Category Archives: Ventura County Star

And Now for Something Completely Different: Jackson versus Dantona

The Ventura County Star reported Tuesday that Hannah-Beth Jackson was set to announce her candidacy Wednesday for California’s District 19 Senate seat.

 

A Jackson announcement, said to be scheduled for Mound Elementary in Ventura, would mean that Jim Dantona, who declared his candidacy months ago, would have company in his quest for the Democratic nomination.

 

The winner of the primary will be pitted against Republican Tony Strickland, the only candidate so far for his party’s nomination.

 

News of Jackson’s impending announcement kicked off a fierce debate on Brian Dennert’s blog, which has a good readership of both parties.

 

The question of whether Jackson’s announcement would make Democrats weaker in the district was widely discussed.

 

“Democrats aren’t afraid of a little competition,” wrote Laura Winchester. “I’m looking forward to a spirited competition.”

 

Heather Schmidt, who recently stepped down as president of the Young Progressive Democrats of Ventura County, wrote, “I look forward to a fair primary and hope that at the end the Dems can unite to take down the Strickland-machine.”

 

Republicans, predictably, were less generous. Most hoped that Jackson’s entering the race would divide the Democratic vote.

 

News of Jackson’s announcement came just before Dantona’s big fundraiser on Thursday. Donors will be able to rub shoulders with former Maryland Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend and California Senate President Pro Tempore Don Perata.

 

This lucky blogger was among those invited to come and report on the event. Check back here Friday for the scoop.

 

 

Election Day is November 6, Are You Registered to Vote?

Elvis Impersanator VotingThat’s right, Election Day is less than one month away. Time again for Democrats to come out and show some muscle.

 

Voters in the Conejo Valley cities of Agoura Hills and Westlake Village will decide among City Council candidates. Ventura, Bell Canyon, and Ojai Valley voters will also be heading to the polls.

 

In a superb show of civic responsibility, the Ventura County Star last week published an editorial that gave its readers a brief lowdown on local elections.

 


Here’s the deal: you have to be registered by October 22 to vote in this election. Ventura County voters can go to the County of Ventura Elections Division website at http://recorder.countyofventura.org/elections.htm for information.

LAVote.netAgoura Hills voters should go to the Los Angeles Election Division’s website at www.lavote.net.

 

To register to vote in California, go to www.sos.ca.gov/elections/elections_vr.htm. You can also call 1-800-345-VOTE for assistance in English.

 

You can also get voter registration forms at the post office or public library. You can download a California voter registration form by clicking on this link: www.sos.ca.gov/elections/english.pdf.

 

I recently registered to vote online. The form asks you to provide either your driver’s license number or the last four digits of your social security number, but it is easy and fast. After you fill out the form, the Secretary of State’s office mails the completed form to you, which you sign, date, and drop back in the mail. You don’t even need a stamp.

 

Remember that you have to re-register to vote if you have moved, changed your address, changed your last name, or changed your political party.

 

The next election, the much-awaited presidential primaries, will take place on February 5, 2008. The direct primaries will happen on June 3, and the Big Kahuna, the presidential general election, will take place on November 4.

 

Be sure to participate in that one. The future of our country is at stake.

 

The polls in Ventura County open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m. You can find your polling place for cities in Ventura County for the November 6 election by going to http://recorder.countyofventura.org/PPLACE/POLLPLAC.HTM.

 

Los Angeles County voters should go to www.lavote.net/locator/ to find their polling place.

 

Click on this link for a great list of upcoming Ventura County election dates: http://recorder.countyofventura.org/Electionday.pdf.

 

Los Angeles County voters can click on this link for a similar list of upcoming elections: www.lavote.net/VOTER/PDFS/CALENDAR_EVENTS/11062007.pdf.

 

Democrats can turn the Conejo Valley blue in upcoming years just by turning out to vote their conscience. Let’s get it done.

 

And remember, regime change begins at home.

Regime Change Begins at Home

 

Bush’s Poodle: Why Gallegly Won’t Fund Children’s Health Care

Gallegly as a PoodleApparently funding the health care of poor children is not as important to Congressman Elton Gallegly (R-Thousand Oaks) as funding the war.

