Archive for the 'Matt Gunterman' Category

The American Prospect: Blue Moon Rising in Kentucky?

Matt Gunterman November 3rd, 2007

In the wake of his piece earlier this week in The Guardian (UK), Terence Samuel writes again on the topic of the burgeoning progressive movement in Kentucky, but this time for The American Prospect.

Blue Moon Rising in Kentucky?
Democrats are using a gubernatorial race in Kentucky as a warm-up for swinging the state — and the nation — blue in 2008.

Terence Samuel

Barring some unforeseen, cataclysmic shifts in the public mood, Kentucky Democrats will score a huge win in next Tuesday’s gubernatorial election, booting one-term incumbent Ernie Fletcher. But as euphoric as the Democrats are about the prospect of retaking the governor’s mansion in the Bluegrass State, they have their eye on a bigger house, hoping that a 2007 victory in the governor’s race will be a harbinger of what’s to come across the country in 2008.

They dream of a win in Kentucky for the Democratic presidential nominee and defeat of Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Republican Senator who has acquired a reputation as a real Machiavelli for having outmaneuvered home-state Democrats so often and for so long. “That is not going to happen this time,” promises State Party Chairman Jonathan Miller.

The incumbent Fletcher, a physician and former three-term congressman, trails his Democratic challenger, Steve Beshear, by double digits, with the most recent polls showing him 20 points down. Fletcher once got in trouble for flying his plane too close to the U.S. Capitol during Ronald Reagan’s funeral, only to return home and watch his administration crash and burn in the face of corruption charges. He was indicted by a grand jury in 2006 after facing accusations of corrupt hiring practices. None of the charges were felonies, and the case was eventually settled, but Fletcher never seemed to recover.

Democrats smelled blood in the water. As one of only three statewide contests anywhere in the country, Kentucky offered a rare chance to measure the public mood in a non-election year, and it gave Democrats a change to do a test run on their 2008 campaign apparatus.

While there were also governors races in Mississippi and Louisiana, the results there seemed forgone conclusions — Republican wins — and the races were never really contested. (In Mississippi, Gov. Haley Barbour is headed for easy re-election on Tuesday, and two weeks ago, GOP Congressman Bobby Jindal became the first Indian American elected chief executive of a U.S. state.)

Kentucky, however, was another story; in part because it has long been a place where frustrated Democrats believed they should be performing better. There have been constant hints and reminder of what is possible Bill Clinton won Kentucky twice. When Fletcher resigned his House seat to become governor four years ago, Democrats won the special election and have held onto it since. And of course, in 2006, they finally knocked off the perennial endangered 10-year incumbent Anne Northup, who lost by three percentage points (51 to 48 percent) to John Yarmuth, a political columnist who was stridently anti-war and anti-Bush.

“Kentucky is going to be blue next year, even if Hillary Clinton is the nominee,” says anti-McConnell crusader and blogger Matt Gunterman.

But for more than two decades, the state’solitical apparatus has been controlled by Republicans, most particularly McConnell, who may be the most attractive target of all the current efforts. McConnell, whose willingness to stand by the White House on Iraq has hurt his standing at home, has had to endure a sustained barrage of attacks led by national Democrats and an increasingly organized grassroots effort at home.

On McConnell’s birthday in February, Gunterman launched a blog called DitchMitchKY.com, which has become a popular clearinghouse for all things anti-McConnell. “The conservative movement is just imploding, and you could see he was vulnerable,” Gunterman says,

After wild successes in the 2006 midterms, Democrats saw Kentucky as a way to keep their momentum going, and they have invested enormous amounts of time and money to what would have otherwise been a little noticed, off-year re-election campaign for a troubled incumbent governor.

But McConnell is not on the ballot until next year, and Republicans say Democrats are setting themselves up for more heartbreak with all the talk of unseating him. “I don’t see where they are getting their information that he’s vulnerable,” says Rebecca Fisher, spokeswoman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee. She also points out that Democrats have not yet found an opponent for McConnell.

The Republican hope is that voters in Kentucky next week, and around the country next year, will decide to vote on issues like taxes, abortion, and guns, instead of Iraq, corruption, and their general gloom about the country’s future. Fletcher’s spokesman told me that he expects Kentuckians to come back to conservative issues, and when that happens the governor’s race will tighten up. That is likely the same playbook that will guide GOP strategy in the 2008 presidential race. The question is whether they have the time or the credibility to pull it off either in Kentucky or beyond.

Democrats, from national party insiders to independent advocacy organizations to big labor, have all descended on Kentucky. This week the AFL-CIO announced a final weekend push to turn out union members across the state. Beginning Saturday, organizers said they expected union volunteers to knock on up to 17,000 doors and make 72,000 calls in the last four days of the gubernatorial campaign. Those are also the first four days of Get-Out-the-Vote efforts for the 2008 campaign.

Quoted (in muddled fashion) in my favorite paper

Matt Gunterman October 30th, 2007

When I lived in Glasgow in 2001-02, one of my favorite morning pleasures was picking up a copy of The Guardian on my way to the coffee shop before heading into the dark recesses of the library for a good day’s work. (Of course, since it’s Scotland, for much of the year anyway, everywhere is a dark recess.) I loved this time with that paper; it was like nothing I’d ever seen before (this was, of course, before the rise of the blogosphere).

So, you can imagine I was tickled to find in my email inbox this morning a Google Alert that had a quote from me [albeit a little muddled in the online edition]. Lots of people get quoted in The Guardian everyday, but it’s nice to be a small part of a narrative that you’re proud of and that you feel will make a difference — that difference being the defeat of the American conservative bile and bigotry that not only infects our nation’s politics and culture, but adversely affects the lives of so many millions around the world.

One of the biggest players in this election cycle in Kentucky towards the defeat of the conservative machine has been organized labor. Their level of commitment and, appropriately, organization, is amazing; they are not sitting down as Republicans rip apart the shared American prosperity that’s taken generations to build.

The humiliating defeat of candidates like Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and Rep. Stan Lee (R) for attorney general next week will send a strong — and encouraging — message to the rest of the nation and world that a healthy majority of Kentuckians are ready to fight the intellectual filth, churlish bigotry, and general idiocy of the Kentucky GOP and its conservative ranks.

We are beginning the process of pushing social conservatives to the margins of our society, where there delusions can no longer harm the middle class, workers, children, students, ethnic and sexual minorities, or the elderly.

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”