Posted tagged ‘Sheila Hixson’

12.04.16 David Moon for D20 Senate – deadline is December 7 to contact Central Committee

December 3, 2016

Maryland District 20 voters are thrilled to be sending Jamie Raskin, to Congress to take on the Trumpian forces of darkness. Raskin’s elevation leaves a senate vacancy that will be filled by a decision of the Montgomery Democratic Central Committee (MDCC) when they meet on Wednesday, December 7.

It is unfortunate that state law does not allow us to directly elect Raskin’s replacement: any appointment process is not exactly (small-d) democratic, but this is the process we’re stuck with. It seems to me that the most democratic solution would be to appoint someone who has already won D20 votes, namely one of our three elected state delegates. David Moon and Will Smith are actively campaigning for the seat (while Sheila Hixson has, unsurprisingly, decided to hold on to her chairmanship of the powerful Ways and Means Committee in the House of Delegates). Both Moon and Smith have had impressive records as freshmen delegates. Both are strong progressives and have worked well with Hixson and Raskin.

I am endorsing Moon for Senate mostly because I see him as a determined progressive fighter in Raskin’s tradition, while Smith is somewhat more of a go-along-to-get-along Democrat that is more common in the MD legislature. Also, I have been significantly more impressed with Moon’s responsiveness to and engagement with district residents than Smith’s. (Smith has made several appointments to meet with me and broken every single one at the last minute.)

I urge you to write to all members of the MDCC immediately to indicate your endorsement. See below for more details.

Let’s take a quick look at some of the issues Moon has taken on:

  • Special elections to fill statewide vacancies: Just as D20 voters are frustrated by the lack of a chance to vote on Raskin’s replacement, so would we be if there were vacancies for US Senate, Attorney General, Comptroller. Under law, the governor would have had the right to name replacements, but Moon successfully got the issue on this year’s ballot (as Question 1) and it passed easily, meaning future vacancies will be filled by voters.
  • Helping homeless residents obtain birth certificates
  • Reining in mass incarceration and generally opposing the disastrous “war on drugs”
  • Early release of sick inmates
  • Protecting women’s pay equity
  • Reforming the investigative process in cases of police brutality
  • Reducing carbon emissions
  • Promoting transparency in rape investigations
  • Working to welcome refugees in Maryland
  • Fighting to maintain Metro service hours.

An argument has been floated that neither Moon, nor Smith should be appointed because it would give the selected individual incumbent power in the 2018 election. Those touting this position claim it would be more democratic to appoint someone for a two-year period who has not ever won an election in our district. I don’t buy it – as imperfect as the current system is, I believe the only way to respect voters is to select someone they have already supported.

If Moon or Smith is selected this week, that will open a D20 seat in the House of Delegates and the MDCC appointment process will start all over again. The following people should not be considered for that seat:

  • Valerie Ervin quit her last public office (MoCo Council D5) two years early because her ambition and arrogance led her to believe she would be a shoo-in for the county executive race (Ike Leggett’s decision to run again in 2014 killed her plans). Then she dropped out of an abortive race against Raskin for Congress after only two months, with a bitter attack on a political process she felt was uniquely stacked against her. She blamed everyone but herself, while a healthy number of other candidates made it all the way to April. Ervin has a record of anger and divisiveness, including a willingness to attack local progressives. If Ervin were appointed to represent us, we could count on her spending most of her time in office figuring out how to move up the political ladder.
  • Will Jawando has run twice for local seats (for state delegate in 2014 and against Raskin for Congress), losing badly each time. He has never done any on-the-ground work in our area and seems to think that his brief service as a White House staffer makes up for having no local record. I’d love to see Jawando work on something that benefits district residents before he tries again for political office.
  • Jonathan Shurberg is a very capable local lawyer who has done a ton of work for progressive causes and individuals in need. Just the same, he must have set a record for dollars spent per vote in his unsuccessful race against Moon and Smith for delegate in 2014. I endorsed his run at that time, but he did so badly in the final result that any appointment to office would be in violation of district voters’ clear preferences. Most recently, Shurberg used his blog to attack Raskin’s candidacy for Congress, while carrying water for megabucks, pro-corporate Kathleen Matthews and David Trone.

Please write to all members of the MDCC to support David Moon and to oppose appointment of anyone who has not previously been elected in our district. You do not have to write an essay – simply stating your view is enough. Here’s the list to write to:

©2016 Keith Berner

 

 

 

04.17.16 Jamie Raskin for Congress

April 17, 2016

Jamie Raskin’s record of accomplishment is astounding. Let’s start with his 2006 campaign for the Maryland Senate from District 20. (Beginning there gives short shrift to Raskin’s career as a nationally respected professor of constitutional law at American University.) In launching the effort, Raskin not only took on an entrenched incumbent, Ida Reuben, who had been serving a decidedly anti-progressive party machine and big-business interests for decades. He also purposely took on a long history indifference to state politics by D-20 voters.

While our district is home to some of the most progressive voters in the country, many of our neighbors had only been focused on national and international politics. Year after year, Ida Reuben and her ilk represented us in Annapolis, keeping Maryland blue, but hardly better than center-right. Raskin not only trounced Reuben thoroughly (2 to 1) in a race he was supposed to lose. He also carried Tom Hucker and Heather Mizeur with him as state delegates, in a progressive sweep. D-20’s powerful chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, Sheila Hixson, got with the program, moving from cautious centrism to forceful progressive leadership, with Raskin as a guide and partner.

Jamie Raskin’s election, then, was not only about a single senate seat. He consciously sought to create a movement, providing the vision and voice that have given D-20 and our values the power we lacked in Maryland. This is leadership defined.

The list of legislation passed with Raskin’s authorship, contribution, co-sponsorship, or advocacy is too long to recount here. Same-sex marriage, gun control, environmental regulation and remediation, economic justice, campaign finance reform. Not everything Raskin has touched has become law. (There is more work to do in a state that remains far more conservative than its Democratic reputation implies). But so many laws would never have seen the light of day or gotten to victory without him in the trenches.

Raskin’s most recent success is his “Noah’s Law” the toughest anti-drunk driving measure in the country, which passed in the just-concluded legislative session, overcoming years of liquor-lobby opposition.

Another element of Jamie Raskin’s leadership is his compelling oratory. He generates enthusiasm and motivates action by walking into a room and opening his mouth. The legions of passionate volunteers who have served in his campaigns demonstrate this. In fact, it is the door-knockers and phone-callers who have made Raskin viable against two opposing campaigns flush with millions of dollars of dirty money. (Kathleen Matthews is the most heavily corporate-PAC funded congressional candidate in the country. David Trone has spent a completely mind-boggling $9.1 million in a blatant attempt to purchase personal glory.)

Indeed, the contrast could not be starker between Raskin, whose life has been dedicated to public service and the two moneybags candidates who have served only themselves and their business interests.

I have written previously about these birds of a feather, both of whom cared so little about policy and politics – prior to seeking their own renown in Congress – that they didn’t bother to vote in two of the last three primaries. Each has been responsible for massive contributions to far-right GOP candidates and officeholders around the country (see Matthews and Trone). Both claim a moral pass on this, because throwing money to bad guys in a corrupt system was what they had to do for business.

There is no moral exemption for helping bad guys in order to enrich yourself or your corporate masters. If you send money to the GOP, you are backing GOP policies, period. While Jamie Raskin has been working hard every day to clean up campaign corruption, Kathleen Matthews and David Trone are its very embodiment.

Your blogger is deeply offended by the mere presence of Matthews and Trone in this race. Their progressive rhetoric is superficial. Their lack of community service reveals their selfishness. Should either be elected, the best a progressive voter could expect would be general support for a Democratic agenda, without any leadership for progressive values. And we could expect both to advocate for the status quo regarding the role of big, corrupting money in our broken democracy.

Jamie Raskin is not the only worthy candidate for Congress in MD-8. Kumar Barve (D-17) has served honorably in the Maryland Senate, making a name for himself as an environmental leader, among other things. Ana Sol Gutierrez (D-18) has been a reliable progressive vote in the House. But both lack Raskin’s power and results. Gutierrez seems in this race to be running solely on her Latina identity, a worthy consideration, but hardly sufficient to justify your vote.

Will Jawando is smart, articulate, and progressive. But he is tainted by having taken Big Pharma money, has provided little or no community service in the area, and seems to offer only his ethnic identity (as an African American) and brief, barely-relevant service in the Obama White House as rationales for his campaign.

Former State Department official Joel Rubin has contributed positively to the race, mostly by criticizing Matthews and Trone.

Coverage of this campaign would not be complete without commenting on pernicious role played by the Washington Post. It is hardly a surprise that the virulently pro-corporate, anti-union newspaper endorsed Matthews – they can count on her to do its bidding and serve its interests, if not explicitly, then certainly in style and attitude. (Another indication of Matthews’s likely fealty to big business if she were elected is her endorsement by former Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan, the prince of pavement.)

Even though the Post acknowledges that there is hardly an iota of stated policy difference among the candidates, it condemns Raskin for being “doctrinaire.” This flies in the face of his success in building bridges, not only across Maryland’s partisan divide, but also within the Democratic Party. (Raskin has managed to create an enduring alliance with hardly progressive Senate President Thomas V. “Mike” Miller [D-27], a remarkable feat.)

The Post’s influence is more insidious than its editorials. While sole Montgomery County political reporter Bill Turque has done some good reporting on the race. He has also ignored Raskin (at times) or damned him with right-wing language that clearly reflects the Post’s editorial bias.

Jamie Raskin has an extremely bright future, not only as a movement leader, but as an effective legislator who will serve the public good for decades. And if Raskin ever decides to move on from legislating, look for him to serve in the judiciary or in a future Democratic administration.

Maryland D-8 voters must show we cannot be bought. We owe it not only to ourselves but to the country to keep Jamie Raskin on an upward trajectory in service to all of us.

