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Missouri news, views, and issues - Show Me Progress

Uh, Claire, you got to dance with them what brung you

  

by: Michael Bersin

Thu Jan 21, 2010 at 21:34:20 PM CST


Previously:

Not really. They forgot about Joe, Evan, Ben, and Mary

Claire Never Fails to Disappoint, Does She?

The Johnson County, Missouri Democratic Club meets monthly on Thursday evenings in downtown Warrensburg. The membership of the club includes Democratic Party activists and a significant number of the members of the Johnson County Democratic Central Committee. A motion addressing health care reform, and specifically, Senator Claire McCaskill's (D) recent statement, in the aftermath of the Massachusetts special senate election was offered under new business by a member of the club and central committee.

The monthly meeting of the Johnson County Democratic Club in Warrensburg, Missouri.

The motion:

January 21, 2010

We, the members of the Johnson County Democratic Club, are disappointed by the recent statement Senator Claire McCaskill made after the special senate election in Massachusetts.  We are especially disappointed in the following:

As I said to somebody last night:, everybody needs to get the Washington wax out of their ears and listen and pay attention that people out there believe that we are going too far, too fast. (January 20, 2010)
 
Actually, the results Massachusetts indicate that by not passing health care reform and proposing a watered-down version the Democratic-controlled Congress has not gone far enough and has gotten there much too slowly.

First, polls show that a majority of voters for the winning Republican candidate support a single payer option.  

More importantly, voting patterns reveal that the strongest areas of support for President Obama in Massachusetts had a turnout lower than the statewide average.  In other words, the results in Massachusetts suggest that Democrats did not vote in necessary numbers because the democratic-controlled Congress has not gone fast enough and far enough in enacting the agenda we elected them to pass.

We, the members of the Democratic Club of Johnson County, worked last year for health care reform and regulation of our financial institutions and government support for working people.  

If our elected officials do not feel that the Democratic agenda is worth fighting for after the loss in one special election, we will surely lose in November.  

We, the members of the Johnson County Democratic Club, call on our elected officials in Washington, Senator McCaskill and Representative Skelton to remember that they are Democrats first and enact the agenda we all fought for in 2008.

If they fight for us in Washington now, we promise we will fight for them in Johnson County in 2010 and 2012.

There were approximately forty individuals in attendance. These are the local people who go door to door, make the phone calls, make the literature drops, register new Democratic Party voters (in large numbers), and write the campaign contribution checks. These are also some of the people who know people without insurance or have family members without access to affordable health care or who are without access to affordable health care themselves. And they didn't just work their tails off in 2008. These are the people who are and were the lead volunteers who do and did the heavy lifting in 2004 and 2006, too.

After extensive discussion the motion passed overwhelmingly by a voice vote. There was some dissent.

The club will forward the motion to Senator Claire McCaskill, Congressman Ike Skelton (D), and Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan (D).

As Richard Trumka of the AFL-CIO said a while back:

Michael Bersin :: Uh, Claire, you got to dance with them what brung you
...but to our friends, the leaders in every level of government who aren't afraid to stand up for workers, well we want them to know that so long as they stand with working people the American labor movement will always, and I mean always stand with them. [applause]

And then there's that other group. Those fair weather friends who can't seem to decide, quite frankly, which side they're on. I'm talkin' about politicians who love to have our help come election time. They love to see us makin' those door knocks, those telephone calls and passin' stuff out on their behalf, and tellin' all our members how they ought to jump up and down and vote for them. But then they seem to forget about us after the votes are counted. Now you know who I mean. They've been in the news a lot lately. They're the ones who say that they're all for health care reform so long as it doesn't offend the insurance companies and the drug companies. They get those big contributions from both and then they pretend this is somehow about principle, that they just happen to be defendin' those big companies.

