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Has Markowitz already been "anointed" by Leahy, Welch, VDP over other gubernatorial contenders?

by: odum

Sat Feb 21, 2009 at 17:22:14 PM EST


Big happenings at the Democratic State Committee meeting, as the beginnings of factionalizing around the appearance of favoritism in the nascent Governor's race around the use of Party resources has bubbled into open frustration in the midst of the Party leadership vacuum.

At issue is whether or not Deb Markowitz is being "annointed" by players in the Party - specifically the camps of Senator Leahy and Congressman Welch - at the expense of other candidates and potential candidates, such as Doug Racine, Susan Bartlett (who announced that she is, indeed, contemplating a run), Peter Shumlin - and at the expense of Party rules and protocols, which seem to have been ignored on her behalf.

The concerns here? It's not about who is or isn't the best candidate, it's about having a fair fight. About not setting a precedent that these decisions are taken out of voters' hands by an elite group stacking the deck in favor of one person or another. It's a deep concern for those of us who see a healthy primary as necessary in this election, and stand generally in favor of a robust primary process.

It's also about having the strongest candidate possible, and if Markowitz is to be that candidate, she would come through any tainted primary seen as tainted herself, and that's completely unnecessary.

Background: Issues center around the Markowitz campaign's unfettered use of the VDP office and the Party's coveted informational resource - the Voter File. Traditionally in a contested Primary, an agreement is made between the candidates before any such access is granted. Usually those candidates don't work out of the Party offices either, but its not unheard of. What is unheard of, again, is doing so without reaching out to every possible contender and coming to an agreement. Access to Voter File - a database of every registered voter in the state with voter identification, demographic and polling information dating back into the 90s, the likes of which neither the Republicans or the Progressives have on their own - is especially strictly controlled. Every election cycle the rules for access are reviewed and tweaked but stay similar in character, accounting for the changing technology and technical nature of how the data is stored and maintained. It is also the compendium of local corrections and identification done by county and town committees, again stretching back over more than a decade. It is the Democrats most valuable common property.

Three things are clear. One: that Markowitz's campaign manager, Jason Powell, has made use of both the VDP office and the Voter File freely. Two: that the other candidates only heard about this second hand and were not brought into the process (even though one of them, Doug Racine, is the only person to have unequivocally announced that he or she is a candidate). Three: that this entire situation has proceeded with the full knowledge of Party players directly linked to the offices of Peter Welch and Patrick Leahy.

odum :: Has Markowitz already been "anointed" by Leahy, Welch, VDP over other gubernatorial contenders?
If you still don't think this is a big deal, consider that Senator Bartlett read from a letter that has circulated through the House and Senate caucuses, promoted not simply by candidates and potential candidates such as Racine, Bartlett and Shumlin, but also championed by House Majority Leader Floyd Nease. The letter explicitly calls for an end to the brazen preferential treatment and appearance of a pre-ordained favorite of the Democratic Party and some of its most influential members. Nease's involvement is significant as it makes clear that the discontent runs broader and deeper than any mere sour grapes from candidates not so favored.

At the meeting, outgoing Chair Carleton responded that a) There is now a Voter File contract, and so far Markowitz is the only candidate who has signed it, but it's open to others. b) Office access should be equal and conditioned on payment of rent.

Unfortunately, it's not as simple as that. For one thing, there remains some question as to whether or not those candidates who haven't yet "staffed up" can sign up for access, and at present, Markowitz is not only the single candidate who has, but its unlikely any of the others will do so soon. As to rent, it sounds as though an amount has not been worked out, and when it is, it will likely not be levied retroactively for the usage the Markowitz campaign has already made of the space.

Part of what's frustrating here is that there is no need for Markowitz to be involved in this ill-advised nonsense. She's a great candidate who understands how to run elections and may well have the best shot in a primary election already, depending on how things sugar out in the coming months. It seems likely that this fits into an overall strategy to "shock and awe" opponents out of the race and clear the primary field if at possible for a direct run at Douglas. In addition to the advantages steered her way from the Party, she has already hired a Campaign Manager, which speaks to the money she is raising and has already raised. Reportedly, Emily's List - the national PAC that supports pro-choice Democratic women candidates - has committed to supporting her, even though Bartlett is also a potential candidate. Hubbub is that EL is hoping to power a $2 million campaign for Markowitz. The connections are being worked hard to give her the appearance of an electoral juggernaut only four months out from the previous election.

Now, $2 million is a ludicrous number, frankly, and the fact that it's in circulation is further testament to the theory that she is simply trying to scare off opponenets. It's a legitimate strategy, and accumulating special favors from those with oversized influence over party resources... well, I suppose you could say its good work if you can get it. But she and those selfsame supporters should be deeply afraid of being responsible for creating a sense of an "establishment" candidate vs. more populist ones. In this day and age, such an impression could be poisonous, and it's precisely the narrative they are flirting with.

