No Pains No Gaines » Elections


September 21, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 11:52 pm  

Adrian FentyAs we wait for Fenty to officially become the next mayor, there is no doubt that he put the beat down on the other mayoral candidates during the primaries. As a matter of fact, no mayor has ever destroyed their opponents as soundly as Fenty did with an unprecedented sweep of all the wards, the precincts (all 142!) and essentially the entire city.

Even in Linda Cropp’s backyard Fenty got twice the number of votes than she did. In his backyard, he took home almost 70% of the votes.

With the city’s endorsement, what should he do next? Jonetta Rose Barras of the Examiner gives some suggestions as far as who should join Fenty as he ushers in the “new guard.” And she doesn’t just hint at who.

Try Brenda Donald Walker, deputy mayor for children, youth, families and elders. And DPR Director Kimberley Flowers. Then she writes, “Don’t forget Anne Witt at the Department of Motor Vehicles or Chief Technology Officer and serial District law violator Suzanne Peck. Dr. Gregg Pane is a nice guy; the health department needs more. Patrick Canavan’s magic might return if he were moved from the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs.” She would’ve suggested Deputy Mayor for Operations Herbert Tillery, but he already submitted his resignation.

Well, she was right when she said she wasn’t shy.

Michael Brown is also speaking up. He’s one of several hopefuls for Fenty’s soon-to-be former Ward 4, but anyone who’s been paying attention knows the odds are slim. It’s one thing that Fenty apparently is going to endorse Muriel Bowser who was in his camp during the campaign. Brown? Well, when he decided to quit, he threw some cheap shots at Fenty on his way to endorse Linda Cropp. And now Brown thinks Fenty’s neighbors might want him to replace Fenty? Amazing.

   Speak Your Mind
September 13, 2006
  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 9:50 am  

Adrian Fenty wins the DC mayoral primariesIn a nutshell it wasn’t even a race. It was just a formality. Adrian Fenty is essentially a lock to be the next mayor of Washington, DC after winning 57% of the votes in yesterday’s primaries. Linda Cropp did muster up 31% but without anyone else running with enough substance to steal some of Fenty’s votes, she fell 26 points behind.

Fenty now has to beat Republican challenger David Kranich and Chris Otten of the DC Statehood Green Party. District residents are something like 102% Democrats, so the odds of an upset is about as good as Michael Brown running as an Independent.

September 10, 2006
  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 8:03 pm  

Toucan Printing and Promotional Products has again sent out over voter guides to DC residents that with inaccurate information. Over 150,000 voters guide were sent out instructing citizens to go to the wrong precinct to vote. Makes you wonder who they endorse, huh?

To find out your correct precinct, call the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics at (202) 727-2525 or visit its Web site, dcboee.org.

September 7, 2006
  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 11:02 pm  

Michael BrownWith Fenty gobbling up major endorsements, Linda Cropp grabbing a couple more and hanging on, Marie Johns and Vincent Orange still in denial, mayoral candidate Michael Brown dropped out of the race to be Washington DC’s next mayor. In the process, he took a swipe at Adrian Fenty, not mentioning him by name, but alluding to “a political novice, a man without the courage and strength required to run the city…”

With Michael Brown dropping out, the question is who are his supporters going to vote for now. Brown endorsed Linda Cropp who can use the extra votes next Tuesday as Fenty leads her in the polls convincingly. But with Fenty leading the polls by at least 10 points and Brown only garnering around seven points, if everyone who was going to vote for him voted for Linda Cropp, she’s still going to need Marie Johns or Vincent Orange to drop out and hope their supporters to vote for her.

Next Tuesday will essentially determine our next mayor. Assuming Orange and Johns decide to ride out the storm, look for Fenty to ascend to the top and begin the next chapter in DC politics.

September 4, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, DC Libraries, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 8:22 am  

DC Public LibrariesThere’s only about a week to go before the Democratic primaries. The race has pretty much come down to Adrian Fenty and Linda Cropp, but I’m sure there are still a lot of undecideds out there still trying to figure out who to give their vote.

I was looking up some stuff online and came across a survey given to the candidates (mayoral candidates and other races) about the DC Public Libraries by the Federation of Friends of the DC Public Libraries. The libraries in Washington, DC, definitely aren’t what I consider world class, and electing a mayor who’ll actually do something about it is imperative to me. We recently welcomed Ginny Cooper, the new Executive Director of DC Public Libraries. Her arrival with a new mayor should bring fresh ideas and some kinetic energy to a neglected system.

Speaking of the libraries, one of the things I really was looking forward to is happening already. By mid-September all the neighborhood branches and all of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library will have wireless Internet access for anyone who has a laptop configured for wireless connection (in other words, a wireless Internet card). From Federation of Friends of the DC Public Library:

Wi-Fi Installation Project: We tested it at Georgetown. A couple of places in the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library are “hot spots.” Now it’s time to make all of the D.C. Public Library Wi-Fi! Beginning next week and extending through mid-September, all branches and all of Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library will be brought online as wireless access hot spots. That means anyone with a laptop computer that is configured for Wi-Fi can walk into one of our libraries and log on without using a public access computer. It’s great news for DCPL and even better news for our customers. Once the installation is complete we will broadcast the news of our Wi-Fi availability to the entire Metro area. Signs and brochures for the public will come as Wi-Fi access is installed. Watch as we take yet another step toward being the library our public needs!
August 28, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 1:41 am  

I’ve been reading a lot of articles about the mayoral candidates.  The Washington Post is all over Adrian Fenty.  Bloggers range anywhere from Fenty Fanatics to Fenty Haters to Marie Johns Junkies to Linda Cropp supporters (well, a few of them) to a ton of Linda Cropp bashers to the other two guys who get very little attention.