They're the same people who say that the way to pay for health care isn't to tax the rich, it's to tax our health care benefits. They're the ones who lack the guts to tell the truth. That the only way that we're ever gonna get a handle on the health care crisis is by creating a public system that puts people before profits, not the other way around. [applause]

Well..., we need to send them a special message. That is, you may have forgotten what labor, the labor movement did for you when you got elected, but, by God, we're not gonna forget. And if you stab us in the back on the Employee Free Choice Act and health care and a bunch of other things don't you dare, don't you dare ask for our support next year, whenever you're running. [applause] We need people who stand up for workers. [applause]....

Massachusetts is what happens when a very unhappy base sits on its hands come election time. It ain't pretty.

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Claire does not care about the worker bees she is sure they have nowhere else to go.. (0.00 / 0)


Lake Lady

Here's the problem (0.00 / 0)
Senator Claire McCaskill in Sedalia - May 27, 2009 - part 4

...Senator McCaskill:...And, I, I'm pretty much getting chewed on by the right and left constantly. [laughter] I figure I'm about right for Missouri, maybe. Because the left is unhappy with me, my daughter is so liberal it's embarrassing, and she's so mad at me she won't speak to me. [laughter] She's nineteen and she lives in New York and she said "I'm never coming home." I said, "That's just fine." [laughter] No, I didn't really say that. But at times I feel that way. She chews on me all the time because she thinks I'm too moderate. And then obviously the right, folks on the right think I am completely wet, all wet about some of my positions.

So, but I really do try and make decisions, I vote against my party's leadership probably more often than almost any other senator. And it's not because I'm trying, it's because I try to look at every issue based on the policy and not the politics. And it's harder than it looks 'cause there's a lot of pressure to do the politics.  So, I try to do it on policy, that's why I end up on the other side of the aisle sometimes, and, and it gets a little uncomfortable, but I think that's what most Missourians want. They want somebody who's independent, who's gonna look at it on the policy and not necessarily on the party line. [applause]...

Not all opposing views are equal. You can't equate the validity of view on the so called "left" that problems with our very expensive health care delivery system need to be addressed and overall costs reduced by a public option or single payer with the view on the wingnut right that the system is just fine as it is and we should do nothing because Obama wasn't born in America, he's a Muslim, and besides, the Tenth Amendment trumps everything. The "left" in this case is searching for a rational solution, not espousing theories about George Herbert Walker Bush's personal involvement in JFK's assassination. The right is batshit crazy and babbling incoherently. There is a difference.

It would make sense that someone who is afraid of the noise from the right's "Mighty Wurlitzer" continually pulls the Overton Window to the right for them. We're deeply disappointed and unhappy because we all thought we had helped elect someone in 2006 who wasn't afraid.

543,895 votes


[ Parent ]
Devilstower at Teh Orange Eloquently Rips Her A New One (0.00 / 0)
Ah yes, our shitty junior Senator:

http://www.dailykos.com/storyo...

She will not get a dime of my money nor my vote.  Way to go Claire, I'm as hard core a Dem as they come.  I've held my nose and voted for some shitty-ass Dems in my day.

No more.  The buck stops with you.  You didn't run as some big progressive, change agent, you're much to scared shitless to do that.  You ran as "I'm not Jim Talent".

Guess what?  I'd be hard pressed to see much of a difference between the two of you anymore.

I don't expect you to be Russ Feingold or Barbara Boxer but I also don't expect you to be Mary Landrieu or Ben Nelson.

It would be nice to primary your ass back to the private sector but alas, this is Missouri and we have no Dems in the pipleline to hold you accountable.


[ Parent ]
If the Democrats in DC think we will support the forever they are wrong (0.00 / 0)
I sure hope staff of the DC Democrats are reading these posts.

If Claire (and right now Robin) believes we worker bees are going to keep coming back and work for them and then they listen only to people waving tea bags, they don't understand the lesson of Massachusetts.

Mike got it right above.  The opposition to health care reform is bat shit (and that may be a slander on bat shit) crazy.  We aren't.

