Washblog

Are We Closing the Primary Door Too Soon in the 8th CD?


Except where indicated, the opinions and assessments expressed in this article are solely my own.  I consulted in advance with several people about this article, but I have not asked for review of any part of it.

Recently, I've been talking with other Democratic activists in the 8th Congressional District who are concerned that Darcy Burner may be in the process of successfully positioning herself in the public eye as the only viable Democratic candidate to challenge Dave Reichert for US Senate in 2008.  

I am not alone in believing that a premature primary choice for this race has the potential to diminish opportunities for other candidates who may have a better chance to beat Reichert this time around.  During a conversation that I participated in last week, several Democratic activists, myself included, agreed that we would like to convey a message that we think it's advisable that the 8th Congressional District primary still be considered an open race.

 

Some current media reporting assumes a Burner v Reichert re-match in 08.  For example, in this April 25, 2007 article in the Seattle Weekly, support from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) and the environmental community, including Greenpeace, are cited without context or question.

The idea of the inevitability of a Burner-Reichert rematch seems strong enough in Washington's progressive blogosphere that it would be understandable for regular blog readers to conclude that there is a Netroots consensus in favor of Burner. Because public perception affects public behavior and choices, I see this growing perception as a relevant political reality that merits a response, given the assessment I share with others that we should not yet shut the door on this primary.  

In addition, as a resident of the 8th CD who was active in the 06 campaigns, I feel I have a responsibility to share information that belongs in the public realm in relation to this important race.  In this post I quote emails that were sent to me by Darcy Burner.  I consider the content of these emails to belong to the public, as they were sent by a national candidate, addressed to me in my role as a blogger, and sent without request for confidentiality.  I have not taken the additional step, which I always do before sharing emails that are sent to me, of notifying Burner of their publication because I believe the information they convey about this candidate in this important race is of critical public interest and not likely to be available to the public through other means.

Most of the concerns relating to an assumed Burner-Reichert rematch that I have discussed with others have to do with Burner's electability in relation to other potential candidates who may enter the field.  I don't yet know whether I would support Representative Ross Hunter in this race, for example.  But if he decides later this year that he is going to run (I understand that he is waiting to undergo a medical procedure before deciding), I would like the people in the 8th CD, including me, to have the opportunity to consider his candidacy.  And I think it's fair that he -- and other potential candidates -- are given a chance to make their case.

Burner lost to Reichert in 2006 by a relatively small but significant margin, 7,341 votes, in a year when many believed this was our best shot to beat Reichert.  One of the main contentions of this post is that Burner's chances are not likely to be better for the next race.  A 2-term incumbent like Reichert will be tough for anyone to beat.  But we should not exclusively support Burner before we have even thought about other candidates whose chances may be better.   Below is a summary of some of the considerations I have joined in discussing with other activists who also believe that the public interest would be served by allowing this primary race to stay competetive at this point:

  • Prospects for overcoming Reichert's incumbency advantage
    Incumbents are always difficult to beat, but they are considered to be the most vulnerable during their first re-election campaign.  Nationally, re-election in Congressional races has averaged about 95%.  See, for example commentary by Jeffery Bernstein, a political scientist at Eastern Michigan University, in What High School Government Teachers Should Know about Congressional Elections.  Or see A Certain Uncertainty, from the Center for Politics and Public Affairs, June, 2005.

    A different candidate in this race will not erase the incumbency advantage.  However, a person who has won an election or who has significant political experience or other favorable attributes in relation to this race, may have more of a chance to overcome this handicap.  We should not close this door.

    I have recently looked at the results for every race in every congressional district for Washington state from 1996 - 2006. I show that data in a table that appears below. I am able to find in Washington only a few cases when a Congressional challenger tried a second time. In every second challenge to an incumbent that I saw, including Heidi Behrens-Benedict's in the very same CD, the challenger did worse or essentially the same on subsequent runs.

  • Prospects for Overcoming Funding and Volunteer Fatigue
    The Burner campaign, with Netroots help, was a stellar fundraiser.  Burner made a critical contribution by forcing the Republicans to spend very heavily on the 8th CD race.  This was a boost to other candidates around the country.  The excitement over her race increased turnout among voters who then also made other election choices that were good for the environment, for education, and for the Democratic cause in general.  In her reflections on the 06 race, Burner has stated that politics is a team sport.  She is correct in citing her achievement last year as a contribution toward turning the national tide to a Democratic majority and favorable election outcomes in Washington.    

    But all this does not change the Burner prospects in 08.  This race belongs in the public trust and should not be considered to belong to any one person.  

    Despite Burner's newness to politics, her campaign had an extraordinary advantage in 06 because it was the most heavily-supported campaign in our district at a time of intense public desire for a change in the balance of power in the US Congress and few other center-stage races in our district.  These conditions have changed in 08 and no longer offer such an extraordinary advantage to a political newcomer like Burner.  

    In 2008, attention and resources will flow toward a momentous presidential election and a gubernatorial race -- already underway -- that will be fiercely challenged.   Any candidate in the 8th CD, including Burner, will gain indirect benefits from the higher turnout and attention.   However, he or she will also be likely to share a smaller portion of the total pool of available funding, volunteers, and public attention.   Burner's $3 million fundraising in 06 could not get her elected.  It is likely there will be comparatively less funding -- less media attention -- and fewer volunteer feet on the ground available for Burner 08.   Although this would be true for any candidate in the race, there may be more reluctance among donors to invest in a Burner-Reichert rematch than there would be to invest in a candidate who might be perceived as more electable.  We won't know if this is the case if we close the door to this primary now.


  • Public Perception
    Burner has achieved much in her professional career and she is right to be proud of it.  However, it is a light record of achievements relative to what voters expect from congressional candidates in terms of political, professional, and community service experience and accomplishments.  Burner's spotty voting record, which the Seattle Times factually misrpresented in a way I thought was shameful was, nevertheless, still spotty.  

    Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chair Rahm Emmanuel noted at a fundraiser for Burner near the election that Burner and Reichert were at a dead heat in the polls.  This indicated to him that the public was willing to fire Reichert.  What the public hadn't decided yet, he said, and what we needed to help convince them to do, was to decide to hire Burner.   The Burner camapign, the Netroots and the grassroots worked very hard to do just this -- as did the Democratic establishment and the big funders.   Despite $3 million and a tremendous outpouring of volunteer work, however, we did not prevail.

    Burner can't change her resume or history between now and 2008.  Before deciding that public perception on these issues can be overcome, or that this election is not important enough to buck grassroots sentiment over, the DCCC should at least do some focus group research to understand public opinion on Burner.

  • Riding the Blue Wave
    The "blue wave" of 2006, in which 22 House seats switched from Republican to Democratic hands -- and none switched to Republican -- was a mandate for Democratic oversight of the Bush administration and for an end to the Iraq occupation.  Now that both chambers of the national legislature are in Democratic hands -- and now that we have a chance to elect a Democratic president, we are unlikely to see this intensity of public sentiment focused on the congressional race in the 8th in 2008. In fact, the advantage of outsider's passion is now likely to be with the Republicans.