©2106 Keith Berner

10.25.14 Endorsing David Moon & the D20 team + Anthony Brown

October 25, 2014

The Washington Post  is scared of forceful progressives. For years, they refused to so much as to print Marc Elrich’s name in their reporting. (That they have come to see Marc as effective, rather than dangerous, is credit to Marc’s enormous skill.) Last week, the Post didn’t even mention David Moon in their endorsements for Maryland District 20 and endorsed Dan Robinson (running as a Green) instead. The Post’s fright should be fuel for D20 progressive voters!

David Moon, a Takoma Park resident, has been active in Maryland and Montgomery County politics for years. He has a proven record of speaking truth to power. He knows all the players, processes, and committees in Annapolis. And he is the closely allied of the rest of our Democratic D20 team: Jamie Raskin, Sheiia Hixson, and Will Smith. Electing them together will create a D20 dynamo with impressive power for our values and our region.

David Moon and Dan Robinson agree on policy 90% of the time (David is at least as green as Dan), except that David likely to be more progressive  on economic justice issues. 

Dan, also a Takoma Park resident, is a nice guy with a record of community involvement (including a term on city council), but it not as prepared for this job as David. Since he has not built relationships with Jamie, Sheila, and Will, he will lessen their effectiveness if he is elected.

I urge D20 voters to support the entire Democratic D20 team: Jamie Raskin, Sheila Hixson, David Moon, and Will Smith.

PS. You must vote in this election. Medieaval Republican Larry Hogan is dangerously close to Anthony Brown in the race for governor. Every progressive and Democrat who sits this race out moves our state closer to the 13th century. Don’t let that happen — early voting has already stated and election day is November 4.

©2014 Keith Berner

06.23.14 Vote!

June 23, 2014

In my view, any US citizen who does not vote is betraying the few billion human beings who don’t have the right to. As broken as our political system is, it is the only means we have to change our society. Even if your vote is only one in a hundred million at a presidential level, real change starts locally. It is in our own community where we have the privilege to get to know candidates and office-holders directly and personally. We owe it to ourselves, to our neighbors, and — ultimately — to the world to stand up and be counted.

I’m happy that Maryland affords us the right to vote at our convenience over an extended period. Just the same, I choose to go to my polling place on Election Day. My participation — along with my neighbors — energizes me, makes me feel a part of the community and of something truly important. Because I know so many neighbors and even so many candidates, showing up and waiting in line becomes a unique social experience. I wouldn’t miss it for the world, even when I’m less than thrilled about many of the choices that await me on the ballot.

Please join me tomorrow to make a small difference in our little part of the world.

Now, back to politics. . .

Must-Vote Candidates (my favorites of my favorites)

  • Brian Frosh (Attorney General)
  • Jamie Raskin (D20 Senator)
  • Sheila Hixson (D20 Delegate)
  • Dana Beyer (D18 Senator)
  • Marc Elrich (MoCo Council At-Large)
  • Beth Daly (MoCo Council At-Large)

Don’t-Vote Candidates (the worst of the worst)

  • Doug Gansler (Governor)
  • Jon Cardin (Attorney General)
  • Doug Duncan (MoCo Executive)
  • Hans Riemer (MoCo Council At-Large)
  • Nancy Floreen (MoCo Council At-Large)
  • Chris Barclay (MoCo Council District 5)
  • Duchy Trachtenberg  (MoCo Council District 1)
  • Ben Kramer (D19 Delegate)
  • Charlotte Crutchfield (D19 Delegate)

For a summary of my endorsements.

For my fully annotated endorsements.

See Progressive Neighbors, for races I don’t cover.

PS. Thanks to all who have taken the time to read my musings this political season. From a tiny start six years ago, this blog has really taken off in 2014. By tomorrow, over 600 people will have visited my site in the past week and viewed about 1,600 pages on this site. This pales in comparison to many other blogs, but it’s plenty for me! Your interest is a big honor!

©2014 Keith Berner

06.21.14 Darian Unger’s grassroots bonafides

June 21, 2014

Last week, I asked whether Darian Unger (candidate for MD D20 delegate) is as grassroots as he appears, after I received five mailings from him in five days. Unger sent me a note pushing back. Among other things, he pointed out to me:

  • He is the only candidate doing $5 per person ($15 per family) fundraisers, while refusing corporate donations
  • He had planned to do eight mailers over three months, but the post office botched up that distribution by dumping all the mail pieces at once (that is a standard hazard of bulk-mail)
  • He is being massively outspent by others.

Unger is correct in raising these points. Among the viable candidates (Hixson, Jawando, Moon, Shurberg, Smith, Unger) Unger’s campaign is certainly near the bottom in expenditures and near the top in terms of mobilizing small donors. (I’m going on gut sense here. Unger pointed me to the Board of Elections site to research the actual data, but I tried and can’t make any sense of what I found there. This is a symptom of why Maryland is among the worst states nationally for campaign finance transparency and good governance.)

©2014 Keith Berner

 

06.20.14 Which endorsements are worth considering?

June 20, 2014

Dear Readers, at this time of year you not only get barraged with mailings that tell you surprisingly little about the candidates running (and, if you’re like me, you hit overload at some point and just toss all the stuff in the recycling bin), you also get news about which candidates have been endorsed by whom. How do you sort through all this often-conflicting information and make good choices? Here is a brief guide.

The Washington Post has good writing and the capacity for decent analysis. But for local races, it is important to remember that the Post is obsessively pro-development (at the expense of the environment) and is so virulently anti-labor that it colors everything they do. This years’ endorsements for Montgomery County Council at-large are downright disgusting; their endorsees — except for Marc Elrich — never met a piece of concrete they didn’t love. Elrich slips by the Post’s ideology because of his advocacy for bus rapid transit and his willingness to dialogue with developers. I think the Post’s endorsements for state and national races are very good to excellent.

The Montgomery Gazette used to be at least as pro-big business as the Post, but seems to have toned it down a bit this year. But you have to wonder about a publication that is willing to toss aside a powerful champion like Sheila Hixson with the comment “longevity’s no substitute for the passion that’s abundant elsewhere.” If they disagreed with Hixson’s positions, that would be one thing, but to blame her only for what they (incorrectly) see as a lack of fervor is just plain ridiculous. For me, that lack of serious analysis discredits everything else they write.

Progressive Neighbors (PN) produces a quality questionnaire for evaluating candidates, even if their presentation and processes are a bit amateurish at times. Apart from me, this is the only organization in Montgomery County I’m aware of that judges candidates based on their actual positions on progressive issues. Since PN is all-volunteer, they lack the resources to cover the whole county or to produce more professional-looking materials. I sure wish they would provide some analysis to go with their endorsements.

Public employee unions and big business endorse candidates based entirely on their self-interest. Perhaps you should follow them if you are a member of the union or the business. Otherwise, you are selling your soul by trusting their endorsements. Of particular note is the Montgomery County Education Association — the teachers’ union — which publishes the “Apple Ballot.” You’ve heard it here first: the Apple Ballot is rotten. This union, which sued the county (this is, you and me) twice during the recent fiscal crisis isn’t really about quality education, but rather only about getting their own at the expense of everyone else. Their big-money involvement in county politics is nearly as bad as the big developers — distorting the process in service to themselves. All MoCo candidates claim to be in favor of good education and most really are. But remember that county elected officials other than the county executive and members of the school board don’t actually have a role in creating school budgets and policies.

Sierra Club does a very good job of comparing candidates on their issues of concern and pointing you towards the truly green candidates (as opposed to greenwashed ones). Here’s a summary for those in my area:

  • Maryland Governor: Heather Mizeur
  • Maryland Attorney General: Brian Frosh
  • Maryland District 20: Jamie Raskin, Sheila Hixson, Will Smith, Darian Unger
  • Montgomery County District 5: Tom Hucker
  • Montgomery County At-Large: Marc Elrich and Beth Daly only

Women’s rights and gay rights organizations’ endorsements in most Montgomery County races are utterly meaningless, since 90% of the candidates agree on these issues. All these organizations are doing is cherry picking tiny nuances of difference between the candidates or, even worse, playing inside baseball and picking favorites for reasons they won’t reveal. I urge readers to ignore these endorsements entirely, unless they live in conservative parts of the county.

Elected officials’ endorsements can be very helpful in selecting candidates. If you know, for example, that you agree with Marc Elrich’s politics, seeing that he has endorsed Beth Daly can help you get comfortable with her, even if you don’t know very much about her.

Candidate slates (i.e., candidates who have agreed to run together) are a poor way to select whom to vote for, except to the extent that you trust some of the slate members (per the previous point). I was very disappointed to see that D20 candidates Raskin and Hixson put together a slate with Will Smith and David Moon (even though I think highly of them), as I was that Jonathan Shurberg countered by slating with D’Juan Hopewell. I see slates as an attempt to manipulate voters and disincent them from thinking for themselves.

Left-Hand View: Would it surprise you, Dear Reader, that I consider my own views damn near brilliant? Well, my candidate review process is hardly methodical and complete (mostly, all I write are my opinions, hopefully grounded by some facts) and my coverage of the county hardly extends beyond MD D20 and MoCo D5. There are plenty of good reasons to disagree with me. But, if you don’t have another basis for sorting through your choices, I hope that you find my analysis helpful (or, at least, amusing).

©2014 Keith Berner

06.15.14 Keith Berner’s Biennial Voters Guide/Primary 2014 (for Takoma Park & Silver Spring, MD)

June 15, 2014

Election Day is Tuesday, June 24. Early voting is underway now.

For a summary that lists my endorsements with minimal annotations, see: 06.11.14 Voters Guide 2014/Primary Edition Summary (for Takoma Park & Silver Spring, MD)

The theme this year is disappointment. Dear Reader, you will see in my commentary below just how unenthusiastic I am about most races and candidates this year. Where I think all the candidates in a race are bad news, I recommend voting against all of them by casting a write-in vote. In other races, I don’t actively oppose all the candidates, but can’t make myself recommend any, either. In those cases, I indicate “no endorsement.” I just can’t fathom how our progressive state and county can’t find more noble human beings and solid progressives to run for office.

In each race, I list candidates in my order of preference. An asterisk before the name indicates my endorsements.

