Tag Archives: racism

FW: here’s what happened:


Wanted to make sure you saw this. It was a tough election night — but you made a real difference in this campaign. You should take a look at what you made possible.

And if you’re still fighting with us… if you’re still standing with the President… sign our note to President Obama thanking him for all he’s done and letting him know that we have his back.

———- Original Message ———-

This is a long email — but we hope you’ll read all the way to the end.

First off, you know we’re not afraid to be blunt. So we’ll just come out and say it: last night was rough. We registered more voters, and made more phone calls, and knocked on more doors than ever before. But we were still left with heartbreaking losses.

Although make no mistake: last night’s results were no accident. It was the result of Republicans’ cynical political strategy that put hurting President Obama before helping the American people. The President put it best just a few months ago:

There has been a certain cynical genius to what some of these folks have done in Washington. What they’ve realized is, if we don’t get anything done, then people are going to get cynical about government and its possibilities of doing good for everybody. And since they don’t believe in government, that’s a pretty good thing.And the more cynical people get, the less they vote. And if turnout is low and people don’t vote, that pretty much benefits those who benefit from thestatus quo.– President Barack Obama (August 29, 2014)

In other words, the Republicans broke Washington. Then, they spent millions of dollars of secret money running against a broken Washington.

So yeah, last night was rough. It’s infuriating that Republicans’ cynical strategy worked. But we refuse to give in to them. We refuse to give in to the cynicism. As President Obama always says, “hope is a better choice.”

And believe it or not, there were some bright spots last night that give us hope. Here are just a few examples:

FLORIDA

Republican Congressman Steve Southerland is the poster-child for Republicans’ anti-woman agenda.
He opposed the Violence Against Women Act. He voted to defund Planned Parenthood. He even held an all-male fundraiser where the invite actually said, “Tell the Misses not to wait up […] because the after dinner whiskey and cigars will be smooth & the issues to discuss are many.”

WHAT YOU MADE POSSIBLE: We registered 9,958 new Democratic voters in the district.
For the first time in our history, we supplemented our field program with a voter registration program. In addition, our larger, more targeted field program knocked on 75,000 doors.

THE RESULT: We defeated Rep. Southerland by 2,193 votes.
We’re so glad you gave us the chance to execute that voter registration program — it made all the difference. And we’re so happy to welcome CongressWOMAN-elect Gwen Graham.

NEBRASKA

Republican Congressman Lee Terry voted to shut down the government.
And if that wasn’t bad enough, when Congressman Terry wouldn’t give up his government paycheck during the shutdown, he replied, “Dang straight… I’ve got a nice house and a kid in college.”

WHAT YOU MADE POSSIBLE: We launched a massive early vote program that gave Democrats a 5,262 vote advantage.
When we told you we could beat Boehner’s Republicans — even in deep-red states, we weren’t kidding. We personally reached out to nearly 40,000 voters on the ground. And when the Republicans ran an attack that was called “unspeakably racist,” we got on the air and fought back.

THE RESULT: We defeated Rep. Terry by 4,132 votes.
Because of the work you made possible, Congressman Terry is going to have a lot more time to spend in that “nice house” of his.

ARIZONA

Arizona House Speaker Andy Tobin was a chief architect of SB 1062, better known as the “No Gays Allowed” bill.
Under Tobin’s bill, businesses could deny service to customers simply because they’re gay.

WHAT YOU MADE POSSIBLE: We invested in community organizers early and often.
We knew defeating Tobin was going to be tough, so we made a huge investment on the ground. We put field staffers on the ground earlier than ever before. In particular, we focused on organizing tribal communities.

THE RESULT: We defeated Speaker Tobin by 9,346 votes.
None of this would have been possible without your support. You broke every grassroots fundraising record we have — and then some. And each one of those $5 and $50 donations allowed us to pull off these upsets — even in a tough year.

So now the question is: what’s next?

Let’s start with the obvious: Republicans have won control of Congress — so now they have no excuses. They can’t just sit back and blame Democrats like President Obama, Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi. They’ll have to stand up and try to convince people that the Republican agenda is better than the Democratic agenda.

That’s a fight we’re looking forward to.

So if you’re still fighting with us… if you’re still standing with the President… sign our note to President Obama thanking him for all he’s done and letting him know that we have his back.

Thanks again for everything you do.

All of us at the DCCC

Marc Solomon, Freedom to Marry


Freedom to Marry - Uniting for Marriage
Watch the video: Spirit of the South

The past few weeks have been ones of unprecedented momentum in our fight for the freedom to marry: We’ve built public support for marriage to historic levels, and we’ve won marriage in an additional 11 states.

But even now, hundreds of thousands of gay Americans — across the South and around the country — are denied the freedom to marry the one they love.

Our campaign shows just how important marriage is to countless families who call these non-marriage states home. Watch our powerful new video featuring a beautiful family from Alabama, and then pledge to fight with us until we’ve won marriage nationwide.

Watch now

Nancy Duff Campbell and Marcia Greenberger


 

Nancy Duff Campbell and Marcia Greenberger

In yesterday’s election, we saw voters were with us on the issues. Here are a few bright spots: Four states and two cities voted to raise the minimum wage. Two out of three states voted down restrictions on reproductive rights. One state and three cities guaranteed paid sick days to their workers. And extreme candidates moderated their messages to appear to support women’s issues.

Now it’s up to us to hold them to their campaign promises.

You may feel down — but we’re not out. Not by a long shot. Pledge to stand with us.

We won't back down.

