Archive for the 'John Yarmuth' Category

The Big Democratic Guns Come To Hardin County.

Jim Pence October 26th, 2008

October 25, 2008
Radcliff, Kentucky
The big boys were in Hardin County, Kentucky today and they were fired up and ready to go. Among those at the rally were former Nebraska Governor and former U.S. Senator J. Robert “Bob” Kerrey, former Governor John Young Brown Jr., Governor Steve Beshear, Congressman John Yarmuth , David Boswell , Bruce Lunsford , Mike Weaver, former Senator Walter"Dee" Huddleston, Greg Fischer, State Rep Jimmie Lee and more.
This tells me the Democratic party is leaving no stone unturned to win in November. I have put together 4 fairly short videos of the event and they are below. I also managed to get a few photos, click here to view them.

Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear


Bruce Lunsford

John Yarmuth

David Boswell

Congressman John Yarmuth Speaking At A Kentucky Democratic Fund Raiser, In Louisville, Kentucky. A James Pence Youtube Video.

Jim Pence May 10th, 2008

I plan to have Hillary Clinton’s speech at the fund raiser up by Sunday morning.
We also did a interview with Heather Ryan , Democratic Candidate for Kentucky’s 1st Congressional seat, at the event and I plan to have that clip up by Sunday morning.
I will be in Owensboro, Kentucky today, May 10, 2008, and hope to have some video up of the Democratic Congressional and Senatorial Candidates speaking there up by Sunday Morning also.

Deja Vu All Over Again. Ben Chandler Endorses Barack Obama. Youtube Video!

Jim Pence April 29th, 2008

Albert Benjamin “Happy” Chandler, Sr. did the right thing in 1947 and , in my opinion, his grandson Ben Chandler did the right thing today.
I was proud of Happy Chandler in 1947 and I was proud of Ben today. For me, it was a good day to be a Kentuckian!!!!

Congressman John Yarmuth introducing Ben Chandler.

Congressman Ben Chandler endorsing Barack Obama.

Expect More Denials

Terri Whitehouse January 29th, 2008

So ousted Anne Northup has officially announced her candidacy against Rep. John Yarmuth. Also running in the GOP primary will be Louisville businessman Chris Thieneman, and it appears that some GOP careerists aren’t too happy about that:

[Thieneman] claimed in an interview that people working on her behalf have “threatened” him in an effort to get him out of the race — including Larry Cox, who runs Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell’s office in Kentucky.

He said the threats weren’t of a physical nature. But he added that he had angered Northup and other Republicans and that the race would be ugly.

Northup denied that she or anyone working on her behalf has tried to get Thieneman out of the race. “There are several advantages of having a primary,” she said.

Thieneman, 42, is running as an “anti-establishment” candidate, but he said his comments weren’t orchestrated to help him solidify that position in the race.

He said several elected officials and other Republican officials have called him over the past few days and suggested that he leave the race or face an ugly battle against Northup.

He said that one state representative told him he has “stirred up Anne’s hornet’s nest,” and that Cox told him “you’re going to be in a fight like you’ve never been in before, and it’s going to be nasty.”

He also accused McConnell of being behind efforts by the party last year to clear the field for Roberts. He said “no one is going to convince me that Mitch McConnell didn’t have Erwin supposedly called up.”

Anne, give it up. We don’t want you. Your own party didn’t want you. Try to have a modicum of dignity, why don’t you? The message of Kentuckians to you and McConnell is loud and clear: we are SICK to DEATH of our elected officials not TALKING TO US, not LISTENING TO US and most of all, not WORKING FOR US! We are tired of politicians BOUGHT AND SOLD!

Weekend Quick Hits Open Thread

Terri Whitehouse January 5th, 2008

Gov. Steve Beshear appointed Eleanor Jordan as executive director of the Commission on Women. Bill Stone, former Jefferson County GOP chairman, opined:

Stone said he does believe that a separate commission for women is part of “government silliness.”

“I personally, and I think conservatives think, the Commission on Women is another wasteful government department,” he said.

Stone, however, said that he knows Jordan and that if there has to be a commission she is a “probably a perfect fit for that job.”

I guess being in the bottom third in just about every indicator of stability, health, and well-being, is A-OK with some bourgie city folk.

Sen. Mitch McConnell has shitloads of money. I know our readers must find this absolutely shocking. The Public Campaign Action Fund gets it right:

No one in Kentucky ought to see McConnell’s fundraising as anything but his mastery of a corrupt political system that places the interests of donors ahead of all Kentuckians.

