Category Archives: Politics: FL-25/FL-27

National Dems to Buy $1.4 Million of Local Congressional Ads

According to a Washington Post blog, The Fix, House Democratic Campaign Arm Broadens TV Buy, the DCC is buying $1.4 million in local ads to boost the chances of Joe Garcia, Raul Martinez, and Annette Taddeo.

This is what comes of overturning the GOP's traditional edge in fundraising. And AFAIK these are genuinely uncoordinated expenditures (as the law requires) because (at least in my presence) le tout of Democratic political South Florida has been on tenterhooks wondering if, when, if, the DCCC would make a local move.

Posted in Politics: FL-18, Politics: FL-25/FL-27 | 1 Comment

Joe Garcia Is Cool

Joe Garcia has been hanging out at Netroots Nation and talking to bloggers.

He's also being interviewed by bloggers and traditional media. Here he is being interviewed by MTV:

joe-mtv.jpg

I wish I could say this shows he has the media at his feet, but it's not quite as good as that.

Posted in Politics: FL-25/FL-27 | Comments Off on Joe Garcia Is Cool

Off to Netroots Nation

Once upon a time, I used to do a lot of local politics. I worked as a young intern in the McGovern campaign (not the world's most organized organization). In high school, I volunteered for the late, great Mo Udall, the best President we never had. In college I was one member of a small committee that set up a state office for the primaries for an underfunded Presidential candidate in Connecticut — without his approval (they eventually sent an actual staffer to take over). Just after I graduated from college, I was the press secretary for the Ira Lechner for Congress (VA-10) campaign (we got clobbered by Frank Wolf in the Reagan landslide). Later, while a first-year law student busy not crossing picket lines at Yale, I ran phone banks for Bruce Morrison for Congress (CT-3); he got re-elected, making it one of my few winning campaigns.

Then I lived abroad for long enough to lose many of my local political ties; when I came back to the US it was to a new and strange place, South Florida, where serious politics seemed to happen in Spanish. And I had other things to worry about: hurricanes, children, tenure, life. So I didn't do much beyond the armchair.

George Bush has (re?)radicalized me. And once again, I'm doing a little activism. This time, I'm helping out one of our wonderful local Congressional candidates, Joe Garcia (FL-25). (Our other great local candidate is Annette Taddeo (FL-18), but we've got that covered too, in a different way: my older son, age 14, has been interning at the Taddeo campaign office, and he's coming too to help Annette and her staff.)

When I called Joe to volunteer, he first asked me to look over his web presence and see if anything needed improving. That wasn't hard, it was pretty good already. Then, when Joe came over to breakfast to get my report, I asked him what else I could do for him.

I figured he'd ask for money, and was even braced to do a fundraiser, although it's really really not my style. But he surprised me: Joe asked me to go with him to Netroots Nations and introduce him around to the other bloggers. I tried to convince him that I don't actually know most of them, except by email, but he seemed to think that would do.

So Thursday, I'm going to Netroots Nation (formerly Yearly Kos), to act as a sort of advance man for Joe Garcia. Perhaps I'll see you there? If so, there's this great candidate you might like to meet…

JG.jpg

(Poster from Miami & Beyond.)

If you won't be in Austin for the conference, you can follow along online in Second Life. See NNinSL.org for details. All the main events will be streamed and they also promise inworld parties and special events. And, unlike the meatspace version, this one is free.

Posted in Politics: FL-25/FL-27, Talks & Conferences | Comments Off on Off to Netroots Nation

Joe Garcia Trounces Incumbent in Q2 Fundraising

Joe Garcia's campaign just sent out an email about their fundraising — and they have something to brag about.

We beat Mario Diaz-Balart, a three-term Republican career politician, this quarter by over $100,000.

The totals: Joe Garcia – $513,000

Mario Diaz-Balart – $392,000

Here's the best part: we beat our opponent's individual contributions by over $300,000.

Want to help? They're asking you to volunteer.

I'm helping out — details about that tomorrowThursday.

Posted in Politics: FL-25/FL-27 | Comments Off on Joe Garcia Trounces Incumbent in Q2 Fundraising

Miami Wakes Up to Political Normality (This is Good for Democrats)

David Rieff has a long piece in tomorrow's NYT magazine about Cuban-American politics in Miami, provocatively titled, Will Little Havana Go Blue?.

The main conclusions track what those of us who live here see around us: Cuban-American politics are being changed by a generational shift (a rising generation that is American first and treats its hyphen much they way other ethnic groups do), and a political differences between recent immigrants and the revanchists who have been here 40-50 years. The recent escapees are much less willing to support policies that prevent them sending money to relatives left behind, and which limit their ability to visit their families still trapped in Cuba.

The result is a breakage of the monolithic support for the GOP and for its candidates. Particularly hurt are the Diaz-Balart brothers, who suffer from poor constituent services and a failure to bring home the kind of bacon that their storied predecessors — Claude Pepper, Dante Fascell — did.

Although Rieff doesn't address this directly, it turns out that Joe Garcia's vicious mockery of the Diaz-Balarts as a “one trick pony” may be right on the mark.

Rieff's piece contains another bit of wisdom. Miami's shift to normal politics away from unthinking equation of the GOP as the natural home for Cuban-Americans does not mean automatic victory for Democrats.

The lesson for local campaigners is obvious: Cuban-Americans being up for grabs means that they will need to be addressed in the same way as other swing constituencies: with appeals on the issues they care about (housing, jobs, health, social security, as well as Cuba) and — and this is probably key — turnout will rule. The community is no longer monolithic. Just like with many other communities that means whoever gets out their voters will win.

It's going to be a turnout election down here.

Posted in Miami, Politics: FL-25/FL-27, Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 4 Comments