It should be clear to all that the only honorable way forward is to follow the precedents of the past - precedents which candidates have had a right to expect would be in play this cycle. And going by that precedent, no candidate should have access to office space or Voter File until all the candidates have come to an agreement. Period.

For those of us who work hard to insure that the Democratic Party is an institution we can all hopefully be proud of, this cycle is off to a piss-poor start.

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Raise Your Voice!
Jumping to conclusions (3.00 / 3)
That's a huge leap, JO, and I'm not sure who your sources are, other than Jack. But "The Party" has NOT to my knowledge "steered" any resources toward Markowitz. Has there been a perfect storm of absenteeism and a power vacuum? Yes. Has anyone called or overtly invited Markowitz or Jason Powell, her major domo, to use the office and loot the Voter File gratis? No and NO.

You want to blame somebody, blame the Obama campaign and the DNC who cut off all the funding for the staff people as of November 5. No staff, nobody but volunteers in the office, if that. Nobody knowledgeable enough to close accounts that were set up. As the Obama guy, Jason Powell had unfettered access to the Voter File, with no one to shut him off..

You want to cast blame, put it on Powell and Markowitz for seeking to take unfair advantage of party resources while no one was available to mind the store.

You want to blame a party person? Blame now-former Chair Ian Carleton for being ChINO (Chair in name only) for far too long.

There's plenty of blame to go around.

Piling on to tar "The Party" as a whole with favoritism is not going to help resolve the situation. The Acting Chair, Judy Bevans, took several suggestions about what to do at this point. My read differs from yours about whether retroactive rent and other charges might be assessed.

Have you just delighted every Republican who reads this blog? Hell yeah.

NanuqFC
Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. - Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.

 


PS: The Chair Does NOT Equal the Chair / NT (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
Shoulda read: The Chair Does Not Equal the PARTY / NT (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
No, the Party equals the Party. (0.00 / 0)
You're equating the "Party" with "Democrats," and that's bunk. The Vermont Democratic Party is an incorporation. An entity. It does not equal "all Democrats" any more than the entity that is "The Catholic Church" equals all Catholics.

The issue is very much an issue of the entity entitled the "Democratic Party." That's what this is all about, that's why people give a damn, and that's why the letter was even written.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
I'm not sure I understand... (4.00 / 1)
...how you can state this as fact:

Has anyone called or overtly invited Markowitz or Jason Powell, her major domo, to use the office and loot the Voter File gratis? No and NO.

That said, I should be clear that I don't have any real knowledge of this at all, only information I've received third hand.  But I do think these are important questions to be asking, and I'm not particularly concerned about whether or not Republicans experience "delight" at this sort of questioning, because this, quite frankly, has nothing to do with them.  If this sort of insider politics nonsense is going on, we need to stop it before it has the chance to get any worse.  If it's not, then we've probably just made a few unpleasant ripples that will fade away quickly.  

Republicans rarely do much of anything in terms of self-scrutiny and serious self-analysis, and if we can't figure out ways to confront problems within our own party, or at the very least, question our processes, then we're going to end up marginalized and out of touch.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


[ Parent ]
This is NOT "within our own party" (4.00 / 1)
This is public.

JO wants to cast blame, and by implicating the VDP as officially participating in favoritism, he's implicating every person who thinks of him/herself as a Democrat, but especially anyone who is a part of the party's organizing bureaucracy (to use the term loosely).

I neither voted for or knew about Markowitz's abuse of party resources until two days ago (and that raises questions for me about her campaign's integrity).

As I said: there's plenty of blame to go around, but none of it belongs to the State Committee or to the grassroots. So if JO wants to name names, then name NAMES, not "the VDP"! The VDP has not anointed anyone. Maybe the power brokers think they have, but the rest of us -- at this point unpaid volunteers all -- are doing what we can to make sure the best candidate -- not just the best-connected one -- will make a run for the Governor's office.

NanuqFC
Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. - Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.


[ Parent ]
I'm not reading it the way you are (0.00 / 0)
I'm reading it as though the VDP might be being used by powerbrokers for inappropriate process.  If there's any specific blame on the party roots, it's more about allowing themselves to be blindsided by this sort of thing.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer

[ Parent ]
I'm reading it differently, too (0.00 / 0)
It reads to me that he's referring to the people in the VDP office (since it's office resources being used) and certain people associated with specific candidates.

Beware the Everyday Brutality of the Averted Gaze

[ Parent ]
What Office People? (0.00 / 0)
There are NO STAFF. There are only VOLUNTEERS -- who are valued and doing the best they can, but most don't know enough -- or haven't been around long enough -- to tell a campaign manager, "Sorry, you can't use that computer, and you can't use these phones."

