Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Petition condition

The petitions are in. Some causes made it, and some didn’t.

The two most interesting reports surrounded an anti-abortion proposal and the Fire the Senate drive, both of which fell short of picking up the necessary 317,757 signatures to get the issue on the November general election ballot.

The anti-abortion proposal, to define life as beginning at conception, would have effectively outlawed all abortions in Michigan and given pro-life groups the tool to take a challenge to Roe vs. Wade to the new Supreme Court with Justice Roberts and Justice Alito potentially reversing or altering significantly the landmark 1973 decision that effectively made abortion legal throughout the United States. Yet the effort failed to get the blessing of Right to Life, arguably one of the most powerful special interest groups anywhere. What gives? I thought Right to Life always supported causes to make abortions illegal. Some have said it was a turf war between rival pro-life groups. But the real story is that it’s not in Right to Life’s best political interests to have its sole reason for existence taken away. After all, it does raise millions of dollars in funds and helps make a lot of lobbyists and politicians as well as ministers and activists rich and powerful.

Think about it. We’ve elected a heckuva lot of pro-life zealots to state and national offices over the last 25 years, and what have these anti-abortion champions produced in the way of legislation to outlaw the procedure? A lot of sound and fury signifying nothing but a blatant attempt to milk votes from gullible single-issue voters! Oh, to be sure, we saw the end of Medicaid-funded abortions for low income women and laws like the 24-hour waiting period have been whittled around the edges. But there is something to the twisted logic that Right to Life and its ilk stand to lose an awful lot if abortion is outlawed. What then happens to Right to Life? What then happens to all those pro-life politicians who’ve nailed down massive numbers of single-issue voters after winning the blessing of the Most Reverend Right to Life? It seems as though the movers and shakers behind Michigan Right to Life decided they didn't want to know. Or perhaps they realized how it could create a backlash from the majority of voters who still support keeping abortion legal that would result in a tidal wave of voter anger putting state government in to the hands of the Democrats and demoralizing the troops (and donors) in the ultra-conservative movement for years.

Meanwhile, there seemed to be some rejoicing in Lansing and in newsrooms around the state with the news Unicameral Michigan’s “Fire the Senate” campaign failed. Many news outlets that wouldn’t give Unicameral a morsel of coverage during the time volunteers were gathering signatures circled like buzzards around the movement of its untimely death Monday. There was even a time early in the effort when the much exalted Michigan Public Radio had a news report about all the state petition drives, and conspicuous in its absence was any information about Unicameral. Fire the Senate spokespersons claimed they were marginalized by the corporate media, the State Legislature and lobbyists, so it was nearly impossible to get the job done as only a grass-roots movement.

Just as the anti-abortion measure was killed by in-fighting among the factions, the Unicameral effort seems to have died not from a lack of public support, since every journalist who bothered to report on it commented that if placed on the ballot it would likely be approved by voters, but from the callous indifference of the media which acts as a gate-keeper but you're only allowed access if you belong to the club. The lesson here: You’ve got to have money, a sugar daddy, celebrities crawling all over the place and you have to do outrageous things to get noticed. Beating the fife and drum and trying to spread the word via the Internet and telephone just doesn’t cut it.

In fact, what the anti-abortion drive and the Unicameral effort had in common was that both failed to make the ballot because they couldn't afford to "pay to play." The ballot proposals that make it to the voters overwhelmingly have resulted from special interest money that can afford to pay $1 per signature to professional companies that circulate petitions. A good example is Ward Connerly's use of millions to buy his way onto the Michigan ballot with a drive to end Affirmative Action which voters will decide on in November.

There are insidious ways to stifle freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and the free exchange of ideas. The most insidious way of all is to deliberately ignore what’s going on. Another is to make freedom so expensive, the poor can't afford it. The peasants are hungry for democracy and they're not getting it from their elected officials or the gate-keepers in the media- it seems their attitude is "Let them eat cake!"

20 comments:

Pol Watcher said...