The women’s vote continues to be a critical factor in elections — and politicians need to make sure they don’t turn their back on policies that help women. But we also know that we’ll need to roll up our sleeves, stand by our agenda, and use every tool we can to make advances for women and their families.

This is not the time to back down. Now is the time to fight even harder, stand even stronger and never let up for a minute.

Will you join us?

Sincerely,
Nancy Duff Campbell and Marcia Greenberger
Co-Presidents
National Women’s Law Center

Protect federal and military retiree pensions …


campaignForAmericaLgo

In this tough economy, there are always businesses looking to take advantage of people. Sadly, a new underhanded business practice is targeting the pensions of federal and military retirees.

In the same spirit as payday and car title loans that victimize the poor, “pension advance” schemes provide instant cash at a terrible cost.

Veterans and federal employees are encouraged to sign away pensions earned over decades for a high interest loan laden with hidden fees obscured by complex fine print.

Representative Cartwright (D-PA) has introduced a bill, H.R. 3310, that would end this unethical practice. We need your help to force John Boehner to bring this to a vote. Sign the petition here.  

Our veterans and public servants deserve better.

Campaign for America’s Future manager@ourfuture.org

Cliven Bundy said WHAT?


So, you can always count on some folks ….Bundy doesn’t disappoint ! Question is …
WHAT do we, as voters do or think NOW about Republicans like Senator Rand Paul, Boehner, Dean Heller , Greg Abbott, Governor Rick Perry who support Bundy

Bundy made some racially charged comments about government assistance in his daily news conference Saturday, according to a New York Times story published Wednesday.

“I want to tell you one more thing I know about the Negro,” the rancher began as he described a “government house” in Las Vegas where he recalled that all the people who sat outside seemed to “have nothing to do.”

“And because they were basically on government subsidy, so now what do they do?” he said, as quoted by the Times. “They abort their young children, they put their young men in jail, because they never learned how to pick cotton. And I’ve often wondered, are they better off as slaves, picking cotton and having a family life and doing things, or are they better off under government subsidy? They didn’t get no more freedom. They got less freedom.”

The Times reached out to spokespeople for Sens. Rand Paul (R-KY) and Dean Heller (R-NV), who have spoken in support of Bundy, and for Texas Attorney Gen. Greg Abbott (R). Those who responded distanced themselves from Bundy and his remarks.

A spokesman for Heller, who had called Bundy and his supporters “patriots,” told the Times that the senator “completely disagrees with Mr. Bundy’s appalling and racist statements, and condemns them in the most strenuous way.”

A spokeswoman for Abbott, who asked BLM to respond to reports that it planned to acquire land near his state’s Red River in the wake of the Bundy ranch standoff, told the Times that the gubernatorial candidate’s letter to the agency “was regarding a dispute in Texas and is in no way related to the dispute in Nevada.”

A spokesman for Paul told the Times that the senator wasn’t immediately available for comment on Bundy’s remarks. TPM has reached out to Paul’s office and will update when we receive a response.

Cliven Bundy Muses On What He Knows ‘About The Negro’

Defiant domestic terrorist Cliven Bundy shares his thoughts on liberty, race, and “the Negro.”
Cliven Bundy Muses On What He Knows 'About The Negro'

The standoff at Bundy Ranch is over, but Cliven Bundy can’t quite let go of the limelight, so he is giving a daily press conference. If he has nothing to say, he’s got plenty of opinions to share with reporters.

New York Times:

“I want to tell you one more thing I know about the Negro,” he said. Mr. Bundy recalled driving past a public-housing project in North Las Vegas, “and in front of that government house the door was usually open and the older people and the kids — and there is always at least a half a dozen people sitting on the porch — they didn’t have nothing to do. They didn’t have nothing for their kids to do. They didn’t have nothing for their young girls to do.

And because they were basically on government subsidy, so now what do they do?” he asked. “They abort their young children, they put their young men in jail, because they never learned how to pick cotton. And I’ve often wondered, are they better off as slaves, picking cotton and having a family life and doing things, or are they better off under government subsidy? They didn’t get no more freedom. They got less freedom.”

Two things to remember about this. First, Rand Paul and Dean Heller think this guy is a patriot and a hero. Second, the United States Supreme Court thinks race is no longer an issue any of us need to worry about.

Having read Bundy’s remarks, is anyone at all surprised that he doesn’t recognize the federal government’s authority?

Yeah, I didn’t think so.

Also, a factcheck for the New York Times. This paragraph needs to be corrected:

Mr. Bundy, whose family has grazed cattle here since they homesteaded in the 1870s, owes the government more than $1 million in grazing fees. He stopped paying after the bureau ordered him to restrict the periods when his herd roamed the 600,000-acre Gold Butte area as part of an effort to protect the endangered desert tortoise.

You got taken for a ride, NYT. Bundy’s family didn’t buy that land until 1948 and didn’t start grazing their cattle on it until 1954.

Update: Rand Paul (predictably) distanced himself from Bundy’s remarks, saying “he completely disagrees with Mr. Bundy’s appalling and racist statements, and condemns them in the most strenuous way.”

However, let’s not forget that Rand Paul’s former social media director and book co-author Jack Hunter would be quite in agreement with Mr. Bundy. Senator Paul also supported doing away with the Civil Rights Act, and his former spokesperson Chris Hightower also posted racist remarks on Facebook. Sometimes actions speak louder than the strongest condemnation of someone else’s opinion.

Update 2: Waiting for Governor Rick Perry to walk back his praise for Mr. Bundy, too. I won’t hold my breath.