We didn't insist on single payer (and probably should have).

We didn't insist on a public option (and probably should have).

However, if they think I'm going to work for them and give them my money and then they talk about how what the compromise to the right is maybe too far and they got there too fast, they lost this yellow dog Democrat!

I will fight (and I have a record) for REAL Democrats, but I won't do a damn thing for a Democrat who only hears people waving tea bags.

I'm not THAT stupid!

And, a lot of people like me just sent them a message in Massachusetts.    

 


[ Parent ]
Jim Dean can prove that Mass. voters don't want health care reform to go slower. (0.00 / 0)
Dean e-mailed Josh Marshall at TPM. In response to the claims by some Democrats that the election shows Mass. Dems want reform to go slower, Dean wrote:

They're wrong again -- and we can prove it.

We had Research 2000 poll voters immediately after the Election ended: Even Scott Brown voters want Democrats to be bolder and they want healthcare reform that includes a public option.

You read that right. By a margin of three-to-two, former Obama voters who voted for Republican Scott Brown yesterday said the Senate healthcare bill "doesn't go far enough." Six-to-one Obama voters who stayed home agreed. And to top it off, 80% of all voters still want the choice of a public option in the bill.

The message is clear, there is only one way out of this mess if Democrats want to win in 2010. It's time to pass healthcare with 51 votes in the Senate using the budget reconciliation process. And it must include the most popular piece of bold reform: the choice of a public option.



Jim Dean is getting the word out. (0.00 / 0)
Someone e-mailed me this petition from Democracy for America and CREDO Action. Feel free to click the link and sign.

In the 48 hours since Democrats lost Ted Kennedy's Senate seat, a whopping 150,000 people signed a petition telling congressional Democrats not to learn the wrong lesson.

Americans want faster, bolder, more populist change -- not slower change, regardless of what Joe Lieberman says.

Momentum is growing for Congress to pass the public health insurance option by using a Senate procedure that only needs 51 votes instead of 60.

Can you add your name telling Democrats to be bolder -- and pass a bill with the public option? Click here.

The New York Times and others have reported on this petition, which we launched with our friends at Democracy for America and CREDO Action. We'll soon deliver signatures to congressional offices, so please pass this email to your friends so our numbers grow.

Speaking of numbers, yesterday we announced some stunning new poll results from Massachusetts that all Democrats need to see.

We polled people who voted for President Obama in 2008 and then for Republican Scott Brown for Senate.

   * On health care, they overwhelmingly support the public option (82%) and oppose the Senate bill because it "doesn't go far enough."

   * On the economy, by 2 to 1 they think Democrats put special interests ahead of the little guy -- and they overwhelmingly want stronger regulation of Wall Street.  

   * And 57% say Democrats are not "delivering enough on the change Obama promised."

Why did they vote for Scott Brown? They're angry, and Democrats weren't seen as fighting for the little guy. Brown pretended to be a populist, so he won.

Can you sign our petition telling Democrats to be strong populists in 2010 -- and to start by passing the public option?

Then, please send this to your friends.

Thanks so much.

-- Stephanie Taylor, Adam Green, Aaron Swartz, Andrew Perez, Natasha Patel, and the PCCC team



[ Parent ]
UH, CLAIRE (0.00 / 0)
Please tolerate the commercial at the beginning; they're part of all MSNBCs clips.  This segment about what Dems are &aren't communicating to voters is worth watching.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21...

Firedoglake links to us (0.00 / 0)
The Writing Is On The Wall. But Who's Reading It?

...And yet, here we have Democratic consultants like Mark Penn and Lanny Davis, and Senate Democratic caucus members Joe Lieberman, Evan Bayh, Claire McCaskill, and Mary Landrieu insisting that Obama's underreach is somehow too ambitious and scary for the people who voted for him.  Interestingly, Bayh is the only one of those Democrats who is actually running for office right now...



543,895 votes

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