He bought a share of the minor league Everett AquaSox in order to gain access to season ticket holders' personal information and use it for campaign fundraising. Now he's looking to expand.
Gregoire has a reputation as being tough, smart and decisive. So when the blogosphere erupts in concern about her “oh-so-careful” approach to governing, we wonder if the hesitancy is with Gregoire herself or with some misguided campaign consultant or kitchen cabinet member.
How many times does Dino Rossi get to bend or break campaign finance rules before it becomes a pattern of deceit? First Forward Washington, then abuse of a tax-exempt religious organization, now use of federal military property for fundraising. He knows better.
Eric Earling over at Sound Politics has a fascinating take on what fundraising really means. Seems Dino Rossi needed a little pep talk after being beaten, handily and consistently, by Governor Chris Gregoire in the money take.
In his latest campaign video, Republican candidate Dino Rossi is, OMG, not wearing a seatbelt! Which is illegal, and dangerous, but also about as interesting as the fact that Governor Gregoire’s campaign bus had Oregon plates.
Despite the ground game advantages, the time when a union could swing an election has long passed, although the historical party split remains. Democrats get endorsements in exchange for sending their campaign work to union shops, and Republicans get to rail against unions.
Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown is looking to hire a surrogate to increase her name recognition on the Westside of the mountains. The Spokane lawmaker’s name has been floated for governor for many years, but she lacks the roots in Western Washington that any candidate for governor needs to win.
Just about every story written about Rahm Emanuel since Barack Obama selected him to serve as White House chief of staff has described him as the tough Chicago operative who became the consummate Washington insider. But how sensitive will the bulldog at Mr. Obama’s gate be to New York interests?
Nobody can doubt that the Republicans in the Senate will obstruct as soon as that seems politically safe. Right-wing pundits, from Rush Limbaugh to the Wall Street Journal editorial page are already egging them on furiously. But is there enough muscle behind that filibuster threat to block Mr. Obama’s mandate?
Something funny happened last week: A liberal Democrat from Chicago, running on a ticket with a liberal from Delaware, won the White House by a comfortable margin. And while Barack Obama did actually win three states in the South, his triumph should do away with the notion that a “Southern strategy” is essential to the Democratic Party’s long-term viability at the presidential level.