Sunday, July 31, 2005

Akron's Filthy Lucre

According to yesterday's BJ (yes, I know. It was a hard day) the Akron area raked in serious highway funds in the recently passed Federal transportation bill.

Given that highway bills are traditionally porkfests and given that the recent CAFTA vote was notable for politicking, arm twisting and pork bribing, one has to wonder where the money came from. Brown and Ryan -- both famously protectionists -- voted against the bill. My suspicion is that we can thank Steve LaTourette.

LaTourette changed his vote very very late in the game to provide the apparent margin of victory (at least he prevented the North Carolina ghost vote from being determinative.) By my reading of this map, his district probably includes or at least is influenced by the project in Stow. Voinovich and DeWine are taking credit for the projects, but given the timing of LaTourette's switch, you gotta wonder.

So let's enjoy our new transportation hubs as we watch more manufacturing jobs move south. Thanks, Steve.

Friday, July 29, 2005

Friday Random Ten

I haven't been at this long enough to actually get memed, but one meme that has stood the test of time is the Random Ten; tell your i-Pod to shuffle and post the first ten songs. A couple of blogs I frequent still post a random ten or something like it regularly. Even on a mostly political blog like this, it humanizes the participants somewhat. Or it will just let you all know how cool I am.

I don't actually i-Pod; a concession to becoming a one-income household. But I do have an MP3 program on my computer that lets me shuffle the stuff I have loaded onto it. I've never done it before -- my tastes are quite eclectic and a random selection of even the small slice of my music collection that I have loaded so far yields some jarring juxtapositions. But I am drawn to the idea, so here goes:

"Return of the Grievous Angel" -- Gram Parsons
"Myxamatosis" -- Radiohead
"Pinhead" -- The Ramones
"Pirates (So Long Lonely Avenue)" -- Rickie Lee Jones
"Saint Simon" -- The Shins
"Things Change" -- Dwight Yoakum
"Y Control" -- Yeah Yeah Yeahs
"Bed Bed Bed" -- They Might Be Giants
"Who Needs the Peace Corps?" -- Mothers of Invention
"High 5 (Rock the Catskills)" -- Beck

And yes, I did actually listen to this mess in this order

Follow the Paul Hackett Endgame from the Ground

My essential blogging philosophy since starting this a couple months ago has been 1) stay as local most of the time and 2) find untrodden ground whenever possible. I haven't covered Coingate or BWC or Steelyard Commons because they are covered better than I could elsewhere.

I haven't mentioned the Paul Hackett race for much the same reason, though I have been following it in other blogs. But right now one Bob Brigham, who decribes himself as "an old field guy," is blogging live on the ground in Oh-2nd on Swing State Project. I will be as glued to this as the kids and getting-ready-for-vacation allows. It's the must-read of the weekend.

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Janet Creighton is not Tom Noe

A couple of blogs are piling on Canton Mayor Janet Creighton due to an inquiry in Stark County over property valuations. Yes, we are talking about property valuations. Hoo boy. Can we stand the excitement. Needless to say, for this to be a topic, someone thinks they catch the whiff of scandal.

Briefly, the current County Auditor, a Democrat, is wondering why a bunch of properties were appraised down in 2000, then appraised up again in 2003 – all while his Republican predecessor was still in office. His predecessor, Janet Weir Creighton, now the mayor of Canton, was active in Bush’s campaigns in ‘00 and ’04.

Still awake? Lets bring in Jeff Seeman (writing not on his blog, but on Grow Ohio) to spice things up. As I said, a number of properties were appraised down in 2000 – mostly in three jurisdictions. After noting that the three jurisdictions involved were among the wealthiest four in the county, he goes off as follows:

These same wealthy people had their property taxes INCREASED in 2003 back to the proper levels. One would think that perhaps this was simply correcting a wrong, and maybe it was....unless you happen to remember what Creighton was telling supporters during the 2004 Presidential campaign.

