Archive for the 'Republican Party Decline' Category

PSA: Phony Pheminists

Terri Whitehouse September 15th, 2008

Aww, how precious. Conservatives have gone and discovered pheminism. A whole week-ish after I called it like I saw it, B. Hussein Osama’s uppity ass went and said that the same old bullshit by any other name still stinks.

It doesn’t just stink. It STANKS!

At any rate, it’s really sweet to see the GOP hustle at developing their pheminist muscles. (No, I’m not talking about kegels.) To the conservatives out there who are new to pheminism, I’d like to offer a very brief rundown of the concept. I understand that you’ve dedicated your whole lives to harming women’s physical, psychological, and financial well-being, so there are bound to be early failures. Pheminism, like any asset worth having, doesn’t develop over night. You’ve got to practice!

First off, rushing to the defense of your VP, as though she were a Damsel in Distress and not a damn pit bull-skinned moose hunter is problematic. Read and learn. No, rape is nowhere near as bad as some boy being a big meanie, but I think the same concept applies.

Secondly, please understand the difference between “feminism” and “pheminism.” Feminists are a bunch of fugly, hairy, man-hating sluts that care about shit like getting paid, and not dying as a result of pregnancy. Real trivial crap.

Pheminists, on the other hand, are beautiful, non-threatening white women (mostly) who collect wingnut welfare and have made hefty money putting bitches in their place. Intellectually, feminists win hands down, but who wants to hang with a bunch of humorless brainiacs? Pheminists are women, so you don’t have to hide or feel all guilty about your deep-seeded innate hatred of them.

Finally, it’s 2008, not 1968. Therefore, it’s probably not the brightest idea to call out supposed sexist attacks by reverting back to racist dogwhistles. While it’s admirable that you’re coming to pheminism in the 9th inning, better not to do it on the back of racism. That’s not how feminism works.

This is.

(x-posted: B&P)

Apparent Transparent

Terri Whitehouse August 30th, 2008

Sen. Mitch McConnell had this to day to the Messenger-Inquirer about Sen. John McCain’s VP choice of Gov. Sarah Palin yesterday:

Clearly, picking a little-known governor from Alaska was an effort to appeal to women voters.

McCain was looking for someone who was not of Washington, who has a reputation as a reformer like him and on the foreign policy stuff, he’s going to say, “I’ve got the experience. I don’t need it in a vice president.”

The test will be when it’s all over, it will either look like a genius move or a Hail Mary that went imcomplete.

So, what do you think? Mitch McConnell: true believer, or just kidding himself because he’s power-hungry? Personally, I thought Sen. McCain came across as less-than-enthused about his own choice.

Appealing to women? I don’t know about all ya’ll, but I don’t vote with my vagina.

Of course, what do you expect from a party of dumb shits that think people are only voting for Obama because he’s black. Talk about just not getting it.

And while we’re on the topic of vaginas, why is Rep. Ed Whitfield so scared of them? Vagina dentata, perhaps?

Eulogizing Jesse Helms

Terri Whitehouse July 8th, 2008

Sen. Mitch McConnell will deliver former Sen. Jesse Helms’s eulogy. I’ve been reading and listening to coverage of the late Senator’s death, and all I can say is it’s a pretty sad reflection upon your legacy when just about the only thing your supporters can say about you is, “Well, at he had the cojones to be blatantly racist, which is something enviable in this age of political correctness.”

The Bush Legacy Tour, A James Pence Video

Jim Pence June 27th, 2008

[I'm posting this on behalf of Jim Pence.]

The “Bush Legacy Tour” bus came to Louisville, Ky. yesterday and I had the opportunity to shoot some video and take a few photos.

I put together the video below for folks that won’t have the chance to see the Bush Legacy Tour bus in person, so they would have an idea of what it looked like and what was about.

The video below is set to the music of “Takin My Country Back” by The Honky Tonkers For Truth.

Click here to view the photos, the video is below.

(x-posted: Hillbilly Report

He Got 935 Problems, But A War Ain’t One

Terri Whitehouse January 23rd, 2008

The AP is reporting that the Bush administration issued nearly 1,000 false statements about national security in the two years after the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001:

The study concluded that the statements “were part of an orchestrated campaign that effectively galvanized public opinion and, in the process, led the nation to war under decidedly false pretenses.”

As far as I’m concerned, it’s just another statement of the bleeding obvious. But still, it gives me a massive headache this morning. Doesn’t Sen. Mitch McConnell know that ignoring something doesn’t make it go away? Time to send him packing so he and his BFF George W. Bush can have more free time together next year.

