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Entries for 2010

05
In a recent blog, Carter posed some lofty questions to me about religion, like: Are all religions equal? Is Islam a violent religion? And so forth.
 
I’ve pondered posting some lofty thoughts that might help our readers in their own struggles with these vital issues of theology and faith.
 
In the end, I’ve decided that the best response is one that Terry Sanford long ago offered to a question that he recognized was intended to drag him into a lengthy and, to Sanford, unproductive debate: “These matters deserve prayerful consideration.”

 

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04
This headline on a Wilmington Star-News editorial represents the apex of either naïveté or optimism about politics:
 
“Misleading ads won't work if voters are savvy.”

 

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03
It’s Tom Fetzer’s job to run around the state sounding alarms. But it’s not the media’s responsibility to salivate every time he rings the bell.
 
There is no greater example than the Perdue flight flap. In the end, that looks to be nothing more than a few small licks of flame.
 
Fetzer did his best to fan them into a firestorm. But the dry tinder for the fire is a sometimes-disturbing attitude among the media, the public and zealous regulators. Even violent criminals are presumed innocent until proved guilty. In politics, it’s the opposite: All politicians are presumed guilty, even if proven innocent.
 
That presumption serves Fetzer and his party well during this campaign. But, if they win in November, they’ll get burned next.
 
I think it’s useful to set aside Fetzer’s hype and pay careful attention to the August 27 point-by-point rebuttal from Marc Farinella, Perdue’s campaign consultant. Few people have read it in full, so I provide it here for your Labor Day reading pleasure:
 
On Tuesday of this week, the State Board of Elections (SBOE) adopted a motion to levy a fine against the Perdue Committee for failing to report flights in a timely manner.    The same motion, which passed on a 4 to 1 vote, explicitly stated that there was no evidence to indicate that anyone in the Perdue campaign intentionally violated reporting requirements.

The Perdue Committee’s failure to report 41 flights on time was discovered and made public by the Perdue Committee itself.  It was not unearthed by an investigation.  The Perdue Committee publicly detailed the flights over the course of several months in 2009 when it reported the results of a voluntary post-election self-audit.   The Committee conducted the audit in order to make certain it had accounted for all expenditures properly.  The SBOE and the Perdue campaign had agreed in early 2008 that it would make sense to conduct an audit after the election because the campaign’s transition from one software package to another created some imbalances on the summary pages of our campaign finance reports.

The unreported flights discovered during the Perdue Committee’s self-audit led to a complaint being filed by the state Republican Party.  In response to the complaint, the State Board of Elections then initiated an investigation into the matter.  Quite remarkably, the investigation was assigned to an SBOE employee who was the spouse of an elected officer of the state Republican Party.  In other words, the investigation was conducted by the spouse of an elected officer of the organization that filed the complaint she was investigating.  Why anyone thought that was a good idea from any perspective is beyond me, but that is what happened. 
 
The investigation lasted eight months and apparently cost taxpayers in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.  State GOP chairman Tom Fetzer was predictably unhappy that a majority of the members of the Board did not find, in the investigator’s report, sufficient justification for continuing the investigation or holding formal hearings.  And so Mr. Fetzer reiterated his calls for various resignations and accused the SBOE chairman and executive director of “corruption” and “partisan white-wash” even though they were the same chairman and executive director who were instrumental in investigating and punishing Mike Easley and Jim Black.
 
Lost in all the political finger pointing are several essential points that I think explain why the SBOE decided to bring the Perdue matter to a close:
 
First, after an eight month investigation, there is still no one who was involved in the campaign, close to the campaign or had knowledge about how the campaign operated who is suggesting that anyone in the campaign sought to conceal information or intended to break the law.  No one. 
 
Second, the investigation turned up virtually nothing more than what the Perdue Committee had publicly disclosed on its own in 2009.  In all that time and with all that effort, investigators found only one single unreported flight that the Perdue Committee had not itself already found and disclosed many months ago.
 
Third, investigators tried to build a case that the Perdue campaign knew of some unreported flights in early 2008 but chose to conceal them until after the election.   But that allegation was shown to be false when the Perdue Committee pointed out that it had sent information (including dates, destinations, etc.) on unreported flights to the SBOE for an initial review in the first half of 2008.  Obviously, if the campaign were trying to conceal those flights from the SBOE until after the election, it would not have sent the flight information to the SBOE in the first half of 2008. 

It’s also worth noting that the aggregate value of all the flights that the Perdue campaign allegedly knew about in early 2008 but didn’t report until 2009 came to about $21,000.  It doesn’t really make much sense to think that in a $17.5 million campaign, the Perdue committee would go to such great lengths and take such enormous risks just to delay paying or accounting for $21,000 until after the election.  $21,000 was approximately twelve one-hundredths of one percent of the Perdue campaign’s total expenditures.

Partisan Republican mouthpieces like Mr. Fetzer like to argue that the Perdue campaign never would have reported any of these flights if it were not for the fact that Mike Easley got into trouble over flights.  However, as noted above, the Perdue committee started talking to the SBOE about its unreported flights back in the first half of 2008, about five months or so before there was any suggestion that Easley had flight problems. 

These and many other important facts were rarely reported over the course of the SBOE investigation.  Instead, there was a rush to judgment on the part of many observers, including many well-intentioned ones.   I think knowledge of these facts makes a difference to those who want to reach a fair and impartial conclusion about this matter.  Hopefully, now, everyone can return to more productive endeavors.