NanuqFC
In a Time of Universal Deceit, TELLING the TRUTH Is a Revolutionary Act. - George Orwell  


[ Parent ]
So are you saying we -shouldn't- be addressing this? (0.00 / 0)
It seems to me a big part of the problem here could easily be structural.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer

[ Parent ]
I'm referring to... (0.00 / 0)
....the entity legally responsible for these resources. That's not Ian Carleton, that's the Vermont Democratic Party. You're a part of that entity? You don't like that these things are happening under your auspices?

Good. That's the POINT.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
Thats bullshit Euan, and you know it. (0.00 / 0)
There is a legal entity called the Vermont Democratic Party.

It has an office.

It has a Voter File.

It has allowed one side in  this contest to use these resources.

Does that piss you off? Good. That's the whole point of this diary.

You want to dump all this on one single guy? You were hoping this diary would be all about dumping on one single guy? Forget it.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
So tell me ... (0.00 / 0)
Who got the key, opened the door, made sure no one else was around, settled in, and started making phone calls and using computers on behalf of one announced candidate?

And who is the "legal entity" who was there either to invite or bar the person making use of resources that weren't his to use?

You've so far produced no evidence proving that anyone in a position of responsibility in the party invited or condoned this misuse. You seem quite willing to let the actual guilty persons -- Jason Powell on behalf of (possibly with the knowledge/approval of) Deb Markowitz -- off the hook.

And no, I'm not dumping "all this on one single guy." You misunderstand me. You talk about the VDP as a "legal entity" that "allowed" unfair access. The legal entity is abstract. The "legal entity" has neither eyes, nor ears, nor hands, nor mouth, nor feet. The "legal entity" did not, could not, see this happening and stop it.

I'm looking at something more concrete: who within the party was in the position of responsibility to see this abuse of resources happening, take steps to stop it, and initiate equal-access agreements with known potential candidates.

So who would it be who could have seen and stopped the  misuse of resources to the advantage of one candidate?

Then-VDP Chair Ian Carleton: has eyes, ears, mouth, hands, physical mobility, key to office, knowledge of those involved, authority to determine access to Party resources.

Former Interim Executive Director Kristina Althoff: eyes, ears, mouth. hands, physical mobility, key to office, intimate knowledge of those involved, but note "former." No authority.

Former staff members Liz Saxe, Gretchen Kruesi, Chris Brown? They have all the requisites except they are no longer employed by "Legal Entity" (and actually were all employees of the DNC) and thus have no authority over access to VDP resources.

So who in the VDP would have been able to throw themselves in front of the door in January, Odum? Who could have barred the way? "Legal entity?" I don't think so.

Do we like powerbrokers who try to steal primaries by misappropriating resources? Hell no, I hate that crap as much as you do. The reality is that one candidate's campaign manager took advantage of a power vacuum because he could: "Legal Entity" had an awol chair, no E.D., no staff to get in his way. I get that you think he did so with the tacit or explicit approval of the powerbrokers, and maybe of his boss. Okay, you have your sources and your reasons. (And I think Deb Markowitz should reprimand if not fire Jason Powell. At minimum she should publicly or within the party repudiate his behavior.)

But for you to make it an "official" VDP action actively taken to "anoint" one candidate is, in my opinion, one step too far. The party is not the powerbrokers, regardless of what they think. The fact that the misuse was discovered and stopped shows that. The party is us, and we haven't "anointed" anyone -- and won't until we find someone worth the fragrant oil.

NanuqFC
In a Time of Universal Deceit, TELLING the TRUTH Is a Revolutionary Act. - George Orwell


[ Parent ]
You *really* don't - or won't - consider this POV (0.00 / 0)
...and you'd rather hide it all or gloss over it than even consider it?

I don't care who you want to dump all the blame on. I'm dealing in facts and facts only. X is happening. X is happening under the auspices of the VDP. The VDP as an entity is not abstract in any way that matters as far as responsibility goes. You don't wanna talk about this stuff unless you can pre-select a Simon Bar-Sinister to dump it on? That's a bad precedent. Nothing changes if people don't take umbridge - if they don't say "hey, look what's happening in our name, let's do something."

Looks like you've taken the umbridge, but you prefer to direct it against me. Okay, fine. Let me know when that solves the problem, okay?

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
You're way out beyond left field on this one. (4.00 / 1)
I've never said you did the wrong thing in talking about it. I've never said that I wanted to cover it up. I have said consistently something you seem unable to hear: that I hate the behind-the-scenes wink-nod-handshake machinations by self-appointed powerbrokers as much as you do.

Read this slowly, preferably out loud: What I object to, John, is your smear of the entire party for the (alleged) bad faith of a few. PERIOD.

There are a lot of bright people who participate here. The fact that you've had to explain the point of the diary more than once might be a clue that maybe, just maybe, you missed the mark.