SUSA: Kentuckians STILL hate George Bush

Joe Sonka December 21st, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

A new SUSA poll is out, and it confirms whats been true for quite some time:

Kentuckians loathe the failure and disgrace that is one George W. Bush.

Only 36% approve of the performance of the Chimp-in-Chief, while a whopping 61% disapprove.

This continues the 2 year trend for Bush in Kentucky. In each the last 14 months, Bush's disapproval has been at least 15 points higher than his approval, and in each the last 21 months this has exceed at least 9 points.

These numbers can't help but remind me of this quote from Senator Mitch McConnell:

Senate Majority Whip Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called Bush "one of the great presidents in the history of the United States."

I look forward to that commercial.

Next Republican economic debacle about to hit: Home equity loan crisis

Matt Gunterman December 17th, 2007

Dennis Jacobe, who’s the Chief Economist for Gallup, has a writeup about the nation’s next bit of economic turmoil: the coming crisis in the trillion-dollar home equity loan market.

Here’s Jacobe’s conclusion:

[...]

Fed Needs to Change the Consumer/Investor Psychology

As the so-called “subprime”-related losses have been felt worldwide, structured financings and even the securitization process have come under increasing stress. But today’s financial market stress, and the volatility it has generated on Wall Street, has yet to be fully reflected on Main Street. More importantly, the anemic response of public policy-makers to the potential for widespread mortgage foreclosures and housing price declines unseen for many decades leaves much to be desired. Now, we can add a Fed that seems more interested in econometric analysis and geopolitical globalization than current investor/consumer psychology.

Currently, lenders are tightening their underwriting standards to the old norms in response to their “subprime”-related losses and the mortgage lending excesses of recent years. These are much-needed changes, but the current tightening reflects past excesses in the mortgage and housing markets much more than conditions in the consumer lending markets. But these are just the beginnings of the consumer credit crunch set to unfold in the months ahead.

What the Fed should have done was to take every action possible — cut the federal funds rate by more than 50 basis points, reduce the discount rate even more, and make it clear that it would continue pumping liquidity into the system as necessary to free up the credit markets — to get out ahead of the “other shoe to drop” in response to falling housing prices and poor underwriting standards: the coming home equity lending debacle and its effect on consumer credit availability. Unfortunately, as was the case with the so-called “subprime” mess, the nation’s monetary authorities are now positioned to be reactive as events unfold in the credit markets — often not a winning strategy.

###

It’s not a pleasurable thing to see the economy go into steep recession (and that’s where it’s headed). It negatively affects all Americans of whatever political ideology. However, a longterm benefit of that near-term, mutual pain is that, once again, Republican economic policy will be revealed to the latest generation as the snake oil that it is. And the end result will be marginalization of Republicans and their return to national minority status for the better part of a generation.

In fact, after 2008, it’s likely that by the next time the Republican Party has a chance to dominate the federal government as it has between roughly 1994 and 2004, same-sex marriage will be a social norm. So, yes, we’re talking a long time before Republicans regroup and find their ideological footing.

Likewise, whatever the result at the ballot box against Sen. McConnell in 2008, the project to place him in the proper context of the severe detriment to American democracy that he represents is a generation-long affair. The monstrous career of money-grubbing, influence-mongering, and hyper-partisanship of Mitch McConnell will be to the history of the early 21st century United States what Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R) is to the second half of the 20th century.

Just as today we still hear the term McCarthyism lobbed around, there will come a day when, in remarking on tactics of legislative obstruction, Senators accuse one another of McConnellism.

And when that day comes, Mitch McConnell will have inherited the legacy he rightly deserves.

Military families turning on Republicans

Joe Sonka December 10th, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots and DailyKos)

In light of Mitch McConnell's despicable comments last week about our military deaths, its worth noting this story from the LA Times last Friday on how Republicans are hemorrhaging support from the military. Check out these numbers from the Bloomberg/LA Times poll conducted Nov. 30th to Dec. 3rd of active military, veterans and their family:

Was it worth going to war in Iraq?- only 36% yes, 57% no (was 64% yes in 2004)

Should we withdraw our troops now or within the next year? Or should we stay as long as it takes?- 58% withdraw, 35% stay

Do you approve of the way that Bush is handling the needs of active duty troops, veterans and military families?- 35% approve, 53% disapprove

What party do you trust to do a better job of handling issues relating to military families?- 39% Democrats, 35% Republicans

And military families in KY are quite aware of the fact that Mitch McConnell has rubber-stamped Bush's failed policies every step of the way. And let us not forget, it was Mitch McConnell that TWICE filibustered Sen Jim Webb's amendments to restore proper troop rotation and rest between tours, which both had broad bipartisan support and 58 votes. I noted back in July the LHL story on the shift in attitudes towards Bush/McConnell/Iraq in Ft. Campbell, where the strain on military families has reached the breaking point.  