For Maryland Governor

Write in “Mickey Mouse.”

It’s hard to believe that Maryland could not produce a single decent candidate for governor this year. Last year, I felt sorry for Virginia, with its choice between 13th-century theocrat Ken Cuccinelli and venal operative Terry McAuliffe. Well, now ’tis the season to pity poor Maryland.

Heather Mizeur, is an ego-driven politician for whom tactics replace principles. She’s a darling to many on the left this year for staking out positions that most of my readers will agree with. Everything Mizeur does is calculated, though (there’s not a genuine bone in her body). If she thought she could get more attention by running as a centrist, she’d do so in a minute (I dare you to ask her about her support for Lockheed-Martin tax breaks). Mizeur’s blind ambition is demonstrated by her twice abandoning her responsibilities as a public official. The first time was when she quit her two-year post as a city councilwoman in Takoma Park after a year. She had only run in the first place to burnish her credentials. She quit as soon as she thought she had gained enough attention to begin planning her next campaign. The second time was the past two years, when she nearly completely stopped showing up at events related to District 20, where she is still officially our delegate. In fact, her former “dream house” (as she called it) is sitting vacant in Takoma Park, while she spends most of her time at her other house on the Eastern Shore. She’s bored with D20, you see, and this little run for governor is just for her own amusement. I mean seriously, she can’t possibly think that a back bencher with few substantive accomplishments and with no executive experience of any kind is ready to run a state. And she has insulted voters by selecting as a running mate a Prince George’s County preacher who is even less qualified than she is. This race is not about anything other than being in the limelight. Don’t reward the insult by giving Mizeur your vote.

Anthony Brown is an empty shirt whose only significant public accomplishment was completely screwing up Maryland’s health care exchange. He has refused to take positions on controversial issues and has run a nearly completely negative campaign against Doug Gansler (who deserves it), while getting an advance coronation from the entire Maryland Democratic establishment. If this man is able to accomplish a single positive thing as governor, I’ll be surprised. He is currently leading both of his opponents by a 2-to-1 margin, so you might as well get used to him.

Doug Gansler is a frat boy who thinks he’s above the law. The Washington Post exposés last year about his abuse of state police and disregard for traffic laws reveal Gansler as a danger to the public interest. If he already behaves this way, who is to say where the impunity would stop if he were to have executive authority over the whole state? Even worse are Gansler’s right-wing policy positions. A fan of the death penalty, Gansler’s main platform plank this year is a tax cut for wealthy corporations and he hammers constantly on current governor Martin O’Malley’s highly responsible fiscal policies that included (gasp!) tax hikes. Who needs the GOP when you have this crap coming from Dems?

See also:

For Maryland Comptroller

Write in “Mickey Mouse.”

Peter Franchot (incumbent), who is running unopposed, is an arrogant man who long ago gave up on his Takoma Park progressive roots.

For Maryland Attorney General

*Brian Frosh is a principled progressive with a long record of accomplishments in the Maryland legislature. I often disagree with the Washington Post on local politics, but their re-endorsement of Frosh yesterday does more justice to Frosh (while highlighting the flaws of his opponents) than I can possible do. I encourage my readers to give it a close look.

Jon Cardin is best known for improperly commandeering a police helicopter to propose to his girlfriend and, more recently, for missing 121 out of 164 committee votes in the just closed 2014 legislative session. If this man’s uncle weren’t a US senator, he would’t be so much as blip on public radar. Because of his name, though, he could win this race, which would be a disaster for Maryland.

Aisha Braveboy is another 13-century theocrat opposed to gay rights, reproductive freedom, etc. She is now pretending never to have held those views. Yeah, right.

For US Congress – Maryland District 8

No endorsement.

Chris Van Hollen (incumbent) used to be my hero. No more. He lost me when he was among the bad guys on a House bill to rein in NSA spying that failed by only eight votes. Civil liberties are more important to me than nearly any other area of public policy. I cannot support anyone who loves the NSA. I know nothing about about Van Hollen’s two opponents in this race. Neither stands a chance, so you and I might as well flip a coin and vote for one of them to protest Van Hollen’s betrayal. Or, there’s always Mickey Mouse.

For Maryland Senate – District 20

*Jamie Raskin (incumbent) is running unopposed, so I don’t have to spill much virtual ink on him. Just the same, it’s fun to write that this budding national progressive hero is our very own. Raskin is a captivating orator, constitutional scholar, and progressive firebrand. He also knows how to reach out to and defang potential opponents (e.g., the very conservative senate majority leader, Mike Miller, with whom Raskin has a strong relationship) making Raskin not only a moral leader, but a highly effective one. Raskin is also just a great guy: accessible, down-to-earth, and humble. What’s not to love about Jamie?

For Maryland House of Delegates – District 20 (select up to three)

*Sheila Hixson (incumbent) used to be my favorite politician whom I didn’t vote for. She had a record of being disappointingly centrist, a go-along-to-get-along Democrat. This began to change with the disappearance of bad influence Ida Reuben and replacement by Jamie Raskin in 2006. Hixson realized just how progressive her constituents were and responded. She has built a powerful partnership with Raskin and they are quite the dynamic duo, helping each other pass progressive milestone legislation in their respective houses of the Maryland legislature. Hixson is one of the most powerful politicians in Maryland, as chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, which makes her a rare treasure: How often do progressives get to have not only a representative voice for their views, but one that can deliver? And that partnership with Raskin is so much more than the sum of the parts. Any D20 progressive who doesn’t vote for Raskin and Hixson is a fool and a knave. Why was Hixson always a favorite of mine, even when I wasn’t voting for her? Because she (like Raskin) is another mensch — warm, engaging, and downright fun to be around.

*Jonathan Shurberg and I have known each other since we both worked on Raskin’s 2006 campaign. Talk about smart: Shurberg can discuss articulately the fine points of policy from economic justice, to civil rights, to education. He has spent lots of time in Annapolis writing and promoting legislation. He and his late wife, Rebecca, were major players in the county Democratic Party. My readers know I’m no huge fan of the party, but having elected officials who are plugged in and know everyone is a bonus. Shurberg will balance Will Smith’s inexperience. Last November, I described Shurberg as “the adult in the room” and “a passionate fighter for progressive causes.” I stand by those words.

*Will Smith is a born and bred Montgomery County resident. He is smart as a tack and itching to make a difference in the lives of D20 and Maryland residents. Smith has an impressive record of service in our district, having run Raskin and Hixson’s 2010 campaign, raising substantial funds for local young scholars, and serving with IMPACT Silver Spring and the local chapter of the NAACP. Smith is relatively inexperienced, but the fact that he knows the Annapolis players and has been endorsed by Raskin and Hixson is significant. I expect he’ll be able to hit the ground running, working with his mentors to make a mark in the House. As an African American, officer in the Naval Reserves, and the first in his family to graduate from college (and graduate school), Smith adds much-needed diversity to the D20 delegation. It is high time for this extremely diverse district to send a capable person of color to Annapolis.

Darian Unger was so amateurish at the November D20 forum, that I disregarded him completely in my write up of the event. He has come a long way, baby. I have been blown away by his ability to captivate the public and political observers with a grass-roots, pure elbow-grease campaign. His service as a volunteer firefighter and chair of the Silver Spring Citizens Advisory Board shows his commitment to the community.  I particularly like Unger’s green credentials: an environmental engineer by trade, he lists “sustainable development and environmental protection” as his top priorities, the only candidate to do so.

David Moon matches Shurberg for smarts, knowledge, and probably has even greater encyclopedic knowledge of county and state politics. Moon is also a fighter — absolutely fearless about speaking truth to power. (I also know Moon from that first, magical Raskin campaign — as campaign manager, Moon gets credit for creating the strategy to beat Ida Reuben by a two-to-one margin.) There may be some concern that Moon’s record of truth telling would make it hard for him to work with the powers that be in Annapolis, but endorsements by Raskin and Hixson provide him with needed cover. If elected, Moon will make his presence felt very quickly.
So, why haven’t I ranked Moon second, just behind Sheila Hixson? Because of his longstanding ties to Valerie Ervin, perhaps the most destructive force in county politics. I believe Moon when he tells me that he won’t let Ervin tell him what to do if he’s elected. But the fact that his first campaign brochure put her picture and quote front and center, concerns me, as does his recent declaration to me that he considers Ervin among the most important local politicians. Make no mistake, Ervin plans to run for county executive, governor, or congress. I would hate to see one of my elected delegates endorsing her pursuit of power. Just the same, Moon looks likes like a winner in this race and I would shed no tears over this result.

Will Jawando deserved the apology I recently issued. He is not a bad guy, by any means. He’s smart, articulate, experienced with (federal) legislation, and — just like everyone else in the race — a solid progressive. But my strongest criticism of him remains valid: though he was born here, he has not provided any direct service to our district, unlike his fellow native Will Smith. If there weren’t so many more captivating choices, I could see getting really enthusiastic about Jawando. But in this fine field, he just doesn’t rise to the top.

See also:

For Montgomery County Executive

No endorsement.

Phil Andrews wins the integrity race easily. He is a class act of the boy scout variety, a politician who is in it for all the right reasons and cannot be bought. Sadly, Andrews has tacked right in the past four years. He was the lone council vote against raising he minimum wage and remains steadfast against indexing the wage to mitigate the impact of inflation. Some of my environmentalist friends are backing Andrews, but insiders tell me he has been less cooperative on land-use issues than he used to be. I had sent “dear neighbor” letters to my precinct in support of Andrews, but have come to regret it because I disagree with Andrews so strongly on key issues.

Ike Leggett (incumbent) is, at best, a big disappointment. I was an enthusiastic supporter when he first ran for executive in 2006, but his opposition to progressive state taxation on millionaires lost me a couple years later. Among the list of Leggett “foibles” is, of course, the misbegotten Silver Spring Transit Center, millions over budget, already more than two years late, and a potential danger to all who use it. Other items include tax breaks for Lockheed Martin, subsidies for Costco, and joyfully accepting bribes contributions from the development industry.