Now, please, instead of being vicious and dumping your anger on me, why not actually call the folks involved? Get some actual responses. Ask Deb if she condones Jason's actions. Ask her if her strategy is to blow potential primary rivals out of the water. Ask her if she has a $2 mil commitment from Emily's List.

Ask Carolyn and/or Peter and/or Patrick if they've decided to back Deb.

Half a dozen phone calls should do it. Aren't you a citizen-journalist-blogger?

You do a service to political discussion, and yes, to the Democrats by turning on the lights, but in this case a lot of innocent bystanders are getting burned under the heat lamp.

NanuqFC
In a Time of Universal Deceit, TELLING the TRUTH Is a Revolutionary Act. - George Orwell  


[ Parent ]
I haven't seen any indication of this (0.00 / 0)
...now, please, instead of being vicious and dumping your anger on me...

but it does seem that some real nerves were touched here.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


[ Parent ]
Riiiigght.... (0.00 / 0)
Like you did here:

It might be logical, if our DNC committeeman cared about the entire VDP instead of simply protecting his candidate, to think that perhaps Chuck Ross might fight for 50-state funding, or that accountable-only-to-herself (thanks to her large contributions to campaigns) DNC Committeewoman Billie Gosh might raise the point and put some energy into it. But I suspect we'd have people passing out or turning Democratic chokehold blue holding their breath waiting for that to happen.

http://www.greenmountaindaily....

....and here...

Another piece that doesn't figure into Porter's calculus is that VT DNC delegate Billi Gosh -- a major donor in Vermont and die-hard Clinton supporter -- was just elected to the (temporary) Credentials Committee. (Vt State Committee Treasurer and establishment supporter Michael Inners and political newcomer Dottie Deans were also elected to the [two other] temporary DNC Credentials Committee[s].) Final Committee delegates will be elected at the State Convention.

Finally, there's Dean's quote:

I think we will have a nominee sometime in the middle of March or April. But if we don't, then we're going to have to get the candidates together and make some kind of an arrangement. Because I don't think we can afford to have a brokered convention.

So why is it we bother with primaries?

http://www.greenmountaindaily....

I'm done with this exchange.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
Are you serious? (0.00 / 0)
This is NOT "within our own party" (4.00 / 1)
This is public.

Because when it stays hidden in the corners of "our party" it doesn't get solved. This latest scenario represents problems that run deep, and have run deep since back before I even worked there.

What this is called, is "sunshine." It's why were here. Sunshine now prevents problems later when we can't afford them - or at least, not if we expect to actually win in 2010.

It's absurd that I have to explain this simple principle to you of all people.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
Facilitate Change (0.00 / 0)
Don't let the same old folks call the same old shots.  Time for a new generation, that has been chosen by the new generation.  God bless Patrick Leahy, but he hasn't lived here for 30 years.  Vermonters are way too loyal to incumbents, and have far too few primaries and contested elections.  The only way for change and progress is to have a marketplace of ideas.

Markowitz (0.00 / 0)
If the Ds want a candidate to follow in the footsteps of the last three, Markowitz is their candidate.  Let us not forget that it is only Racine who has been close to Doesless.  What the Dems need is a good primary fight that will tune-up the nominated candidate for the general election.  Perhaps that candidate is still in the bushes?

Something similar to this (0.00 / 0)
happened in a party society I was part of in NYC. In the end, the headquarter volunteers (there were no paid staff) smeared the candidate. By the time of the primary, the party backed another candidate. Shame was, the candidate whose staff did this (unbidden by him) was the best in the bunch.

Jumping to Conclusions (4.00 / 1)
I don't think there is any blatant favoritism.

I think wat we're seeing is a pretty casual attitude to access and appearances. Definitely a problem, but I don't see it at the level that you're suggesting. Part of the problem is not only that the state Party has been defunded as of November 5 (bye-bye 50-State Strategy), but also that the DNC, which owns the VAN, has become somewhat hollowed out and doesn't have staffing to manage the transitions, granting and terminating access, that need to be managed.

At today's meeting there was no suggestion that a candidate without staff won't have access to Voter File, once they sign the contract. (I don't even know why that would be, assuming they weren't asking for blanket access for legions of volunteers.)

I'm sure you have plenty of sources, and I don't want to contradict what other people are telling you without hearing it or talking to them, but I don't think it's necessary to impute bad faith to say that we have identified certain issues, the State Committee has recognized them, and they need to be addressed, pronto.


I consider the conscious exploitation... (0.00 / 0)
....of holes in supervision for personal gain, and against standing policy to be "bad faith."

If you don't, that's your business.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
Candidates need to get off their butts instead of whining. (4.00 / 2)
*
Note to Shumlin, Bartlett, Racine and Nease: Poop or get off the pot.

