Posts with the tag Fundraising
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Source: Huffington Post



Now that the Obama campaign has turned its focus towards the general election against John McCain, leading Democratic fundraisers are predicting that Obama's fundraising could skyrocket even higher than it already has. Specifically, some predict that he could raise $100 million in June:


Leading Democratic fundraisers predict that Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) will raise hundreds of millions of dollars over the next few months if he opts out of public financing and begins raising money for the general election.


Specifically, they say Obama could raise $100 million in June and could attract 2.5 million to 3 million new donors to his campaign.


These fundraisers say Obama could increase his fundraising dramatically because of three factors: a boost of enthusiasm among Obama donors following his clinching of the nomination; the migration of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-N.Y.) donors to his camp; and the mobilization of big Democratic donors who have given little so far this year.


Record-breaking projections give Obama strong incentive to pass up $85 million in public funds that his opponent, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), has said he would accept.


May has been a busy month and it is more than half over. I have a few important things to announce this week.

1. CHANGES IN THE CAMPAIGN ORGANIZATION -- We are going to make several important changes to the campaign organization this week. These moves will bring in some new people with important knowledge, experience and expertise to the campaign and will change the roles of some people already involved with the campaign.   Read More »

Barack, WHERE ARE THOU?

 

Hey, check this out. (click the link: OBAMA VISITS BILLIONAIRES )

WWW.ZOMBIETIME.COM/

THis is so "cool". I begin to believe what the black gent said in above that ALL white men are corrupted. No wonder Senator Dick Durbin asking Federal Security Protection for Barack. It’s so Obama can make common people shut out on information where he is about. With Secret Services Protection, Obama can sneak out the back door to attend these “soup-up” with the riches fundraising events, then telling the common folks like us that his campagn only take donations of $5, $10,$20,$50 from regular everyday people, and those want to know where he goes want to assassinate him like he ever done any thing significant that haven’t already done for by Bill Clinton and other Civic Leaders in this country. Dick Durbin may have been bought, and most of the white Representatives and State Senators/Rep are backing Barack, they smell Barack pandering of the riches's money long before any of us do, therefore we the americans have been sold CHEAP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! If we can see on HillaryClinton website how much and who are attending her fundraising events. The Barack fundraising event are totally "zip up" about who will be there, how much money exchange hands, no media allow inside the building, etc…. Hillary's "secrecy" may not match Obama's secrerative "vaulted" fundraiser events. No wonder why small town like Champagn, Decatur have certain parts of neighborhood falling apart. While people like me volunteering our times and moneys, efforts to help those unfortunates and Obama keep brushing it off as eighter Bill Clinton and Bush failures. Barack was 8 years IL senators and currently US Senator of IL, what did he ever do to change these communities. Wouldn't that the responsibility of IL Senator and US Senator of IL to work on IL's behave first and foremost? Let's check out what Barack did in term of legislatures or law maker, bills passing for those millionaires and billinionares ever attending or associate with these of his fundraising events. SEIZE THE BAY! BARACK. SEIZE THE BAY!

I made copy here incase the website move or shutdown:

     Obama Visits Billionaires Row San Francisco, April 6, 2008 

[UPDATE: Are you looking for the controversial statement about "bitter" small-town Americans which Obama made immediately after this fundraiser? If so, click here to jump to the audio clip and transcript, which are posted at the bottom of this report.]


On April 6, 2008, Barack Obama visited the San Francisco region, zipping from event to event all day long, from one end of the Bay Area to the other.

What? you might ask. How did I miss that? If only I had known, I would have gone to see him.

Well, there's a reason you didn't know about it. Obama didn't want you to know about it. Because the events he was attending weren't for people like you.

They were for people with lots and lots of money, who use that money to gain access and influence with politicians -- especially politicians who might become president.

So although the San Francisco Bay Area is probably the most pro-Obama section of the entire country, with Obama signs and stickers visible everywhere you turn, when Obama himself actually visited his electoral home base, he ignored the hoi polloi -- all the little people who swoon over him -- and instead, he spent the entire day with the rich. According to local gossip columnist Leah Garchik:

In the Haight, stencils of Barack Obama's smiling face are decorating the sidewalk. But in real life, he is turning up in more lucrative venues: The candidate will be around here on April 6, at a series of events that includes three $2,300-a-head maximum-strength fundraisers: Sara and Sohaib Abbasi are throwing a luncheon in Atherton; he'll zip up to Nancy and Bob Farese's house in Kentfield in mid-afternoon; and proceed from there to Ann and Gordon Getty's in San Francisco.