Doug Duncan’s toxic legacy from his tenure as county executive remains with us, in a county woefully short of infrastructure to match growth-without-thought and in our poisonous personal politics. While serving as front-man for the development industry, Duncan also oversaw unsustainable giveaways to MoCo’s public employee unions that worsened the fiscal crisis of 2008-12. Why return to office someone whose dream is to pave everything and enrich the powerful?

For Montgomery County Council – At Large (select up to four)

Marc Elrich and Beth Daly (vote for only two)If you cast a vote for any other candidates, you risk knocking Elrich or Daly into fifth place. That’s why I recommend “bullet voting” (selecting fewer than candidates than there are seats).

I recommend highly Bill Turque’s recent analysis of the MoCo at-large race in the Washington Post. Turque does an excellent job of showing who is in the developers’ pockets and who isn’t.

*Marc Elrich (incumbent) has been serving the public interest and society’s underdogs for decades. He has been the county council’s lone voice against unrestrained development, pointing out that what the other incumbents call “smart growth” is just rhetoric for more traffic on the roads, more school trailers, and more environmentally hazardous runoff from impervious surfaces. What is truly astounding is how Elrich has traveled from being the radical whose very name the Washington Post refused to mention to getting the Post’s endorsement for the second time in a row. Why? Because Elrich is more smart than ideological. His plan for bus rapid transit has won over the Post and even many developers (even while he refuses to accept the developers’ bribes contributions). Elrich is that rare politician who is 100% about public service, not personal glory. Even while he has enough respect to have come in first in the 2010 at-large race, though, he can’t get any respect from the rest of the council incumbents, who not only block him from formal leadership, but also prevent him from forcing discussion about their pave-it-all politics. If only there were some means to throw the rest of the incumbents out. Sadly, the best we can do is to toss one out (please, let it be Hans Riemer!) by putting Beth Daly in office.

*Beth Daly is the real deal: smarts, values, articulateness, and genuine warmth. Daly is as committed as Elrich to sensible land-use policies and protecting the environment. She promises a high level of transparency including (can you believe it?!) voting the same way on final legislation as she does in committee. She also promises to be a second when Elrich raises topics the other council incumbents want to bury and to champion a term for Elrich as president of the council. Daly is the most exciting newcomer to MoCo political campaigns since Jamie Raskin appeared in 2006. But she is no novice, having been an engaged and effective civic activist and creator of legislation for years (see her experience list).

George Leventhal (incumbent) is by far the second best of the incumbents. His constituent service is incredible and he has an admirable commitment to the disadvantaged. I keep wanting to endorse and vote for Leventhal, but I just can’t get there. This year, he’s attacking Marc Elrich and Beth Daly as he continues to serve the developers. Even if he weren’t playing this actively destructive role, it’s just far more important to have Elrich and Daly on the council than to keep Leventhal, so I cannot risk having my vote for him doom the others.

Nancy Floreen (incumbent) is 100% pro-developer, pro-chamber of commerce. At least what you see is what you get with Floreen, which can’t be said of . . .

. . . Hans Riemer (incumbent), who is a perpetual liar and deceiver, a carpetbagger who never belonged in our region’s politics to start with. He lives on taking credit for others’ work and claiming to support policies he doesn’t. The most egregious example of this was when he worked hard to kill last year’s minimum wage bill and then claimed to have led the fight for it. (Watch this must-see 30-second video showing Riemer holding back on the final vote for the minimum wage until he sees that it has the five votes necessary to pass.) He also says he’s an environmentalist, even while he gleefully takes money from the developers. Hans Riemer wins my 2014 award for Most Despicable Politician. This year’s MoCo voters owe future generations a service: stop Riemer’s political career right now, before rises through the ranks to become a lying empty shirt with actual power.

See also:

For Montgomery County Council – District 5

What hope I had when Destructive Force Valerie Ervin got bored with her seat on MoCo council and quit last winter! Sadly, my hopes have been dashed. This race is almost as bad as the one for governor, providing little hope at all for progressives who want good government.

*Terrill North is the only really good human being in the race. He is a solid progressive with experience in almost every area of policy we care about, from serving the poor, to environmentalism, to civil liberties. So why am I not more excited as I repeat my endorsement of North? Because his campaign has never seemed to get off the ground. He has no significant endorsements, beyond Progressive Neighbors (who also endorsed Tom Hucker for the seat). North is not going to win, so voting for him is more of a protest against the others than a practical choice. Sigh.

Tom Hucker is a bully and dirty campaigner. He has voted the correct way on nearly everything while serving as D20 delegate in Annapolis, but he is going to be wrong on everything involving public-employee unions if he serves on MoCo council. Just as most of the other council incumbents would be nowhere without developer money, the same goes for Hucker and the unions. My main concern about Hucker, though, is not about policy (again, he has a voting record any progressive would be proud of). Rather, it is that his bad temper and drive for dominance will eventually make him our very own Chris Christie, imploding and bringing his agenda (and ours) down with him. Hucker will win this race. I can only hope that the few of us speaking out about his flaws will bring about some introspection and humility on his part. If Hucker were to tame his demons, he could be an excellent progressive leader for years to come.

Evan Glass seemed to be the other good guy in the race (in addition to North) until his horrific mailer this week in which he granted himself magical powers to cure all that ails us. He has now shown himself to be just another ball of arrogance, willing to lie to his potential constituents to get a job. What’s amazing is that Glass slipped and revealed his inner truth when he had absolutely no reason do to so. He had already secured some plum endorsements and was running a solid campaign.

Chris Barclay is a petty thief who didn’t even live in the district until the past few weeks. He wouldn’t be wasting our ink and oxygen if Valerie Ervin and her Coalition that Only Cares about Color (Cherri Branson, Nancy Navarro, and Craig Rice) hadn’t foisted him upon us. (See my discussion of race in this race in my original endorsement of Terrill North, who is African American.) After being caught with his hand in the cookie jar, Barclay lost the endorsements of the two largest MoCo public employee unions, so I can’t believe he remains a factor.

See also:

Other Races

In races I don’t follow closely, I’ll let Progressive Neighbors be my guide.

Not My District: Brief Comments on Races Beyond My Neighborhood

  • For Maryland Senate – District 18: *Dana Beyer is not shy. We can count on her to stand up and be counted in Annapolis. I have known and been fond of Beyer for a long time, but still wondered why she — as a transgender woman — was taking on Sen. Rich Madaleno, who championed passage of Maryland’s marriage equality law. The answer? Because Madaleno might as well be a Republican on fiscal policy. Beyer will be a progressive hero in Annapolis, showing us what has been missing from D18 up until now.
  • For Montgomery County Council – District 1: *Roger Berliner (incumbent). I’m not a big Berliner fan; though, he is better than most of the other council incumbents. What compels me to endorse him is just how bad Duchy Trachtenberg is. Her pursuit of personal attention has led her to ditch principle entirely this year, flip-flopping on issues that were previously central to her politics: standing up to developers and public employee unions. If you are still tempted to vote for Trachtenberg, see my recent post about her.
  • For Montgomery County Council – District 3: Marc Erlich’s choice in the race to succeed Phil Andrews is *Ryan Spiegel. Progressive Neighbors has endorsed Tom Moore, but I’m more inclined to follow Elrich’s determination of who can best support his agenda on council than I am any outside observers.

See also: 05.30.14 How your blogger chooses candidates to love (and hate)

©2014 Keith Berner

06.11.14 Voters Guide 2014/Primary Edition Summary (for Takoma Park & Silver Spring, MD)

June 11, 2014

With early voting beginning tomorrow, I want to get my picks out the door. I’ll provide a fully annotated version in a few days. Note that I only cover my home districts. For other districts, I suggest Progressive Neighbors’ recommendations.

For MD Governor: Write in “Mickey Mouse”
None of the declared Mickey Mice deserves your vote.

For MD Comptroller: Write in “Mickey Mouse”
Peter Franchot, who is running unopposed ditched his Takoma Park progressive roots long ago.

For MD Attorney General: Brian Frosh

For US Congress MD District 8: No endorsement.
Chris Van Hollen no longer gets my vote because he supports NSA surveillance. I don’t know a thing about the other two candidates.

For MD State Senator District 20Jamie Raskin

For MD House of Delegates District 20 (select up to three): Sheila Hixson,  Jonathan Shurberg, Will Smith

For Montgomery County Executive: No endorsement
Phil Andrews wins on integrity, but is too conservative to support a decent minimum wage. Ike Leggett is at best very disappointing. Doug Duncan must be stopped!

For Montgomery County Council At-Large (select up to four): Marc Elrich and Beth Daly only
Do not vote for any additional candidates: your vote for one of them could be the vote pushes Elrich or Daly into fifth place.

For Montgomery County Council District 5: Terrill North

For Montgomery County State’s Attorney: John McCarthy

For Clerk of the Circuit Court: Alan Bowser

For Montgomery County Board of Education At Large: Jill Ortman-Fouse

Other races: no position

See previous relevant posts:

©2014 Keith Berner

06.09.14 MD D20 Endorsements

June 9, 2014

I wrote recently that the Maryland District 20 race presents a dilemma of riches. The riches are wonderful: a bunch of candidates so compelling and progressive that we wish we could send them all to Annapolis. If only we could distribute them across the county — any one of them could be our first choice in other districts.

Alas, they all belong to D20. Which produces the agony of choosing only as many as we’re allowed to choose (three delegates) and having to say “no” to some really great people.

I have pondered and ruminated and considered and triangulated and studied the D20 delegate candidates for months (since their first forum in November, to be more precise). Only yesterday did I finally decide what I would write here.

You will notice that I don’t discuss policy very much in what follows. That is because there isn’t a centimeter of daylight between any of these candidates on the issues progressives care about. What distinguishes them from each other is largely experience, potential effectiveness, and style.

So, without further ado, here is a rank-order listing of my candidate preferences, with my endorsements in bold.