And it seems like no matter how you write it, twist it, slant it, swear by it or whatever, I still come away knowing very little about how any of them will perform as a mayor.  The 30 second sound bites just aren’t cutting it.  The newspaper articles speak more about the bickering than the platforms.  Some bloggers even say they prefer Fenty just because he’s easier to look at than Linda Cropp.

So who loses?  Well, we the citizens lose because we’re voting in the dark, making the whole “your vote counts” slogan a joke because we really have no idea what we’re voting for!

(more…)

August 21, 2006
  Category: Crime/Public Safety, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 10:59 am  

In this week’s themail from DCWatch.com, former assistant Police Chief Ron Linton was responding to a previous post about Adrian Fenty’s public safety plan. Instead of trying to paraphrase and not getting his point across, I copy-paste and hope he doesn’t mind…

…Let me address a couple of points. In his nearly six years on the city council, Fenty has visited numerous crime scenes in his ward shortly after the crime occurrence. He has met constantly with police and citizens to examine the issues impeding police and has supported police on the street and focused community policing. He recognized and understood the drain on patrol forces, which prompted him, along with Councilman Jim Graham, to introduce a bill in October 2005 to increase the MPD force by five hundred additional officers. I guess since no emergency had been declared the rest of the council wasn’t interested. 

Let’s look at the emergency that was declared. A heinous crime occurred on July 9 in Georgetown. The media played it to the hilt and alarmed the citizens in that area. The political outcry compelled the administration to push the Police Department to put more officers on the beat. But the chief can only significantly increase personnel on the street in the short term by declaring a crime emergency that suspends the notification provisions of the police labor policy. With that declaration, citizens were upset all over the city, which prompted the administration to rush out an emergency crime bill. An emergency is when the unexpected happens that temporarily overwhelms resources available to deal with the occurrence. So the chief pulled three officers from each of the other six districts to meet the Georgetown emergency. Now, lets go back to July 7. Early that morning east of the river there were three homicides, one a double. Already overworked detectives in 6D were even more stressed out to cope with those. But this apparently was not considered an emergency. No extra forces were made available to 6D. Perhaps it didn’t meet the definition of emergency because it wasn’t unexpected and there already were insufficient resources to deal with the ordinary. I’ll leave it to you to ponder the discrepancy in definition. Meanwhile, the council passed the crime emergency bill. It provided for cameras. What number? Oh some number, since no advance thought was really put into how many, where they should go, or what was trying to be achieved. But this is an emergency, let’s pass the bill first, then try to figure it out. Oh yes, while we are at it let’s tighten up the curfew on juveniles , no matter that most crimes are committed by adults. then as an after thought let’s increase the force by some number. Of course it takes a couple of years to get one hundred officers recruited, trained, and certified. But this is an emergency, let’s get cracking.

Now Adrian Fenty didn’t ask me if he should vote no. But had he, I would have said absolutely. Maybe it will be a wake up call that this action by the council and the city administration was nothing more than doing something that would really look good, make citizens feel at least something is being done, and take the pressure off without actually achieving much.. But now the council can really ignore doing something serious about the systemic problems that are wrecking the Metropolitan Police department. Let’s get Fenty for telling us the emperor had no clothes on. This is from Ron Linton, retired assistant chief, Metropolitan Police Department, who supports Fenty’s public safety policy approach.

As Ron Linton mentioned at the beginning of his post, which I edited out to get straight to the point, Adrian Fenty’s plan can be viewed on his website at Fenty06.com.

August 19, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 4:24 pm  

Looks like Linda Cropp get her date with Adrian Fenty, and it’s going to be aired for all of to see. As both camps continued with the staring contest as to who’s going to flinch first, NewsChannel 8 anchor Bruce DePuyt broke the tie and offerd to host the debate for TV.

The hour-long debate between the leading mayoral candidates is scheduled for 4 p.m. next Monday. Then, two weeks later, we head to our voting stations. The polls already have Fenty leading anywhere from 10 to 21 points. To make up for falling behind with the public opinion, Cropp has recently included attacking Fenty in her campaign.

In Blogger News
Linda Cropp Thinks That I Am Gay
Tim, Emily and myself went to Dakota Cowgirl last night after too many $1.00 beers at Fast Eddies. For those who don’t know, Dakota Cowgirl is a gay bar. What I mean is that there are gay men there and it is obviously gay friendly, but it isn’t over the top gay so as to make a straight man uncomfortable… So there we were critiquing the music videos on the flat screen TVs and losing in Keno, when a man comes up to our table and asks if we are registered DC voters and if we would like to meet Linda Cropp.