A few days after the Sept. 11 attacks, Bo Ward put these words on the sign at his 12-chair barbershop near the main gate at Fort Campbell: "President Bush, show no mercy. Kick their ass!"

But almost six years later, and after more than four years of war in Iraq, Ward's no longer so sure.

"Soldiers are tired; wives are tired; families are getting worn down," Ward said. "I know these boys can't just pick up and come home from Iraq, but we need some kind of exit plan."

**************

Kentucky has given heavily to the war effort. Fort Campbell's latest round of deployments will push to 23,000 the number of soldiers from the post serving in the Middle East conflict.

At Fort Campbell, the place Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, once called home, feelings about ongoing efforts in the Middle East and Republican leadership during the war are mixed.

On any given weekday, Ward's barbershop, the fort's largest, is a place where privates and senior officers sit side by side waiting for a trim. Ward chats with these soldiers as he snips away. And he says he thinks many of them now would be happy to see Washington set a date for leaving Iraq.

"Right now, you've got first sergeants and sergeant majors and E-7s and E-8s that are getting out of the army right and left," Ward said. "They're saying 'I've been deployed three times, I'm pressing my luck, I'm not going to give up my life and my family for something where there's no end to it.'"

Karla Tucker works at a furniture store just down the street where many military families shop. She also says that many soldiers, exhausted by repeated deployments, are deciding not to "re-up" as their enlistments end.

"These young men and women are coming back with all kinds of problems; some of them are on anti-depressants; their marriages are in trouble," Tucker said. "There are families right and left that are deciding not to hang around; they're leaving here and going home. I personally have not heard anyone say they're going to re-enlist. It's sad."

It is sad, and this war's tragedy goes far beyond even the high number of deaths and serious injuries. The effects of the war have taken a deep psychological toll on many soldiers returning, breaking up families and even leading to a 26-year high in the suicide rate among the Army's active duty.  Below is the video of Lt. Col. Andrew Horne on MSNBC, explaining the strain on families from the extended tours that Mitch McConnell filibustered in order to maintain.

Military families know the role that Mitch McConnell has played in being Bush's lapdog in respects to Iraq, and what once helped him will now be an anchor around his neck as they turn on Bush. Just look at McConnell's recent poll numbers among those in Western KY (where Ft. Campbell is located). In just 2 months, McConnell's approval/disapproval rating went from 66/23% to 49/36%. Western KY is usually where Mitch pulls in his biggest amount of support, but if a candidate is able to significantly cut into this, Mitch could seriously be in trouble next year.

west ky apps

As I mentioned back in July:

Meanwhile, Marine vet Jim Webb shows how you deal with a repetitive talking point regurgitator and Bush enabler on Meet the Press.

Can you imagine Mitch McConnell having to debate a tough Marine veteran like this in his Senate race next year? Someone that actually has a distinguished military record and can speak for the veterans and their families that have paid such a heavy price for their sacrifice to their country in Iraq?

Perhaps we can make that happen, eh?

Perhaps we can, indeed.

The Historic Obstruction of Senator McFilibuster

Joe Sonka December 4th, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots and DailyKos, go recommend it!)

Mitch McConnell is currently employing the most cynical and selfish of tactics within the Senate. Mitch finds himself faced with a minority in the House and Senate, where much progressive legislation has passed in the House and been supported by 50+% in the Senate.

But this would certainly make Democrats look good, as they promised to raise the minimum wage, expand health care and shift course in Iraq. And they have had the votes to pass such legislation.

So what's Mitch McConnell's strategy? Block everything. Filibuster everything. And then, accuse Democrats as being a "do-nothing" Congress. Then, hope that the American people are stupid enough not to realize that it is the Republicans that are blocking legislation from passing. The strategy was laid out in public by Trent Lott when he said, "The strategy of being obstructionist can work or fail … and so far it’s working for us." Working for the American people is a far different matter.