For Senator

Jamie Raskin is running unopposed, so I don’t have to spill much virtual ink on him. Just the same, it’s fun to write that this budding national progressive hero is our very own. Raskin is a captivating orator, constitutional scholar, and progressive firebrand. He also knows how to reach out to and defang potential opponents (e.g., the very conservative senate majority leader, Mike Miller, with whom Raskin has a strong relationship) making Raskin not only a moral leader, but a highly effective one. Raskin is also just a great guy; accessible, down-to-earth, humble. What’s not to love about Jamie?!

For Delegate (in preference order – select up to three)

Sheila Hixson used to be my favorite politician whom I didn’t vote for. She had a record of being disappointingly centrist, a go-along-to-get-along Democrat. This began to change with the disappearance of bad influence Ida Reuben and replacement by Jamie Raskin in 2006. Hixson began to realize just how progressive her constituents are and responded. She built a powerful partnership with Raskin and they are quite the dynamic duo, helping each other pass progressive milestone legislation in their respective houses of the Maryland legislature. Talk about power: Hixson is one of the most powerful politicians in Maryland, as chair of the House Ways and Means Committee. She is a treasure: how often to progressives get to have not only a representative voice for their views, but one that can deliver. And that partnership with Raskin is so much more than the sum of the parts. Any D20 progressive who doesn’t vote for Raskin and Hixson is a fool and a knave. Why was Hixson always a favorite of mine, even when I wasn’t voting for her? Because she (like Raskin) is another mensch — she is warm, engaging, and downright fun.

Will Smith is a born and bred Montgomery County resident. He is smart as a tack and itching to make a difference in the lives of D20 and Maryland residents. Smith has an impressive record of service in our district, having run Raskin and Hixson’s 2010 campaign, raising substantial funds for local young scholars, and serving with IMPACT Silver Spring and the local chapter of the NAACP. Smith is relatively green (inexperienced), but the fact that he knows the Annapolis players and has been endorsed by Raskin and Hixson is significant. I expect he’ll be able to hit the ground running, working with his mentors to make a mark in the house. As an African American, officer in the Naval Reserves, and the first in his family to graduate from college (and graduate school), Smith adds much-needed diversity to the D20 delegation. It is high time for this highly diverse district to send a highly capable person of color to represent us in Annapolis.

Jonathan Shurberg and I have known each other since we both worked on Raskin’s 2006 campaign. Talk about smart: Shurberg can discuss articulately the fine points of policy from economic justice, to civil rights, to education. He has spent lots of time in Annapolis writing and promoting legislation. He and his late wife, Rebecca, were major players in the county Democratic Party. My readers know I’m no huge fan of the party, but having elected officials who are plugged in and know everyone is a bonus. Shurberg will balance Smith’s relative green-ness. Last November, I described Shurberg as “the adult in the room” and “a passionate fighter for progressive causes.” I stand by those words.

Darian Unger was so amateurish at the November D20 forum, that I disregarded him completely in my write up of the event. He has come a long way, baby. I have been blown away by his ability to captivate the public and political observers with a grass-roots, pure elbow-grease campaign. His service as a volunteer firefighter and chair of the Silver Spring Citizens Advisory Board shows his commitment to the community.  I particularly like Unger’s green credentials: an environmental engineer by trade, he lists “sustainable development and environmental protection” as his top priorities.
Unger’s mail campaign stands out as the most creative in the race. With limited funds, he has sent out three smallish postcards. The first two were unusual by being useful: one contained recycling tips, the other was about fire safety. The last card proudly proclaims: “The BIGGEST postcard he can afford. Big ideas, not deep pockets.” I just love this creativity and willingness to take a different tack from the crowd. Unger has, of course, eschewed cooperate contributions. Yet, this quirky progressive is the only candidate in the race to be endorsed by the hyper-corporate Washington Post and Montgomery Gazette. If Unger can get these folks on board, maybe he can overcome his Annapolis inexperience help build effective coalitions. Not picking Unger in my top three was a very tough call. I would shed no tears if he’s elected.

David Moon matches Shurberg for smarts, knowledge, and probably has even greater encyclopedic knowledge of county and state politics. Moon is also a fighter — absolutely fearless about speaking truth to power. (I also know Moon from that first, magical Raskin campaign — as campaign manager, Moon gets credit for creating the strategy to bury Ida Reuben by a two-to-one margin.) There may be some concern that Moon’s record of truth telling would make it hard for him to work with the powers that be in Annapolis, but endorsements by Raskin and Hixson provide him with needed cover. If elected, Moon will make his presence felt, very quickly.
So, why haven’t I ranked Moon second, just behind Sheila Hixson? Because of his longstanding ties to Valerie Ervin, one of the most destructive forces in county politics. I believe Moon when he tells me that he won’t let Ervin (or anyone else) tell him what to do if he’s elected. But the fact that his first brochure of this race put her picture and quote front and center, concerns me, as does his recent declaration to me that he considers Ervin among the most important local politicians to work with. Make no mistake, Ervin plans to run for county executive or governor or congress. I would hate to see one of my elected delegates endorsing her pursuit of power. Just the same, Moon looks likes like a winner in this race and I also wouldn’t shed tears over this result.

Will Jawando deserved the apology I recently issued. He is not a bad guy, by any means. He’s smart, articulate, experienced with (federal) legislation, and — just like everyone else in the race — a solid progressive. But my strongest criticism of him remains valid: though he was born here, he has not provided any direct service to our district, unlike his fellow native Will Smith. If there weren’t so many more captivating choices, I could see getting really enthusiastic about Jawando. But in this fine field, he just does not rise to the top.

D’Juan Hopewell is another great guy with a passion for making a difference. The couple of hours I spent with him a few months ago were as enjoyable as any I have spent with a candidate. Just the same, I feel like he is searching for his calling in life and that this campaign is more of an experiment than a commitment. Also, he is nearly invisible in the race, meaning that there is no way his campaign is viable.

Justin Chappell is the only disabled candidate in the race. I was unable to find a Chappell website via an internet search, which shows how unserious his campaign is.


George Zokle was completely unimpressive in that November forum and invisible since.

©2014 Keith Berner

 

 

05.30.14 How your blogger chooses candidates to love (and hate)

May 30, 2014

Dear Readers, you may just be wondering what happens in the mind of your blogger, as he writes about candidates for public office. Some of you might be surprised that much is going in there at all. Anyway, I do indeed have some criteria for selecting good guys and bad guys in politics.

  1. Ideology and values. If you’re not a progressive, at least in a substantial part of your agenda, you cannot win my love. (I’m not going to define “progressive” here — most of you know pretty much what I mean.) On the county level, I go for environmentalists over developers. Thus do Doug Duncan, Nancy Floreen and 99.9% of Republicans lose my consideration. Oh yeah, those who run on tax-cuts for the wealthy (that’s you, Doug Gansler) also get no love from me. Chris Van Hollen — NSA lover — also no longer gets my vote.
  2. Relevant knowledge and competence. Does the candidate know anything about the issues at play, the other players, and the process? I’m sorry, you can’t just show up suddenly in Rockville or Annapolis and be a hero, without knowing anything. By the same token, you can’t declare yourself ready to run a state, when the largest previous operation you have ever run is a political campaign: sorry Heather Mizeur.
  3. Previous service to the community. Don’t show up here suddenly demanding glory if you haven’t paid some dues. I want to see a resume of engagement — a record of caring about this place and its people. This is where Hans Riemer (the Liar) lost me at the start of his quest for glory — he hadn’t even lived here long enough to know anyone’s name when he declared his first run for office. This remains a valid criticism of Will Jawando, who certainly has experience, but not serving our area.
  4. Diversity. I don’t think diverse communities should be served by a non-diverse set of elected officials.
  5. Tempered ambition. I get that nearly all politicians are ambitious. Heck, your blogger is ambitious in his day job. But I want to vote for people who intend to do the job they’re running for, rather than plotting their next advancement from Day 1 in office. Empty ambition, thy name is Heather Mizeur.
  6. Putting power in perspective. Power is necessary for the accomplishment of anything. Power ought never be the end in itself. Beware these cynics for whom power is the only thing. If your fundamental political views are malleable and subservient to your pursuit of power, you won’t get my support — sorry, Duchy Trachtenberg (more on this soon!). And Valerie Ervin is the poster child of a power-hungry pol.
  7. Ability to work with other elected officials. If you and those you’ll be serving with can’t get along, this is a black mark against you.
  8. Stopping the worst of two evils. Sometimes, I do the pragmatic thing and vote primarily out of disgust with the other guy (rather than love for mine). When I vote for Democrats at the federal level in general elections, this is usually what I’m up to. That’s what I’ve decided not to do in MoCo D5 this year (Hucker vs. Barclay).
  9. Character. If you behave with impunity (Doug Gansler), steal from the public (Chris Barclay), or treat people badly  (Tom Hucker), you have a hill to climb with me.
  10. Personal. If I know you personally and like you, it certainly helps drive my support for you. Great examples include Sheila Hixson, Jamie Raskin, Marc Elrich, and Terrill North. But they are not the only ones — in a year of depressing politics, I have met some really nice people who are running for office.

So, am I 100% consistent in applying these criteria? Yeah, right. As you have previously accustomed yourself to, Dear Reader, your blogger is flawed. But he takes comfort knowing that those who criticize inconsistency are hoboglined by little minds, or some such.

©2014 Keith Berner

05.29.14 A dilemma of riches in MD D20

May 29, 2014

With two open seats in the most progressive part of the most progressive county in one of the bluest states in the US of A, voters in Takoma Park and Silver Spring, Maryland are blessed with some very difficult decisions in the June 24 primary (which given the local ideology, is the only election that matters).

Our incumbent state senator, Jamie Raskin, is a bonafide national progressive leader in the making. He is running unopposed, so there’s no dilemma there.

The dean of our three-seat delegation to the House of Delegates, House Ways and Means Chair Sheila Hixson is so deserving of reelection, that I sometimes have almost forgotten that she is running. Well, she does need to be reelected and D20 voters are going to make that happen. No dilemma.