I know some will probably accuse me of sour grapes or whining, but I'm just trying to point out we have a problem. As long as millionaires can buy their way onto the ballots and the airwaves, one person one vote is a myth and our democracy is dead (or at least on life support).

Jay said...

I believe this anti-abortion proposal mirrored the South Dakota one. If that was the one, Michigan RtL didn't want to touch it. With no state group backing, nor funding from those big donors that give to RtL proposals (DeVos, etc) it died.

--------------------------------------

As for Fire the Senate...interesting note:
The spokespeople funneled all questions to Brian Reynolds, I think to give him free media. From the article I read he sounded like he was a bit startled that the media was coming to him.

Yes ballot issues do need money to get rolling, but not the type of dollars that one may think. The K-16 intiative was mainly grassroots (they didn't pay for sigs), but they had the MEA, the Superintendents, etc behind it. The more recent RtL ballot questions were gathered by the churches, as was gay marriage, but they did pay for sigs in some areas.

DeVos has bankrolled at least three drives that I recall (Charters, Term-limits, and I think one of the abortion ones).

The problem with Fire the Senate is that they were not flashy enough. I would of had high drama (a guy in a pig suit at the Capitol), nor did they seem to have a unified base outside of Barry. The writing was on the wall when not one TV station came out to the forum at Hastings High.

Inside Michigan Politics, Gongwer and others did take note of the early smoke the group raised, but they were quick to add in their mentions that there did not seem to be much fire behind the movement.

I do salute them for trying. They attempted quite the endeavor. I wish them luck in '08.

truthfulpat said...

Timmy has been relying on 'Lassie' so long he has shown a belief in the toothfairy.
Michigan has continued to rely on a system that is based on inpennetrable Gerrmanders ( For Timmy and others in Loma Linda) a Gerrymander is an ill shaped district that is designed for such deep partisan imbalance that the seats involved are safely assured to one or the other political party. Once designing such districts they are further protected by Primary Elections scheduled for the peak of vacation season.
This from the people who show outrage that Shool Board Elections are scheduled in June.
As for Unicameral, any REAL understanding of the 'founding fathers' and the origins of the United States SHOULD know that they designed a SINGLE HOUSE SYSTEM that was modified to provide two Senators to each State.
The change to this system was to assure that tree stumps were given votes as well as the land owning white men (no women or workers allowed thank you}.
The disaster of the Electoral College where the voters in small States are given more votes than others means that Vermont with 550,000 people has two United States Senators and a single member in the U. S. House and thus three votes for President of the United States while Michigan with 20 times more residents is given only 18 votes in the Electoral College. A Michigan voter has 1/6th of a vote compared to Vermont and other three member States. Hell, I even like Vermont but it is hardly a reprsentative Republic.

el grillo said...

"put it in your pants" is certainly a grown-up comment, "Timmy". Speaks volumes about you, and reduces your valuable taxation input to the drooling of an infant.
"Baby steps" are the hallmark of Barry County government, which explains why we don't have a juvenile detention program, a developed rail trail, a half-way house, etc. ad infinitum.
The "Unicamerals" have created a permanent change in Michigan government. They have brought an issue out of the basement into the light of day in only one year. If this isn't a significant achievement than we will never see one. So what if your instant gratification wasn't gained at your drive-through window of opportunity. By the time another season of the American Idle has passed you will hear people wondering out loud if their representatives are as efficient as they might be.
By the way, National Guardsmen are defending "Democracy", which has never existed in the USA. We have, at best, a Representative government style which is currently not.

truthfulpat said...

Baby steps are ineffective when the baby is chained in the basement, muzzled...No, Uicameral will be back with a vengance in 2008 and beyond.
The Grand Rapids Press and others cannot maintain a news blackout forever.
After Unicameral, the remaining legislators will quake in fear...and then we can focus on true campaign finance reform and meaningful electoral reform.
The Constitutional Convention was defeated in 1956 and 1958.
The Michigan Jaycees were able to convince the League of Women Voters, the AAUW and others to try 'one more time'.
It passed and it is in force today.
A fine example is Ken Sikkema who was limited to his final term in 2002, but who continued to raise money $250,000 as of last January for the Committee to Elect Ken Sikkema to an office he was prohibited from again seeking.
Taking that special interest money is nothing more than bribe taking and those that gave it expected and recieved a great deal in return.
Corrupt is the only word for it.
Pol Watcher has a link to Campaign Finance Reports...check it out. Hell, even Lassie could do it.

