Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

Phillips: Unions made this man a lifelong Democrat – Quad City Times

I drove up to John Shaws house, not quite sure what to expect, and when he answered the door, he admitted he was a little nervous about inviting me into his dining room to talk about his deepest held beliefs. Well figure it out together, we said with a laugh.

Thanks to Shaws easy manner and his ability to put strangers immediately at ease, we slipped quickly and comfortably into conversation about life.

Its a funny thing to be 80, he said. Youll see. It happens fast.

Shaw has an American flag hanging by the front door of the Davenport home where he and his wife have lived for 50 years. Theres a sign in the yard, Proud Union Home. He was the first person to volunteer for my What You Dont Know About Us experiment to turn this column into a Quad-Cities listening tour, talking to people about what they believe and why they believe it.

Shaws political views, he told me, took shape when he was a child, listening to stories about his father. His father worked in the brickyard in Shale City, Illinois, three miles from Viola. As Shaw tells it, his father worked 12-hour days, seven days a week, only taking the first Sunday of the month off when his shift changed. He made $800 a year, Shaw said. My father had a fifth-grade education, but he was a hard worker.

By the time John Shaw was born in 1936 the seventh of seven children his father was better off. His father had a job with a steady wage and steady hours as a member of Local 537 (now International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150). But Shaws brother, Bob, kept the stories alive of how hard his dad had worked in those early years. Bob drove John to the site of the brickyard and the tiny house where they had lived, then to the tile factory in Matherville and the coal mine near Geneseo where his father had also worked. Bobs words were a drumbeat about hard work, about what it means to be a man, and most importantly, what it means to have union representation. Johns father retired at 71 years old and lived off his huge garden and a $100-a-month pension.

Shaw grew up in Green River, Illinois, and graduated from Geneseo High School in 1954. Because he was the youngest, he watched his brothers go off to war. Not all of them returned.

John Shaw looks at this area and sees a place that his family had a hand in building, a place that he literally helped to build. His great-grandfather, Anson Calkins, founded the village of Alpha, Illinois, in Henry County. And Shaw spent his career as a union operator of heavy equipment, running cranes and backhoes.

Like many in the Quad-Cities, Shaw was out of work for a couple years in the 1980s. To get by I did odd jobs for $5 an hour for one woman, and she told seven other women, he said. That was the darkest time of my life and my marriage. I saw other people lose their jobs, their homes, their marriages. The good thing was that a lot of people started businesses of their own when the work didnt come back.

Then unions got stronger, got bigger. I can only remember being on strike for one day in my whole life. We had good representation.

Shaw is and has always been a Democrat, based in large part on his belief in unions. He voted for Hillary Clinton and has voted for the Democrat in every presidential election, except for once when he voted for Republican Richard Nixon. In local and county races, he said, he doesnt vote by party, but for the best candidate, which has included many Republicans. In 52 years of marriage, he said, his wife, Mary, has never told him whom she voted for.

Shaw is motivated by kindness to the poor and tries to be generous. Otherwise, we didnt talk about social issues. Shaw grew up in a church-going household and is an active member of the Methodist church, but Ive never put religion and politics together.

Its an interesting time to be a Democrat, or to be political for that matter. Shaw meets a group of eight or 10 men every morning at Hy-Vee for coffee. The group is about half Democrat, half Republican. A couple of the men like to poke at him for supporting Clinton, but mostly, they tiptoe around the topic. Since Trump was elected, tempers flare quickly on both sides, and men who value each others friendships change the subject to sports or grandchildren or fishing when things get heated.

Politics are so confrontational now, Shaw said. Its more divided now than ever.

If youd like to sit down with me for this What They Dont Know About Us series, send an email to aphillips@qctimes.com or give me a call at 563-383-2264.

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Phillips: Unions made this man a lifelong Democrat - Quad City Times

Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

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PD Editorial: First, define sanctuary citys scope

Sundays Letters to the Editor

Gullixson: Waging war against Muslims, the media and Agnes Grill

Close to Home: Deportation plan has destructive local impact

Calexit would be a disaster for progressive values

Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again

DONNA BRASSET- SHEARER

DONNA BRASSET-SHEARER IS A CULTURAL-ANTHROPOLOGIST WITH A BACKGROUND IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. | February 5, 2017, 12:05AM

| Updated 3 hours ago.