At a Bush rally in 2004, Creighton was the head cheerleader. The main focus of her speech was obviously the war...the other one was how Bush would lower their taxes.
My campaign had a person on the inside taking notes on all the speeches (mainly in the hopes my opponent would take the microphone, which he did not). Creighton blamed property tax increases on the "obstructionist Democrats", and promised that Bush would continue to lower them.


Add it all up yet?

* Taxes were the issue in 2000, Creighton gave breaks to the rich and pushed Bush's tax-break agenda.
* One year before his re-election, she had them raised again, outraging the rich, then promised them that the Republicans could lower them again.

In the end, she appears to have manipulated the system to help her party win....in the most important county of the most important state of the most important election ever.

General Washington summarizes with even higher invective on Ohio Watch:

If anyone in local politics qualifies as a partisan Republican hack in this area - it's Janet Creighton. As far as missing documents - I wouldn't necessarily put it past these people to destroy evidence of wrongdoing. But regardless of that possibility, they've just provided another perfect example of how the Culture of Corruption doesn't only infect the statehouse, it's infecting at least one community in Ohio as well - one that cannot afford it anymore than the rest of the state. Canton would do well to see her gone from office.

So there we go. Janet Creighton tried, convicted and sentenced, and we haven't even brought in the special prosecutor yet. Well, I dissent.

I have three problems with all this. First, it’s premature. The posts above were based on the first newspaper story about the current auditor looking for someone to investigate who doesn’t have an appearance of conflict. Yes, it’s the blogosphere and all, but declaring someone a participant in the Culture of Corruption® based on a story that an investigation is imminent is a little rich.

In fact, already the story is getting muddier. The centerpiece of yesterday's story in the Canton Repository (no long available on the website, but check out the blog posts) was a former high-level appraiser claiming to have received orders to lower appraisals. Today another top-level appraisal denies any such order. In a day we have gone from "sounds like something ain't right" to "sounds like someone's talking shit."

Second, the logic of the plot escapes me. If you are going to don the tinfoil hat, at least spin a good yarn. This one makes no sense. Consider, Creighton is campaigning for Bush in the waning days of the Clinton administration. She wants wealthy people to believe they would be better off under a Republican administration, so she . . . lowers taxes? Then in 2003, again for the benefit of Bushco, she . . . raises them? Let me here you all say . . . Wha?

Finally, there is Janet Creighton herself. Unlike Jeff, I won’t claim to “know her personally,” but I do know her by reputation. I worked in the prosecutor’s office for five years and her reputation for both integrity and competence was beyond reproach in my – very Democratic – office. She was known as a party loyalist, but neither a rigid partisan nor a movement conservative. She was well-known for her ability to work with officials of all political stripes. She was, in the mold of most R politicos in Stark, a pro-business moderate.

I must say that it’s been some years since I had day-to-day contact with the Stark political scene. It could be that in the intervening time Janet Creighton has jumped the ethical tracks, though I think it unlikely. This post isn’t about I’m right and they’re wrong, this post is about not going off half-cocked. I am a firm advocate of Democrats being the adults in the room, not because it come naturally to us, but because someone has to be while the Republicans are playing G.I.Joe.

And in a similar vein, let me say that I don’t exactly weep for Janet Creighton. She has maintained her support of a party that has coursened the political dialogue in this country to the point that a half-baked story like this gets flogged. Her party dragged a sitting president through impeachment over a tawdry sexual dalliance. Her party responds to any public criticism with opposition research, personal attack and echo chamber smear. Her party . . . my God, do I really need to catalogue all of their sins?