Finally, Rep. John Yarmuth puts his money where his mouth is, donating his whole first-year congressional salary to the Louisville community as he promised. MediaCzech provides the Republican response.

What other interesting things have you read in the last few days?

We the People

Terri Whitehouse October 12th, 2007

David M. Herszenhorn of the New York Times posted an excellent blog about Rep. John Yarmuth’s effort to bridge the partisan divide in Congress and distribute buttons emblazoned with “Article 1″:

The way Representative John Yarmuth of Kentucky sees it, lawmakers on Capitol Hill and Americans everywhere have forgotten who the Founding Fathers really intended to run the country –- not the President who was more of a Constitutional after-thought but the Congress, the people’s elected representatives.

“All legislative powers are vested in the Congress and, in fact, the Constitution grants very limited powers to the executive branch,” Mr. Yarmuth said. “We lost sight of that.” The Article 1 buttons, he said, were “a reminder that we have not just power but responsibility under the Constitution. Hopefully, if this catches on, the public will see that we understand our power and our responsibility.”

I applaud Rep. Yarmuth’s effort, and think it’s pretty frightening the extent to which some people have forgotten the roll of the legislative branch.

(h/t: Crooks & Liars)

Such Vulgarity Gives Me the Vapors

Terri Whitehouse September 26th, 2007

Via Crooks & Liars comes video of Rep. John Yarmuth speaking on the House floor:

With brave American soldiers dying in record numbers, I have two questions for the President — just whose posteriors are we kicking and how do you know? With Sunnis and Shiites killing themselves and each other, plus an incompetence Maliki government, we don’t know who we’re fighting, much less where we’re kicking them. And while we’re tied up in Iraq, Al Qaeda thrives in Pakistan and Afghanistan. So the President’s turn of phrase will go to the blooper hall of fame with other Bush Golden Oldies like last throes, links to Al Qaeda and Mission Accomplished. There was a time when America’s success meant defeating Nazis, tearing down communism’s Iron Curtain and walking on the moon. Supportng our troops meant honest safeguards, not trash talk. How low have our standards fallen when the President points to the debacle he created and says, this is what I’m proud of. Most americans believe in a country that’s capable of much higher standards, and if America were really “kicking butt,” the President wouldn’t need to say anything, every one would know it. I yield back.

Watch the video in your choice of Windows Media Player or Quick Time.

Moser: Kentucky at War

Matt Gunterman September 13th, 2007

The Nation Cover “Kentucky at War”

Bob Moser’s excellent analysis of the development of the movement to support the troops, end the war, and ditch Senator Mitch McConnell (R) has hit the stands.

The piece is too long to block quote here, but I’ll include excerpts particularly relevant to the Kentucky progressive blogosphere. You can read the entire article here.

Kentucky at War
Bob Moser

[...]

As summer–and McConnell’s recess vacation–approached, two new sets of nontraditional allies materialized to help LPAC bird-dog the senator, who makes his home in Louisville with his wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao. Matt Gunterman, a 30-year-old rural Kentucky native and Yale University graduate student, launched the DitchMitch blog earlier in the year, bringing together a varied band of bloggers from around the state on a composite site with a common goal. And in June, two young native Kentuckians and a Navy veteran opened an Iraq Summer headquarters in Louisville, part of a national campaign by Americans Against Escalation in Iraq (AAEI) to target key members of Congress with a homegrown antiwar message before they returned to Washington to resume the war debate.

By mid-August McConnell was sending out fundraising letters complaining about being harassed by “the ’60s antiwar movement on steroids.” But as the Republican kingmaker well knew, the reality was something altogether different from that old stereotype–and considerably more formidable.

Jim Pence is a 68-year-old, Salem-smoking, pickup-driving, self-proclaimed hillbilly from economically devastated Hardin County, retired after thirty-five years in the factory at the American Synthetic Rubber Corporation. Politically inactive until 2004, when Bush’s re-election and the war in Iraq spurred him to “vow to fight with every ounce of my strength from then on,” Pence now makes some of the freshest, funniest antiwar and political videos anywhere–and as a result, he’s become the unlikely heart and soul of Kentucky’s DitchMitch campaign.