(Let it be pointed out that Atherton and Kentfield are two of the cities with the highest-per-capita net worth in the entire United States.)

And not only were the non-affluent excluded from these events, even the media was disallowed -- as Garchik adds:

Your trusty party-animal-by-proxy has tried to infiltrate these events, but transparency seems to be fogged up. No media eyes allowed on the collection kettles; when the gifts are big, the press is barred.

I wasn't about to let that stop me. When I hear the words "No media allowed," that's when I reach for my camera.

And I set my sights on the grand prize: The fundraiser at the home of Ann and Gordon Getty, on what has come to be called "Billionaires Row," reputed to be the wealthiest block in the world.

But why was I so interested? As pointed out in the Bookworm Room blog,

Obama bills himself as a man of the people, who will beat down big business. ... Given his populist stance, Obama's recent trip to the Bay Area, during which he hobnobbed only with the richest and most famous, is amusing, since it either presents a man with no discernible principles or it presents a bunch of rich people who are allowing themselves to be led like lambs to the slaughter.
...
The 46-year-old Democratic senator started the day in Atherton [really rich people], made his way to Marin [really rich people] and then was due in at the Getty [plutocrats] mansion in San Francisco for another event.

Actually, the political pandering from Obama, on the one hand, and the stupid fawning from the rich, on the other hand, wasn't what I found so irritating about the IJ article. Politics in America is, after all, mostly about power, and Obama looks as if he will have the power and these people think that they can buy access. End of story.

Obama's campaign slogan is "Change" -- declaring that he alone will change the way things are done in politics.

But what kind of "change" is this? The single most insidious aspect of American politics is that candidates often must pander to and do the bidding of the wealthiest Americans, who have the funds to get the candidate elected. It's so commonplace, we no longer think of it as "corruption," but that's basically what it is. So when Obama spends all day doing nothing but going to a series of private fundraisers populated exclusively by the wealthy, the only "change" I feel are the coins jangling at the bottom of my pocket.

And I don't like hypocrisy.

According to this article (and many others), Obama's campaign is claiming he raises his money from small donors:

"When you're given the gift of advocacy, you don't sell it to the highest bidder," Mrs. Obama said. Mrs. Obama stressed how her husband has relied on "regular folks" instead of big donors. Instead of thousand-dollar donations, the Obama campaign has raised millions on small checks of $20 to $50. Mrs. Obama sees this participatory attitude as a new trend.

Wait just a minute there. If you do the math, on just this one day in the Bay Area, Obama went to four events, three of which had $2,300 minimum donations per ticket, and the other $1,000 minimum per ticket. Each of the events, from the various descriptions, held as many as 400 people (the Getty mansion has a ballroom that reportedly seats at least 300). 400 x $2,300 = $920,000 per event, times three events = $2.76 million, plus the other event, which undoubtedly puts him over $3 million in contributions for this one day alone. And who knows how many other similar days he schedules in other parts of the country.

Michelle Obama (and other Obama campaign spokespeople) aren't telling the truth. It seems that a signficant portion of Obama's monthly campaign contributions are coming from "large donors"' -- i.e. rich people, not just the "$20 to $50" donations they're constantly bragging about.


It was not easy finding out exactly where and when to go. The precise time of the fundraiser was never revealed, and the Gettys own many properties in the area. But another local columnist dropped a clue as to where it was happening: "The hottest ticket in San Francisco this weekend may well be the $2,300-a-head reception for Democratic hopeful Barack Obama at the Pacific Heights mansion of billionaire couple Ann and Gordon Getty." Ah, that Getty home -- it could only be the legendary one in the heart of Billionaires Row.

I scoped out the address and took a guess at the time -- late afternoon -- only to find I had arrived over an hour early. I sauntered up to one of the attendants and asked, "Doesn't the fundraiser start at four o'clock...?" "Five," he corrected me. "That's right -- five, " I said, and walked away.

The mansion, seen here in wedding-cake colors, may not look overly impressive at street level, but it sits on the crest of a ridge overlooking the bay; the estate actually cascades down the hillside behind, out of sight from the front façade.