John, I have to agree with Euan -- this is inappropriate hearsay.  Additionally, it just reinforces my opinion of a select group of whiny Dems.  I don't see a power broker deal going on here.  I see a kick-butt candidate who is already more popular than Jim Douglas.

First:  What "other candidates" are you talking about?  How many have filed papers?  No one is a candidate until they've done some of the basic filing.  If a potential candidate hasn't made a decision they have no reason to whine.  

Second:  Why is any candidate obliged to wait for another?  This smacks of Vermont nicey-nice politics.  Yes, we're all on the same team, but candidates are expected to get in the game, take the gloves off and fight hard.  

Third:  What makes you think that "players" associated with any other elected official have or have not decided to get behind a candidate.  Whether they have or not, it seems way off base to suggest that Markowitz is getting an endorsement from Leahy or Welch.  Call their office and ask.  

After four straight losses in the gubernatorial race, it seems incredible that members of the party are admonishing a proactive early contender.  In my opinion, the only person who has a right to whine about this is Racine, because he is the only other candidate.  

My question is, why hasn't Racine gotten his ass to work as a candidate?

If Markowitz is favored by anyone, it's because she's been doing what every other candidate should have been doing all along:  making phone calls, raising money and getting her organization together.

What the heck is wrong with that?  

If other candidates want to use the Voter File, than why don't they just get their butts in gear instead of whining?



Nate Freeman

Northfield, VT

natefreeman@gmail.com


Why should they "get their butts in gear" (0.00 / 0)
if the deck is stacked against them?

Fairplay. Sunshine. That's what this is all about. You wanna make it about why your candidate is the best, I really don't give a crap. This is about honesty, integrity and a fair process. I couldn't care less which candidate was or wasn't involved, but I guarantee you'd be raising holy hell if it was a candidate you didn't support reaping the benefits.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
A couple things (0.00 / 0)
(1)
Why is any candidate obliged to wait for another?

No one is obligated to wait for another.  What they are obligated to do is to follow appropriate rules.  One rule is that there has to be an agreement on how access to the voter file is granted prior to someone just grabbing it.  Whether it's done with the consent of party elders or just done by a long-time party member without anyone else's consent, it's doing an end-run around the system.  

(2)

...whiny... whine... whining...

Accusing one's opponents of whining is a fairly juvenile tactic.   It strikes me as though it's used primarily to reinforce the status quo rather than to deal with real change of any sort.  

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


[ Parent ]
Well done! (4.00 / 1)
Good for you JO for raising the flag on this issue. As you have said, there is clearly enough of a widespread feeling of discontent on display already to warrant putting some sunshine on this. Don't fight the discussion, folks. If you have some observatioons or opinions to share, please do so, by all means.  But we need more of these discussions, not less. There could be nothing more demoralizing to the democratic majority in VT than to find that the primary had been sabotaged by the same old back room forces again this cycle. I also say this not having decided on any candidate at this point.

Earlier flag... (0.00 / 0)
I received this email on Feb 13th:

Please join us for a reception honoring
Governor Howard Dean
And the success of his 50 State Strategy

Saturday, February 21, 2009
6:00 - 7:30 pm
Host reception 5:00-6:00 pm
Host Committee
Arthur and Anne Berndt - Tom and Susan Boswell
Hon. TJ Donovan - Crea and Phil Lintilhac
Hon. Deb Markowitz - Liz and Eric Miller
Hon. Peter and Deb Shumlin - Hon. Bill Sorrell
Jane and Bill Stetson - Hon. Shap Smith & Melissa Volansky
Steve Waltien

At the home of Liz & Eric Miller
327 Appletree Point Road, in Burlington's New North End

Then this on Feb 19th:

Last Chance to RSVP!
Please join us for a reception honoring
Governor Howard Dean
And the success of his 50 State Strategy

Saturday, February 21, 2009
6:00 - 7:30 pm
Host reception 5:00-6:00 pm
Host Committee
Arthur and Anne Berndt - Tom and Susan Boswell
Hon. TJ Donovan - Crea and Phil Lintilhac
Hon. Deb Markowitz - Liz and Eric Miller
Hon. Doug Racine - Hon. Peter and Deb Shumlin
Hon. Bill Sorrell  - Jane and Bill Stetson -
Hon. Shap Smith & Melissa Volansky - Steve Waltien

At the home of Liz & Eric Miller
327 Appletree Point Road, in Burlington's New North End

Notice the difference?


Racine gets in the game (3.00 / 1)
Racine decided he needed to get in the game.  If there is any good to come of this particular mess (and it is a bit of a mess) it will be motivating other candidates to start working now - instead of July 2010.

A few individuals took advantage of the fact that the party organization (the VDP as an entity) has pretty much been adrift since the election.  Virtually no staff (none for the last month), an Executive Director and Chair that knew they were short-timers, and nobody with both the willingness and authority to make many decisions.