    Burner rode the 06 blue wave right to the crest but she didn't make it over.  This is a tough reality to face, but a natural event in a political cycle.  Many of us who volunteered with the Burner campaign are grateful for this strong try that accomplished so much.  This gratitude should not close our eyes to the fact, however, that little has changed to make Burner a more viable candidate this time around -- but that much has changed which could, potentially, make this race more difficult to win for a candidate with her history and attributes. We should take this into account when considering whether we want to anoint Burner as the 08 candidate and close the door to this primary.

  • Responsibility to the Larger Community
    This race belongs to the larger community, not to activists or individual candidates. One of the valuable services that the Democratic party provides to the public is helping to encourage potential candidates to step forward. We have more to do, I believe, in order to rise to our due diligence responsibility in this case.
  • The "Gender Card" and Public Sentiment for Unity
    Burner stated numerous times during the 2006 primary that we should choose her as a candidate because her 'profile' -- including her gender -- made her more electable. I struggled with this aspect of her candidacy, as can be seen in this January 2006 Washblog interview with Burner.

    After the election, Burner seemed to turn her own wisdom on its head by stating that her loss was in part attributable to voter reluctance to elect Democratic women during time of war.  She wrote to Jim Brunner of the Seattle Times: "There has been a lot of talk about this year's Democratic wave, but it was clearly a wave that helped men more than women.  A reasonable hypothesis would be that the wave was related to voter feeling about the war, and that voters responded by preferring Democratic male challengers to Republican incumbents (of either gender), but did not apply that same preference to Democratic female challengers."  

    Which should we take more to heart, Burner's pre-campaign or post-campaign gender analysis?   I believe that Burner was correct in both gender assessments.  Being a woman in this race both helped and hurt her chances.   Burner's willingness, however, to look to voter bias rather than to her own choices and campaign when explaining her loss to the media will be used against her if she reaches the general election.   And, at a time when a powerful national longing for unity is becoming an influential force in elections, her emphasis on gender may be seen as divisive and counter to positive emerging trends.  I believe that Burner is going in the wrong direction on this issue.

  • Relationships in the 8th CD
    Burner's campaign had flaws, as all campaigns do.   That is no slight on her dedication and talent.  It is, however, legitimate to examine those shortcomings -- and ask if it is likely that she can adequately learn from these mistakes -- both in order to run a better campaign and also in order to govern well.   I feel that some of the mistakes she made are serious enough to bring out for public discussion and that her most serious flaw as a candidate and potential national leader is revealed in an exchange that she and I had recently.

    At a fundraiser for Burner during the 06 season, Burner's campaign consultant, Blair Butterworth chided Bryan Kesterson, the Chair of my legislative district, for having expected Butterworth to play by "Marquess of Queensbury rules" -- in other words, to play fair, in another race in our district.  Butterworth closed this dressing down with a comment directed at Bryan in his role as Chair of the 47th LD: "You are irrelevant."  Both Bryan and I contacted the Burner campaign about this incident.  I stopped doorbelling for the Burner campaign because it dispirited me.  If I had received an apology from Burner and Butterworth, I would have resumed doorbelling.  I did not receive a response.   At the time I assumed the message did not get through to Burner.

    But in early March of this year, Burner sent me an unsolicited personal email responding to my comments on Washblog, which were cited in the comments of this front-page Daily Kos article.   In her email to me, Burner stated that I had misrpresented the context of Butterworth "irrelevant" remark.    In this campaign that Butterworth was referring to, Burner said, the state senate campaign committee had recruited a primary candidate to run against another -- on the basis of racial and gender profiling.  That's what Butterworth was referring to, the 47th LD's involvement in supporting this racial profiling.   "Blair believed (and still believes)," Darcy wrote, "that their problem with (the candidate) was simply that she was a Native woman."  Burner went on to describe Butterworth as "the most principled person in that exchange" who "refused to give into the prejudices that pervade our society".  

    Burner and Butterworth have presented no evidence that there was racial profiling in this campaign.  The candidate Burner refers to took no part in this allegation of racism and did not benefit from it.  I don't know if she was aware of it, except perhaps for an article that appeared in Nation Magazine that charged that the Democrats in the race preferred a "white cop" to a Native American woman.  Butterworth was quoted in this Nation Magazine article.  The language, referring to the choice of a "white cop" over a Native America woman is very close to the language that he used in at least one email sent out to a broad Democratic audience.  An email that Butterworth sent to all King County Democratic Central Committee Representatives starts with the line:  "I am emailing you to see if you would help me restore some sanity to the 47th."  He goes on to say the following:

    It would clearly be odd for King County D 's in 2006 to endorse a white policeman who is a recent D and has never been active over a well-known Native American woman when the latter has been a life long D, raised more money, has an active campaign and will probably win the primary. She is campaigning hard. I'm not sure what was behind the Senate Democratic Campaign Committee going out and recruiting (candidate's name). I've heard that they weren't sure a woman and a Native woman at that could win the 47th.

    I explained in my March 11 response to Burner that contested primary races happen and people shift their support to different candidates for many reasons -- and that support for a white person over a person of color is not the same as racism.  Racism was not a factor in decisions that we made in this race, I explained, and I felt her charge was hurtful.  

    She responded with the message reproduced below, which I have not answered.  

    I did not accuse you of being a racist.

    I did accuse you of drastically misrepresenting what Blair said, what he meant, and the circumstances in which he said it.  I stand by those accusations.

    Blair did the honorable thing with respect to (name of candidate).  I have tremendous respect for him for doing it, and for standing up to the powers aligned against her, including the 47th LD.  Blair does have tremendous respect for the grassroots, which is broader than one LD organization. In light of what actually happened, I am genuinely disappointed in your deliberate misrepresentations.

    Noemie, I have viewed you up until now as a truthseeker.  While I haven't always agreed with you, I have had a great deal of respect for you.  However, I am shocked, quite frankly, that you would deliberately try to destroy the reputation of someone you disagreed with through blatant dishonesty.  It seems very out of character.

    What is the underlying issue that is so upsetting to you that you would consider this acceptable behavior?

    In a an article I posted on Washblog in February I quote Senator Russ Feingold's statement that he believes the "inside Washington crowd" -- including consultants -- has set the parameters of the debate in the Iraq conflict.  I suspect that this indeed is a central fact of our current poltical reality -- that consultants have tremendous -- and nearly invisible -- power over which candidates get to run in elections and how public policy decisions are made by those candidates once they are elected.  I would like to Reichert to be replaced with a Democratic Congressperson whom I trust to think independently of consultant advice.  I question Burner's ability to do this based on my feeling that she displayed, in her response to this issue, an uncritical confidence in Blair Butterworth's criticism of people in the state Democratic party and in her own congressional district.