National Security Adviser Michael Flynn has the idea that Irans recent missile test warrants a strong notice to Iran to be very careful about provoking the ire of the Trump administration. The critics of Flynns warning to Iran arent against the idea that the United States has a right to defend itself against an enemy provocation. On the contrary, they are concerned that Flynns hard-line rhetoric against Iran can inadvertently invite a counterproductive escalation of the already frayed tensions between the two countries.

It took years of a hard-won struggle with European allies to negotiate the 2015 Iran deal, which secured an arrangement by which Iran agreed to cease all efforts to advance any nuclear weapons work for 10 years in exchange for much- needed sanctions relief. As a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran was compelled largely against the wishes of its own hard-line factions to comply with the terms of the agreement, even when it meant unrelenting, intensely intrusive inspections of its military arsenals over an entire decade. Countries that have not signed the non-proliferation treaty Israel, North Korea and Pakistan are not under the same obligation or scrutiny to reassure the world that they will not build or use nuclear weapons in a hypothetical war with a rival state.

If there is any doubt that Flynns warning to Iran is not ideologically based, consider his comments in his recent book Field of Fight: How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and its Allies, co-authored by his colleague Michael Ledeen. The U.S. is confronted with an international alliance of evil countries and movements that is working to destroy us, they wrote.

In her New York Review of Books appraisal of Field of Flight, national security expert Jessica Matthews notes that Flynn and Ladeen have singled out Iran, North Korea, China, Russia, Syria, Cuba, Bolivia, Venezuela and Nicaragua as emblematic of the evil countries the U.S. should take to task, lest they eventually succeed in defeating, dominating and destroying the U.S. Both Flynn and Ledeen have been advocating for some time that the nuclear issue aside the goal of U.S. policy toward Iran should be regime change, an idea that has had Iranian hardliners on defensive alert ever since the Islamic Revolution in 1979. In a now infamous quote, Ledeen caught the attention of Irans defense ministry a few years back for its rarely articulated arrogance: Every 10 years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business.

These are the kinds of sentiments evoked by the new administrations Make American great again trope, even as it reveals a remarkably ahistorical perspective on world affairs. One wonders where the learning curve is regarding the utility of throwing a weaker country Vietnam? Iraq? against the wall, or where the rationality lies in listing China or Russia among the evil countries that Flynn believes require every dimension of American national power in a cohesive synchronized manner similar to the effort during World War II to fight an impending war that would be international in scale.

If, in his new role as national security adviser, Flynn continues to hold or worse, to act upon the near apocalyptic worldview expressed in his book, the world is in for some dark times.

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As Mathews concludes in her review, Clearly this is a time for rethinking many long-established claims and convictions, and for new foreign policies As threatening as the external environment is, it could easily become much worse.

If there is a silver lining in this daunting narrative, it surely rests with the worlds citizenries. There may be no better time than the present to forge the international alliances necessary to check the political power of the worlds hard-line military ideologues.

Donna Brasset-Shearer of Petaluma is a cultural-anthropologist with a background in international relations.

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Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

Rep. Brad Sherman compares Trump to ISIS – Washington Times

Rep. Brad Sherman compared President Trump to the Islamic State terrorist group during his remarks on the House floor Friday morning.

Mr. Sherman gave a one-minute speech rebuking the presidents recent executive order that temporarily restricts immigration from seven predominantly Muslim countries that have a history of terrorism.

The California Democrat called the order a Muslim ban that repudiates our values and violates our Constitution, The Daily Caller first reported.

After 20 years on the Foreign Affairs Committee, I think its important to come to this floor and explain how that executive order is harmful to our national security, Mr. Sherman said. Trumps executive order plays right into the ISIS narrative. It says that theres a clash of civilizations and that all Islam is our enemy.

ISIS, which has, perhaps, a few hundred thousand followers, dreams of convincing all of Islam dreams of convincing one and a half billion Muslims that they are at war with America and the West, he continued, using an acronym for the Islamic State.

We do not have a clash of civilizations. We have a clash between civilization and the forces of darkness bent on destroying civilization whether they reside in Raqqa or at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, he concluded.

Mr. Sherman, who represents the San Fernando Valley, has been critical of the president in the past. During a CNN interview earlier this month, he facetiously claimed that the Electoral College votes are controlled in Moscow.

He also said last month that he attended Mr. Trumps Jan. 20 inauguration with a heavy heart in order to show respect for the process, despite many of his colleagues decision to boycott.

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Rep. Brad Sherman compares Trump to ISIS - Washington Times

A Democrat is making waves in Tom Price’s conservative turf – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)


Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
A Democrat is making waves in Tom Price's conservative turf
Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
Price won a commanding victory for another two-year term in November with about 62 percent of the vote. But Hillary Clinton came within a whisker of winning the district, and Democrats hope they can consolidate behind a single candidate to land a spot ...

