the Kentucky Republican Party that Mitch McConnell replaced the good old boy Democrats with was a political machine that set about inflaming the ugliest elements of Kentucky’s own culture: its racism, its bigotry, its sexism, its churlishness, its phobias, and its anti-intellectualism.

The thing to remember about Mitch McConnell (and this is something that his fellow Republicans in the U.S. Senate are discovering now about him in his capacity as Minority Leader) is that McConnell always has McConnell’s interests first. He’s not at all concerned about the long-term consequences of his tactics and actions on the people of Kentucky. What he’s counting on is that Kentuckians and the state’s chattering class will never fully digest the disaster that was McConnell’s Senate career so long as there’s plenty of pork named after him spread around the state.

Mitch McConnell took Kentucky, a state already at the bottom of the cultural and economic barrel of the nation, and he exacerbated the very social qualities of the place that had kept true progress (making gains on its peers, rather than playing catch up) out of reach for so long. McConnell’s strategy was to spear his political legacy with a wicked trident of slash-and-burn partisan politics, redneck populism, and moneyed corporate interests.

McConnell’s Kentucky GOP is today the political establishment in the state, and you can see what sort of establishment it is by the criminal behavior and incompetence of the administration of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R).

As I write, that Republican establishment is bunkering itself deep beneath the political reality on the ground in Kentucky. While Ernie Fletcher and his minions ratchet up their language of fear on expanded gaming and hate against sexual minorities and while Mitch McConnell continues to cultivate the corrupt environment of campaign finance in Washington that he fathered and stands steadfast behind the reckless presidency of George W. Bush, neither Fletcher or McConnell is making headway among Kentuckians.

Both are indeed consolidating support among their conservative base, but that base is shrinking. Kentuckians are waking up to the reality of what Fletcher, McConnell, and conservatives truly are.

The people of Kentucky are once again seething against their political establishment, but this time there is an energized and organized progressive Democratic party waiting in the wings. Whereas last time when Kentuckians cleaned political house they replaced bad with worse, this time the alternative to entrenched Republican corruption is a Democratic party that offers the hope of change and a better future for us all.

SUSA: Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) approval hits 40% for first time in over two years

Matt Gunterman August 17th, 2007

The sparkling wine bottles will be popping at Fletcher/Rudolph 2007 HQ today!

The August Survey USA approval/disapproval tracking numbers are out for Kentucky Governor Ernie Fletcher (R), and they show that the scandal-plagued Republican’s approval has topped 40 percent for the first time in over two years (the tracking graph only records back to May 2005).

Why are approval numbers that would scream nothing but political doom anywhere else in the nation sweet music to the politically tone-deaf ears of Ernie Fletcher? Well, after all, it was only a year ago this month that Fletcher’s approval bottomed out at 24 percent. [Keep on the sunny side, always on the sunny side! Anybody got a broom for pedagogically challenged running mate Robbie Rudolph to use as a prop?]

Of course, this month’s upward movement was a statistically insignificant one point (Aug:40/57; Jul:39/57), but all statistics are insignificant to the Fletcher camp, whether they’re the ones showing Kentucky’s sorry state of health, education, or business climate. [Keep on the sunny side, always on the sunny side!]

Where’s Fletcher’s big gain coming from? Among Republicans and conservatives.

In the last month, Fletcher’s approval/disapproval went from 58/39 among Republicans to 62/35. In March of this year, Fletcher was at 46/50 with that group. So, he’s consolidating his party base, but he’ll need significantly more than 70 percent support from Republicans at the ballot box, especially considering that Republican turnout is likely to be somewhat suppressed, to pull off a November win. Republicans accounted for 34 percent of the latest survey.

Fletcher’s popularity this month among conservatives rebounded to 57/39 from 52/46 after plummeting between June and July. Conservatives were 33 percent of this survey.

There was no significant movement among males, females, Democrats, independents, moderates, or liberals.

By region, there was no significant change in western Kentucky, Louisville, or eastern Kentucky.

There was, however, a statistically significant jump in Fletcher’s approval in northern Kentucky, where the governor went from 37/57 to 45/53.

Alessi: Gov. Fletcher refuses to offer straightforward endorsement of Sen. McConnell

Matt Gunterman August 13th, 2007

The Lexington Herald-Leader’s Ryan Alessi asked a very ornery question of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R), and he features it in this week’s installment of his column Political Notebook. It was the same one that Senator Mitch McConnell (R) was getting asked a lot this time last year, when Secretary of State Trey Grayson (R) took the plunge at Fancy Farm and announced that he was considering a challenge to scandal-plagued Governor Fletcher. McConnell remained mum on Grayson’s move, but he did soon after attend a fundraiser for Grayson that Fletcher’s goons were demanding be boycotted.