Pol Watcher said...

Timmy, you're getting obnoxious. If you want to ask Mark then give him a call. I'm not going to speak for him. I'd be interested in hearing the answer. But I don't know what you expect of me- you raised the question and now we all are waiting for an answer.

And Jay, I gave Unicameral the pig suit idea months ago but they just didn't have the resources and man-power to do that kind of stuff- partly because they weren't well organized before they started. A lot of this had to do with the people who promised help and then disappeared. As I said long ago, it's easy to sit back and suggest what could have been done better but so few actually were willing to do it when it came time to SHOW UP. I agree with el Grillo that Unicameral did what these groups do best- raise an issue to prominance that is now part of the discussion and will have an effect on state politics for some time. Joe L. is promising another effort and has some serious help ready this time. El Grill is also right that our worship of bicameral is a flawed misremembering of history forgetting that in order to get the small states the join in the union we had to give them something in return- two Senators.

Also, Joe L. was out of town on business and unavailable for comment. Reynolds was always on board even before he launched his campaign- while it's possible he was given the spotlight for a little cmapaign boost I doubt it. While I think Unicameral really fell down in its media relations this week (Joe should have had a press conference planned to announce he wasn't going to make the deadline but vowing he'd be back with money and ground troops), I understand that it's because of the anger they have at the media which they feel treated them like they had no chance which fueled a public perceptive that it wasn't a cause that could win- who wants to jump on board a sinking ship?

My problem with the media is that unless a big money backer or major union like DeVos or the MEA STARTS the process the media will belittle you as not being "serious," people follow the news and get the impression they shouldn't bother joining a losing cause and it becomes a self-fulfilling propecy. I don't expect free air time (something which some of the Unicameral folks sound like they think they deserved) but I do think the way Tim Skubik or Charity Nebby (probably mispelled both of those) phrase their stories has an effect of the success or failure of an effort- in this case the constant focus on MONEY could not have helped a grassroots effort that could have made it on the ballot with NO money if only enough people would have joined the fight but they were told not to bother.

Jay said...

Project for '08--sew a pig suit.

Project for Timmy: Have Lassie bring him some prozac.;)

Jay said...

BTW Pol: Any word on how many signatures the "uni's" got?

Jay said...

Forgetting to post items today...oy

Brian "The PAC-Man" Calley finally shot the moon on endorsements garnering MI Townships (I thought Susan or Reynolds would be their pick), Citizens for Traditional Values, MI Chamber, Reps Bender, Newell & Geiger (Geiger is suspiciously not pictured)

Hear the bandwagon? It's well financed. Maybe Jack Abramoff (sp?) wants to sponsor him (picturing NASCAR style blazer)...

Calley makes my blood boil, but he's running the perfect campaign.

el grillo said...

Come on, Timmy, you can't really believe that you can mine drivel off the Internet and call it "evidence". Oh, I suppose you might, but you don't really expect us to believe you, do you? Try to visit some office where they keep actual records. If Mark owes back taxes and you think we might be interested, do your damn homework. Otherwise we will vote for you for County Commissioner. That's it! A write-in campaign for "Timmy" on a platform of rumor and inuendo. (I dare you to take the bait and do your homework).

Pol Watcher said...

Jay, despite your protestations to the contrary, you would make a good cheerleader for Calley and it's getting old- Right to Life is probably the only endorsement that matters on that list since its the only one that delivers vote- who the hell cares who Newell endorses- wasn't that a given anyway? Calley's got problems at home and maybe should call up Bailey and find out what dragging his feet on an animal shelter can mean to your prospects at moving up the ladder- the last thing he needs at this point is to piss off the home crowd which it seems he's already done. Then again, he's it wrapped up as you've told us... what? Maybe a dozen times already. We got it, Jay.

truthfulpat said...