The lack of an engaged chair has been an enormous bottleneck, and led to quite a few organizational mis-steps.  With that situation, by all indications, finally behind the party I expect a fairly rapid improvement.

Collapse of party structures after an election isn't anything new this cycle - or unique to Vermont.  The DNC isn't exactly humming along these days, and from all reports many state party organizations are suffering.  At least the VDP is only almost drained of money, not in debt as some state parties are.

Something the GOP has done a much better job of doing - for at least the past 30 years - has been retaining a functioning organization post-election.  The Democratic Party - almost without exception - folds up the tent and goes to sleep for a year.  Howard Dean really did do something different by keeping some continuity from 2005-2008.  It looks like the incoming DNC administration doesn't understand why this needs to continue.


[ Parent ]
Some thoughts (3.00 / 1)
I think this diary sheds important light on a perception problem that needs to be addressed.  I think that the fact that there's a perception of favoritism (both inside and outside the party) is a problem.

Intent doesn't matter - whether intent is good, bad, or entirely non-existent, the reality is that apparently a significant number of people see what appears to be an unfair provision/use of resources.

At the same time, I think MyDog has a point: the other candidates need to get their paperwork in order - though if they have not been informed of the process, and thus may not have not known they needed to sign a voter file contract or pay rent for facilities, we can't necessarily blame them for not following the process.

The lack of paid staff is clearly a problem, and seems to have contributed to this perception issue. Short-timer volunteers with no authority are not to blame - they're a symptom, not a cause. We need to find a way to stabilize funding for critical staff. The DNC's 50-state strategy gave hope that this would happen from the national level, but the new leadership at the national level seems to have chosen a different direction.

At the same time, I'm guessing that someone must have complained (to no avail) to someone who was in a role to fix this problem before the legislature decided to send today's shot across the bow. It's not like the VT leg is known for taking this kind of action, unless they're very deeply concerned.

It seems that this is a complex problem, with many contributing factors, but in the end, somehow an important element was not addressed leading the entire Democratic legislative caucus to call attention to it.

I don't think I would blame any one person in particular, or even any specific group of people, but rather a lack of clearly defined processes, combined with an unfortunate change of direction by the DNC throwing a monkey wrench into the staffing.

This kind of issue might be avoided in the future if written process information is automatically provided to potential candidates as soon as they start a dialog with the VDP about running.

Beware the Everyday Brutality of the Averted Gaze


Same thing with the Republicans (0.00 / 0)
The Republican "Party" is essentially a campaign office for Jim Douglas.  The party needs to be separate from an individaul, and serve as the facilitator and referee.  The party should not equal (or be controlled by) any individual candidate.  That's what Venezuela is for.

[ Parent ]
First out of the gate (0.00 / 0)
I have no dog  (or cat) in this fight, but it seems to me that Markowitz has her campaign act together earlier than the others  and she capitalized on it.  Is that a bad thing?

I guess the question is... (0.00 / 0)
...do you consider fair primaries to be a good thing? DO you think a few people potentially skewing party rules for the benefit of some over others is a good thing?

Your call. For me its an easy one.

And again, the one who's gonna get hurt by all this if an "establishment" candidate narrative sets in?

Markowitz.

It's in her interest to make sure everything looks fair and above board. Right now, it doesn't - hence the letter from legislators.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
Windsor County Chair's report (0.00 / 0)
I asked for comment on this situation from our county chair, Ann Raynolds, and she provided this to our listserve. She doesn't do the blogs, but thought it would be a good idea if her comments were posted back on GMD to further the discussion.

From Ann Raynolds, Chair, Windsor County Democratic Committee

My understanding is that it occurred because no one has been minding the store and an old staffer, Jason Powell who now works for Deb Markowitz, simply used his old staff access code to the file. Ian had already moved on getting the Markowitz campaign to sign a contract, the kind that was used in the 2006 Lt. Gov. Primary. The issue was raised yesterday by Sen. Susan Bartlett and Rep. Floyd Nease at the State Committee meeting.

Let me assure you and everyone that there is NO annointment going on and, if anything, this has hurt Deb. Deb is the only announced candidate and the only one hiring staff and the only one who has signed a contract for use of the Voterfile. We plan to have a Voterfile Audit to see just what has occurred.

Acting Chair Judy Bevans is now in charge and this will be handled properly. Ian had already drawn up contracts for potential gubernatorial candidates to sign as previously in Primaries. Candidates using the office and other campaigns using the office, eg. Senatorial and House campaigns, will pay rent and I am not worried that any future gubernatorial candidatel have been damaged by anything which has already occurred.



Is that accurate? (0.00 / 0)
Ann Raynolds says that Secretary Markowitz is the only announced candidate. I don't believe that's correct, as officially she is still in an exploratory mode.