Notice the servants' entrance on the left side of the building -- it'll crop up again later in the report.


Across the street, I found a newspaper (probably dropped by a previous rubbernecker) which featured a photo spread about the Gettys' renowned parties. Since their address is not widely publicized, I suppose the person was using the photos as visual clues to the mansion's location.


Around 4:30, the millionaires started to arrive. And yes, I'll call them millionaires, because I'm pretty sure Ann Getty doesn't have too many poor people in her famed Rolodex.


A no-nonsense guy with a crew cut held The List: all arriving guests, no matter how rich or famous, had to check in with him to confirm that they were approved for admittance.


As the sidewalk swelled with arriving millionaires, the police set up a perimeter around the building. I pointed out to them that the street in front of the Gettys' was still public property -- so couldn't I walk down the block if I wanted to? The police were actually quite nice and said yes, in fact, I could indeed walk right past them down the block to the Getty house if I really insisted. They were only there to discourage any potential party-crashers. Even so, I didn't have the nerve.


Next, the bomb squad showed up, to check the area out in advance of Obama's arrival.


A hippie car parked nearby was given the twice-over by the bomb-sniffing dog, just to be sure.


Every now and then limousines (in this instance, an extraordinarily long one) would deposit Getty guests in front of the mansion.


The real logistical problem with the fundraiser was parking -- there was nowhere to put the scores of cars that were showing up every minute. Guests would leave them idling in the street, and valets would one-by-one drive them off to mysterious distant parking spots.


A surrealistic scene ensued as parking valets in red bow ties ran by the dozens through the surrounding streets -- they'd drive off in a guest's car, park it in an empty spot somewhere blocks away, and then sprint back to the Getty house to pick up another car. I felt like I was watching a nature documentary about the migration rituals of an endangered species.

Behind the cars in the previous photograph you can see part of Billionaires Row. While we're waiting for Obama, let's check it out.


As far as I can tell, this page has the best description of Billionaire's Row, and gives the addresses of some of the Gettys' immediate neighbors. According to various sources, this short stretch of Broadway has more billionaires-per-house than any other neighborhood on Earth. A sample (according to the link):

Norman Stone, heir to insurance tycoon W. Clement Stone, 27xx Broadway.
Peter Haus, Levi Strauss heir, 28xx Broadway. In 1996, Haas' Levi holdings were valued in a news report at $2.2 billion.
Peter Sperling, U. of Phoenix heir, 28xx Broadway. In 2003 he had about $1.5 billion.
Larry Ellison, Oracle founder, 28xx Broadway. In 2003 Forbes set his worth at $18 billion.
Gordon Getty, Getty Oil heir, 28xx Broadway. In 2003 Forbes Magazine estimated his fortune at $2.1 billion.
George Jewett, Weyerhaeuser heir, 29xx Broadway.

...and so on. I've deleted the exact addesses -- click the link for the full list and more details.


Yes, this is a single-family dwelling -- as are all the houses along the block.


The mansions on the north side of the street (where the Gettys are) have the best views, but the structures seem somewhat less impressive to the casual viewer, because what we see as the "front door" of each building is actually the back of the house, layout-wise.


One of the estates reflected in the convex mirror they have in their driveway.


This must be one of the poorer families -- they're not on the list of billionaires linked to above.


This is the view from Billionaires Row -- and the Golden Gate Bridge is just out of the frame to the left.


As five o-clock approached, the crowd swelled. A few key people were let inside, but the rest of the millionaire riff-raff had to wait out on the sidewalk.

Watching the guests arrive one-by-one, I got an unofficial fashion show revealing how the wealthy dress. If I was the Society Pages editor of some high-end publication, I probably would have recognized half these people, who were after all the crème-de-la-crème of the San Franisco social scene. Instead, I'll just give you an off-the-cuff analysis of the many different variations of "millionaire style." (I've pixelated the eyes of each guest for privacy, since this wasn't a "protest" and this report doesn't exactly count as a gossip column.)


Here we see the "no-nonsense successful businessman" look. Very aggressive posture, go-get-'em attitude. Probably a venture capitalist or an investment banker.


Here is a good example of "old money" style. Aristocratic.


Definitely two of those "dot com millionaires" you hear about. Young, proud of themselves.