Janet Creighton is not the sort of Republican that I have grown to loathe from the moment I wake to my last conscious thought as I retire. But that sort of Republican sent out the chickens that are now roosting in her back yard. Hard to lose sleep over that, even if it is ill-founded.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Some Blogkeeping Notes

First, I have added an email address. This was mostly in response to the very nice comments I received inviting me to the Cleveland blogger meetup. I thought people might want to contact me outside the comments section, so there it is. It is a Hotmail account I opened for blog-only email, so any evil trolls out there thinking of spamming me, save yourselves the trouble. If it gets clogged with crap, I'll just cancel the account.

Second, I've blogrolled a few new sites. George at Brewed Fresh Daily blogrolled me, so, in the tradition of Spy Magazine I am blogrolling him back.

Ditto Sherrod Brown's maybe-campaign-maybe-freestanding-netroots site Grow Ohio.

I am involved in Summit County Progressive Democrats and have up till now kept our perpetually-under-construction site off my links. It's close enough now and should be even better in the near future. One other member is a blogger under the sobriquet Crosscurrent. I've added him as well.

Enjoy.

Monday, July 25, 2005

Labor's Love Lost

I spent six hours today in a meeting at the Ohio AFL-CIO and have declared that it's enough of a local connection to permit me to blog about the Big Labor Split within the self-imposed rules of the blog.

The split sounds pretty inevitable -- much has been written about Andy Stern, the arrogant hotshot vs. John Sweeney, the ossified old-school high chieftain. Fortunately, the spat seems mostly about tactics, not policy. It's not like half of the rump labor movement will suddenly line up behind Jeb in '08.

Generally speaking in human enterprise, it is better for a number of institutions to try different ways of going about business than one big institution following the same playbook for decades. John Sweeney may have had early success running it up the middle, but the other side has stacked the line and he's still going there. I am hopeful that small, fast, energetic upstarts like SEIU and Unite Here can put together a bootleg or two.

Certainly it has been the case in Ohio. SEIU was the lead union in organizing the coalition against TABOR, and their Stop Ohio's Slide was to my knowledge the only union-led media campaign in the last budget cycle. One SEIU organizer I talked to said that Stop Ohio's Slide was so successful in generating grassroots contact to the legislature that the leadership held a press conference to say it wasn't working.

The real potential for damage comes from Sweeney refusing to make a clean break of it. Like in any long term relationship, when the end comes you can nurse your wounds and move on, or you can become Scary Stalker Guy. Listening to Stern today, he sounded wistful, but hopeful about a new beginning. From Sweeney's comments, he sounds ready to boil the rabbit. Stay tuned.

Shut up and drive

For the third time in my life, an idiot on a car phone has pulled in front of me. Yesterday I was driving in the Valley when a guy in a white Mercedes pulled to the end of a drive, stopped, then pulled out about twenty feet in front of me. As was the case the other two times, I was able to avoid the fool.

So why am I writing about this in a political blog? Because for certain breeds of conservatives – mostly radio ranters but also avatars of tiny government – local traffic ordinances against driving and cell phoning are something of a touchstone. They are supposed to be symptomatic of intrusion into every facet of our private lives. Brooklyn, Ohio, passed a talking-while driving ban a couple years back and the local radio mouth-breathers when insane. (Didn't find much on a Google search, though check this out if you need yet another example of how economists can justify anything by jiggering the numbers.)

In fact, such ordinances are examples of government responsiveness to new threats. As long as you believe that the government should step in when people engage in activity that endangers others, this is right in the wheelhouse of what government should do. As study after study after study shows, a driver is simply more dangerous behind the wheel if he also has a cell glued to his ear. White Mercedes Guy was out to freaking lunch yesterday. He stops, looks both ways and fails to see me. In broad daylight. On a flat stretch of road. WHEN I WAS IN A MINIVAN, FOR GOD'S SAKE.

We don't have laws against people reading while driving or having sex while driving or watching TV while driving because people generally don't do those things (though the last may be coming if Xhibit and crew have anything to say about it.) We have laws about driving while intoxicated, because people do that. And since people also yammer on their cells while they are supposed to be making sure they do not pancake me and mine, laws against it make sense.