And these filibusters have come at a record-shattering pace. In July, the 110th Senate was already on pace to almost triple the record number of filibusters, as you can see in this handy little graphic: (and an incredibly thorough run down here)


And they're still on pace to shatter this record. From the New York Times, we learn that Mitch and his Republican buddies continue to obstruct on an unprecedented level:

So far in this first year of the 110th Congress, there have been 72 motions to stop filibusters, most on the Iraq war but also on routine issues like reauthorizing Amtrak funding. There were 68 such motions in the full two years of the previous Congress, 53 in 1987-88 and 23 in 1977-78. In 1967-68, there were 5 such votes, one of them on a plan to amend cloture itself, which failed.

For policy making, this is the legislative equivalent of gum on a shoe.

It has produced a numbing cycle of Washington futility: House Democrats pass a bill, but Senate Democrats, facing a filibuster by the Republican minority, fail to get the 60 votes needed to end debate. Little wonder that approval ratings of Congress stink these days.

But is this strategy working for McConnell? Are the American people duped by this obstruct and blame strategy?

While it is true that Congress' approvals are abysmal, a look at the numbers shows that Americans are not blaming the Democrats at this point. A recent USA Today/Gallup showed that 54% have a favorable view of Democrats, 37% unfavorable. The Republicans? 40% approve, 50% disapprove. And a recent Washington Post/ABC polled showed similar numbers as the Democrats had a 51% favorable rating to the Republicans 39%.

Want further proof that this cynical strategy is not working? Take a look at Mitch McConnell's plummeting approval ratings, which are an all-time low of 44/47%. Furthermore, his numbers among moderates and Independents in KY are particularly god-awful and continuing a steep downward spiral. People are sick of McConnell's allegiance to Bush and his corrupt party.

But Mitch and his Republican friends in the Senate are going to stick by this strategy: 1.) Block every piece of popular legislation which will help our country move forward. 2.) Blame Democrats for nothing passing and "doing nothing". Forget the negative consequences of blocking such important legislation, just think about driving down Democrats' approvals by dishonestly blaming them.

Too bad for them, people aren't getting fooled and Republicans will have no shelter when the great Democratic tidal wave of 2008 hits. 

Especially the "Grim Reaper" of the Senate. 

These, my friends, are truly frightening paragraphs

Matt Gunterman November 25th, 2007

Yes. Frightening paragraphs. I was reading this oped by a lawyer in Lexington named W. Bryan Hubbard in this Sunday’s Herald-Leader with bemusement until I came to these words. Then the whole thing just turned dark and scary:

GOP must reclaim conservative high ground

[...]

In mockery’s face, we must continue to preach that America is special because it is divine. The God who created it is the same God who grants our liberty against the tyrant within. To protect a nation of faith, we must be a party of faith that welcomes all who worship and respect that which is greater than man.

We must preserve a nation of color. One hundred years from now, we will look and sound much different than we do today. Fear not, for America is not a language or color. It is the sum of history’s eternal dream — a land where freedom reigns and peace prevails.

We are called to keep that flame for those who risk life and limb to live in its light. If the choice must ever be made, may we be brown, speak Spanish and be free before we stay white, speak English and be socialist.

Freedom calls. The time has come to rise and march.

###

First, as far as the conservative high ground is concerned, they can have all the conservative ground they want. The rest of us — the vast majority of us — are going a different direction. It’s called progressive, and we’re looking for progress, not preserving the status quo.

Second, it really is the sign of a highly delusional mind to make a statement to tens of thousands of readers that the United States is divine. Let’s be frank; that’s a statement that all but the very fringe of religious Americans would eschew. That’s crazy talk.

Third, I love the not-so-latent racism. To paraphrase, ‘It’s better to be brown than socialist, but in the perfect world we’d remain white and capitalist.’ And do you know what will make us socialist in his eyes? Universal health care! Yes, that’s right, for conservatives, to provide every man woman and child in the country access to health care is socialism! Just like it’s socialist to provide every man woman and child access to state-sponsored education. Oops.

People. This man represents the state of the conservative movement in Kentucky.

Progressives rejoice!

What’s missing from Mitch’s new ad?

Joe Sonka November 19th, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

This totally slipped by me somehow. Do you notice what’s missing in Mitch McConnell new ad slash loveletter to big government porky earmarks? Northup Republican badqat did.

Mitch McConnell…. Suddenly not a Republican?

It’s a very interesting turn of events for someone who lays claim to the title of Senate Minority Leader to be running political advertisements this early. And perhaps even more interesting, and a bit disturbing, is the fact that at no point in his advertisement does he indicate to the viewer that he is a Republican.