The other two incumbent delegates, Tom Hucker and Heather Mizeur, are gunning for other offices. Which leaves (by my count) six worthy contenders for two seats.  I’ve now met with all of them. They are (in alphabetical order):

  • D’Juan Hopewell
  • Will Jawando
  • David Moon
  • Jonathan Shurberg
  • Will Smith
  • Darian Unger

Yes, your blogger has thought long and hard about how he will vote in this race. His mind has at times been made up and at other times, not quite so.

Here is your chance to weigh in, Dear Reader. Would you like to make your case to me for your chosen candidates? Do you want to share secrets with me that you think others should know? Do you sense that I’ve been on the wrong track in what I have revealed of my views thus far? Would you like to prognosticate about the outcome of the race?

Please leave your comments on this blog, write to me, or (if you know my number) give me a call. If you want me to keep confidential anything you share, I will. If you want it to be published, but just not have your name on it, that’s fine too.

I’ll publish my views soon and may very well take your views into account.

©2014 Keith Berner

05.24.14 Apologies to Will Jawando

May 24, 2014

I guess this is Will Jawando week at Left-Hand View. After my harsh criticism of him in three posts, Jawando dropped me a note asking if we could meet one-on-one. I admired his doing that immediately: I think most politicians (and most people) would have avoided me like the plague or wanted to beat the crap out of me. Anyway, I invited him to my house a couple of days ago and we spent an hour together.

Jawando denies categorically having bad-mouthed Sheila Hixson. I take this denial at face value.

I also learned that Jawando is far from an empty shirt. He has an inspiring personal story and has been working hard on real and necessary progressive politics for several years, as a staffer to Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama, among others. He is clearly driven by a desire to make the world a better place, just like most (all?) of the others running for D20 delegate.

Ambitious? Well, I certainly have more of a feeling about Jawando that he is interested in political advancement than I do from Darian Unger, for example. But there is no evidence that Jawando is inclined to abandon his commitment to his constituents, if elected, like Heather Mizeur and Valerie Ervin have done. Most politicians are ambitious. It is a matter of degree and I no longer have the feeling that Jawando is over the line.

Your blogger has learned some valuable lessons here:

  • When Jawando first rubbed me the wrong way last fall, it was my responsibility to seek him out, not his to seek me out. I should have checked my impressions with the candidate, rather than simply running with them.
  • It’s no secret that I loathe Valerie Ervin and her destructive influence on our region’s politics. But I need to stop blaming the the recipients of her endorsements for her flaws. There is no denying that her endorsement is a negative mark in my appraisal of anyone, but it is not fair for me to let that be the whole story. And I think there is a big difference between accepting Ervin’s endorsement (as Jawando has done) and putting her front and center in the campaign (as David Moon has done).
  • I need to avoid most (not all) name calling. I never should have called Jawando stupid (which I did in the first version of my May 17 post). It is ok for me to call actions stupid, but not people. (I reserve the right to call some politicians by names that fit.)

So, am I ready to endorse Will Jawando? No. I have sharply revised my view of him — he seems to be a good man who is running for the right reasons —  but I still think he has done less work on the ground here in D20 than other candidates and that he is certainly on the green (as in inexperienced) side of the field in terms of knowing Maryland issues, processes, and people.

I wish Will Jawando the best in this race and in the future. I am glad he reached out to me: it was classy and courageous.

Dear Readers, your blogger cannot promise to be right all the time. He can and does promise to be willing to admit when he’s wrong.

©2014 Keith Berner

 

 

05.20.14 Thank you, Will Jawando

May 20, 2014

The number of people reading this blog has been climbing steadily recently — apparently my truth-telling about the upcoming primary election in Montgomery County has struck a nerve. Just the same, I was marveling today as the number of visitors to Left-Hand View surpassed my previous record. I was particularly amused as I saw that a new, popular way of finding me is an internet search on “Will Jawando stupid.”

I have figured out what’s going on, thanks to two fans who separately forwarded Jawando’s newest fundraising appeal to me. In another display of stunningly poor judgment, Jawando himself is driving traffic to my blog by reproducing my content in an email blast that starts out:  ““Is Will Jawando Stupid? ” You read that right. That was the title of a vicious and unfounded attack posted against Will this week.” Evidently,  Jawando has forgotten that — even without providing a link to my site — his email recipients know how to type “Will Jawando stupid” into a search engine. And once those recipients get to my site, they see the very substantive reasons why Jawando has no business getting in the way of the worthy candidates in the race.

Here are the two top results are when you type the search term into Google:

will jawando stupid - Google Search

You, Dear Readers, are not stupid. So you’re wondering as you look back to my May 17 post, where the word “stupid” is. Well, this may surprise you, but your ever-loving blogger sometimes gets carried away. The first version of that May 17 post was indeed titled, “Is Will Jawando Stupid?”. If you click on that search result in Google, you’ll now get to an error message, because I took that page down. I republished the post and marked it “[revised],” because I was concerned that perhaps I had gone overboard the first time. I not only rewrote the headline to something a wee bit less provocative (Google’s second search result), but also tightened up the rest of the post to focus better on what I was really trying to say.

A friend called me tonight and said, “You need an editor, Berner.” He’s right. Are there any volunteers? (I’ll offer you half of what I make as a blogger.)

Anyway, the Jawando campaign has decided to reinforce the “stupid” meme and it’s getting a lot of play. In between reveling in my newfound fame, I am humbled by the fact that my little opinion piece is helping Jawando to bury his own campaign, only adding to the damage he has done by bad-mouthing Sheila Hixson at voters’ doors. And for  that, I say: “Thank you, Will!”

I have one more post re Will Jawando in store. After that, we can turn to more serious topics.

©2014 Keith Berner

05.18.14 Going Rove in D20

May 18, 2014

Karl Rove has been in the news this past week bashing Hilary Clinton for being old and brain damaged (in between chants of  “Benghazi, Benghazi, Benghazi!”). How does this relate to our little neck of the woods, Dear Reader? Yesterday, I wrote about Will Jawando’s idiocy in challenging  Sheila Hixson’s fitness for public office. Here’s the thing: Jawando is unique only in being stupid enough to say this stuff in public. But he is only the tip of the iceberg, the visible piece of an insidious, Rovian campaign against Hixson. Twice in the past week I heard the exact same language from  well-known, “progressive” local politicians, whispering to me that Hixson is no longer with it. Make no mistake: this is no accident. When identical language comes from disparate sources, someone has written the script and is organizing the players.

Sheila Hixson is a powerful progressive force for D20 and Maryland. These supposedly progressive wannabes are lying and know they’re lying. They are not only mirroring GOP tactics, but making the world safer for GOP policies. For shame!

©2014 Keith Berner

05.17.14 [revised] MD D20: What’s he thinking? Jawando goes after Hixson.

May 17, 2014

this post replaces a version I published earlier this evening — this revision is not of the substance, but rather of the form

Will Jawando is a candidate for one of three delegate seats in Maryland’s District 20. Valerie Ervin wants us to vote for him as her model candidate:

  • He’s ambitious. If you liked how Valerie Ervin quit mid-term to plot her path toward greater glory, you’d love how Jawando would be running for Congress from his first day as delegate.
  • He’s unqualified: What connection is there between being White House staff and Maryland politics? Not much.  Jawando has never done five minutes of work for our district and our community. He was born here. So what? So was Will Smith.
  • He’s weak: Jawando would be nowhere without Ervin’s backing, meaning that if he is elected he will follow her to the ends of the earth. Jawando’s debt to Ervin will come at the expense of D20.

As if  this weren’t enough, Jawando has begun badmouthing D20 delegation dean, Sheila Hixson (ahem) Chair of the House Ways & Means Committee (ahem) when he’s out door-knocking. He’s apparently telling folks that Hixson is over the hill and needs to pack it in. What’s dumb about this strategy?

  1. Jawando’s simply wrong. Hixson is totally with it. She’s vigorous, healthy, and eager to continue using her considerable political power on behalf of our district and our values.
  2. Hixson is going to win. Which means that if D20 voters somehow also put Jawando in office, he will have alienated the person he would most need to collaborate with to be even marginally effective in office. It’s practically Politics 101 not to go negative in a race for multiple seats — for very little upside, making enemies just ain’t worth it.
  3. Taking on one of the most powerful politicians in the state for no apparent reason is hardly recommended political behavior.

There are many attractive D20 candidates.  Why choose Will?

©2014 Keith Berner

05.03.14 Terrill North for Montgomery County District 5

May 3, 2014

The District 5 race for Montgomery County Council makes me very sad: two very decent and qualified candidates have had all the oxygen sucked out of the race by two bad guys. First, the good guys.

I’m proud to endorse Terrill North for this seat. North is the most consistent progressive in the race. I have known him for about a decade and am a fan of his integrity and passion for economic and social justice. You just have to love a VP of ACLU Maryland, long-time activist with Progressive Neighbors, former advocate with Earth Justice, and leader of a Silver Spring mentorship program for at-risk youth. Putting North on county council will ensure that local hero Marc Elrich (At-Large) will have a partner for the things we care most about.

Give other good-guy Evan Glass credit: while everyone was else cowered in fear, Glass declared his candidacy for D5, before Destructive Force Valerie Ervin quit her post mid-term. Glass is a serious and capable candidate with a long history of community leadership in Silver Spring, including service as chair of the Silver Spring Citizens Advisory Board. Just like North, Glass advocates for closing the educational achievement gap, sustainable environmental practices, and bus rapid transit (thanks to Elrich for that plan!).

If North and Glass were alone in this race, we could expect an uplifting campaign in which voters might end up having to flip a coin. I am going with North, because he has direct experience with a broader range of progressive issues than Glass. But I expect that Glass would also do a fine job on council.

Alas, these two good guys have been eclipsed by two politicians you should not vote for.

Tom Hucker served MD D20 well as delegate since 2007. As one progressive political leader puts it, “I agree with Tom on the issues 90% of the time.” Tom was going to remain a delegate until Valerie Ervin quit her council post. I get why Hucker wasn’t interested in taking on Ervin (fear), but don’t respect it. When it became apparent that Hucker was going to jump in the race after Glass and North had been working it for weeks, I and others pleaded with him to run for an at-large seat instead, creating an opportunity for progressives to take two seats: D5 and one of the at-large slots. His name recognition and connections with political leaders across the county would have made him a favorite to knock off an incumbent like Nancy Floreen or Hans (The Liar) Riemer. Hucker’s response (not verbatim): You can’t expect me to do that. It would be too hard.