The "Mom, do I have to go?" "Yes, we're grooming you for a life of success" look.


One half of a glamorous power couple from a bygone era.


Very daring. The "I paid my $2,300 and the rest of my family is dressed decently so I can wear whatever I want" look.


Ooooooh. Now here's someone to watch out for, whoever he may be and wherever he was going. Fancy clothes are for mere millionaires and social climbers. When you get past a certain level of wealth, you inevitably assume the "casual billionaire" style, most famously expounded by Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. It's like -- I don't even have to try.


Shortly after 5pm, Obama's motorcade zoomed up. Here's a video of the thrilling scene.


Our small cluster of onlookers had figured out that Obama would probably sidestep the paying crowd directly in front the building, so we positioned ourselves closer to the servants' entrance where we guessed his limo would pull up. And our guess turned out to be correct -- Obama got out of the car and was about to quickly slip into the building when the shouts from our group caught his attention.


He did that fake "I recognize you" gesture that politicians always do.


He came over and shook the cop's hand.


A grand total of one San Francisco eccentric had showed up -- an Obama supporter in a glittery costume. All the other members of our small group of onlookers were random passersby who stumbled on the fundraiser by accident. His costume caught Obama's eye and earned him a handshake as well.


He briefly exchanged niceties with a few of the people there.

For more Obama pictures from this event, see the Seven Things About Obama I Never Knew Before posting at zomblog.


And then he was taken into the building -- through the servants' entrance.

When I pointed out this rather ironic detail in the zomblog posting linked above, a few commenters felt that my observation was somehow tasteless or offensive. I don't get why. I've read biographies of various famous black performers from the mid-20th-century, and a common incident that crops up in many of these biographies is when the performer would get invited to entertain at a private party in a rich person's mansion -- and still be forced to enter through the servants' entrance, simply because they were black, even though they were the star of the show. I realize that in this instance Obama was shunted to the side and hidden from the guests most likely to allow him to make a grand entrance later on. I just thought it was a weird echo of the past.


After Obama was inside, they made the millionaires line up as they let them in one-by-one. For some reason, there's something strangely gratifying about seeing millionaires forced to stand in line. They probably don't have to do that very often.


I -- along with the rest of humanity -- was of course excluded from the Getty mansion. So this long-distance shot of the interior of the building will have to be our substitute for a ticket to the fundraiser. We can see, for example, that the Gettys have a very shiny floor, an arched doorway, and a big picture window. And a mean-looking doorman.


A tiny smattering of media did in fact show up -- three local news crews stood across the street or down the block and used the Getty mansion as the backdrop for short segments about Obama's swing through the Bay Area. But that was it. They didn't probe any further. This newscaster stood underneath an eccentric samurai-robot statue perched in front of a nearby house.

The few other rubberneckers who had been there seemed so intoxicated with the idea of Obama that they didn't seem at all bothered that he was pandering to the dictates of the wealthy -- just like all the other candidates -- and that his insistence that he'll bring "change" appears more and more to be just another hollow campaign slogan.


UPDATE: Less than an hour after these photos were taken, Obama addressed the assembled guests at a very similar fundraiser held just a few blocks away at the mansion of Alex Mehran, and said a now-notorious statement about "bitter" small-town Americans. An audio of his speech was posted at Huffington Post, but it is an overwhelming 50 minutes long. Luckily, I now have a 44-second long, short and small mp3 clip of just the crucial portion of his talk, which you can listen to by clicking on the audio player below:



Here is a transcript of Obama's words (this is an EXACT transcript -- versions posted elsewhere had some minor errors):

You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, a lot of them -- like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them. And they've gone through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not. So it's not surprising then that they get bitter, and they cling to guns, or religion, or antipathy toward people who aren't like them, or anti-immigrant sentiment, or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.






(Click here to return to the main zombietime page.)





-For Your Eyes Only!
http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-g7Mm1MErc6Mvj3bGuj5EgBw-?cq=1

Mrs. Clinton, of New York, currently has $10.3 million in outstanding primary debts but only $9.5 million available to cover them, leaving an $800,000 shortfall at the end of March. In February, the Clinton campaign had unpaid bills of $8.7 million and $11.7 million in cash.