 

 

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03
When President Obama stared into the cameras Tuesday night he must have felt more than a tremor of foreboding. Nonetheless, he folded his hands in front of him and marched resolutely into the first minefield and announced we’re pulling out (except for 50,000 men) of a war we didn’t win.
 
There hardly seems any point in arguing about Iraq; President Bush set out to destroy Al-Qaeda and build a western-style democracy in the middle of the Middle East and we struck out on both counts.
 
The President grinded through that part of his speech, then took a deep breath, and waded into a second minefield, announcing pulling out of Iraq meant he could send more soldiers to Afghanistan where even our most stout-hearted democracy-builders have given up and accepted the hard fact the best we can do is put one of the most seedy dictators on earth in charge of the country.
 
Plodding ahead stoically without flinching – and without a glimmer of good news to share – Obama finished with Afghanistan, then pirouetted rhetorically and landed in the worst quagmire of all: The Great Recession. With foreclosures soaring and unemployment rising he struggled to temper the bad news which led him straight into articulating his unshakeable faith in government. Building up what for a moment looked like a head of steam he listed all the programs government is launching to cure the ills of the hard-pressed middle class. Government, he said, is going to unleash a wave of innovation. And give our children the education they deserve. And train our workers. And jumpstart our industries. Salvation-by-government is Barack Obama’s faith and creed and he believes it in his bones but he also had some brutal facts working against him: A year after government set out to save us 2.6 million Americans have lost their jobs and another 1.2 million have given up even looking for jobs.
 
It was a tough speech for a President to have to make. But Obama stuck it out and made it. But the happiest moment for the President Tuesday night must have been when they turned off the cameras and he could lean back and sigh, Well, that over with.
 

 

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02
Senator Richard Burr’s ad shows he knows he could be vulnerable. Voters don’t know him or what he’s done.
 
Which supports Elaine Marshall’s case for getting the $10 million she needs from the DSCC to be competitive.
 
Senate Democrats are playing defense most everywhere this year. It would be nice to make one raid in Republican territory. Make them spend time and money here instead of against a Democratic incumbent.
 
Public Policy Polling has repeatedly noted Burr’s weakness.
 
RealClearPolitics says Burr is in “the danger zone.”
 
Marshall has a good campaign team, and she can draw a sharp contrast with Burr. She can attack him on voting for the bailout, which will temper Republicans’ enthusiasm for him and hurt him with independents.  She can attack him as a 16-year Washington politician.
 
Plus, she has an advantage: She’s a woman.
 
PPP’s analysis shows that Democratic voters aren’t energized. Money – and a visit by President Obama – could change that.
 
Which would help not only Marshall, but also Democratic congressional incumbents. And Democratic chances in the legislative races. And redistricting in 2011. And Obama’s chances here in 2012.
 
The votes are there for Marshall. The question is whether she’ll have the money to get them.
 

 

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01
A reader called today with an interesting thought spurred by Richard Burr’s ad.
 
She took issue with his suggestion that all jobs come from the private sector. She pointed out that government contracts with Blackwater, Halliburton, KBR and a raft of defense contractors sure created a bunch of jobs.
 
She has a point. When private companies aren’t hiring, a government job – or a job created by a government contract – can pay the rent.

 

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01
Remember the furor last year when Governor Perdue announced that dozens of long-term, convicted criminals might get out of prison early because of an issue over “good time”?
 
Remember how everybody said what a disaster this would be for her?
 
Remember how critics said she overreacted by threatening to stand in the jailhouse door to prevent their release?
 
Then, last week, did you notice when the state Supreme Court ruled that she was, in fact, right? That the inmates wouldn’t be getting out early?
 
Somehow that didn’t get quite the same attention.
 
The Governor and her people should enjoy some told-you-so’s here.

 

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31
My friend Damon Circosta, executive director on the N.C. Center for Voter Education, gets an A for effort but an F for persuasiveness.
 
Circosta, according to Under the Dome, says the flap over Governor Perdue’s campaign not reporting some flights is an argument for “voter-owned” (publicly financed) campaigns. http://projects.newsobserver.com/dome#ixzz0yBS20BU0 
 
The logic goes over my head.
 
Why is a candidate taking public funds any less likely to commit a reporting error than a candidate taking individual and PAC contributions?
 
I hope Damon will enlighten me.
 
As I’ve blogged before, I understand that public-financing supporters are well-intentioned – and right to be concerned about corruption in today’s system. But if President Obama had used public financing, he couldn’t have competed in North Carolina.
 
There is a case to be made for public financing. I just down see how this is it.
 
 
 

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31
I’m amused by people who argue that the “mosque” shouldn’t be built near Ground Zero because a poll showed a majority of Americans oppose it.
 
Well, not along ago I saw a poll that found, for the first time, that most Americans think gay couples should be allowed to wed.
 
That settles it, I guess.

 

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30
…could a charlatan like Glenn Beck (with Sarah Palin as backup) claim that holding his Washington rally on the anniversary of Martin Luther King’s is “divine providence” AND simultaneously claim that an Islamic center shouldn’t be built two blocks from Ground Zero because it offends some people.
 
Am I the only person who thinks it’s fine for Beck & Co. to hold their rally when and where they did AND for the Islamic center to be built on that site?

 

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