    [Note, 5/1/07: N in Seattle noted, in a comment on this recent Washblog article I wrote on Port Commission candidate Bill Bryant, that Butterworth was cited in the Seattle PI as considering representing Bryant, a Republican. I called the reporter and confirmed with her that this was based on a statement by Butterworth himself. NWDem notes the same thing in the comments on this piece and adds that Bryant is running against a "well known Democrat."]

  • Getting Votes Outside the Seattle Area
    During the primary race, Burner came to several meetings of the 47th District Democrats to tell us that the 47th was a key district for winning the race.  The 47th, she said, had a very high proportion (she may have said the highest in the CD) of precincts where both Patty Murray and George Bush gained significant percentages of the majority.  She termed these high-gap precincts.  With this awareness on her part of the "swing" nature of the 47th, I was surprised to read the email quoted above which indicates that she sees the support of the 47th grassroots democratic organization as strategically so unimportant that she judged it acceptable for her consultant to insult its Chair and for her to insult one of its most active volunteers, me.  

    During the race, I did expect to see Burner at more festivals and parades and community events in the 47th and I remarks from others that they felt this, as well.  Recently, I spoke with Jean Bouffard, a prominent attorney in the 47th, who told me that she arranged with the Burner campaign to throw a house party for her and put a great deal of time and effort into organizing it and inviting guests.  On the evening of the event, shortly before it began, she received a phone call that Burner would not be able to make the event.  These kinds of snafus can happen, but are politically "expensive" in a key district like the 47th.  Given the overall pattern of Burner's approach, I think it is legitimate to question to what degree her committment to the grassroots extends throughout the congressional district.  If she is elected as our Congresswoman, how will she feel about her constituents in the 47th then?

    Here in the 47th in 2006 we elected, for the first time, three Democrats to the state legislature.   Darcy did not ride this wave either.  According to data from the King County Canvass Project available on the Fred Morris Consulting site, she received 15,910 votes to Reichert's 18,922.  (It is interesting to note that this same source indicates that Burner lost by 7,692 to 8,207 in the 45th LD where she lives.)

Burner Makes the Case that "Second Time is the Charm"
While I was in the process of thinking this article through, I received a mailing from the Burner campaign with the theme that second-time challengers are able to build on name ID, infrastructure, and goodwill earned in the first campaign to win the second time around.  

Burner cites several factors that make the 8th "structurally more promising in 2008", including the following:

  • Voter turnout will increase substantially in the 8th in 2008, from 257,000 votes (64% turnout) cast in 2006 to a projected 340,000 votes (83%) for the 2008 presidential election year.
  • These 85,000 new presidential-year voters are young (75% are under 50, 60% are 44 and younger, and 52% are age 40 and younger) and trending Democratic.

I think that the factors she cites would indeed work in her favor in 08.  But I don't think they overcome the concerns outlined above.  And I believe they would benefit any Democratic candidate and so do not constitute a persuasive argument in favor of closing this primary door.   More importantly, I take issue with her choice and characterization of data in a persuasive table included in this letter, as outlined below:


Data from a 4/24/07 campaign document from Darcy Burner entitled: "The Second time is a Charm for Democratic Challengers in Districts Shifting toward Democrats".

Dem. ChallengersYear Lost$ Raised% Vote Year Won$ Raised% Vote
Brian Baird (WA-03
Note, NM: Baird was not
a challenger in 1998.
1996$0.7 mil49% 1998$1.7 mil55%
Stephanie Herseth (SD)2002$1.5 mil46% 2004$4 mil53%
Melissa Bean (IL 08)2002$0.3 mil43% 2004$4.3 mil51%
Joe Courtney (CN)2004$1.2 mil43% 2006$2.5 mil50%
Jerry McNerney (CA)2004$0.2 mil39% 2006$2.5 mil53%
Joe Donnelly (IN)2004$0.7 mil45% 2006$1.654%
Paul Hodes (NH)2004$0.6 mil38% 2006$1.6 mil53%
Nancy Boyda (KS)2004$1.1 mil41% 2006$0.8 mil51%
Darcy Burner2006$3.1 mil49% 2008$%

 


Discussion of the data in the table provided by Darcy Burner

The table above excludes the only case in Washington within the past ten years (1996-2006) of a Democrat who ran against a Republican incumbent two or more consecutive times.  That excluded case is much more relevant than the case that Burner uses to bolster her argument. It is sited in the very district, the 8th, in which Burner is running.  And it directly contradicts Burner's central point.  This is the series of 3 campaigns that Heidi Behrens-Benedict ran against Jennifer Dunn.   Behrens-Benedict did best in her first challenge to Dunn, garnering 40%.  In her following two races, she garnered 35% and 37%, respectively, never exceeding the percentage of her first race.

The case that Burner chooses from Washington State, misstates Brian Baird's status as a candidate in the race that he won.  Baird was not a challenger in this race.   In his first, 1997, bid for this office,  Baird faced Linda Smith, an incumbent.   However,  Smith resigned after that term and, in 1998, Baird faced Don Benton.  

Another inaccuracy in this table is that Darcy Burner received 48%, not 49% of the vote in 2006.  She is apparently rounding up from 48.53%.  And this would be ok to do.  However, she did not round up Brian Baird's 1996 vote of 49.82% - which is much closer to 50% than 48.53 is to 49%.  I assume that this was inadvertent but I also think it leaves an unfortunate impression.  

It is also quite iffy to say that the 3rd district was at the time "shifting toward Democrats".   From 1960 through the present, the 3rd has been represented by Democrats in US Congress - except for Linda Smith's two-terms.   Smith was swept into office in the Republican Revolution of 1994.  

It is also worth noting, in order to understand the meaning of this data, that Burner lost in 06 by over 7,000 votes - about 2.9 percent of the total votes cast - a statistically significant number.   Baird, however, lost by only 887 votes in 1996.  This is barely over one third of one percent of the total voters in that election - quite close to the margin of statistical error for an election with that number of voters.   This fact also makes the races quite different.  

In order to understand the total data picture for the case that Burner was pulling in the Baird case to make, I looked at the results for every race in every congressional district for Washington state from 1996 - 2006.   As per the table below, I saw only a few cases when a Congressional challenger in Washington state tried a second time.   In the cases I see, excluding Baird's because he was not running against an incumbent the second time around, the challenger did worse or the same on subsequent runs.  Perhaps someone can find errors in my data.  But it seems clear to me that, based on Washington's experience in the past decade, second-time challengers do worse, not better, in their second runs.  Here is the list of every case I saw in the table below of challengers who returned a second time in efforts to beat an incumbent:

  • Lawrence (R) challenges Norm Dicks in 1998, 2000, and 2002 in the 6th CD and gets 31.63, 31.10, and 31.35, respectively, never exceeding the percentage of her first loss.
  • Carol Cassady challenges McDermott in the 7th in 2002 and 2004 and gets 21% and 19%, respectively.
  • Heidi Behrens-Benedict (D) challenges Jennifer Dunn (R) in the 8th   -- This is the same district in which Burner is running.  Behrens-Benedict received 40%, 35%, and 37%, respectively, in 1998, 2000, and 2002, never exceeding the percentage of her first loss.
  • Cloud challenges Dicks in the 2004 and 2006 races in the 6th CD and garners 31% and 29% of the vote, respectively.