By comparison, Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, who raised $42 million in March, had $43 million in cash for the coming primaries and a campaign debt of less than $660,000 at the end of March. Mr. Obama is spending 75 cents for every dollar he is taking in; Mrs. Clinton is spending $1.10.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/22/us/politics/22donate.html

Jim Callahan
Orlando, FL
Tickets for Michelle Obama's visit to Tallahassee, Florida at The Moon, 1105 E Lafayette Street on Wednesday, April 9, 2008, from 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. are only available from the host committee!!! DO NOT PAY ONLINE!!! Contributions to Mike Underwood's Christmas Fundraising Campaign are gratefully accepted, but will not count toward purchase of tickets. Please cancel those transactions if necessary. Tickets are available at three price levels: $250, $125 and, for students with a valid ID, $40. The $250 tickets are for admission to the ground floor, where the speaker's platform will be, while the $125 tickets and the student tickets are for the balcony. Send checks or inquiries about credit card payments to Patsy Palmer, 1117 Myers Park Drive, Tallahassee, FL 32301, patspalm@aol.com, to Don Hinkle, Hinkle & Foran, 1545 Raymond Diehl Road, Suite 150, Tallahassee, Fl 32308, (850) 205-2055, or to Commissioner Andrew Gillum at gilluma@gmail.com.

Mike Underwood
munderwood@nettally.com
850-566-5968

Contribute at least $1 to my personal fundraising campaign to show unity in the fall against John McCain.  Now is a critical time to show that we as Democrats are united and will support the eventual nominee whoever he or she is.

Click the link below and pass it around .. or even better start your own personal fundraising page.

Contribute

Thank you,

 Frank George

Michelle Obama will be in Tallahassee, Florida at The Moon, 1105 E Lafayette Street on Wednesday, April 9, 2008, for a coffee, running approximately from 11 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. The host committee is offering tickets at three price levels: $250, $125 and, for students with a valid ID, $40. The $250 tickets are for admission to the ground floor, where the speaker's platform will be, while the $125 tickets and the student tickets are for the balcony.

Send checks to Don Hinkle, Hinkle & Foran, 1545 Raymond Diehl Road, Suite 150, Tallahassee, Fl 32308. For student tickets contact Andrew Gilliam at gilluma@gmail.com. If you need to use a credit card, please call Don's assistant, Patti Liedy at (850) 205-2055 and she will fax or e-mail you a donation form.

This is an excellent opportunity to galvanize and energize support in the Florida Big Bend area. This is also a testament to how successful Tallahassee was in showing that support on Barack's two visits last year. We need a good turnout so our area will continue to be a stop heading into the Fall. Of course, we also need to bring in new support to ensure that Barack Obama is the Democratic nominee and the next President of the United States!

This week, I came across the saying "Before you try to tell someone how much know, show them how much you care." I think that sums up what every political candidate should do when trying to connect with voters.

Early last week, I spoke with a family in DuBois about my campaign and what they felt was the biggest problem they are facing. Without hesitation, the mother said "Mark, the rising cost of gas and heating oil is making it tough on my family." Another person told me when we talked about the stimulus checks that Washington will be sending out "I hope I get mine soon, I need another tank of oil to get through the cold months.".

When you hear these two stories, do you think Washington cares and understands? Members of Congress touted when the stimulus package was passed "we’re giving back money to the people so they can go out and buy something". The reality is that many people will use the funds to pay off existing debt or buy basic necessities. And, if everyone in Washington would be honest, the stimulus package was the incumbent members of Congress sending you a check in an election year so you’ll remember them in November.   Read More »
Help elect the outsider! Jason Lee Jones for Congress!

http://www.jones08.com
http://www.actblue.com/page/jasonleejones

Jason Lee Jones for Congress will be hosting a Meet and Greet on Saturday, Feb 23 at 7:00 PM.

This will be an opportunity to meet Jason, pepper him with questions and pour salt on the subsequent wounds. Campaign materials we be available for you. There will also be a buffet provided during the event.

We ask that you please bring your friends and neighbors.

Donations are encouraged! The only way we can survive and compete is by having the finances necessary to run a credible campaign - it is people like you who can make it happen!

Julie's Supper Club
1123 Folsom Street
San Francisco, CA 94103
(415) 864-1222

From Your Friends at Jason Lee Jones for Congress
1(415) 244-8327
info@jones08.com
A thought. Is it possible that republicans are funneling donations to Obama via internet,because they are afraid of Hillary and want to exhaust the process of picking a nominee?