When you’re only the second Kentucky U.S. Senator in history to lead his party in the chamber, when you like to frame yourself as the architect of the state GOP apparatus, when you cultivate a reputation as a grand schemer and tactician in the nation’s capital, you would think that the first Republican governor in a generation — who handily won his election in no small part due to your maneuvering and your machine — would endorse you, especially considering that this governor is facing his own tough reelection battle in 2007 and needs a unified base, for your own reelection in 2008.

You would think that, yes, but you’d be wrong because this is Kentucky, and the party that Senator Mitch McConnell built is falling apart, and Governor Ernie Fletcher is not going to play by the polite rules that McConnell nurtures in public. Fletcher’s one vindictive son-of-a-gun, and you put him together with the Nunn family and Larry Forgy branch of the Republican party and you’ve got some serious, old-fashioned grudge holding.

[...]

Payback is …

While Fletcher says that he and Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell are friends again, the governor has stopped short of saying that he’ll endorse McConnell for re-election in 2008.

“I don’t know any reason why I wouldn’t,” he said, dodging the question similar to the way that McConnell, last year, refused to say whether or not he would back Fletcher for the Republican nomination for governor this spring.

“Mitch has done a great job,” Fletcher added. “We in Kentucky are lucky to have someone of that stature in the U.S. Senate.”

He later added, “I expect we’ll go forward and be endorsing him and be working to make sure he gets elected. But that’s all speculation.”

Fletcher said doesn’t think McConnell will draw primary opposition from another Republican, even with at least one person trying to stir up interest in Larry Forgy challenging McConnell. A Web site, www.draftforgy.com, was started anonymously.

Fletcher wouldn’t say whether he’ll discourage other Republicans from challenging McConnell.

“I don’t anticipate a primary against Sen. McConnell,” Fletcher said. “He’s out there. He’s done a tremendous job. He’s got a tremendous amount of influence.”

It should be noted that Fletcher also said he didn’t expect to draw a GOP challenger for his re-election and ended up with two.

Justin Brasell, McConnell’s general consultant for his re-election bid, said whether Fletcher endorses or not is up to the governor. But he said reports of any animosity between the two GOP leaders are exaggerated.

“No, there’s no source of frustration at all,” Brasell said. “I think the governor and the senator are getting along just fine.”

Al Cross: Divided Party Haunts Fletcher

Matt Gunterman August 12th, 2007

Al Cross, veteran political journalist and director of the UK’s Institute for Rural Journalism offers an outstanding post-Fancy Farm round up of the sorry political position of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R).

I’ve included the entire column below, but one of Cross’s best observations is that Fletcher and Senator Mitch McConnell (R) are trying to sell Kentuckians on the scary liberal bit, a favorite of McConnell’s, once again. The problem? It doesn’t have the salience it for the past generation? Why? Because conservatives are the scary ones now. They’re the ones bent on needless, endless, and fruitless war. They’re the ones allied with fundamentalist Christians out to purify the nation of anything they deem unfit in others (they ignore that log in their own eye, you know). They’re the ones who’ve spent the nation into trillions of dollars of more debt. They’re the ones who want to throw science out of the laboratory and our schools’ classrooms for the sake of their fairy tales. They’re the ones who’ve allowed our middle class to waste away for the sake of free markets that are anything but.

CONSERVATIVES ARE SCARY!

And, also, for the record, every blogger — both on the left and the right — who attended Fancy Farm and who went on record themselves agreed that, objectively, by some factor Democratic activists outnumbered Republican activists. The one person who disagreed with us was Bill Bartleman of the Paducah Sun, which is a paper almost entirely unread within the blogosphere because it’s subscription only (and a conservative rag, I might add). Bartleman said it was a 50/50 divide. The blogosphere called him on it, and his only response was that unnamed reporters also agreed with him.

Well, notice in the column below that Al Cross certainly doesn’t.


Divided party haunts Fletcher

Can hard-right issues turn tide?

FANCY FARM, Ky. — The political speaking at the Fancy Farm Picnic is not an educational exercise. It is rhetorical and theatrical, testing politicians’ mettle and wits more than their minds and ideas. But it can help you understand an election.

Last weekend, the Democrats in the raucous crowd didn’t lose a single shouting contest, as they clearly outnumbered Republicans. The turnout showed how Democratic partisans are unified and energized behind the gubernatorial candidacy of Steve Beshear, and how much ground Republican Gov. Ernie Fletcher still has to make up in his own party.

