democrat

In the News: To Stimulus or Not To Stimulus?

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Obama

…That ain’t the question.

Obama is a man with a mission. He’s gonna pass this damn stimulus package, and he’ll pass it whether the Republicans like it or not.

“The time for talk is over, the time for action is now,” Obama said in a speech at the Energy Department yesterday.

An $800 billion version of the bill swept through the House without a single GOP nod of approval last week. It’s now in the Senate (with a new price tag of nearly $900 billion) and Obama’s been doing his darndest to woo some Republicans—but it’s going to take more than a bipartisan Super Bowl party and a few one-on-one parent-teacher conferences to get those conservative penny-pinchers on board.

A bipartisan group of senators is currently working to cheapen the package by cutting social initiatives that won’t immediately stimulate the economy. Blah, blah, blah. As time drags on, Obama’s getting more and more antsy to throw around some money, create a few jobs, and pop a few economic anti-depressants.

And so the Dems are gearing up to take a vote and pass the bill, with or without Republican support.

“Not … so … fast … !” some say—and around we go again …

Election ‘08: Celebrating at the the Onion’s Election-Night Bash

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

While thousands of people congregated at the official Democratic and Republican election night parties, many flocked to bars and restaurants for smaller events. I caught the reaction at Redwood Bar and Grill in downtown Los Angeles, where the satirical newspaper The Onion sponsored an election-night party of its own.

As soon as I entered the bar, a woman handed me a campaign button that read, “Vote Dewar’s and Ginger.” The drink was free from 8 to 10 o’clock. I quickly figured out the button’s reference: a poster on the wall was split down the middle, a red side with Dewar’s on the Rocks and a blue side with Dewar’s and Ginger.

The dimly lit, pirate-themed bar was an appropriate venue for a tongue-in-cheek newspaper to sponsor a party. Plenty of revelers were having a good time downing the Dewar’s, having come for the free booze and two stand-up comedy acts slated to follow the election coverage. But when the media proclaimed Barack Obama had secured victory, the cheers that rocked the belly of this ship-like bar confirmed the majority here supported the Democratic winner.

“This has been a great fucking event we’ve been leading up to,” said Anthony Sanchez, who runs several paint stores in Anaheim and Tustin, Calif. “And this is really what we’ve been looking forward to the whole time. I mean, McCain got turned down, big-time.”

“The polls definitely showed that Obama was winning,” said Sanchez’s cousin, Rodrigo Lois, who is currently a student at the University of California in Irvine. “No one wanted to be so hopeful as to say it was for sure. Now that it’s happened, it feels amazing. It’s so positive! Hopefully he can follow through with all the things he’s been saying.”

Sanchez said their excitement was tempered with some criticism now that Obama’s victory was secured—namely, that Obama is no Dennis Kucinich.

“It has nothing to do with race or anything like that,” he added quickly.

“He’s a lot more centrist than I would like him to be,” Lois explained. “Hopefully that’s just a move to get elected and he can actually push through ideas that make sense for the country. We’ll see. We’ve got time. Things are better now, I think.”

The mood was both positive and jocular as John McCain took the stage to offer his concession speech. Some people were popping off jokes even as others devoured every word, their faces rapt and glowing from the television screens.

During a short lull in the action, I noticed one fellow looking eager to chat, so I waded over to him through the sea of humid bodies.

“I’m Ben and I love Obama, and I just moved to this fabulous country, and I made a pledge that I would leave the U.S. if McCain should become president, so I’m glad I can stay!” he said.

When I asked him to elaborate on why he favored Obama, he got as far as saying that Obama was better for the economy and for international relations before pausing and saying, “Sorry, I can’t think clearly. I’m drunk from Dewar’s!”

But as much as the event was about celebration and inebriation, some people were caught up in the moment, with the full import of this history-making election for them clearly as potent as any brew. One young woman was wiping away tears throughout almost the entirety of Obama’s speech.