In any event, I'm fairly certain Senator Racine has explicitly announced. Is that not correct?


[ Parent ]
Doug has already announced (0.00 / 0)
And I'm pretty sure he's filed papers. Susan Bartlett hasn't announced as a candidate, but she specifically said yesterday that she's considering running.

Other than that, I completely agree with what Ann Raynolds says.


[ Parent ]
I just want to say something about this post (4.00 / 2)
I get that some people are pissed off about this.  I don't blame anyone for being pissed off.  But if this piece doesn't say what you think it should, or doesn't focus on the same issues that you think it should, everyone here is free to write their own pieces with their interpretation of events or to write a rebuttal.

But I have no patience for the "republicans love it when we fight" meme.  Seriously.  Republicans are the party of the grand delusion these days.  Let them think whatever the hell they want to think.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


Yeah (0.00 / 0)
I try not to live my life or choose my actions based upon what crazy people might think.

You can read JD's latest at five before chaos. Politics. Godlessness. Music. Films of questionable quality. It's all there, folks.

[ Parent ]
I hate to tell this but... (0.00 / 0)
If you choose your own actions, then...

Eh.  

Never mind :)

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


[ Parent ]
A question of perceptions (0.00 / 0)
The party management doesn't decide who the candidate will be: the voters of the party do.

We hear the opposite all the time, though, from calls that the party should decide to support a gubernatorial candidate, such as Anthony Pollina, without expecting him to go through the primary process, to attacks on the party leadership because "they" haven't come up with a candidate, or a good enough candidate.

What is essential is to be fair and neutral, and to appear fair and neutral. I was in this position just last year because I had two contested primaries in my county. In both cases I reached out to the campaigns and offered to provide access to the Voter File so that nobody could claim that the Party had taken sides in a contested primary, which we're not supposed to do.

The point is, that's what the State Party is doing. I refer you again to Anne Raynolds's comments.

Perception is important, sure, but whose perceptions are we talking about? At this point, it's a small slice of the small subset of the population who are even thinking about next year's election. The Party has moved to address whatever perception problems existed. We shouldn't blow this up to be bigger than it is.


Kristina Althof is at fault here (0.33 / 3)
This is my first time on greenmountaindaily. I'm a frequent visitor to this site and was at part of yesterday's State Committee meeting and have a few thoughts.

What I see here is a continuation of the Kristina Althoff and Jason Powell's disrespect for our Party and their superiors.

Kristina Althoff, being the last Executive Director, was probably the one who assigned access to the voter file throughout the campaign. Has anyone asked her if her access has been taken away? She probably still has it. Or if she didn't assign access and Powell is using the access he had for the Obama campaign, how come that hasn't been taken away? What was Kristina Althoff doing for her three months of employment after election day? Clearly not raising money, right? And clearly not doing necessary 'clean-up' work after the Election (taking voter file access away for people, for example).

Kristina Althoff and Jason Powell - who've been dating since the 2006 campaign when they pulled other manipulative moves, albeit not to this level - are probably reading our postings laughing. They don't care. Who's going to stop them?

I think the first mistake the Party made was hiring Kristina Althoff last spring. She did a piss poor job working for the House Caucus. She then did entry-level work for the Obama campaign, traveling state-to-state, organizing Colleges (real hard, right) and came back to VT because the Party as desperate when their best asset in Jill Krowinski left. The Party felt the need to hire Kristina Althoff and since then, she's systematically tearing apart the Vermont Democratic Party. How on earth was she even qualified?

Think about that. She was at the helm of running every Democratic campaign last year. She had the ultimate say in which candidates got which resources. How is she remotely qualified? Because she helped out a few House candidates? Because she hung up posters of Obama at UNH?

Unbelievable. We need to make sure a qualified is hired for this job - we need someone even better than Jill Krowinski or Jon Copans, which will be hard.


Look (0.00 / 0)
One of the best traits of the left side is its ability to criticize our own. When we stop doing that, we're corrupt. I applaud criticism and investigation of our own. It keeps us honest.

I do all the time ;) n/t (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
:) (4.00 / 1)
But seriously, I'm not an insider at all with any party now, and haven't been since living in VT. It's enough distance to see that the left takes the right wing stance too often about internal problems. We should be trumpeting ferreting out shata, not denying it or keeping it hush-hush. If you don't want to do it from a purely moral stand, it's a win/win to do. So it's stupid as well as immoral to hide it.  

[ Parent ]
Same here (0.00 / 0)
when I worked up in Waterbury, I made a point of avoiding the politics.  Now that I'm working nowhere near Waterbury, I'm just too far removed to follow along.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer

[ Parent ]
And (0.00 / 0)
she'll make the baby Jesus cry! THat's even worse!

You can read JD's latest at five before chaos. Politics. Godlessness. Music. Films of questionable quality. It's all there, folks.