After all, poor children are certainly not going to vote Republican when they grow up. If they survive without health care, that is.

There’s no doubt about it, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, which would cost taxpayers $60 billion over 5 years, would be expensive. But isn’t it the legitimate business of government to protect those who are most vulnerable?

Only if it is not too expensive, apparently.

Elton Gallegly“I understand where the president is, and I agree with him on this issue,” Gallegly told the Ventura County Star.

The president vetoed a bill to renew SCHIP on Wednesday, despite overwhelming support in the House and Senate.

The bill is popular with Republicans, Democrats, and most Americans. But not with Gallegly or Bush.

Both say the bill is too expensive. And, says the president, “government coverage would displace private health insurance for many children.”

This is certainly not true, but even if it were children with health insurance, even government-sponsored health insurance, are better off than children with none.

Senate Republicans have bent over backwards to meet the president’s demands.

“Frankly, I think the president has had pretty poor advice on this,” said Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

“I can answer every objection that they’ve made, and I’m very favorable to the president. I know he’s compassionate. I know he’s concerned about these kids, but he’s been sold a bill of goods.”

Gallegly told the Star that “this is a classic case of the ugliest part of our government process, which is taking something as critical as the healthcare of children and turning it into political spin. Today is a day that I think is an embarrassment to this institution.”

Wednesday certainly was an embarrassment. It was embarrassing for Gallegly, for Bush, for the Republican Party, and for the nation. It shows the world that we value a wasteful war in Iraq—a war that has nothing to do with terrorism—more than we do the health of our own children.

The proposed $35 billion increase in funding for the SCHIP program, an increase that will cover a five-year period, mind you, is about as much as it costs to finance the war in Iraq for a mere three months.

The president just asked Congress for an additional $200 billion in war funding. The war in Iraq has cost about $457 billion to date, and increasing at a rate of about $300 million a day, according to economist Scott Wallsten.

The Congressional Budget Office predicts the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the ineptly named war on terror will cost about $1.2 trillion between now and 2017.

Less than half of this amount, writes David Leonhardt in the New York Times, “would pay for an unprecedented public health campaign — a doubling of cancer research funding, treatment for every American whose diabetes or heart disease is now going unmanaged and a global immunization campaign to save millions of children’s lives.”

And yet the president and his obedient congressman can’t scrape up enough money, or moral courage, to help out 10 million poor kids.

Bush and his sycophants, like Gallegly, have been calling recently for more fiscal discipline. This is a laughable attempt to salvage some respectability at the last minute after six years of deficit spending.

The public debt is now up to more than $9 trillion, according to the Treasury Department. When Bill Clinton left office, there was a budget surplus of $127 billion.

And yet the president and his party continually tout themselves as being deficit hawks and Democrats as tax-and-spend liberals.

Nobody’s buying it, least of all now, and Republicans will pay a hefty fine at the ballot box in the 2008 elections.

The presidential veto is meant to be a check on congressional power. But in some cases, the president, be he (or soon, she) a Republican or Democrat, is just plain wrong.

This is one of those cases.

The Constitution provides Congress with the ability to override a presidential veto. The House needs 25 more votes to do this, and even Republicans are lining up to oppose the president.

These, ladies and gentlemen, are the last days of a failing presidency.

Gallegly Sinking ShipWill Gallegly go down with the ship?

That’s up to Ventura County voters. Let’s all turn out for the elections in November 2008 and show Gallegly the door.

Key Links:

Gallegly’s Voting Record, as reported by the Washington Post

Bush Vetoes Child Healthcare Bill,” by Michael Collins, Ventura County Star, October 4, 2007

Families Brace for SCHIP Demise,” by Carla Williams, ABC News, October 4, 2007

Bush Vetoes Health Measure,” by Michael Abramowitz and Jonathan Weisman, Washington Post, October 4, 2007

 

The Debt to the Penny and Who Holds It,” U.S. Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Public Debt, retrieved October 4, 2007

 

Estimated Costs of U.S. Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and of Other Activities Related to the War on Terrorism,” Congressional Budget Office, testimony before the Committee on the Budget
U.S. House of Representatives, July 31, 2007.