“I just feel really proud of us for the first time in a long time, but it’s a good feeling. Tears of joy, I guess, in a Kennedy kind of way,” said Sarah Sanders after Obama had left the stage. “I kept waiting for our generation to do something good, and waiting, and waiting. I mean it’s a start. It’s at least empowering.”

Sanders’ friend, Erin Cappiccie, a registered Democrat, seemed less enthusiastic about the election outcome and even said she had voted for McCain.

“This whole time I was watching the debates, and reading the news. I got it. I’m a Democrat. I share the same ideals, but I just wasn’t buying it, from either party, really. I just didn’t buy it. I don’t know if I didn’t invest enough time in it, or pay enough attention, but honestly I wasn’t going to vote today because it didn’t really matter to me who won, because I was so on the fence.”

It took seeing the night’s events unfold, from Obama’s victory to McCain’s sportsmanlike speech to Obama’s rousing one, for her to get excited about what had happened, Cappiccie said.

“I’m going to look back on this in four years, and be like, ‘Oh, God, I love Obama,’” she said.

Sanders turned to her friend. “Everything you just said flies in the face of what I said.”

Cappiccie defended herself. “We did do something good, but I don’t know, I wasn’t really struck by anybody this whole election. I didn’t really believe in either of them.”

“Well, there, we agree to disagree,” Sanders said.

“I wasn’t excited about either party until now,” Cappiccie repeated.

“Well, that’s where you are wrong,” Sanders said, but explained that the two of them were friends.

“That’s why she can talk to me like this,” Cappiccie added.

Regardless of who won or who sponsored the party or how much anyone had to drink, what seemed to separate this event from, say, watching the final outcome from the comfort of your couch, was the ability to connect to others and share in the sheer magnitude of the night. It was like New Year’s Eve, or as Cappiccie and Sanders pointed out, like a sporting event. People were blissfully happy to share their reactions.

“You want to be part of something. That’s why people watch sports,” Cappiccie said.

“Yeah, but it’s like the Superbowl instead of pre-season games. The last election was like a pre-season game,” Sanders said. “People actually give a shit. I like when people give a shit. It’s so much more fun.”

In Brief: How Republicans Responded to the DNC (from an Unaffiliated Voter)

Monday, September 1st, 2008

With the DNC over and the temperamental limelight now hovering towards McCain’s more than slightly surprising VP choice and the impending (weather-based, obstacle ridden?) Republican National Convention, the GOP doesn’t seem to be having their expected grand old party lashing out against the Obama campaign…today. But the day is young and the elephants have not yet been wished happy hunting.

Over the course of the Denver-based convention, however, the McCain Campaign, National Review and folks such as Michelle Malkin, Mark Hemingway and Ann Coulter went to town with a bevy of nasty tidbits that “more than hinted” (cough) at a hope to subvert Obama’s influence (or to simply get a gleeful two cents in).

The Brief Breakdown:

Mon, 8-25: On Michelle Obama’s Speech:

In what can be shocking only to an earthworm lodged deep in the world’s core and away from the sensory-overload producing buzz of this election and American politics in general, we read that Ann Coulter did not like Michelle Obama’s speech.

Here’s an excerpt of her reaction:

The speech itself felt mechanical. There were some interesting quotes including:

“I love America!” [Note: As an aside, I feel like if you have to say it, you call it into question.]

“We will build the world as it should be.”

“Hillary Clinton put 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling”–and this is a paraphrase–and changed the world for our girls. [I'm sure Hillary is happy to know she paved the way for Michelle's daughters.]

She also said some airy, fairy stuff about stellar education from cradle to grave, but no specifics other than by “bringing us together” and finding the “common thread”. Whatever the hell that means.

At the end of the speech, there was a staged moment where Barack was piped in via satellite and talked to his girls who were absolutely precious. To me, I think that part was the “winning” moment, if there was one. The all-American family. The all-American black family. Very powerful.

(more…)