Of course, Kentucky just saw the defeat of a Republican governor. President Bush isn’t a popular fellow. But just because Ernie Fletcher proved himself incapable of being elected to a second term, and just because Bush is a lame duck who the public is ready to sweep away into the past…should that make one disregard their own identification?

Wow. Truly sad days for the Republican Party. Their own Senate Minority leader is so vulnerable that he has to run ads a full year before the election, and now he’s ashamed to even say that he is a Republican.

It looks like “Republican” has become the new “Liberal” in Kentucky.

Snap.

UPDATE: actually, Republican flashes onto the screen for a brief second. Blink and you’ll miss it (as badqat and I did).

To repeat, in a minute-long commercial, the word Republican is not spoken once, and only flashes onto the screen for one second.

Mitch, why are you so ashamed to let everyone know that you’re a Republican? Say it loud and say it proud!

Unless you’d rather keep that untidy skeleton in the closet. I don’t blame you, Americans just don’t like you folks very much these days.

The campaign to culturally marginalize conservatives turns a new page

Matt Gunterman November 14th, 2007

ThinkProgress highlights this ad campaign from the Center for American Progress. The goal with these ads is just as much to inform and remind Americans of the pitiful record and history of the conservative movement as it is to promote a new progressive vision for the nation. It’s to make Americans recall the sad twentieth-century conservative legacy of discrimination, bigotry, racism, bungled diplomacy, and environmental and fiscal irresponsibility, and to ensure that Americans make the connection between the sorry state of our nation today and the cultural dominance of conservatives.

New Ad Campaign: “Progressive. And proud of it.”

[Our guest blogger is John Halpin, a Senior Fellow and Executive Speechwriter at the Center for American Progress focusing on the foundations of progressive thought, communications, and public opinion analysis.]

The Center for American Progress, in conjunction with the Glaser Progress Foundation, recently launched a multi-year effort to increase public understanding of what it means to be a progressive given our nation’s history and the challenges we face today.

The first part of the campaign involves a pilot experiment to begin defining progressivism in the public’s mind through a series of distinct advertisements that explain the progressive movement’s core values and policy ideas, its historical accomplishments, and its philosophical differences with conservatives.

Progressive reformers in the 20th century paved the way for a more humane society that ensured decent working conditions; fought corporate abuse and corruption; provided support for the elderly and unemployed; protected our natural resources; and expanded democratic opportunities for all citizens. Our ad campaign is a first attempt at bringing these progressive values and accomplishments to light for modern audiences.

We are just completing a three-week run of four ads in the Columbus, Milwaukee, and Indianapolis media markets. We look forward to hearing ideas from readers of Think Progress and other progressive blogs — let us know what you think:

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.

Al Cross: McConnell has “managed to alienate two elements of his own party”

Matt Gunterman November 4th, 2007

Two more days until Democratic Christmas this year: Tuesday, November 6.

As for my election night plans, I plan on live-blogging the results via a map of Kentucky as I did back in the May primary. Most everyone with an internet connection can get the number results, but for the visual thinkers out there, I’ll lay out the geography of the results for both the gubernatorial race and secretary of state.

Al Cross (I), the kingpin of political journalism in Kentucky, offers us this week on the Sunday pages of the Courier-Journal his take on the dynamics of the present election and what they mean for Sen. Mitch McConnell (R).

In final days, not much hope remains for Fletcher

Kentuckians are about to vote in a most unusual election for governor.

The two campaigns are going full steam, as if the outcome will be decided in the final hours. Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell is on the radio in his hometown of Louisville, urging voters to re-elect Gov. Ernie Fletcher.

But all available polls suggest that Democrat Steve Beshear will hand Fletcher a crushing defeat, perhaps with a margin rivaling those of recent Democratic governors whose elections were, in the end, not fully contested: Julian Carroll, who won by 25.7 percent of the vote in 1975, and John Y. Brown Jr., who won by 26.3 in 1979. Heck, Beshear might even get near his old nemesis Wallace Wilkinson (29.6 in 1987) and his buddy Brereton Jones (29.5 in 1991), even though he is running against an incumbent governor who was elected by 10.1 percent, a record for a Republican in Kentucky.

[...]

This confounds those of us who thought the race would narrow as anti-Fletcher Republicans, such as those who voted for Anne Northup in the primary, came home to their party. They don’t appear to be moving. In The Courier-Journal’s latest Bluegrass Poll, GOP voters charted almost exactly the same as they did in September — 25 percent for Beshear and 9 percent undecided.

[...]