Notwithstanding the selfishness of taking an easier road, I was prepared to back Hucker enthusiastically, until I started hearing about the nasty, underhanded campaign he was running. Yes, Hucker is the bully I was referring to in my recent post on the state of local politics. His 2006 campaign for delegate was widely considered to be unsavory, which I had put this out of my mind in recent years. But when I started hearing that Hucker was spreading false rumors about his opponents this year and publicly attacking their backers (driving one of them to tears), it revived unpleasant memories and revealed that this is Hucker’s default modus operandi, not an aberration.

I made about a dozen calls about Hucker to community leaders, elected officials, and political observers, seeking reassurance about his character. Instead, every single person I spoke to — none of whom was associated with his opponents’ campaigns and some of whom expect to vote for Hucker — described him as a bully. I heard not only about campaign tactics, but also about strong-arm behavior in Annapolis that had alienated allies and reduced his effectiveness.

When I called Hucker to tell him why I would not be endorsing him, he angrily described himself as the victim of “scurrilous hearsay” spread by “desperate” opponents who “have nothing to offer.” When I repeatedly pointed out to Hucker that this stuff was coming from neutral observers and even political friends, he just couldn’t hear me. This is classic bully: playing the victim of the very sorts of behavior he engages in.

I really wanted to endorse Hucker, at the very least in order to stop Chris Barclay (see below). But I decided that I just could not ethically attach my name to his style of politics. And here’s the practical aspect of my decision not to back him: Can you think of the other bully who has been in the headlines? That’s right, Tom Hucker is a Chris Christie in the making. How long will it be before Hucker’s behavior results in scandal that takes him down and a part of the progressive agenda with him? I don’t think progressives should take the risk.

I also oppose Hucker for two substantive reasons. He is a union guy first and foremost. There have been other labor backers — people like Elrich, Ervin, and county executive Ike Leggett — who, in the midst of the county’s recent budget crises, demanded that the public employee unions share the pain with other county residents, rather than be given a pass. Hucker has promised the unions never to ask them again to contribute to a sustainable county budget. County residents voted in 2012 to put an end to “effects bargaining” by the Fraternal Order of Police (FoP), under which the union could object to impositions of simple workplace rules (like a requirement to check email). Hucker has promised the FoP that he will fight to restore their stranglehold on common sense.

More surprising is Hucker’s opposition (in two recorded votes) to indexing the state’s new minimum wage to the rate of inflation. Indexing is essential for assuring that newly increased minimum wages don’t end up as poverty wages a few years later. When confronted with this at a recent Silver Spring Democratic Club forum, Hucker hemmed and hawed and finally admitted to having voted against indexing, saying that he was doing what the party leadership in the House wanted him to. That is, Hucker was more concerned about his political future than he was about good policy in support of working women and men.

Rounding out the D5 field is school board member Christopher Barclay, who doesn’t even live in D5 (and is the only one of the four candidates never to have done any work on the ground here)! That’s right, Dear Reader, Maryland law doesn’t exclude carnet baggers if they move to the district by election day, which Barclay promises to do. Why does Barclay even stand a chance? Because a Coalition only Concerned with Color — Ervin and current county-councilmembers Nancy Navarro (D4), Craig Rice (D2), and Cherri Branson (interim D5) — have endorsed him. His apparent prime qualification? He’s African American. His apparent secondary qualification? He’s needy, which means he would be indebted to politicos who help him. Word on the street is that Barclay has no money for this campaign or for moving into our district. This means that Ervin & Co. will be raising or giving Barclay the resources he needs for the campaign and for house-hunting. I can’t prove this point, but it seems to be a logical supposition.

(Barclay is also the politician I referred to  whose campaign manager was found rummaging around Hucker’s Annapolis office in the dead of night.)

For those of you who thought we might be rid of Ervin when she up-and-quit her Council seat mid-term, here is your wake-up call. Ervin got bored because she didn’t have sufficient power or limelight. So what she is doing is cultivating easily manipulable candidates in preparation for eventual runs at county executive, governor, or dictator of the universe. As part of this effort, Ervin has declared D5 a black seat. She is backing empty shirts like Barclay and Will Jawando (empty-shirt candidate for MD D20 delegate — more on him later), all in service to building a political empire. Ervin is seeking to remake the political fault lines in our county from developers/Chamber of Commerce vs. environment/slow-growth to people of color vs. white. All in service to her ambition.

I’m 100% in favor of affirmative action. And there is no question that people of color have been underrepresented in Montgomery County politics. But, in a year when the US president is black, the likely governor of Maryland is black, the current and likely future county executive is black, and four of nine current county council members are of color, is race really the most important criterion for selecting candidates?

In case you missed it, Terrill North happens to be African American. I don’t know why Ervin didn’t settle on him (though, she evidently promised a bunch of candidates her support this year, only to ditch them when push came to shove). Perhaps Ervin decided that North has too much character to serve her future empire. I have settled on him because he is the best man for the job. Period.

PS. In my recent post on dirty local politics, I referred to a political consultant who used blatant anti-Muslim hysteria and Nazi imagery as a campaign tactic. This is David Goodman, who used such horrific themes on behalf of then-MD D19 senator Mike Lenett in 2010 in a losing effort against Roger Manno. (The Gazette cited Goodman as “the architect of Mike Lenett’s aggressive direct mail campaign, which received low marks and helped contribute to one of the nastiest primary races [in 2010].”) He is working for North in this campaign. It turns out, sadly, that other local politicos like Jamie Raskin and Sheila Hixson have given this despicable man work. This sucks. It is also the nature of politics and ultimately not reason enough for me to punish North.

©2014 Keith Berner

11.16.13 It’s 2014 in Maryland Politics – D20 Candidates Forum

November 17, 2013

2013’s leaves haven’t even finished falling, but the Democratic campaigns for next June’s primary are well underway. This past Thursday evening, Takoma Park City Councilman Jarrett Smith (Ward 5) and progressive activist Terrill North (who is running for county council), put on a Maryland District 20 candidates forum at Washington Adventist University in Takoma Park. The district, which includes Takoma Park and Silver Spring, is currently served in Annapolis by Democrats Senator Jamie Raskin and delegates Sheila Hixson, Tom Hucker, and Heather Mizeur. With Mizeur’s candidacy for governor (more on that another time), there will be one open delegate seat. The event this week featured nine contenders (along with Hucker, who offered a few remarks in the mode of elder statesman).

This was a mostly impressive line-up. Six or seven of the wannabes are capable of running viable campaigns and serving competently in Annapolis. As one would expect in D20, there is nary a centrist or conservative in the bunch (all hands up for marijuana legalization!). The district’s voters will have a dilemma of riches, enough to make one wish the talent could be distributed across the county for knocking out retrograde forces from MoCo’s state delegation.

I entered the forum knowing and being positively inclined toward two hopefuls: attorney Jonathan Shurberg and blogger/policy wonk David Moon, whom I knew from Raskin’s first campaign. And I had heard positive things about Will Smith, another Raskin alumnus. (You can expect Raskin to remain studiously neutral in the race, given the number of “family members” competing!)

From my perspective, Shurberg did not disappoint. As another attendee put it, Shurberg came off as the adult in the room. A passionate fighter for progressive causes, he is the only candidate to have written state legislation. He clearly gets Annapolis and would hit the ground running. He also has 20 years of experience of winning cases for individuals and families in need. If I were to vote today, Shurberg would be my choice. (This is not yet an endorsement – I have more to learn about other candidates.)

Moon also made a positive impression – giving perhaps the most compelling performance of the night. He is passionate and articulate, exciting lefties like me with his sharp rhetoric about the powers and policies that be. His Maryland Juice blog has had proven impact on public opinion and policy outcomes.

The question raised by Moon critics is whether he could get anything done as a legislator. They cite, for example, the number of enemies he has made through his blog. This blogger gets the difference between speaking truth to power and actually putting together legislative victories. I have chosen to have a big mouth rather than run for office. The roles are most definitely not the same. Does David realize that?

As much as I like David personally, here is why I oppose his candidacy: his ties to County Councilwoman Valerie Ervin, probably the most venal and destructive politician in the county. Ervin provides the first endorsement quote in Moon’s printed lit and is front and center on the piece’s biggest photo. I’ll discuss Ervin in more detail another time, but the bottom line is that I cannot support any politician who is beholden to her and who will serve to increase her power. It is a shame that Moon has hitched his wagon to hers.

Smith was disappointing at the forum. He is clearly smart and capable, but so was nearly everyone else. He provided no rationale for his candidacy, no passion, no driving issue. My sources tell me that his strong suit is how hard he works – among other things, he is one of only two candidates in this race who has already been out knocking on doors, doing this essential job of sinking roots on the ground (added to those he has from being born and raised here). It is early. There is time for Smith to impress. My mind remains open.

D’Juan Hopewell is the new (to me) face who made the most positive impression this week. He was the only candidate to speak – and speak passionately – about poverty, hunger, and a progressive economic agenda. His primary issue – supporting small business – doesn’t light my fire, but I get the connection between commerce and jobs for those who need them. Count me intrigued.

One candidate left a distinctly negative taste in my mouth. White House staffer Will Jawando is clearly already running for Congress and beyond, with our district as stepping stone (ala Mizeur, who abused Takoma Park in her rush toward glory). He may well care about national policy, but gave no hint (apart from being raised here) of any insight into the district or Annapolis. He came off as somewhat arrogant and slick, assuming that his ties to Barack Obama automatically qualify him for this seat. (Being tied to Obama in 2013 provides zero value in my book – this ain’t 2007 or 2008.) His repeated pabulum about “raising two daughters” in the district was as nauseating as it was empty. Further, he proudly touted Valerie Ervin’s endorsement. If this is a black mark against someone I’d love to support (Moon), it is doubly so against someone who probably has no business wasting our time in this race.