The latest evidence: a Survey USA automated poll, taken Saturday through Monday, showing that most of the Republicans who voted for Anne Northup in the primary probably are for Beshear.

With such a weak and fractured party, Fletcher has to build a new base for this election. He is taking the only route available: social conservatism.

Beshear handed Fletcher a wedge issue by supporting casinos at horse-race tracks and up to four other sites. That plan won’t fit on a bumper sticker; Fletcher’s already does: “Say NO to Casinos.” In politics, simplicity can be a virtue. In a contest of ideas, those who frame the debate and keep it understandable usually win.

Beshear spent much time in his picnic speech defending his plan, continuing Fletcher’s control of the “free media” or “earned media” phase of the race, abetted by wrangling over the special legislative session. Democrats got so antsy about the media angle that Mark Nickolas revived his BluegrassReport.org political blog.

But the anti-casino argument, from a governor who once said he wouldn’t oppose a referendum on the issue, seems unlikely to trump the ingrained, negative opinions voters have about him — in a state where horses are now the main agricultural product and $1 billion a year goes to other states’ casinos.

Fletcher says Beshear’s plan makes the election a referendum on the issue, but that’s an incomplete strategy for victory. When voters approved a lottery in 1988, only 17 of the 120 counties voted against it. That’s about as many as Fletcher would carry with such a limited message.

So, gambling and Fletcher’s exaggerations of its evils are just the point of entry for a broader argument aimed at socially conservative Democrats — that Beshear is a liberal pushed by “liberal media,” a construction often used by Sen. Mitch McConnell, whose handiwork is apparent in the campaign.

In his picnic speech, Fletcher didn’t mention abortion (perhaps because folks who vote on that issue are pretty well informed about candidates’ stands on it) or Democrats’ special-session bugaboo, domestic-partner benefits at universities. He did mention the potent issues of guns and the Ten Commandments, complete with theatrical props, but on both violated the commandment against bearing false witness.

“If he had his way, local communities could take away your guns,” Fletcher said. His campaign said that referred to Beshear’s opinion as attorney general that Louisville could impose a waiting period to buy a handgun. The facts fail to support the charge.

Fletcher said we won’t find the commandments in schools and courthouses because Beshear said they had to go. Wrong again. The Supreme Court said that, and Beshear said (in a case only about schools) the Court had to be obeyed.

If Fletcher gets his facts straight, such arguments may shore up his GOP base, but he will remain a tough sell in the other party. Still, socially conservative Democrats could be persuaded to stay home, making the election more competitive. And the X Factor is Fletcher’s four-year incumbency, something never truly tested in Kentucky. But the national winds are blowing against Republicans, and the fall looks Democratic.

Reflections on the latest gubernatorial race poll

Matt Gunterman August 8th, 2007

Most of you are already likely aware of the latest poll out in the Kentucky governor’s race. If not, check out WHAS political reporter Mark Hebert’s post and analysis. In short, Beshear leads by 21 points three months outside the election.

By now, with all the open talk of how Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) is receiving political life support from Senator Mitch McConnell (R), it’s quite apparent that Mitch was the father of the idea to use the expanded gaming and casino issue as a political wedge in the November election.

And it’s clear that it’s not working. I personally don’t know that McConnell ever thought it would work. Perhaps he was just working with what he had, and in Ernie Fletcher and his dumbass goon of a runningmate Robbie Rudolph there’s not much to really mold and work with.

Sure, McConnell and company can ramp up the rhetoric a bit and expand their campaign against it to television and radio and whatnot, but if that sort of strategy were going to make a difference and tip the balance, we’d have already seen some movement in the polls on the issue.

Why isn’t it working? First, the majority of Kentucky’s population lives within a short distance of a casino in other states. Second, those Kentuckians have seen that those casinos have not brought the social and economic doom and gloom that McConnell and Fletcher claim (I, for one, can say that downtown Evansville, Indiana is MUCH better off with a casino than it was without one). Third, Kentuckians have had more than a decade’s experience with state-sanctioned gambling in the lottery; they’ve acclimated to it.

The dynamics of Kentucky politics are shifting and McConnell’s old tricks aren’t working. For instance, do you actually believe that McConnell anticipated that when he dropped the names of Hillary Clinton and Nancy Pelosi at Fancy Farm last weekend in a derogatory sense that the two women would receive a roaring endorsement and standing ovation from the heavily Democratic crowd? Democrats are proud to be Democrats again. That sort of energy is bad for McConnell.

The real question in my mind is what’s McConnell’s Plan B? Because Plan A is a non-starter. He’s got three months to change the conversation. The current conversation, which he started and which has dominated the campaign is going nowhere. What to do? What to do?

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