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A Democrat is making waves in Tom Price's conservative turf - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Democrat Greg Cava tries again in race for open 32nd state Senate seat – Danbury News Times

Photo: Scott Benjamin /The News-Times

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Roxbury Democrat Greg Cava, a Region 12 Board of Education member, is running for the 32nd District state Senate seat recently vacated by Republican Sen. Rob Kane.

Democrat Greg Cava tries again in race for open 32nd state Senate seat

ROXBURY - Greg Cava says the best way to find out what the voters of the 32nd state Senate District are thinking is to get out of your bubble of friends and meet them door to door.

He visited countless homes in the 10 classic New England villages last fall, and now in chilly winter hes doing it again.

Cava, a Democrat from Roxbury who serves on the Region 12 Board of Education, lost to incumbent Sen. Rob Kane (R-Watertown) by a more than two-to-one margin last November in the Republican-leaning district, which stretches from Bethlehem to Oxford and includes such metro Danbury towns as Southbury, Washington, Roxbury and Bridgewater. Kane resigned last month and was approved by the General Assembly recently to become one of the two state auditors of public accounts.

Much is at stake in the special election. The state Senate is deadlocked with an even number of Republicans and Democrats, and a Cava victory would tip it back into Democratic control.

Cava, an attorney specializing in land development, last month defeated Robert Van Egghen at the Democratic convention in Woodbury. He now faces Republican state Rep. Eric Berthel of Watertown and petitioning candidate Dan Lynch of Southbury in the Feb. 28 special election.

Cava said he has raised enough money to qualify for a $72,000 grant from the Citizens Election Program. Berthel also recently qualified.

Republicans reportedly have held the seat for more than 100 years, even though such notable Democrats as Bethlehems Ken Curran, who managed three campaigns for U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, and Woodburys John McCarthy, a former ambassador, ran against Kane, who served for nine years.

Cava said he agrees with Murphy that if you dont tour neighborhoods you get a skewed perception of the electorate.

He said the prime topic has been better-paying jobs in a mostly suburban state that lacks a brain hub such as the Route 128 corridor near Boston which has attracted a large number of millennials who are less inclined to being tied down to buying a home in the suburbs.

Connecticut has a lot of small municipalities and people in most municipalities in the state want a lot of control over what happens in their town, Cava said. They want them to stay the same. We have some regional planning, but each town decides what it will accept. Its not a planning agency that decides where the airport or the waste facilities will be. To some extent it stymies the growth of large industry.

With economic development, we need to think long term, he said.

Cava said Gov. Dannel Malloys First Five/Next Five program is a step in the right direction, since it has provided financial incentives to such corporate giants as ESPN, Bridgewater Associates and Cigna in Connecticut for a commitment to add jobs over the coming years.

But what happens when those incentives end? Cava said.

He said the state needs to develop small business incubators, leverage its premier fiber-optic network and establish more private/public partnerships.

Cava said in the district some of the 1,400 acres at the state-operated Southbury Training School, which is expected to close most of its operations and be ceded to the town, might be ideal for a partnership between a research and development firm and the University of Connecticut.

He said he wants the roughly 100 residents at the facility to be able to continue living there for the rest of their lives.

Cava said he is not thrilled with Malloys performance, but I realize it was a difficult climb entering office six years ago, facing a $3.7 billion budget deficit over a two-year cycle. He spread the pain around and in the process a lot of people have become unhappy.

UConn economist Fred Carstensen recently told CT Mirror that in the face of a projected $1.5 billion deficit for the next fiscal year and pension obligations that are only 35.5 percent funded, taxes will have to be increased.

I dont want to have to raise the income tax, Cava said. But were going to have to look at it being more graduated so that we increase it gradually over a series of years so that we dont have this repeat cycle of deficits. We have to find a balance.

On another topic, he said he supports a Democratic plan to gradually raise the states minimum wage from the current $10.10 to $15 an hour over the next five years.

$15 an hour is barely at a level to sustain people, Cava said.

He said he also supports legislation to make incentives for municipalities to establish tax deferral for elderly residents, which make up a considerable segment of the population in the district.

Under the proposal, Cava said they could keep their taxes level for years and then pay the balance when they sell their homes.

He said, Towns have the ability to do it, but not every town does it.

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Democrat Greg Cava tries again in race for open 32nd state Senate seat - Danbury News Times