It’s hard to tell what going on at the Republican National Committee (RNC) on December 5, 2007.  While Robert M. “Mike” Duncan (RNC Chairman) was hoping to create a profitable fundraising campaign, it appears that he missed the mark and has provided dedicated Democrats and Progressives with a good laugh.

 

Holiday parties around the country are likely producing the same experience as a recent gathering of mostly Democrats in Larimer County.  We went around the room comparing who did, and did not, get Mike Duncan’s plea for donations.

 

Be it amazing, perplexing or even pathetic, a large of number of us had that letter at home, or had even brought it to the party as a conversation piece.  There was an abundance of humor and criticism available after many eyes picked through this correspondence.

   Read More »
To fellow democrats,

Barack Obama is more than just hype. He's more than just good TV. He's more than a star. He's a real candidate for the presidency and may just get the Democratic nomination. This weekend Newsweek released a new poll showing his lead in Iowa - ahead of Clinton by 4 points. Today, Obama's campaign released their 3rd Quarter fundraising numbers - $20 million with $19 million to be used in the Primary!

People aren't donating for charity. People believe Barack's the best candidate - with the right experience, judgement and intelligence to run the country. People want a fresh voice. Money is not the most important aspect of the race but it's indicative of the real desire for change.

2007-10-01-obama.jpgThe Huffington Post has learned that Senator Barack Obama, D-IL, raised a total of $20 million during the third quarter fundraising period, $19 million of which can be used for the primary election.

The money represents a decrease from the $33 million he raised during the second quarter period, but is believed to match the total raised by his primary rival for the Democratic nomination, Senator Hillary Clinton, D-NY.

Obama's fundraising was aided by approximately 93,000 new donors who contributed to the campaign during the past three months. The decline in the money total was attributed to the traditionally slow fundraising months of July and August.

To date, the Obama campaign has raised more than $78 million, nearly $75 million of which is slated for the primary election. In addition, more than 350,000 people have donated to Obama since he announced his presidential candidacy.

SOURCE 

This Blog is just a few observations about the Second Quarter fundraising totals. Of course I'll lead with the cavernous comparison of the two frontrunning candidates in each Party's totals, but beyond of the raw numbers I think the most interesting bit comes from the previously people-powered McCain campaign as an example of the force driving the disparity in small donations for each Party.   Read More »
(this diary was written by a great Friend and Blogger- Boadicea and is posted with her permission. You can see more of her writing at Texas Kaos and Boadicea.)

What's that you say? What the heck is "Blogosphere Day"?



The tradition we now know as Blogosphere Day began in 2004 when, in a surprise statement, incumbent Rep. Jim Greenwood (PA-08) announced his retirement. Democratic challenger Ginny Schrader, with $7000 in the bank, came to the attention of the nationwide blogosphere via the front page of DailyKos, and over $30,000 poured into her campaign that day. Just three weeks earlier, a brand new fundraising platform for Democrats -- ActBlue -- was launched, and quickly adopted by those raising who were raising funds for Ginny Schrader.   Read More »
If appropiately organized I could be inclined to provide what assistance I can for any labor based benefits (subject to negotiating, scheduling, and finances). The issues are related to what is normally considered and what should be considered.

This is open to suggestion.

Based on experinence in Central, Pa (which is similar to where the Democratic party had trouble in OHIO and Alambama):

Governor Rendell has made strong good arguments addressing tax loopholes where oil companies are cheating the state,and people out of revenues by fraudulently claiming revenues were derived in other states when they are derived here in Pa.

While the local Republicans sacrifice the people's interests on those issues by use of Reaganomic rhetoric without even addressing those matters(urgent since we face transportation cuts to public bus service and layoffs due to Republican stonewalling, and where bus service is being cut back from 9:55PM to approxiately 5:55PM)

Though there seems to be many people with Democratic leanings, they are all too often not registered to vote.

Reminding me of the Rainbow Coalition efforts to get people to register (People can not vote Democratic if they are not registered to vote).

I am also highly critical of what I call Democans as most oftne they have not bettered matters.

America must enter the modern age rather than represent the past, a past in which some of society advances at the expense of other parts of society.