Archive for May, 2008

BAGHDANIELS

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels is on his way to meet with members of the Indiana National Guard in Iraq today.  Daniels is slated to meet with the 76th Infantry Brigade Team.

GOOD GOSSIP

Friday, May 16th, 2008

I’ve picked up some good gossip lately. Here it is. Take it for what it’s worth.

Is former Deputy Mayor and Marion County Prosecutor candidate Melina Kennedy gearing up for a Mayoral run in 2011? Maybe. Her old boss, Bart Peterson is having a party at the Broadmoor Country club and invited all of his old staff, except the ones who still work for city hall. Some say it’s more than a friendly get together.

Joanne Sanders, the Democratic Leader on the City-County Council may want to watch her back. Rumor has it that she supported David Orenlichter in the primary and now some of the Black Democrats on the Council think she should step down as leader because she did not support Andre Carson.

And speaking of Councils and Mayors, word is Council member Bill Oliver tried to “punk out” the Mayor at a recent meeting of the concerned clergy, calling Ballard everything but a flat out racist. Ballard apparently had enough and gave Oliver a verbal “pimp slapping” at that gathering. I wish someone had been rolling tape on that one.

FYI, the city should know Tuesday if it’s getting the 2012 Super Bowl.

The controversy between the Jill Long Thompson campaign and the UAW may not be over quite yet. The UAW filed a complaint against Thompson’s campaign over money spent on television advertising. The Election Commission says it can’t look at the complaint until the end of the reporting period which is July 15.

By the way, JLT has a new friend in former Congressional candidate Dr. Woody Myers. He recently wrote her a check for $20,000.

And for those of you who thought all the action was in Democratic circles these days, the Republican race for Attorney General Valparaiso Mayor Jon Costas and challenger AG Chief of Staff Greg Zoeller is stepping up. I’m hearing that while Costas is the Governor’s choice, Zoeller has been working hard to get the votes of the delegates to be the nominee. I think this race will eventually got to Costas, but it will be closer than anyone thinks.

And someone needs to tell Marion County Sheriff candidate Kerry Forestall that the next time you have a political fund raiser at Bubba’s on East Washington that officers should leave their squad cars at home. It’s never nice to mix government and politics, especially where they can be easily seen from the parking lot.

And congratulations to my good friend Leslie Hiner. She is leaving her position as Chief of Staff for House Republicans to take a position with the Friedman Foundation; the school choice people.

That’s all folks.

UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE GET DANIELS

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Indiana Democrats say despite the divisive gubernatorial primary, they are united in their quest to win in November.   Nominee Jill Long Thompson stood with her fellow Democrats at the State Capitol saying they will work together to beat Mitch Daniels in November.

State Chairman Dan Parker said the 1.1 million voters who picked Democratic ballots (Republicans and Operation Chaos not withstanding)  shows their party is sending a united message.

Gubernatorial nominee Jill Long Thompson reiterated her priorities to rebuild the state’s economy, reform the tax code, provide health insurance for all Hoosiers and stop the Governor’s “obsession with privatization.”

Despite the unified message, the UAW, a key Democratic constituent, put out a letter calling for the State Election Commission to follow up on a complaint regarding Thompson’s campaign and how she paid for television ads in the last days.  Thompson staffers played down the complaint saying it had been addressed by the Commission and there was no wrongdoing.

However, the fact that the UAW  would even file a complaint shows that there are still some deep divisions in the party that will have to be healed.  And no, Jim Schellinger was not there.  He was in Florida. 

THAT’S GOTTA HURT

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

The National GOP has got be sweating like a bunch girl scouts at R. Kelly’s house.  Republicans suffered a major defeat in a special election in Mississippi.  Democrat Travis Childers beat Republican incumbent 54-46. 

The special election was to fill the seat of former Rep. Roger Wicker who was appointed to to fill the vacancy left by Trent Lott.  President Bush won the district in 2004 by 62 percent.   This was a classic race, heavy GOP spending, appearances by Dick Cheney, recorded messages by the President, Laura Bush and John McCain, as well as GOP attempts to tie Childers to Barack Obama.  None of it flew.  Childers won by adopting the simple adage that “all politcs is local” and he kept it that way.

Republicans have a shot at getting the seat back in November, but party divisions may hamper those efforts. 

The GOP has lost special elections in “safe districts” in Illinois and Louisiana .  If something like this can happen in Republican rural Mississippi, just imagine what could take place here in Indiana. 

My friends on the second floor of 47  South Meridian probably are. 

A FRIENDLY DISAGREEMENT

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

My good friend Thomas Cook over at Blue Indiana is taking issue with Governor Mitch Daniels’ latest ad.  In it, Daniels says he balanced the budget without raising taxes.  Cook argues Daniels did raise taxes in the form of the sales tax, cigarette tax and increases in property taxes.

Since a lot of us are still recovering from last week, I’m willing to give the recent IU grad (congrats by the wya, Thom)  a pass on this one.  However, allow me to set a couple things straight.

Daniels’ claim is that he balanced THE STATE’S budget without a tax increase, which is accurate.  The Governor did not raise state taxes.  His adminstration held the line on spending.   Daniels’ opponents argue that he did that by balancing the state’s budget on the back of local governments by holding back property tax replacement revenue which led to the massive increase in last summer’s tax bills.  Actually that was only part of it, fundamentally what led to the increase in tax bills was the assessments and local government spending, which is where 99 percent of your property taxes go anyway.  And that sales tax increase was to help pay for property tax relief and the state’s assumption of a number of levies such as child welfare and police pensions.