Well said Mark. ou have done far better with Barry County tax money that Board Chair Tripp. Maybe she can afford all those address' because the bank is grateful to have our funds at a rate lower than a child will be paid at Main Street Savings Bank.

Boggsone said...

Take that Timmy! As I said, Mark Englerth is my choice for a New Barry County in 2007! There is no other choice in that District.

sentinel said...

I think Calley's RTL endorsement and his finally coming out against the unicam proposal in the WBCH forum can be used against him.

RTL is finally being challenged by a group even further to the political right. RTL has their own strategy by gaining control in a slow methodical way by putting their drones in political position. This new group tried to circumvent that process and "shoot the wad" by a ballot initiative. There is now a wedge in RTL and in the issue itself. How can RTL not support a ballot initiative? Hypocrites all! Calley should be confronted on where he stood on the anti-abortion ballot initiative. Then he will go on record with a no-win stand. Sort of like self-righteous Bailey and his ad about the casino.

As far as the unicam issue, Calley said in the Unicam Forum that he supported unicam, just not the ballot proposal offered up by UM. Then in the radio debate, he said he was against the issue all together. Flip-flopper?

el grillo said...

If I were a Democrat and lived near Gun Lake I would be supporting the Republican candidate that I could beat in November. That is, if there were any other Democrats around Gun Lake that didn't plan to watch the American Idle reruns all election day. If I were an indigenous american I wouldn't be bitching about Jennifer not signing my stuff quickly when I was facing the wrath of a reformed God. I would be acting like a Democrat. But then that would only be two of us. So who does Planned Parenthood support out at Gun Lake? How much is the Rainbow Coalition paying to get rid of the old Chairmarm? I suppose that the real power play of the Democratic Party in Barry County will once again be focused on the Loftus challenge to Hoot. I'm still impressed from the last election!

sentinel said...

You can't deny Loftus now has name recognition. Reminds me of Pat Paulson's perrenial campaign for prez. Not sure if Brinkert has a strategy for this part of his campaign against Nov opponent. I agree with you el, Brinkert surruptitiously supporting the weaker of the two candidates in the GOP primary is a no brainer. The question is, which is the weaker one?

Jay said...

Doubt the failure of the anti-abortion measure will damper RtL muscle, nor damper the RtL support going to Calley. RtL is as strong as ever. As said before in the newest thread, he is hitting the churches, bearing witness, snd passing the ammunition. Unicam was a fringe issue, and those unicamis weren't going for Calley anyway. What most likey will impact Calley is the bandwagon nature of his endorsements--that may put people off and provide some sort of dent to his total. We'll just have to see how much Aug. 8th.

truthfulpat said...

Gee Jay...there you go again. Who told you how all the Unicameral voters were or were not going to vote for? Has Lassie, or was it Timmy whispering in your ear. Some folks less well informed might surmise that many of the Unicameral supporters weren't going to vote in the Primary Election at all.

Jay said...

The Unicaminists were about to string Calley up at their forum... It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that their support circles don't overlap. If a unicaminist did support Calley (I'd be surprised), it wouldn't be because of the Unicam issue.

el grillo said...

The real question becomes "Where are all the Democrats when you need them"? The concept of two parties requires that they both show up! Now that we Republicans have provided weapons of all kinds of destruction to most of the world, have declared that we don't recognize the Geneva Convention, have no interest in being declared War Criminals by an International Court, deny Global Warming is going on, disclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, determined that the Constitution is the Inspired Word of God, discovered that the G.O.P. is the sole proprietor of the Global Moral Compass, etc. we could use the help of another opinion. The folks in NYC would like us to get back to some sensible Mafioso control, which at least has the balancing effect of greed and self-interest equal to the current leadership. Perhaps legalizing prostitution and drugs could introduce self-responsibility back into our behavior.