Election Follow-Up
Adrian Fenty and Marie Johns both support gay marriage, so props to them. Linda Cropp does not support gay marriage in DC, but according to the Blade, “she supports recognition of same-sex marriages issued in Massachusetts, where gay marriage was legalized last year.” This makes no sense and sounds like she’s just trying to please everyone. Yet another reason not to vote for her.

August 17, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 4:33 pm  

The Wire: Thomas CarcettiA friend of mine and I always talk a little about politics, locally, nationally and skeptically. He told me about one of HBO’s original series, The Wire, and I must say – I’m hooked. In season three the focus turned towards the politics. Councilman Thomas Carcetti’s run at mayor is quite fascinating as far as how winning the race affects what comes out of his mouth. Overall, his character does seem ultimately concerned about the well being of all the citizens of Baltimore, but Theresa D’Agostino consistently reminds him that it’s about winning the race.

So, as we get closer to the primaries, we’re starting to hear the things that usually aren’t spoken in a non-election year. Whether they’re sound bites or not is for the listener to determine, but I do keep it in mind as the spin doctors go to work.

Council Chair candidate Kathy Patterson brought up an interesting line of questioning that I wonder about. And it’s something I feel no one really wants to talk about.

(more…)

August 16, 2006
  Category: Our Elected Officials, Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 8:43 am  

Another blogger battles those glaring orange signs. Not Vincent Orange for Mayor. The ones that the Cropp camp are planting wherever they so choose, regardless if they have permission or not.

The Cropp campaign had just put it there – presumably to counteract the affect of the Johns sign that our next door neighbors had put up – with no one’s permission, during the day, when none of us were home. And it’s not like they put it at the edge of the yard close to the street either. Nope. They put it at the summit of the yard. They had to go up an entire flight of stairs and spend several minutes on private property to install that atrocity.

Once we’d established that none of us had invited the sign into our yard, and that we are all still united in our hatred of Linda Cropp (even though we will never agree about Uli), I went outside and pried the thing out of the ground. And then I came back in and spent some time surfing the DC Board of Elections website and getting even more het up about the whole thing.

  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 2:18 am  

Adrian FentyFrom the City Desk blog, there’s a link to survey results about which mayoral candidate is favored to win the race. I just read in a Washington Post article that Fenty had a 10 point lead, but looking at the SurveyUSA Election Poll Number 9891 results, it’s more like Adrian Fenty over Linda Cropp by 21 points.

In every category, from race and gender, age and ideology, education and income, Fenty is a clear-cut favorite. And Linda Cropp is just now calling for a one-on-one debate? What can she possibly say that’s going to cause a mass defection from the Fenty camp over to hers? If anything, Fenty could say something to discourage someone from casting a vote in his favor, in which case my vote would go to Michael Brown.

Right about now, it’s like the Washington Redskins game last year against the San Francisco 49ers. You knew the game was over at halftime, but you finished the game for statistical purposes. You don’t half-step to the end; you continue to play hard. But you know the game is over.

Someone just needs to tell Linda Cropp it’s time to go into save-face mode and be a cordial runner-up. All that attacking and mud-slinging and pouting is only going to make it harder for her to say, “I’m happy for his victory and wish him the best…”

August 15, 2006
  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 11:25 pm  

So far the main focus is on the five candidates running for mayor, but just as important this year is the race for the DC Council Chair. The two candidates this year are polar opposites. There’s the black male living in Southeast DC – Vincent Gray. And then there’s the white female not from east of the river – Kathy Patterson.

I’ve taken a look at both their records and so far, well, I’m going to think about it more before I start sharing my opinions. But recently Tom Smith shared a few opinions about the race.

August 14, 2006
  Category: Elections   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 1:46 am  

Mayoral candidates Adrian Fenty and Marie Johns had a date this past Saturday in a housing complex in Southeast Washington, but they weren’t exchanging endearing looks of love. It was more like spewing toxins at each other.

In a race in which Adrian Fenty looks to be a clear favorite to win, Marie Johns invited him to a one-on-one debate. No Linda Cropp. No Vincent Orange. No Michael Brown. Just the two of them. Fenty’s campaign chose the time and date and then stiff-armed their way into choosing the location.

The barbs are coming out as we get closer to the primaries.

April 15, 2006
  Category: Elections, Washington Redskins   |     Posted By: David Gaines @ 11:34 am  

Darrell GreenHow can anyone live in Washington, DC, and not love the Washington Redskins? More than that, who can live here and not love Darrell Green? One of the most beloved of all Redskins, Darrell Green burst onto the scene when as a rookie, he hauled Tony Dorsett of the Cowboys down on Monday Night Football.

Looks like he’s about to join another team, but not one that I can say ranks high in my book. Darrell Green is being wooed by the Republicans to run for the state Senate from Loundon County. The vote won’t be until 2007, plenty of time for Redskins die-hards to decide if they want to vote for one of our favorite Redskins of all-time, or vote against yet another Republican who’s main interest isn’t in line with what’s best for America.

Regardless, I wish him the best, as long as it doesn’t compromise the American standard of freedom being breached by Republicans all over the country.