 


Congressional races in Washington 1996-2006.  Data from Washington Secretary of State Elections Website.

 199619982000
DRDRDR
1st CDCoopersmithWhiteInsleeWhiteInsleeMcDonald
46%53%49%44%54%43%
2nd CDQuigleyMetcalfCammemeyerMetcalfLarsenKoster
47%48%44%55%50%45%
3rd CDBairdSmithBairdBentonBairdMatson
49.82%
Lost by
887 votes
50.18%54%45%56%40%
4th CDLockeHastingsNo Dem?Hastings/
Pross
DavisHastings
47%52%N/A?69%/
24%
37%60%
5th CDOlsenNethercuttLyonsNethercuttKeefeNethercutt
44%55%38%56%38%57%
6th CDDicksTinsleyDicksLawrenceDicksLawrence
65%30%68%31.63%64%31.10%
7th CD McDermott Kleschen McDermott Lipmen. (L) McDermott Szjawa, (Green)
80%19%88%9%72%19%
8th CDLittleDunn Behrens-Benedict Dunn Behrens-Benedict Dunn
34%65%40%60%35%62%
9th CDSmithTate SmithTaberSmithVance
50%47%54%35%65%34%

 


 200220042006
DRDRDR
1st CDInsleeMarineInsleeEastwoodInsleeIshmael
55%41%62%35%62%37%
2nd CDLarsenSmithLarsenSinclairLarsenRoulstone
50%45%63%33%64%35%
3rd CDBairdZarelliBairdCrowsonBairdMessmore
61%38%61%38%63%36
4th CDMasonHastingsMathesonHastingsWrightHastings
33%66%37%62%40%59%
5th CDHagginNether-
cutt
BarbieriMcMorrisGoldmarkMcMorris
32%62%40%59%43%56%
6th CDDicksLawrenceDicksCloudDicksCloud
64%31.35%68%31%70%29%
7th CD McDermott Cassady McDermott Cassady McDermott Beren
74%21%80%19%79%15%
8th CD Behrens-Benedict DunnRossReichertBurnerReichert
37%59%46.7%
Lost by
13,000
51.5%48.539%
Lost by
7,341
51.46%
9th CDSmith CasadaSmithLordSmithCofchin
58%38%63%34%65%34%

 

I've kept my distance for most of my life from partisan politics, which I have perceived as a game that prioritizes winning elections over creating a better world.  But, some time between 2001 and 2003 I came to see my desire to maintain political innocence as a kind of vanity, rather than a virtue, an avoidance of difficult ethical decisions at a time when my help was needed.  The Democratic Party, I realized, does focus on the short term win.  But it is a key political power that is accessible for public input and participation during a time in which we need more than ever for ordinary citizens to bear the inconvenience and risk of sharing in the political power that is our right.  The foundational ideals of the party, enunciated, for example, in the  Washington State Democratic Party Platform, are remarkably in accordance with my core convictions.   Shouldn't I have the courage to join an imperfect organization and work with others to breathe more into the beautiful Democratic ideals that appear here?  I decided to give it a try - but only along with a kind of promise to myself that I would be ready to walk away at any moment and that I would not get caught up in the game.    

Politics is a gravely serious business that shapes this world into which the innocent can't help but be born.  It's too often played as a game.  On a personal level it takes some doing to rise above gamesmanship.  I hope I have done it here, although I acknowledge that personal bias can't ever be erased.  This is the tragedy of politics -- tragedy in the classic sense -- the remorseless working of things that operates outside of our direct control. Regardless of our intentions and interpretations, reality takes its course.  And the social reality in which elections are set is unknowably more vast than any partisan analysis can account for.  For me, the central fact of this social reality is that the happiness and wellbeing of each child who is born into this world rests largely on the political decisions made by adults.  How accountable, thoughtful, and compassionate can we be in these decisions that may seem, moment-by-moment to be part of a game or to impact primarily our own lives and reputations?   By speaking up in a matter like this, I open up avenues for unintentional harm to others, reveal my own bias and flaws, and put myself on a kind of hot seat.  At the heart of my decision to post this article is my belief that, although campaigns can be -- and often are -- won through the use of a marketing approach that uncritically prioritizes short-term electoral results over the long-term political needs of the society -- this approach is not effective in the long run.  Our challenges are too great -- and our societal margin for error is ever too thin -- to keep on in our old ways.  We must find new ones.  As Kurt Vonnegut said at critical moments in Slaughterhouse Five, moments of great pain that, nevertheless, called for stepping back with some ironic detachment, "So it Goes."

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   And not getting a lot of traction at recent events. At least Darcy and George Fearing in the 4th have made clear statements of intent.

Dave Gibney Pullman

by gibney on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 12:18:01 PM PST

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Bringing Baird up got me thinking about the differences (at least in my mind) between the 3rd and the 8th that would make a big difference in Darcy's comparison. Like you said, the 3rd has pretty much elected Democrats since time immemorial, while the 8th has been R county for about as long. As far as I can tell, the reason the 3rd is typically Blue because of Olympia and Vancouver, along with the union blue counties of Pacific and Grays Harbor, pulling the ship together. Lewis County, where 3rd CD conservatism seems to be strongest, is out polled. Anyway, good post. Would have been nice to break it up into about a dozen or so, but good talk.



________________
I blog here.

by emmettoconnell on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 02:40:05 PM PST

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When reading this I can't help having two thoughts: 1) whether you admit it or not, you seem to have a personal issue with Burner and particularly with Butterworth that you are airing publicly rather than in private, and 2) NOBODY IS STOPPING ANY OTHER CANDIDATE FROM RUNNING!

But on the latter point, if no other candidate runs, don't blame Burner for that.

Finally, your analysis contains a ton of conjectures that you put forth as perceived wisdom and fact.  It ignores the experience Burner gained from a first run at Congress and the lessons learned from it.  It ignores the fact the Democratic candidate will need over $4 million this time to have a chance.

One thing I have noticed from the Draft Ross Hunter crowd is how incredibly rude they are in Burner's presence.  If that's the make up of Hunter's potential grassroots organization I don't want to have anything to do with it.

On The Road To 2008: Countdown to the next opportunity to change the direction of America

by Daniel K on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 03:06:48 PM PST

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Although I live in the 7th CD, I gave 3 days of doorbelling and hundreds of dollars to the Burner campaign. Right now, I'm not prepared to give anything to the Burner campaign. My reasons fall into several categories.