Another way Fletcher got elected was also unusual, if not unique. His predecessors got elected by building a political organization of their own; he had organizations handed to him by his Republican colleagues in the state’s congressional delegation. These organizations helped him get elected, but their primary loyalty remained elsewhere. So, when he got in trouble, he lacked a strong political network to guide and defend him.

The lack of organizational help was exemplified by the attitude of U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell, the state Republican kingpin, who helped push Fletcher into the race. He put too much value on Fletcher’s track record of winning elections and seemed not to ask himself if Fletcher could manage the politically complex job of governor. (Fletcher, asked to explain why he almost ignored the huge crowd at his first Governor’s Derby Breakfast, said, “I have a hard time thinking politically.”)

When the scandal hit, McConnell treated Fletcher as if the Governor were radioactive. When Northup challenged Fletcher, McConnell called her a formidable candidate, but he didn’t follow up with the backing that Northup supporters expected. So, he managed to alienate two elements of his own party, just as he was starting what he has said will be his toughest campaign for re-election.

In the general election, McConnell has been complimentary of Fletcher and helped him raise money. That help, and his radio ads, may help assuage some Fletcherites, but 1995 gubernatorial nominee Larry Forgy keeps railing against the senator and may challenge him next year — a quixotic exercise but one that could cause more damage.

The last big Republican kingpin was Louie Nunn, governor from 1967-71. He ran for the Senate in 1972, when Richard Nixon was carrying Kentucky by more than 300,000 votes, but lost to little-known Democrat Dee Huddleston by 35,000. The usual reason cited is Nunn’s sales-tax increase, but the scales may have been tipped by Republican defections in the old 5th Congressional District, where his administration had problems keeping patronage-oriented Republicans happy, and in Jefferson County, where scars remained from his bloody 1967 primary battle with County Judge Marlow Cook.

Louie Nunn never fully healed those scars, and they cost him. Next year, McConnell is a much stronger bet than Nunn was, but he has suffered fresh scars lately, and Democrats smell blood.

###

One of the more interesting passages above is Cross’s statement that it confounded conventional wisdom in Kentucky that Republicans didn’t unite around Fletcher in the end. Many people expect that McConnell will have a far easier time reuniting his base despite its splintering in this 2007 gubernatorial race. The problem with that scenario is that it doesn’t recognize how dissatisfied even Republicans are with the status quo of their party. Yes, there is that core of the party that’s marching alongside McConnell and Pres. George W. Bush over the impending political cliff like a bunch of lemmings, but there’s also a sizable portion that wants a new direction.

It’s true that this phenomenon is far more discernible on a national level than in Kentucky because Kentucky Republicans tend not to be the brightest bulbs or outside-the-box thinkers. Yet, when you combine the KY GOP faction that will be clamoring for change and views McConnell as an obstruction to that change (however small that group is) with the Forgy/Fletcher that will stop at nothing to tear McConnell down, then you have a formidable opposition.

Enough to defeat McConnell in a primary? Almost assuredly not. Enough to help Democrats defeat him in the general election. You bet.

Rep. Stan Lee (R) is Kentucky’s version of Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R?)

Matt Gunterman October 31st, 2007

God bless Joe Sonka. God bless Joe Sonka because he works his tail off traversing Kentucky covering the various manifestations of right-wing lunacy in the commonwealth [If you haven't checked out Joe's blogosphere-famous coverage of the Creation Museum from earlier this year, do so].

I envy Joe because he has that ability to observe the multitude of nitwits that make up the Kentucky GOP with a humorous eye and a sly smirk. I, on the other hand, don’t suffer these fools so well, even from a thousand miles away. Yet Joe has the gift, through his writing, of putting the crazy nature of social conservatives in Kentucky in perspective.

For example, Joe has a frightening new report over at BlueGrassRoots (the article itself will be published in the Lexington-based W Weekly) about a recent meeting of the American Family Association of Kentucky.

I’m going to include some excerpts from Joe’s piece below, but the most important thing to remember is that both the Republican candidate for state attorney general, Rep. Stan Lee, and for state auditor, Linda Greenwell, were in attendance and fully engaged at this meeting.

You know how most of the world has been up-in-arms against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R?) over his years-long effort to promote the cause of holocaust denial? It’s craziness. Rational people know it. That didn’t stop the Iranians from organizing and hosting a Holocaust denial conference last year. Birds of a feather flock together, as even the U.S.’s very own former Klu Klux Klan member David Duke took part.