 

What $1.2 Trillion Can Buy,” by David Leonhardt, New York Times, January 17, 2007.

 

President Clinton announces another record budget surplus,” by Kelly Wallace, CNN.com, September 27, 2000

 

Snow, Praising Bush on Budget, Calls Clinton’s Surplus `Mirage,’” by Alison Fitzgerald, Bloomberg.com, December 21, 2005.

 

 

 

Jackson Won’t Tell…Yet

Hannah-Beth JacksonAn open, accessible democracy is an amazing thing. A humble blogger like me can put questions to politicians, candidates, and potential candidates and get answers…well, sort of.

 

 

I contacted Hannah-Beth Jackson on Monday to find out whether she would run in the California State Senate race for District 19 against current Democratic front-runner Jim Dantona and Republican Tony Strickland.

 

 

She responded quickly and courteously.

 

 

And she was cagey.

 

 

“I will have more information for you in the coming weeks and will be happy to answer any questions at that time,” said Jackson.

 

 

Hmm. I knew that already.

 

 

The Ventura County Star has reported that she will decide whether to run in early October.

 

 

So hold your breath, folks. We’re still waiting.

 

Simi Blinks First; Lessons from the Civil Rights Movement

It’s not quite over, least of all for Liliana, the immigrant sheltered in a Simi Valley church, but the Ventura County Star reported today that the city’s bill of $39, 307 to the United Church of Christ has been put “on hold.”

 

 

Make no mistake about it, the Simi Valley city council and the mayor blinked first.

 

 

Faced with the threat of legal action by the American Civil Liberties Union, the city made its first intelligent decision in this entire affair—it backed down. The church did not.

 

 

City Manager Mike Sedell is quoted in the Star’s report as saying, “The city’s biggest concern is public safety, cost comes later.”

 

 

Contrast this with what he told the Los Angeles Times last week: “We warned [church officials] that if they flaunted it in the public, then these [protests] will occur and there will be consequences.”

 

 

This lofty attitude came with a price: on shaky legal ground, the city is trying to repair its damaged reputation.

 

 

“The city will continue to pursue resolution of this issue, and the mayor will recommend to the City Council that further action against UCC to enforce the letter sent to UCC asking for reimbursement of costs be placed on hold pending further discussion,” read a joint statement issued by Mayor Paul Miller, the Rev. June Goudey, and others.

 

 

What will happen to Liliana remains to be seen, but odds are she’ll be deported.

 

 

It occurs to me that there are similarities between those who heckled the Little Rock Nine 50 years ago and those who picketed the churched harboring Liliana last week.

 

 

The protesters of both eras were intolerant, trying vainly to preserve a way of life that had already disappeared.

 

 

 


 

ProtestersLittle Rock Nine

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And now, 50 years after the forced integration of Little Rock Central High School, former president Bill Clinton held the doors open for those who bravely risked violence to claim the education that was justly theirs.

 

 

 

Politicians fall all over themselves to give lip service in commemoration of the event. In addition to Clinton, the governor of Arkansas and the mayor of Little Rock attended a ceremony honoring the Little Rock Nine. President Bush issued a statement: “We resolve to continue their work to make America a more perfect Union,” said the president.

 

 

The day will come, probably sooner than we think, when politicians will fall all over themselves to praise the contributions of Latinos to American culture. They will say that they always supported a humane immigration policy.

 

 

When that day comes, we will remember those like Mayor Miller and Congressman Elton Gallegly barred the gates.

 

 

The United States should adopt more humanitarian immigration legislation, that which allows economic migrants, like Liliana, to stay in the country as guest workers. Groups like Save Our State would deride this as amnesty, but they forget our long tradition of offering shelter to those like Liliana who come here seeking a better life.

 

 

I’ll take Rev. Goudy’s version of America over Mayor Miller’s any day.

 

 

Greenberg Gets it Right

Congratulations are in order for Steve Greenberg, editorial cartoonist for the Ventura County Star, for his superb piece in Sunday’s paper. I think it captures my feelings about the constitutionality of the matter pretty well. Check out his website for more well-crafted cartoons.

Simi Church Billed