Blair Butterworth

Although Darcy Burner has little grassroots experience herself, she ran, in large part, a netroots and grassroots campaign in 2006. However, she retained a consultant who is clearly hostile to grassroots activists. In addition to his insulting the Chair of a grassroots organization, the 47th District Democrats, he felt compelled to give a group of activist Democrats in the 36th the advice that we ought to lower our rhetoric on Iraq.

Democratic consultants who are hostile to Democratic activists are, in my view, poisonous to the Party. I will not support any candidate who insists on hiring him. Period.

I want a legislator

I have a lot of respect for the work that legislators do. The work requires a specific set of skills, and some elected officials are better at it than others. We don't know how Darcy Burner would do as a legislator because she's never done it before. She hasn't even been involved in grassroots lobbying for legislation. If I have a choice between a skilled legislator and an unskilled candidate, why should I choose the latter?

I want candidate who knows something about public service

What public service has Darcer Burner done? I know people who have selflessly dedicated major portions of their lives to serving their communities. How does Darcy Burner stack up against such people? Not very well, I'd say.

Darcy Burner needs to grow up

During her campaign, I became concerned because, after a certain point, she didn't seem to be maturing as a candidate. Now, after seeing her snippy letters to Noemie, I just think she needs to grow up.

If you're going to be in the public spotlight, you need to learn not to overreact to criticism. You need to learn to be measured when measured is required. And if you don't think that responding is going to be constructive, then you need to learn to be silent. Keeping your mouth shut is better than throwing a hissy fit. (I should know.)

Darcy Burner is shallow

I think the best thing Darcy Burner could do right now is take some time off and dedicate herself to serving others. The truth is that she really isn't a very interesting or inspiring candidate. Her policy positions aren't particularly insightful or well-researched. She's not eloquent. Her intelligence is overrated. She isn't a genuinely passionate person who brings a depth of life experiences to the work of serving the public.

We may not get a better candidate in the 8th CD, but I'm holding back in the hope that we will.

by DWE on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 07:03:13 PM PST

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No, not mine ... the viewpoint of someone far more observant and well-spoken than I am, David Neiwert.

I see both sides of the argument.  In 2006, Darcy came from nowhere and made a tremendous effort.  She raised both money and expectations.  But she also made some mistakes; hiring Blair Butterworth (of whom I think less highly every time the name comes up) was one, failing to respond to Reichert's belittling ads and the "she'll raise taxes" lies was another.  Her campaign ads really weren't very good, and weren't particularly representative of the person that is Darcy Burner.

She's starting out waaaay above nowhere this time.  It would be extremely difficult for anyone to jump in and take it away from Darcy, now that she's added name-rec and a big bank account to the doggedness that got her into position in 2006.  The principal question is whether the lessons she's learned from the last campaign are the ones that can put her over the top.  I know she has the capacity to do so, but I'm still not completely convinced that she'll also apply the lessons about what not to do (such as hire Butterworth).

I do wish she'd done something "public" to burnish her resume in the interim.  That she hasn't, I lay partially at her own doorstep and partially at that of our politically tone-deaf governor -- Chris could have appointed Darcy to some sort of task force, such as the one that will study broadband access throughout the state.

You're only young once, but you can be immature forever -- Larry Andersen
Blogging at Peace Tree Farm

by N in Seattle on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 07:53:57 PM PST

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 though, I find the absence of a position on getting the troops out of Iraq, in any campaign exactly that - an absent position.  I'm not sure that is 'smart' campaigning as much as avoidance of one of the most prevailing issues of state and national politics.  

I share in common with Darcy Burner that I, too, was raised a military brat, Air Force father, and one of the bases where he was stationed, SAC in Omaha, Nebraska, found our family living in Fremont, Nebraska.  

Small world.  

 Politically smart, I'm not, and I weigh in only in my continued concern and speaking out about war in Iraq.  I have personally addressed and directly to Darcy Burner at a recent bloggers conference my concern about an absent position on Iraq war.

Darcy was one of the speakers at the confernece. She gave a good rousing talk, encouraged people to get involved, take the training for candidates if they were considering running for office, and otherwise volunteering and helping candidates to successfully run (I'm paraphrasing).  She did announce that she thought she might run for office again in 2008.  

At a sidebar moment after her speech where people had followed her into the hallway, I had a chance to express (and not without emotion) that while she wasn't a candidate in my district, I thought she was being misadvised to keep quiet on issue of Iraq war. I encouraged her to speak squarely and directly to the issue of Iraq war and getting troops out of Iraq if she does run again.  I think I was speaking directly to her as well as to the bloggers surrounding her.

With my grandchildren's father in training now (downfield they call it) for his second deployment to Iraq this year - another extended 15 month deployment, that issue continues to be the issue of primary importance to me and I believe should be to every candidate running for office. I would imagine now that the Iraq war is into fifth year, and the mandate that got Dems elected in Nov 2006 is the publics' message for a change in leadership  in getting the U.S. out of Iraq, any candidate from any party is going to be queried and challenged on that very issue. An extension of that thought is that hired for pay campaign managers will need to be giving more concrete advise to candidates on how to handle the issue of Iraq war - and avoiding it isn't going to go down well.

I'll be wanting to know that same thing from the candidates in my district.

   

On the Surge in Iraq "--we have set the bar so low it's buried in the sand at this point." - Barack Obama

by Lietta Ruger on Mon Apr 30, 2007 at 08:43:33 PM PST

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This posting about the 8th CD primary could be the most important topic in Washington politics for 08. With the gubernatorial, presidential and congressional elections creating a perfect storm of conflict, the 8th CD will in many ways reflect and impact the other races.

As a co-organizer of Eastside Democracy for America in Bellevue, I lived the 2006 Burner campaign along with many of you. So did our membership. It was both exhilarating and crushing.

Now, looking towards 2008, there is one thing I am certain of: the state party, the grassroots, the candidates and the consultants did not grow together from the 06 experience. We have grown apart.

Since we know that the unseating of Reichert will be an even harder task in 2008, how will we come together in order to win?

Maybe an open primary is a way. Maybe some kind of closed group catharsis can solidify us and move us forward together. I don't know yet.

I do know, however, that this conversation is crucial. Thanks, Noemie for putting it out there.

by Andrew Tsao on Tue May 01, 2007 at 12:14:29 AM PST

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I can't help wondering if this second run has more to do with Blair's desire for two more years of consulting fees than any rational assessment of Darcy's ability to win. He has already shown that his loyalty to Democratic and progressive causes is limited by taking on a Republican client for port commissioner against a well known Democrat. Consultants have to be loyal to paying customers or they don't stay in business long, but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't have an open conversation about Darcy's qualifications and other possible candidates. Blair is actively trying to put forth an image that Darcy has this wrapped up and no others need apply. All Noemie is doing is offering a contrary voice to say that the application process is still open.

by nwdem on Tue May 01, 2007 at 07:43:57 AM PST

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I really do not understand why a highly-paid and supposedly very smart political consultant, and those who hired him, do not simply apologize to the good folks of the 47th District Democrats for their way-over-the-top comments in the heat of the primary last year.