Justin Chappell, the only disabled person in the race, has a track record of advocating those (not only the disabled) who need it. He is also already working hard, including door knocking. He is not a compelling speaker or visionary, though.

The issue of diversity came up, as it should have, for one of the most diverse areas in the state. Our current delegation is all white. Of the nine candidates at the forum three are African American (Hopewell, Jawando, Smith) and one is Asian American (Moon). Should progressives in D20 be favoring a minority candidate?

Look, I believe in affirmative action. I’ve proudly supported black candidates since Carl Stokes of Cleveland because the first African-American mayor of a major US city in 1967. Ultimately, though, I’d rather support someone who can get the job done on behalf of the dispossessed than look like them. Will I continue to regret that we have an all-white delegation if I end up backing a white candidate? Yes. Will that stop me from backing a white candidate if I decide she or he is likely to be most effective? No.

Speaking of she or he, it ain’t gonna be the former this time: not a single woman appeared on Thursday evening. (There evidently is a declared female challenger, but she chose not to show up, with the explanation that she doesn’t speak on Thursdays. ‘Nuff said.) But in gender terms, our delegation is more than balanced: Sheila Hixson – chair of the House Ways and Committee – is arguably the most powerful woman in Annapolis. I used to call her my favorite politician whom I wouldn’t vote for, because I found her too centrist. Well, she has moved left in recent years and I have come to respect how important her political power is to the big causes I care about the most. (She is also just plain nice, which doesn’t hurt.)

And I would be remiss if I didn’t take a moment to praise Tom Hucker, who has been working hard for us and for the greater good. There is no doubt in my mind that this choice is about filling one empty seat: D20 should absolutely stick with Raskin, Hixson, and Hucker! (To you term-limit supporters: how soon do you want these guys arbitrarily kicked out? The solution to bad elected officials is not term limits, but rather campaign-finance reform and voting against them!)

Big credit goes to Jarrett Smith and Terrill North for getting nine challengers out for a forum this early in the race and for the large audience that showed up in a part of Takoma Park that is practically famous for low political participation. This speaks to why I so enthusiastically supported Smith for city council and why I will be an active backer of North’s campaign for county council.

© 2013 Keith Berner

09.09.10 Biennial Voter Guide

September 9, 2010

Quick Guide

  • Governor write in Mickey Mouse
  • US Senator write in Mickey Mouse
  • US Congress-District 4 Donna Edwards
  • US Congress-District 8 Chris Van Hollen write in Mickey Mouse
  • Maryland Senate-District 20 Jamie Raskin
  • Maryland Delegates-District 20 Sheila Hixson, Tom Hucker, Heather Mizeur (select up to 3)
  • Maryland Delegate-District 18 Dana Beyer
  • County Executive write in Mickey Mouse
  • County Council – At Large Marc Elrich & Duchy Trachtenberg only (select up to 4)
  • County Council – District 1 Roger Berliner
  • County Council – District 2 Sharon Dooley
  • County Council – District 3 Phil Andrews
  • County Council – District 4 no recommendation
  • County Council – District 5 Write in Mickey Mouse
  • Other Races: see Progressive Neighbors


Governor

How can any progressive vote for a guy who loves slots and the ICC and wants to provide tax cuts to the wealthy in support of religious schools (the infamous BOAST bill)?  I guess we’ll have to vote for Martin O’Malley in November, but we don’t have to in September.

Recommendation: Write in Mickey Mouse

(There are two unknowns running against O’Malley, but I never recommend voting for an unknown, because one has no idea what he/she stands for!)

US Senator

Barbara Mikulski is the classic go-along-to-get-along machine Democrat. She’s also famous for horrendous treatment of her staff.  Send the same message to her as to O’Malley.

Recommendation: Write in Mickey Mouse

US Congress – Maryland District 4

You have such a progressive gem in Donna Edwards. Vote for her with utter joy in your heart!

US Congress – Maryland District 8

Some in the progressive community blast the incumbent for not being as pure as the driven snow.  I say that Chris Van Hollen is the closest thing to a true progressive in the national Democratic leadership.  We may not agree with every vote he casts, but it is essential to have someone like him in the central power circles.  Vote for him!

With the news that Chris Van Hollen is considering a deal with the GOP to extend Bush tax cuts for the rich, I am withdrawing my endorsement and urging a write in to express opposition.  I am also I urging all Van Hollen constituents to contact the congressman and express outrage over his comments.

Recommendation: Write in Mickey Mouse

Maryland Senate and Delegates – District 20

(Select one senator and up to three delegates.)

In Senator Jamie Raskin and Delegates Sheila Hixson, Tom Hucker and Heather Mizeur, the most progressive district in the state has the most progressive – and effective – legislative team.  Let’s count our blessings every day for their leadership and let’s give them another four years.

I have heard some progressives criticize Hixson for not being as left as we are.  I previously held this view myself and still disagree with the delegate’s support for slots and the ICC.  But I have also come to appreciate how much behind-the-scenes work she has done to stop the cesspool in Annapolis from being worse than it is and to increase Raskin/Hucker/Mizeur’s effectiveness.  Sure, Sheila Hixson is a bit to the right of her district, but we need her right where she is as chair of Ways and Means.

Other Maryland Senate and Delegate Races in Montgomery County

I recommend following the endorsements of Progressive Neighbors.

One candidate deserves special mention, though:  Dr. Dana Beyer, a challenger for delegate in District 18.  Beyer is the clear pick here in a field that includes two incumbents (Carr and Waldstreicher) who oppose the Purple Line.  More important, Beyer is about as committed, passionate, and articulate a fighter for progressive causes you’ll ever find.  Send her to Annapolis and she’s guaranteed to shake things up.

County Executive – Montgomery County

Ike Leggett, who is running unopposed, is a great disappointment.  He opposes progressive taxation, has behaved with utter malfeasance in the Live Nation debacle, and endorses nonprogressive candidates like Craig Rice.  Send him a message:

Recommendation: Write in Mickey Mouse

Montgomery County Council – At-Large

(Select up to four candidates.)

Marc Elrich is the most innovative and consistently progressive member of the county council.  His knowledge of (seemingly) everything, coupled with his willingness to talk with everybody, results in sound public policy.  We couldn’t ask for a better representative in government.

+++

Duchy Trachtenberg aligns with the good guys on the council in terns of good land-use policies and separation from the development industry.  She can be a schemer along with the worst of politicians, but she is also a champion on health issues and gender equality.

+++

As I have written previously, I am ambivalent about George Leventhal.  His temperament seems to be improving (he had been described as the most disruptive force on dysfunctional council), and he is a leader on issues like homelessness and health care.  But he is too tied to the development industry and too much in the Duncan/Silverman mold to merit a vote of support.  His cardinal sin?  Helping lead last Decembers “coup” that knocked off next-in-line Roger Berliner for council president in favor of Development Queen Nancy Floreen.

+++

Hans Riemer wants to be an elected official more than he wants to do anything with that privilege.  He has run a campaign of bromides and exaggerated tales of accomplishments that aren’t relevant to the county, anyway.  It’s impossible to tell what he would do — and whom he would follow — if elected and that might be reason enough to oppose him.  See my longer post on the Riemer campaign.

+++

The other viable at-large candidates, Nancy Floreen (incumbent) and Becky Wagner are classic End-Gridlock, chamber-of-commerce, big-business-at-the-expense-of-everything-else politicians.  Please don’t help put them on the council!

+++

Recommendation:  Bullet vote Marc Elrich and Duchy Trachtenberg. Bullet voting is when you select fewer than the number of candidates you are allowed to.  In this case, your votes for Elrich and Trachtenberg – and no one else – will assure that our two best county public servants are not knocked off by any of the others.  Remember, you don’t have to vote for four candidates in this race and I urge you not to.

Montgomery County Council – District 1

Roger Berliner is a common-sense progressive who supports the Purple Line and has been a close ally of good-guy Marc Elrich.  His opponent, Ilaya Hopkins, wasn’t even a Democrat until two years ago and opposes the Purple Line.

Montgomery County Council – District 2

This cliff-hanger of a race pits three known Montgomery County names against each other: community activist Sharon Dooley (who got 36% of the vote when she tried for the seat four years ago); Craig Rice, current state delegate for D-15; and Royce Hanson, former Park & Planning chair Royce Hanson.

Dooley is an environmentalist and health care advocate who will align with the other council progressives.

Though I’m told Rice is a nice guy and “not as bad as” outgoing councilman Mike Knapp, the company Rice keeps shows which side he would be on: the entire big-business bloc of the county council has endorsed him.

Roy Hanson is heartily disliked by several current council members, having fought many battles against them. He would be an ideal guardian of the Ag Reserve, which he founded years ago, but the price for him seems to be to accept sprawl everywhere else.

District 3

Phil Andrews is a model of integrity and advocate of good government. He’s unopposed, but deserves your showing up at the polls as thanks for he service.

District 4

Nancy Navarro is running unopposed.

District 5

Valerie Ervin is a purposely deceptive politician with contempt for the down-county progressive community. In a world of self-interested politicians, Ervin is a leader.  She’s running unopposed but is badly in need of a message that she is not universally loved.

Recommendation: write in Mickey Mouse

School Board

I recommend following the endorsements of Progressive Neighbors.

Other Races

It’s my practice not to pretend to know what I don’t know.  And I don’t know anything about the other races.  I must leave you here, dear Voter — henceforth, you are on your own.

©2010 Keith Berner

08.16.10 Progressive Neighbors Endorsements

August 16, 2010

Progressive Neighbors is a group of activists dedicated to supporting progressive candidates and policies in Maryland and Montgomery County.  The group first published voter guides in 2006 and has just announced its endorsements for the 2010 Democratic primary elections.

Full disclosure: your blogger is a dues-paying member of Progressive Neighbors and took part in the endorsement discussions.

If you are willing to have your name added as a supporter to this year’s Progressive Neighbors voter guide, please send me an email: lefthandview@kberner.us – deadline: asap!

The endorsements:

No endorsements have been made in races not listed.