The increase in the cigarette tax was part of a bi-partisan effort to provide health care to uninsured Hoosiers; something that has been a corner stone for my Democratic friends.

I do think the 2008 Governor’s race is going to a referendum on Daniels; as most re-election bids are.  And I think the Daniels’ folks should be worried about a year where change is the big theme and Democrats are expected to come out in droves. 

I also think Jill Long Thompson comes in with about 40-percent of the general electorate, but she os going to have to convince 11 extra percent that this state is going in the wrong direction.   And by the way, the race for the Governor’s office is going to be won or lost in Southern Indiana (Jill did well up north, Mitch is strong in central Indiana).

Either way, it’s going to be fun to watch.

DANIELS ENDORSES COSTAS FOR AG

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels formally threw his support behind Valparasio Mayor Jon Costas for Attorney General.  In a letter dated May 11 to state Republicans Daniels called Costas a “proven vote-getter” and “progressive leader.”

More importantly, Costas is not from Indianapolis like his opponent, Greg Zoeller.  Although Zoeller is a Southern Indiana native, he is currently chief of staff for the current AG, Steve Carter and can be hit with the “Indianapolis” label.  In his letter Daniels said he shares concerns by many in the GOP that there should be geographical balance on the ticket and 75-percent of the state ticket should not come from the same part of Indiana.

The nominee to replace outgoing AG Steve Carter will be chosen at the State Republican convention on June 2.

POST-ELECTILE DISFUNCTION

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

I took a few days off after the primary to recharge the political batteries and it’s good to be back.

A lot of us are still dissecting Tuesday’s primary results and what they mean in the grand scheme of things. Although many of my colleagues will say high voter turnout was a good thing in this election (close to or exceeding the 2006 general election) I respectfully disagree.

I don’t think more participation is a good idea when the people coming out are voting for the wrong reason. I prefer a few smart people coming together to make a decision rather than a lot of stupid people. If the intellect of the voters are as high as the turnout then I’m excited. Otherwise, God save the Republic.

That also brings me to my next point which goes to the Limbaugh fans who participated in Operation Chaos, the Rush-inspired plan for Republicans and conservatives to vote in the Democratic primary in an effort to drag the fight to the convention floor, thus making the eventual nominee that much more vulnerable in the Fall.

I hope you know that by pulling a Democrat ballot in Indiana you are declaring your intent to vote for a majority of Democratic candidates in November. You could have been (and some were) challenged to sign an affidavit saying you had or will vote for a majority of Democrats in a past or future election.  If you don’t , you’re violating Indiana law. Now some of you might be saying there’s no way you would ever get caught so what difference does it make? Easy, it goes to the character issue you people keep harping on. Isn’t character defined as what you do when no one is looking and you won’t get caught?

It’s one thing if you pulled a Democrat ballot with the intent to vote for a majority of Democrats, later saw who won the primary and later changed your mind. But for many of the Operation Chaos participants they likely have no intent for voting for a majority of Democrats this Fall. So I for one find it totally ironic that the same people who go on and on and on about character, ethics and the rule of law apparently have no problem throwing those values out the window if they think they can get away with it. I won’t call them lawbreakers yet because they have until November to redeem themselves. But if they don’t they are no different than the people they criticize. Actually they’re worse because they’re hypocrites.

Open the floodgates and let the rationalization begin. This is going to be fun.

SCHELLINGER CONCEDES

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Jill Long Thompson is the Democratic nominee for Governor.  Jim Schellinger called her in the last half hour to concede.  Now the fun can really begin.  Mitch Daniels v. Jill Long Thompson v.  Andy Horning.  Who wins?

IT AIN’T OVER TILL IT’S OVER

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

My sources tell me that Jim Schellinger isn’t ready to concede anything to Jill Long Thompson just yet.  The latest unofficial poll number show Thompson leading with 50.25 percent of the vote to Schellinger’s 49.75 percent.  However, Democratic sources say there are still provisional ballots that have yet to be counted as well as some uncounted precincts still out there.   They estimate a 3,000 vote difference between the two.  Could we have a Bush v. Gore problem on the horizon?  I hope so.  It makes for great punditry.

THERE’S GOT TO BE A MORNING AFTER

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Wow, that was fun.  It’s been a while since I’ve seen a political nail-biter.  Hillary got a slim victory over Barack 51-49 (White men saved her while Blacks kept Obama competitive).  She needed a big win, but didn’t get it. Clinton only won by 22,412 votes out of 1.25 million voters or a 1.78 percent difference.   It’s like a student who needed a high “A” on his exam to pass the class, but instead got a “C-.”

Jill Long Thompson is sitting on a victory over Jim Schellinger in the Democratic Primary.  Two observations about that race were that in Marion County Schellinger won by less than 3 percentage points.  Had his margin been bigger, he would be declaring victory right now.  Also, Schellinger was the party favorite.  With his loss,  I can hear the bodies start to hit the floor over at One North Capitol in downtown Indianapolis.

Andre Carson is living proof the Carson name is a brand and still works.  However, there is a chink in the armor.  54 percent of  people who voted in that primary chose someone other than Carson.  If the GOP can figure out a way to capture that discontent, they just might be able to win the 7th one day.

And Dan Burton is living proof that you can never overstay your welcome.

Now that all this is over, I’m going to spend the next few days with a martini in one hand, a beautiful woman in the other and a cigar in my mouth.  And I might even switch them around a bit.

 See you next week.