The 47th (Kent, Auburn, Covington) used to be a very red district but is now all blue, thanks to a handful of folks who have been busting their humps for many years, even when all the highly-paid consultants laughed and said we were wasting our time.  A foundation was being laid - a foundation that came in handy for the highly-paid political consultants when the time came.

Last year we had two good Democratic candidates for the state Senate.  In a close vote, the longtime activists made an endorsement of the candidate they thought had the most visibility (former police chief) and highest probability of being elected in the general.  You have to remember, up until 2006 Democrats had only won the district on shoestring budgets and by the skin of our teeth.  We had always sought out candidates who would be able to peel off the moderate votes we needed to win given the situation.  That was just political reality.

Enter the highly-paid consultants who come in with guns blazing.  They deeply insulted the very folks who, years ago, were doorbelling in Covington while they were sitting in their safe Seattle districts smirking at our naivete.  

Mr. Butterworth, what you said to us via our Chair and insinuated about us to others was deeply, deeply insulting.  Plain and simple, you owe us an apology.  Why is that so difficult to understand?

I like Darcy.  I like Claudia, very much.  They ought to encourage their highly-paid consultant to apologize.  Simple.

Is Darcy our best choice in 2008?  She may be.  Encouraging her employees to treat her potential foot soldiers with the total respect they deserve would be a positive step.

by Dennis Higgins on Tue May 01, 2007 at 09:14:18 AM PST

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When you lose and lots of people had put their heart and soul into trying to win, it is not uncommon, unfortunately, for people to point fingers and look for scapegoats to blame. When Darcy Burner began her campaign, most people viewed her as a long, long shot and no one foresaw the public mood shift and political shift that was coming on election day last November.

However you want to slice it and dice it, the reality is that most Democrats who might have thought about running, did not, because they weren't willing to put in the time and effort and take the risk.  The same can be said for the present day and the present situation.

No one is stopping anybody at this point who wants to run, but Darcy Burner would be a fool if she encouraged anyone else to enter the race and create a contested primary. She would be off to a bad start if she did not try to keep others out of the race. Contested primaries are best for the other party -in this case the Republicans and Reichert, because they drain time, energy and money from a focused race.

I don't know about the slight Blair Butterworth
supposibly gave you Noemie or the 47th, but people's toes are bound to get stepped on in campaigns. Try to look at the larger picture - compare his one or two remarks to Reichert and his votes and ineptitude and the Republicans. Blair is on our side. Reichert is the enemy.

I for the record admit my bias because I have worked with Blair in the past. Campaigns are rough and tumble, they are no more a game than life is a game. You can't win if you don't participate and work to win. Blair was a key component of the Initiative 394 Don't Bankrupt Washington! effort to gain control over the wanton spending spree on the WPPSS nuclear power plants. I see it to his credit that he stepped in to try to help Darcy Burner in her attempt to unseat Dave Reichert.  He likes the good fight and his involvemnt in the campaign increased Darcy's stature as a candidate. Blair, by the way, is not a Washington, DC based consultant - he lives and works in Seattle.

You wrote in your statement that one should not put a lot of weight on secord attempts  but I disagree. In particular the Washington races you looked at to try to make your point are not fair comparisons. To only look at a vote total and suggest that second attempts don't work is not looking at the whole picture.

Two key components are missing from your analysis, namely how credible were the candidates in the first place and how competitive a race did they run? The best indicator is how much money each candidate raised.  When you compare that, I think you can understand a big reason why the final votes are as they are.

Let's look at the eighth C.D. Heidi Behrens-Benedict, identified as an interior designer, ran 3 times against Jennifer Dunn and a fourth time for the open seat Reichert won- she lost the  primary challenge to Dave Ross. Jennifer Dunn was the former Chair of the Washington State Republican Party from 1981-1992 before being elected to Congress.

1998 Heidi Behrens-Benedict.not listed FEC website
1998 Jennifer Dunn........ .not listed FEC website
2000 Heidi Behren-Benedict..............$321,381
2000 Jennifer Dunn....................$1,714,365
2002 Heidi Behrens-Benedict.............$133,031
2002 Jennifer Dunn....................$1,738,486
2004 Heidi Behrens-Benedict.............$184,701
2004 Dave Ross........................$1,453,019
2004 Dave Reichert....................$1,578,632
2006 Darcy Burner.....................$3,080,297
2006 Dave Reichert....................$3,045,766

Heidi Behrens-Benedict basically raised about a tenth of what the winning candidate did.

The Jim McDermott/Carol Ann Cassidy is likewise a big mismatch.

2002 Carol Ann Cassidy (R).............$19,004
2002 Jim McDermott (D)................$415,537
2004 Carol Ann Cassidy.................$25,138
2004 Jim McDermott....................$379,513

And the Norm Dicks races mentioned are likewise not competitive. His opponents votes represent the hard core Republican vote. Again I couldn't find the 1998 figures on the FEC website but Bob Lawrence in 2002 and Doug Cloud in 2004 and 2006 do not even appear as having raised any money.

1998 Bob Lawrence(R)..............not listed
1998 Norm Dicks...................not listed
2000 Bob Lawrence...................$116,991
2000 Norm Dicks.....................$688,723
2002 Bob Lawrence................none listed
2002 Norm Dicks.....................$841,727
2004 Doug Cloud..................none listed
2004 Norm Dicks.................... $956,738
2006 Doug Cloud..................none listed
Norm Dicks..........................$975,000

One can draw no conclusions comparing second attempts in these non-competitive races with a second attempt by Darcy Burner against Reichert. Her first attempt was an extremely close and competitive race that saw her actually raise
as much as her opponent and come within a couple of percentage points of winning the vote.

Darcy has proven herself as a strong competitor. She has choosen to try again. She has earned that right.  

by Steve Zemke MajorityRulesBlog on Tue May 01, 2007 at 02:39:13 PM PST

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Noemie - have you ever talked to Blair about his comment to get his side of the story?  

by partisandem on Tue May 01, 2007 at 03:40:14 PM PST

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Your post comes across as wanting to punish Darcy for employing someone who
  1. didn't quit when the 47th endorsed his client's opponent and
  2. having the temerity to win the primary for his client anyways.

I also seem to remember there being some grumbling that the KC Dems did a dual-endorsement in the race instead of following the 47th's lead.

One could argue that since his favored candidate lost the primary, Bryan's opinion was indeed ultimately "irrelevant" to a majority of active Democrats in the 47th.