In the end, we will never eliminate crazy beliefs like Holocaust denial, racism, xenophobia, or homophobia, but we can marginalize them. Peer pressure does work, especially here in the United States. Americans, by and large, want to be perceived as successful, accepted, and mainstream. So, by framing these sorts of beliefs as radical, extreme, undesirable and out-of-the-mainstream, you necessitate that people who continue to cling to them make an overt choice for themselves: which is more important to them, their hatred of others or their own prosperity?

It’s objectively true that hatred is not rational; it is morally wrong. Yet some people will not make the rational choice on their own; they need a little cajoling along the way. That’s where societal pressure comes into play.

Keep that in mind as you read what Joe has to say below about this meeting. Think about how outrageous its content was, and how scary it is that two of the Republican candidates for statewide office embraced this message and those who propagate it.

In short, these people at the American Family Association of Kentucky are free to have their beliefs; it’s a free country. The rest of us, however, should expect that men and women who strive to attain the highest levels of elected office in our land would not associate with them, would shun them. Instead, they are embracing them, and on election day the people of Kentucky will shun Stan Lee and Linda Greenwell as punishment.

Raging Bigotry and the Dying of the Right

Did you know that Lexington is run by the “Homosexual Hegemony”? That “the gays” own the government and the media? And the only way to get access to this power is to have the dirty gay sex with them?

Yea, neither did I.

[...]

Roughly 50 people squeezed into the cafeteria. After the first speaker told us how he escaped the evils of today’s society when God told him to start his own line of athletic apparel, it was Kent Ostrander’s turn. Ostrander, the founder of the like-minded Family Foundation, was a key player in the push to amend KY’s Constitution so that gay marriage and civil unions are now outlawed.

He was sure to preface his points with “now, I’m not trying to vilify homosexuals”. For example, he would say this just before his inaccurate tangent on how gay sex is the cause of 75% of AIDS in the world. “These people bring this on themselves!”

He further chastised UK, saying that allowing partners to receive health insurance is to tolerate and “validify” these relationships. Again, he “wasn’t trying to vilify gays”, but the “predatory ideas of the radical homosexual agenda” will destroy our families and society. Ostrander ended his speech, nearly shouting, “Our God shall reign!”

Next, a sociology student presented her research project on why the black community in Lexington is faced with the problems of poverty, crime and drug abuse. Her conclusion, after repeatedly informing us that she was a “scientist”? Young blacks in Lexington are mired in this because of….. The Gays. You see, homosexuals own all of the power in the black community of Lexington, coining it the “Homosexual Hegemony”. Those gays force young blacks wanting access to that power to tolerate and become acclimated to the gay lifestyle. One acclimated to this immorality, they succumb to the evils of drug abuse, crime and dirty gay sex.

But these are just the crazy ramblings of some small fringe cult, right? Apparently, not. Linda Greenwell, Republican candidate for Auditor in next week’s election, was happily handing out campaign literature to the crowd. Ostrander pointed out state Sen. Stan Lee in the crowd, thanking him for all of his work to “support our cause in Frankfort”. Lee, the Republican candidate for Attorney General, took a bow and soaked in the applause.

Then, it was Frank Simon’s turn. He jumped right into the “culture war” routine, blasting the godless villains who have taken the commandments, literal creation science and prayer out of public schools. “We need to stop them and GOD will stop them!”

Simon started in with the gays, then paused, putting on a coy exterior of doubt. “Oh, I don’t want to get into this…” before deciding to share his shocking video with the crowd. The lights were dimmed, and he presented a video that he claimed was being shown in schools. It showed a series of families, in which a child introduced us to his/her two mothers or fathers. Each child explained how, despite their differences, they love and protect each other just like any other family does.

The visceral reaction from the crowd was palpable. Audible gasps. Loud cries of “no!!!”, “my God!!”, “how dare they!” It resembled the “2-minute hate” out of Orwell’s 1984, the crowd whipped up into frenzy at the traitorous Goldstein. “This is what we’re up against!” cried Simon.

“Sure, kids drank beer back in my day, but it wasn’t until the gays that they started smoking the dope! ….. We never used to have to lock our doors!”

They culprit was the ubiquitous “They”. “They” took over our government. “They” want gay sex taught to our children. “They control the media! You’re only going to find out about these votes in Frankfort after they happen. That’s no accident. They don’t want you to know about them!”

Such bigotry among fundamentalists has many forbearers. This used to be the argument against “race-mixing”, how the Bible warned against it and it would tear down the fabric of our society. Such bigots were swept to the margins of society after the civil rights movement, but there is always a new “they” to latch onto. And while fomenting hatred towards gays has proved quite successful for the Christian Right, they also know that the gig is up.