Linking from his own Hillbilly Report website to DitchMitch and YouTube, Pence puts up snappy vignettes on subjects ranging from Kentucky’s annual bipartisan political hoedown at Fancy Farm–where McConnell made a hasty exit this year after being jeered by protesters carrying signs showing him as Bush’s hand puppet–to a fanciful take on Bush and Condoleezza Rice’s relationship, set to the tune of Frank Sinatra’s “The Way You Look Tonight,” to a hard-hitting series of exposés of liquor-industry fundraising by Ron Lewis, the holy-rolling Congressman from Pence’s district. “I don’t know, I just disappear into them,” Pence says on a dog-day August morning, navigating Louisville traffic en route to the Iraq Summer office. “I stay up some nights till 4 and 5, editing these things.”

DitchMitch creator Gunterman, whose postgraduate goal is to fire up an Internet-based “Ruralution,” connecting grassroots progressives from rural America to spur political action, sees Pence as a prime example of the passion and wit that generally go untapped by Democrats and urban progressives. “There’s no one like Jim in the entire United States,” says Gunterman. “Not with his age and his ornery attitude. He is very much a hillbilly, and he’s reinvigorated the term.”

In his three years of crisscrossing Kentucky to publicize its antiwar and progressive insurgencies, Pence has also stirred up the state’s traditionally timid left-wingers. “When I first went out with my camcorder, I’d go up to people at peace rallies and ask them, ‘Would you like to say something to Mitch?’ and they’d just go, ‘Uhhh…’ Or even if they would say anything, they’d say, ‘But I don’t want my picture taken.’ I just kept saying, ‘The newspaper’s not even going to cover this, and if TV does, it’ll be for ten seconds. Whereas this video’s going up on YouTube tomorrow.’” As Pence kept filming and posting his increasingly popular videos, the activists opened up and embraced this new mechanism for showing that, yes, the military stronghold of Kentucky has a vigorous antiwar effort. “People are stepping out more than they would a few years ago,” Pence says. “Now I can’t get them to stop talking when they see that camera. People know me now, and for the most part they trust me–whether or not they should!”

While Pence and DitchMitch have inspirited Kentucky activists, they’ve also pushed the state’s more established media to take notice of the progressive groundswell. “DitchMitch gives us the power to hold the media accountable in Kentucky for the first time,” says 24-year-old Shawn Dixon, a native of rural western Kentucky who’s just started his first year at NYU law school. In 2004, when Dixon was working as deputy policy and communications director for Democrat Daniel Mongiardo’s uphill Senate challenge to Republican Jim Bunning, he spent much of the campaign in a state of frustration over Kentucky newspapers’ assumption that the incumbent would cruise to victory. “There was no recognition that this would be a competitive election and that this guy was beatable until about a month before the election, when it became impossible to ignore.” Bunning wobbled back to Washington with a slender 23,000-vote victory, but this time around, with LPAC continually raising eyebrows and DitchMitch helping to popularize the anti-McConnell movement, “the media don’t have a choice,” Dixon says. On the same day in late July that Louisville’s Courier-Journal ran a column about McConnell’s dip in popularity (below 50 percent approval), the Herald-Leader in Lexington ran a story, sixteen months before the election, titled “McConnell Vulnerable.”

That’s music to Pence’s ears. “It’s not just what he’s done to perpetuate this war,” says the high-tech hillbilly. “It’s what he hasn’t done for Kentuckians, with all his power, on healthcare and so many other issues that really matter to folks at their kitchen tables. We’re trying to cut through the kind of moral-values crap that McConnell’s been using for twenty-five years to get himself elected. We’re doing what we can to show the emperors without their clothes. And show that the folks who don’t like Mitch, and can’t stand this war, are just regular people like me who finally woke up and spoke up.”

[...]

Kentucky’s progressive community about to rock America

Matt Gunterman September 12th, 2007

Coming to a newsstand near you: The Nation with Bob Moser’s cover story entitled “Kentucky at War,” which examines Kentucky’s progressive grassroots community and how it’s reshaping the political and ideological landscapes of that state — and doing so outside the rigid, tepid, and unresponsive party structures.

It’s gonna be a hell of a read!

The Nation Cover “Kentucky at War”

Chandler & Yarmuth: Supporting our Troops; Leading the Way out of Iraq

Matt Gunterman July 12th, 2007

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the Responsible Redeployment from Iraq Act by a 223 to 201 margin. See the roll call vote here.
Kentucky Democrats thanks Reps. Ben Chandler and John Yarmuth

Kentucky Democrats are proud of Representatives Ben Chandler (KY-04) and John Yarmuth (KY-03) for numbering among the strong majority of members to support this legislation that gives our troops the support they need to come home safely.