I think you would've done better to focus on alternatives to Darcy instead of rehashing last year's pie fights.

by sugarfree on Tue May 01, 2007 at 04:15:14 PM PST

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As I read through the comment thread it seems to me that this is a diatribe against Blair Butterworth and has little to do with the WA-08 race.

This leads me to believe that the "public conversation" that was intended really was initiated under the wrong topic.

I wrote earlier that there is obviously still a lot of rancor in what you are writing here Noemie, and your latest responses only seem to demonstrate that.  Perhaps it isn't your own rancor and you are writing on behalf of those that were present at the Blair Butterworth back and forth. But to now understand you weren't even present, and have not made contact with Butterworth has me completely befuddled by all of this.

Frankly, I have no idea anymore what the point of this posting was, what has motivated it, or what was expected to come of it.

On The Road To 2008: Countdown to the next opportunity to change the direction of America

by Daniel K on Tue May 01, 2007 at 04:41:44 PM PST

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Without getting into details, I'm concerned that portions of this post may have violated WashBlogs own Content Policy.  Washblog has set a very high standard in its editorial policy, and has gone to great length to detail it, which I highly compliment them for.  Its clear that Washblog was aiming for the highest ethical standards when it made up these standards.  I think all of us may have participated at some time or other in passing around information that has been released to others into the public domain.  This post however, seems to have released some private information that was clearly not intended as a public release.  As the Washblog Content policy notes:

You may not post any unlawful, threatening, libelous, defamatory, obscene, pornographic or other material that would violate the law, reveal private information of other users.

There's no doubt that some very emotional and personal issues that are being addressed in this post, thats none of my business.  But I  think there was somewhat of an ethical lapse when personal e-mail content was put on the web, especially when there are other non-public communication channels available to make the same point.  

In addition to what appears to be an ethical lapse that occured under some emotional duress, these type of disclosures could have a chilling effect on future efforts of the local blogosphere to communicate with other community, media and political figures.

I hope this does't sound too hardover on this issue, this lapse is one that any of our local blogs could have made, and may have made in the past.  In this case I don't think any major harm was done.  

But as we enter into a new political season, I hope everyone in our local blogosphere will take the opportunity to revisit our commitment to ethics in our communications.

by CoolAqua on Wed May 02, 2007 at 08:06:05 AM PST

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Perhaps someone can find errors in my data.  But it seems clear to me that, based on Washington's experience in the past decade, second-time challengers do worse, not better, in their second runs.  Here is the list of every case I saw in the table below of challengers who returned a second time in efforts to beat an incumbent:
  • Lawrence vs Dicks ... in 1998, 2000, and 2002, ... 31.63, 31.10, and 31.35,
  • Cassady vs McDermott ... in 2002, 2004, ...  21%, 19%
  • Behrens-Benedict vs Dunn ... in 1998, 2000, and 2002, ... 40%, 35%, and 37%
  • Cloud vs Dicks in 2004, 2006 ... 31%, 29%.
Taking the data as given, one thing all of these cases have in common which is not true of Burner's or the other cases she cites where the 2nd time won is that with all of these, the first time wasn't even close.  Even Behrens-Benedict's 40% is still in landslide territory by most definitions.

All of the cases Burner cites (and I'll agree it was a mistake to include Baird in there) are well above this level.  And I think that actually makes all of the difference -- it's a profoundly different dynamic going into a race a second time after you've been soundly repudiated vs after you've lost by only a small margin.

Which is not to say that we shouldn't consider other candidates at this point or that there aren't things Darcy should be doing differently this time around (e.g., tossing Butterworth under the bus), but we do need to be careful about the whole apples vs oranges thing.

by wrog on Wed May 02, 2007 at 03:07:57 PM PST

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Best way to get rid of consultants and any need for or dependency on such leeches is to teach genuine CIVICS and CRITICAL THINKING starting in grade school.

And in Sunday School too.

Lack of grade school CIVICS training is what currently justifies the need for and use of political consultants for all our generations.

Don't let any pretend savvy political sophisticate tell you otherwise.

Arthur
You sure you ain't staking too much on yer theories? Not enough common sense?

by Arthur Ruger on Wed May 02, 2007 at 07:27:42 PM PST

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This is what you initially said back in March:
her consultant, Blair Butterworth, referred to us here in the 47th as "irrelevant"

He called the 47th LD irrelevant.

Then you clarified:

Butterworth did not refer to everyone in the 47th LD as "irrelevant" -- rather to the grassroots democratic organization.

He called the grassroots organization in the 47th irrelevant.

The next day at Dailykos you asked:

If you know more about Mr. Butterworth's dissing of the grassroots, I'd be interested to hear.

He's calling the entire grassroots irrelevant.

Finally, in your post above, you present what others here have agreed happened:

Butterworth closed this dressing down with a comment directed at Bryan in his role as Chair of the 47th LD: "You are irrelevant."

A comment directed at one single person.

How would you characterize your original statements?

Seeing as they're the statements to which Darcy was responding, don't you think you should've presented them for complete context?

How would you characterize your omission of these statements?

by sugarfree on Thu May 03, 2007 at 09:14:55 AM PST

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I mean, I'm in CD-6 and I've never met any of the people being discussed in this thread.  However, I've been reading this thread with interest.  Just a few random comments...take them or leave them as you wish.

  • I think it's odd that Noemie puts so much energy into proving that Darcy probably can't win on a second go-around but then says she would love Peter Goldmark to run again.  

  • Anybody can challenge Darcy in the primary.  Nobody's stopping them.  I see this as indicative of Darcy's drive, determination and political astuteness that she appears to have already driven off competition.  Since so many here seem to welcome the idea of a challenge, find a candidate and help them in their campaign.

  • If there were problems with Darcy's previous campaign and her advisers, why not take a positive approach to this instead of a negative one?  In 2004, Kevin Van De Wege ran against Jim Buck in the 24th LD.  Buck was the only Republican representing the 24th and people wanted him out of there.  Kevin made some serious mistakes in the 2004 race.  Still, he came about as statistically close to beating Buck as Darcy did to beating Reichert.  Many of us encouraged Kevin to run again but we had numerous conversations with him about the mistakes he originally made and our suggestions for correcting him.  He took most of our recommendations, fixed the problems, and beat Buck in 2006.  Would he have been as likely to accept our constructive criticism if we had gone to a public board trashing him first?  Who knows?  It just seems like bad strategy to me.  We were pro-active rather than reactive.  We also approached him in a positive manner with the goal of helping him.  Not in a negative manner that just tears down the candidate and the campaign.  I guess that's what I'm seeing here and it makes me uncomfortable.  Maybe I'm wrong.  Maybe some of you have approached her in a more positive, helpful manner?  I don't know.  But it doesn't sound like it from the remarks here.  I'm just thinking that if she's a good candidate with just a few fixable problems, that there are other ways to approach the issue that would tend to be more successful than this.