Shortly after this AFA meeting, UK had a “coming out week”, where gay and straight students could show solidarity and promote tolerance. At one event, state Sen. Ernesto Scorsone, our first openly gay representative, told the crowd, “When I went to UK, something like this was unheard of. We’ve progressed to the point where this is now possible.”

And that is why we see the vitriol of the Christian right. They know that their loss in the culture war is imminent. A recent poll showed that those under 30 have rejected this brand of bigotry in politics, supporting gay rights in overwhelming numbers. There is even a rift among evangelicals, as a recent NYT article found many churches abandoning the obsession with gays, moving towards the social justice aspect of Christianity.

Tuesday’s election would seem to validate this trend, as Republicans Ernie Fletcher and Stan Lee are expected to lose by nearly 20 points. But victory is not yet upon us, as KY politicians will still seek to capitalize on this homophobic demographic (Even Todd Hollenbach, Dem. candidate for Treasurer, refuses to renounce Simon’s endorsement).

But at least we now know that it will take more than simply using homophobia to get elected in KY.

Of course, if I was Mexican, I’d be sweating a bit.

A telling sign of the sorry state the GOP will be in for a generation

Matt Gunterman October 25th, 2007

The young generation doesn’t like the GOP. Who can blame them? They see right through the party’s demagoguery on race, immigration, sexuality, religion, and health care. The Republicans aren’t even pretending to be building a vision of tomorrow for their party’s and our own future. They’re simply desperately trying to hold onto the power that they have. There’s no future for the GOP, and many Republicans believe that fact literally because they believe our nation should be governed as if the only relevant future event is the second coming of Jesus.

Those last people are fundamentalist Christians, and I think we’re all better off just admitting that they are crazy. Fundamentalist Christians are crazy. Loony. Dangerous. Freakishly churlish. A fierce detriment to American society.

There’s no way around it. We’re seeing the evidence and manifestation of it today.

Anyway, how bad are things for the Republican party today?

Check this out from Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo:

The Younger Set

You’ve probably seen how Stephen Colbert is running for president. You may even have seen this Rasmussen poll that has Colbert pulling down a respectable 13% of the vote in a hypothetical Rudy-Hillary match-up.

But look at this paragraph down into Rasmussen’s write-up (italics in the original) …

Colbert does particularly well with the younger voters most likely to be watching his show and therefore most aware of his myriad presidential-like qualities. In the match-up with Giuliani and Clinton, Colbert draws 28% of likely voters aged 18-29. He draws 31% of that cohort when his foes are Thompson and Clinton. In both match-ups, Colbert has more support with young voters than the GOP candidate.

There’s something appropriate in this. Americans in their twenties would prefer a normal person pretending to be a Republican buffoon than the real thing.

###

George W. Bush Vetoes SCHIP And Kentucky Folks Protest The Veto Outside Senator Mitch McConnell’s Louisville, Kentucky Office. Youtube Video.

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”

Redneck bigots like to invoke Jesus, but that doesn’t mean Jesus listens

Jim Pence September 6th, 2007

[Message from Matt: Jim's work is ever provocatively ornery, but there are times when it not only captures the humor and mood of the moment when making its point, but also is elevated, quite frankly, to the level of art. If ever MOMA does an exhibit on folk blogging, then Jim Pence and his HillbillyReport will be Exhibit A.]

Rep. Ron Lewis (KY-02): Sen. Larry Craig (R) must resign

Matt Gunterman August 30th, 2007

I think I’m correct in saying that Congressman Ron Lewis (R) is the first in the Kentucky delegation to call for Senator Larry Craig’s resignation.

My question: Since Lewis doesn’t stipulate that the indiscretions must occur while serving in one’s current office, how does Craig’s predicament warrant this response and Senator David Vitter’s buying of prostitutes and wearing of diapers with them differ here?

For Immediate Release
Contact: Michael Dodge
August 29, 2007
(202) 225-3501

Rep. Lewis Calls for U.S. Senator Larry Craig to Resign

WASHINGTON, D.C - U.S. Rep. Ron Lewis issued the following statement Wednesday concerning Idaho Senator Larry Craig:

“Senator Craig’s failure to disclose this incident and unwillingness to legally claim his innocence undermine the conservative principles of the Republican Party and should not be tolerated by voters or his congressional colleagues.

“There should be no moral relativism applied to elected officials who tarnish public office with private indiscretions. I call on Senator Craig to do the right thing for our party and for the people of Idaho by stepping down from the U.S. Senate.”

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