Kentucky’s Republican members of Congress voted yet again to enable the crazy, delusional agenda of President George W. Bush, who’s approval has sunk to the levels of Richard Nixon as his failed policies are strengthening terrorists worldwide, over-stretching our armed forces, pushing the American economy to the breaking point, and making government come to a grinding halt as the American people struggle.

Make sure to thank both Reps. Chandler and Yarmuth for their support of our troops and bringing a responsible end to the war in Iraq!

Use the comment section on this post to do so, if you want.

Representative John Yarmuth endorses homophobe Dr. James W. Holsinger for surgeon general

Matt Gunterman June 17th, 2007

Yep, you read that correctly: the most liberal member of Kentucky’s congressional delegation has endorsed the nomination for surgeon general of Dr. James W. Holsinger, the right-wing ideologue, certifiable homophobe, and major financial donor to the Republican party and George W. Bush.

What about Representative Ben Chandler, Kentucky’s more conservative Democratic congressman? He’s made no comment, probably because it’s a matter he gets no formal vote on. I can respect that, quite frankly. Yarmuth, as a unabashed liberal (well, I guess he’s justed ‘bashed’ now), should be the one taking the moral lead here. Someone in Kentucky should.

The chattering class of the state is all lined up behind Holsinger because they want a Kentuckian as a surgeon general, not because they believe the nation deserves a qualified physician who can and will represent the interests of all Americans. There are plenty of fish in the sea for this nomination.

Here’s what Yarmuth’s spokesperson had to say:

[...]

Rep. John Yarmuth, D-3rd District, is concerned about what Holsinger has said, according to spokesman Stuart Perelmuter.

“But he also finds ample reason to believe that those opinions will not interfere with (Holsinger’s) work (as surgeon general), that as a practicing professional he’s never let that interfere,” Perelmuter said.

[...]

Let’s make a statement about Yarmuth’s position by switching around the circumstances of Holsinger’s past for a moment.

Let’s say that, rather than having led a career in his church dedicated to an anti-gay agenda, Holsinger instead believed and espoused — as many on the religious right still do today — that interracial marriage is against the will of God and is sinful, and let’s say that Holsinger wrote a paper in 1991 in which he used cherry-picked “science” to demonstrate that the offspring of those marriages — mix-raced babies — were more likely to suffer from below average intelligence and to engage in criminal activity as adults. And, thus, Holsinger’s paper in its conclusion recommended that his church take the official stance that persons of different races should not marry.

How would you feel about that, John Yarmuth? Would your spokesperson be saying, “those opinions will not interfere with” Holsinger’s work as surgeon general?

I think not. I think you’d be out there denouncing that nomination.

So, essentially: John Yarmuth is a coward on this one, and I for one won’t ever let him forget it.

More signs that Kentucky GOP’s civil war will have lasting consequences

Matt Gunterman June 11th, 2007

The Louisville Courier-Journal’s Joseph Gerth is reporting that Louisville-area Republican State Senator Dan Seum is considering a run against popular freshman Democratic Congressman John Yarmuth.

Why is that interesting? Seum has remained steadfast and true to corrupt and indicted Republican Governor Ernie Fletcher throughout Fletcher’s many turmoils.

However, there’s already another Republican announced he’ll against Yarmuth: former Fletcher personnel cabinet secretary Erwin Roberts, who turned on the governor when the going got tough and ultimately endorsed Anne Northup in her failed attempt to unseat Fletcher in last month’s Republican gubernatorial primary.

So, the race may feature the two GOP factions (the Nunn/Fletcher/Forgy camp against the McConnell camp) duking it out yet again next May.

Yarmuth is already sitting pretty in CD-3, especially considering that next year is a presidential election and the Third votes heavily Democratic. Yarmuth won’t have any problem mopping the floor with any Republican who comes out of a nasty and bitter primary race.

Expect Kentucky Republicans to hand us many more divisions so that we can conquer them in the future.

Congressman Yarmuth: We can beat Mitch McConnell

Jim Pence April 12th, 2007

Congressman John Yarmuth gave a fine and upbeat speech last night to the Louisville Metro Democrats about the work and goals of the new Democratic Congress.

On the topic of Senator Mitch McConnell, he had these words:

“Mitch McConnell can stop anything he wants to, and we need to stop him next year …. We can beat Mitch McConnell.”