  • I don't know Noemie but I've been impressed with her from this website.  However, the tone of anger and sour grapes from her posts really jumps out at me.  I could be wrong but that's my perspective.  I agree that it seems to be bad form to use someone's private email in a public forum.  I don't care if you're a blogger and you feel that this makes email a matter of public interest.  I disagree.  Like someone else said, if Darcy had written to The Editor, The Blogger, etc., then the post is fair game for public use.  However, if it was a personal post to Noemie, I think it should have stayed personal.  I'm not saying that the post couldn't be referred to in an oblique way, but to copy/paste it here seems to me to be bad form.  I'm just saying...

  • There have been many studies where people were interviewed after an event.  It's not uncommon for 15 witnesses to have 15 very different eye-witness accounts of the event.  Our perspective skews how we see and hear things.  This can come from personal bias, physical location, past experience with similar events, past events with the people involved, and various other inputs that tweak how we perceive things.  I'm inclined to believe that this is part of what's happened here with the racist issue.  I'm seeing kneejerk responses from all the people directly involved in the situation based on a desire to cling to their own interpretation of the situation rather than being open to other POVs.  This is human nature.  I've done it myself.  But I'm not seeing any willingness to acknowledge that other perspectives might have some validity.  I just think that's sad.  I guess I expect more from candidates and more from people who have been wonderful activists and have a lot to contribute the process.

I've rambled long enough.  I have no real point to my post but to want to offer up how an outsider with no prior knowledge to any of this and no relationship with any of the parties involved sees this intense discussion.  Like I said, take it or leave it as you see fit.

I just want to see Reichert lose in '08.  As long as he loses to a good Democrat, I don't care who the candidate is.  If it's Darcy, great.  If it's someone better, that's great, too.

by funkycamper on Thu May 03, 2007 at 10:59:38 AM PST

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I don't have much to add to this thread. I really liked Ivan's comments.

Repeating myself, the money I gave the Burner campaign is the best investment I made during the 2006 cycle. This judgment is completely independent of her as a person, as a candidate, as a politician, or the campaign she ran.

I believe in the 50 state strategy. I support the 50 state strategy. The campaigns of Peter Goldmark and Darcy Burner served a greater purpose. I believe we have a majority in the house because of the 50 state strategy. So, personally, I'm pretty pleased.

One lesson from this brouhaha is that what you say matters. Email is forever. Audio and video is ubiquitous. So a lot of people who previously got off easy will either have to adjust to the new rules or get pushed out of the way. (Who was that moron in Virginia? George Allen?)

I make my own friends. I've met Darcy Burner, watched her stump speech improve, and I like her. I have zero qualms about supporting her again, mostly because of the larger strategy.  In some ways, I hope she is mean and tough, to better do battle in Wash DC.

But, taking Noemie at her word, it sounds like this Butterworth guy has to go. The merc consultants are a large part of why our country finds itself in its current mess to begin with. The thought of them profiting from failure really pisses me off.

by zappini on Thu May 03, 2007 at 11:55:56 AM PST

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This post and much of this discussion have been distressing to me for several reasons, primarily because I see no purpose in folks taking precious time and energy taking part in what LBJ used to call the "circular firing squad".   It used to be the common mode of operation amongst Democrats in his day and undoubtedly contributed to the long demise of the Democratic Party in the four decades between his day and the recent beginning of our resurgence.  One of the things I have been most proud of lately is the way in which Democrats have generally stood together in this new Congress on most issues and how much difference it has made in our ability to be successful.

Secondly, I have been very pleased with Darcy as a candidate and a person and am thrilled that she has decided to run again, knowing how much time, energy and money it takes to make such a run.  There are few people who are willing to do it and I applaud her for doing so.  

I was concerned to hear a couple folks here characterize Darcy's email as "snippy".  That simply does not fit with who I have known Darcy to be.  I therefore asked her if I could see what she had written and she sent me the email she sent Noemie following Noemie's posts in March.  I did not find them snippy at all, simply an attempt to lay out her picture of what Blair had said and why.   (Note: I don't know Blair at all; our paths have crossed once or twice and I've talked to him for a total of 2 minutes.)  But this is what Darcy said in her email in full (provided with her permission) because it is this interchange that seems to be at the core of Noemie's argument with Blair and then with Darcy:

Your analysis of Blair Butterworth is deeply unfair.  And knowing how fair-minded you strive to be, it frankly surprises me to hear it coming from you.

I would ask you to take a step back and look at what Blair said, and the context in which he said it.

Claudia Kauffman got into the 47th Senate race when there were no other challengers for the seat.  She hired Blair, put a plan in place, and started working.  And after she had committed fully to the race, after she had asked her friends and family to give their time and their money and they had done so out of respect and love for her, and after Blair had committed fully to helping her win it, the state senate campaign committee decided they didn't think she could win and recruited another candidate to run against her.

Now, they did not decide that she couldn't win based on her fundraising, as she had outraised nearly every other state senate candidate at that point.  It was not based on her not having political experience and connections, as she had been one of the primary political contacts for the Muckleshoot Nation.  Instead, they apparently said that they didn't think she had "the profile" to win the general.

Now what did they mean by that?

Blair believed (and still believes) that their problem with Claudia was simply that she was a Native woman.  And he did not hesitate a moment to stick by her, telling her that she should stay in the race and win it, and that he would be by her side to make that happen.

The 47th LD did not treat her very kindly.  I witnessed many of the interactions before the primary - where she was forced to walk in one of the parades with none of the members of the 47th at her side, where she was excluded from events to which common courtesy would have said they should have invited her.  I was embarrassed for my Party when I saw how Claudia was being treated.

And then Blair was confronted and told he should get Claudia out of the race, that the 47th LD had chosen their candidate, and it wasn't her.  And Blair responded by saying that what the 47th LD had decided was irrelevant to who would be in the general, because it would be up to the voters.

If that is true and heaven knows, I wasn't there, Darcy wasn't there and Noemie wasn't there, but it doesn't sound like Blair was disrespecting the grassroots at all.  He was running a campaign around the LD folks because they had chosen to support someone else - after he, and Progressive Majority as well I might add, had made a commitment to Claudia.  This simple exchange seems to have served as a vehicle for making a range of assumptions, which, when repeated and generalized, wind up being misleading and then damaging.  

Note:  I, Lynn Allen, have been asked to work on Darcy's campaign and will be starting full-time in July.  I will be doing online outreach and community building.  That decision came a couple weeks ago, independent of this kerfuffle. And I would have posted what I post here independent of that decision.  I have been a supporter of Darcy's since early on.  I have also worked closely with Noemie over the last year and a half and have tremendous respect for her and consider her a friend.  I simply think that she has misconstrued several parts of this situation and aired it in public in a manner that is not constructive to what we are all trying to do.  I'd rather have our time and energy spent working against Reichert and the rest of the Republicans and working to get good progressive candidates into office.

by nudger on