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Howard Dean

TODAY: Howard Dean at Sholz Garten


by: Matt Glazer

Mon Sep 25, 2006 at 02:45 PM CDT

(Don't miss this event! - promoted by Matt Glazer)

You may have seen the wonderful ad on your left, but in case you haven't, what are you doing tomorrow night for Democracy? Show your support for the 50 State Strategy and say "Thanks, Howard!"

GOVERNOR HOWARD DEAN
Chairman of the Democratic National Committee for a Grassroots Reception
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
5:00 - 6:30PM Scholz Garten 1607 San Jacinto Austin, TX

$50 per person ($20 for Students - Student I.D.'s will be checked at the door) or Become a Democracy Bond Member To RSVP and contribute, or for more information, please visit the site or contact Jen Gonçalves at: goncalvesj@dnc.org or (202)863-8195.

Discuss :: (7 Comments)

Howard Dean in Austin September 26


by: nickDFT

Wed Sep 20, 2006 at 10:24 PM CDT





Austin, Texas--There's been a lot of talk on the blogs lately about Howard Dean and the 50-state strategy and the already-successes that are taking place in the strangest places for Democrats around the country like Wyoming, Mississippi, Idaho, and Montana. Well, you can add Texas to that list as well.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 199 words in story)

Howard Dean, Rove and Chris Bell


by: lightseeker

Mon Jul 17, 2006 at 00:11 PM CDT


Taking a page from the Roivan playbook: attack their strengths!


SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Politics -- Dean raps Bush on defense
"“You know, people say the Republicans are tough on defense. How can you be tough on defense if five years after 9/11, Osama bin Laden is still at large, the Iranians are about to get nuclear weapons, North Korea's quadrupled their nuclear weapons stash. . . ."
Source

It is a well known Rovian strategy, dating back to his College Republican dirty tricks days I would guess. Well the smear always comes first, but attacking your opponent's strengths is also standard fare as well. So , if you are John Kerry, war hero, tell the voters you are a dirty grandstander who didn't deserve the medals. What Dean is doing is literally the Rovian thing. Make the Repugs defend their "tough on defense" mantra

.

If I hold my nose and surf over to Perry's online sight, I discover that he highlights 4 issues : education reform, jobs and prosperity, fiscal responsiblity and family values. Let's think about each of these in turn.

Education Reform

There is a brewing insurrection on this one. Turn up the heat on his "reforms". Did you know that these reforms take more and more local control from your school boards and centralize them in the hands of the State Director of Education. Call it a power grab.  Did you know that these so called reforms, while our TAAS or TEKS or whatever bullshit name you give these tests have been going UP, our SAT's and ACT's have been doing a Titanic?

"You've seen newspaper accounts that explain how Enron used a single indicator to show how well the company was performing," McNeil said. She went on to explain that the average scores on Texas' standardized tests are like Enron's stock price -- inflated and manipulated. Profits and successes were reflected in stock price. Debts and losses were carried on a different set of books. McNeil believes that placing so much emphasis on kids' scores, and linking the scores to the jobs and cash bonuses of school administrators, corrupted the system. Just as Enron's focus on stock price corrupted the company by encouraging every employee to do everything possible to keep the stock price climbing, school administrators were pressured to use "any means necessary" to pump up test scores. Everything from replacing good curriculum with test practice drills to dumping weak students likely to be a liability to the school's ratings.
my previous blog on this issue

jobs and prosperity

Well, make Perry defend this record:


LINK In fact, according to the 2006 Kids Count Data Book, a just-released national report on the well-being of children, child poverty is up 5 percent in Texas. Nearly one in four kids lives in poverty, less than $16,600 a year for a family of three.
More Texans are at risk of going hungry than anywhere else in the country. Every day, one in six Texans is food insecure, meaning they aren’t sure where they’ll get their next meal. Nearly 5 percent of families actually goes hungry, ranking us fourth worst in the nation.
Texas also has the highest rate of adults and children without health insurance. One in four Texans is uninsured.
These problems have real consequences for all of us. If a family is living in poverty or if a child is hungry or sick, we all pay the price.

Fiscal Responsiblity


The time bomb has been planted on this one, but it won't go off for a year or so. It was planned this way during the educational special session. As I blogged about 2 month ago:

...unless Pie In the Sky By and By is a funding mechanism, even the Republican advocates of the bill know that there will be a $10 billion devil to pay in 2 years or less.

family values

Perry family values uh?  If we cannot depend on outsourcers to do telephone applications right, why should we place the well-being of our most vunerable children in their hands? .

Absent remarkable improvement, the state should cancel the massive contract with a private company hired to screen applicants for state assistance
"Since the Texas Health and Human Services Commission approved an $899 million contract with a consortium led by Bermuda-based Accenture, very little has gone right. The people who've paid for the blunders are the state's poor, particularly children and the elderly.

Since the state instituted the privatization effort, enrollment and reinstatement rates in the Children's Health Insurance Program have slumped; hundreds of persons have erroneously been denied Medicaid and food stamp eligibility; and applications were mistakenly directed to a Seattle warehouse. Planned layoffs of state caseworkers, which were supposed to result in big savings, were canceled as overwhelmed call centers were forced to return thousands of cases to state employees."

Why can't we agree to divide up the work and have these counter-themes pushed by various ones of our candidates, not just Bell? Surely, there is in these themes plenty of ammo for use in local legislative races. While shooting at the your local Republican critter, throw a shot Perry's way as well. Surely, we can create imaginative events to highlight these themes and simultaneously put forth our positive counter agenda? Why not make these a set of common theme for candidates throughout the state? They would not have to abandon their own concerns, just weave these into the mix as well. 

As I see it, Bell needs to dramatically turn up the heat on Perry. He is holding steady at 39%  or so and I don't Bell making up much ground. See poll here

I may be out of my depth, but I see too much reaction, not enough proactive traction on Bell's part. If I am totally off with all this, somebody tell me so...

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Democratic Reunion: 100 Days, 100 Voters, 100 Actions


by: Tracy Joan

Thu Jun 29, 2006 at 11:41 AM CDT

(I'm thinking about setting up a Democratic Reunion event for BOR readers to get together and discuss the future of this blog. Would y'all be interested? - promoted by Phillip Martin)

Author's note: I'm posting this everywhere because it's a 50-State kind of thing! I hope Texans come out strong, ever since working in the 28th I have a special place in my heart for Texas Dems!

Mark your calendars:  July 29th we all take a huge leap forward.

Last year we took the first step.  On November 15th we held the National Organizing Kick-off.  Across the country Democrats gathered together and starting putting the pieces together to organize in every state, district and precinct. Then in April we held the Neighbor-to-Neighbor National Organizing Day.  It was an unprecedented effort.  Six months before an election, holding a 50-State Canvass, and together we talked to over a million voters.

July 29th is going to be bigger and better.  July 29th Democrats across the country will once again gather together for The Democratic Reunion.

There's More... :: (4 Comments, 319 words in story)

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