[ Parent ]
More facts, less speculation (0.00 / 0)
First, full disclosure:  I, Nathan Freeman, support Deb Markowitz in her bid for governor.

Second:  Some of the accusations being thrown around rise to the level of slander, specifically those comments referring to non-candidates.  While GMD is not liable for anonymous comments, we should keep our debates from crossing this line. I am specifically referring to the comment by BBQSpareRibs.

Third:  Your full disclosure?  John, word has already gone around the block that you're a Racine supporter, so it's appropriate to acknowledge this when bashing out other candidates.  

Fourth:  Why the use of innuendo?  Your references to the Welch and Leahy campaign are clearly pointed at one particular person.  Why aren't you naming that person?  She knows you just as much as you know her.

Fifth:  Did you ask for facts?  Did you call Markowitz or anyone in her camp?  

Sixth:  Where the heck is Racine?  Chris Healy shows us an accurate update to the upcoming Howard Dean reception.  I am told that Racine's name wasn't on the first invitation because he hadn't responded to the invitation yet.

Seventh:  I have been told that Carleton offered Racine access to the Voter File.  For some reason, he declined.  

Eighth: Reiterating what I mentioned earlier, no one is a candidate until they have filed their papers.  A Democratic Primary doesn't wait for those who are "seriously considering" a bid.  Bartlett and Shumlin have nothing to cry about.  It looks like it's an early year, thanks to Racine's very early announcement.  Bartlett and Shumlin need to file their papers and get to work.

Ninth: Early candidates don't have to wait for anyone.  Racine should be thinking about this, really.  He announced before the inauguration, but it appears that he's not taking his own announcement seriously until the end of the session.  Markowitz is moving; Racine is resting on his laurels.

Tenth: What's thus noise about insider annointment from the Leahy folks, anyway?  If anyone has an insider advantage with Leahy, it would be one-time-staffer, Doug Racine.  Do you really think Team Leahy would dump Racine in a ditch along an old back road?  If you do, what does this say about Racine?

Nate Freeman

Northfield, VT

natefreeman@gmail.com


Sidenote (4.00 / 1)
From a technical level, nothing anyone posts her can be slander.  

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer

[ Parent ]
Correction (0.00 / 0)
Now that I think about it, if someone posts an audio-video recording here, it's possible for it to be slander, but nothing written here could be.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer

[ Parent ]
I'm liable to agree with your first comment (0.00 / 0)
Slander is a transitory act of defamation. Spoken words or gestures are a vehicle for "slander."

Libel is defamation in a published form. Examples are writing, broadcasts, images etc.  If someone records a defamatory statement and publishes the audio, that is "libel."

In any case, both libel and slander fall under the definition of "defamation."


[ Parent ]
You're right (0.00 / 0)
my correction was incorrect.

I guess if someone were to link to streaming video here it could be slander but that's about it.

Musician, Web Designer, Photographer


[ Parent ]
Jesus, Nate (0.00 / 0)
Can't really deal with the content here eh, so you choose to go all nuts?

Fine. Sally forth. Knock yourself out. But I'll say again what the reality is - a reality you can hold your breath and stomp about 'til you're blue in the face:

1. I aint making any of this up. It all comes from multiple sources, and

2. The one who will get hurt by any retro-strategy of institutional "leaning" is, in the long run, going to be Markowitz.

You're clearly either: a) incapable of engaging with this argument, or b) unwilling to engage with this argument. Instead, you're throwing a temper tantrum.

All that tells me is you've got nothing. Zero. Zip. Nada.

Nullius perfectus est


[ Parent ]
disclosure (0.00 / 0)
Nate, I don't think disclosure of support is really called for in this case, it's not an attack on any candidate. I think you are missing the main point. Many points in fact. The main one being that actions like what happened need to be dragged out for discussion so that any potential back room dealing can be discouraged.

I have some leanings towards Racine at this point, but only because there has been no campaigning yet. Events and positions that come from here out will have far greater affect on my final judgement. Mostly I hope there will be a competitive primary that forces candidates to earn our Dem primary votes.

Speaking of that, I even have a hard time hearing that you have already thrown your support to any candidate this early. Is that based on any position or policy? I don't mean that to question your right, just wondering what you could be basing it on this early?


[ Parent ]
The Game Vs. the Job (4.00 / 3)
I think far too much attention -- on the left, the right, and the MSM -- is spent on the game of politics vs. the job of governing (after the election).  Keep an eye on 'em, but we could sure use all this brainpower, at this point, focusing on the solving the current issues we face.  The election cycle will come around soon enough.  There seems to be no reporter in this entire state who can focus on something as deep as the work that needs to be done.  They "get" an election, and love the gossip around the process.  Following the issues and understanding the options takes too long, and seems to be too complicated.    


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