west bloomfield, MI
gbacheli
Joe Lieberman Retains his Senate Chairmanship, and Bernie Sanders Is a Political Idiot
According to an article in today's (online) New York Times,
"Sen. Joe Lieberman will keep his chairmanship of the Senate Homeland Security Committee despite hard feelings over his support for GOP nominee John McCain during the presidential campaign.
The Connecticut independent will lose a minor panel post as punishment for criticizing Obama this fall.
Lieberman's colleagues in the Democratic caucus voted 42-13 Tuesday on a resolution condemning statements made by Lieberman during the campaign but allowing him to keep the Homeland Security Committee gavel. He loses an Environment and Public Works panel subcommittee chairmanship, however."
The article concludes with a statement made Friday by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who opposed the move.
"To reward Senator Lieberman with a major committee chairmanship would be a slap in the face of millions of Americans who worked tirelessly for Barack Obama and who want to see real change in our country. Appointing someone to a major post who led the opposition to everything we are fighting for is not 'change we can believe in."'
Sanders is a self-described Socialist who caucuses with the Democrats, as does Lieberman. My response to Bernie's statement is this:
As usual, you oversimplified things. Lieberman did not "[lead] the opposition to everything we are fighting for." And Lieberman was not "appointed" as chairman, rather he was allowed to retain a position which he already held.
I discussed Lieberman's situation in my new blog, Keep Joe Lieberman, which has now achieved its purpose. Their actions show that there’s hope for the Senate Democrats yet!
Link to the article by Lieberman's former chief of staff in the August 31st Washington Post
Goodbye Reagan Democrats, and Good Riddance to the Pollster, Stanley Greenberg
“Goodbye Reagan Democrats” is the title of a rather vitriolic column by pollster Stanley Greenberg in the Nov. 11th New York Times. Brian Dickerson has a good column in today’s Free Press, responding to it. Some excerpts from Greenberg‘s column.
I’m finished with the Reagan Democrats of Macomb County in suburban Detroit after making a career of spotlighting their middle-class anger and frustrations about race and Democratic politicians. …
For more than 20 years, the non-college-educated white voters in Macomb County have been considered a “national political barometer.” … After Ronald Reagan won the county by a 2-to-1 margin in 1984, … I conducted focus groups that “found that these working-class whites interpreted Democratic calls for economic fairness as code for transfer payments to African-Americans.” So what do we think when Barack Obama, an African-American Democrat, wins Macomb County by eight points? …
Before the Democratic convention, barely 40 percent of Macomb County voters were “comfortable” with the idea of Mr. Obama as president, far below the number who were comfortable with a nameless Democrat. But on Election Day, nearly 60 percent said they were “comfortable” with Mr. Obama. About the same number said Mr. Obama “shares your values” and “has what it takes to be president.”
Given Macomb’s history, this story helps illustrate America’s evolving relationship with race. … But focusing on the ways that Macomb County has become normal and uninteresting misses the extraordinary changes taking place next door in Oakland County — a place that played a bigger role in Mr. Obama’s success and perhaps in an emerging national Democratic ascendancy.
While Macomb County is home to the white middle class that America’s auto industry made possible, Oakland County is home to the affluent, business-oriented suburbanites of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, some of the richest townships in America. Just a quarter of Macomb County residents have college degrees, but more than 40 percent do in Oakland. …
Oakland County has formed part of the Republican heartland in Michigan and the country. … Over the past two decades, Oakland County began to change, as an influx of teachers, lawyers and high-tech professionals began to outnumber the county’s business owners and managers. Macomb has been slow to welcome racial diversity, but almost a quarter of Oakland’s residents are members of various racial minorities.
These changes have produced a more tolerant and culturally liberal population, uncomfortable with today’s Republican Party. … On Tuesday, Oakland County voters gave Mr. Obama a 57 percent to 42 percent victory over John McCain. … That helped form one of the most important new national changes in the electorate: Mr. Obama built up striking dominance in the country’s growing, more diverse and well-educated suburbs.
So, good riddance, my Macomb barometer. Four years from now, I trust we will see the candidates rush from their conventions to Oakland County, to see the new America.
(end of excerpts)
Here is the letter I sent to the Times.
I have lived in Oakland County, Michigan, for the past thirty years and have witnessed first-hand the changes Stanley Greenberg refers to. I have also been aware of the bellwether status of neighboring Macomb County, which, starting in 1972, has voted for the popular vote winner in all but two Presidential elections.
Greenberg ends his column with the statement “So, good riddance, my Macomb barometer. Four years from now, I trust we will see the candidates rush from their conventions to Oakland County, to see the new America.”
Why the need to trash Macomb County, after, as he puts it, “making a career of spotlighting their [Reagan Democrats’] middle-class anger and frustrations about race and Democratic politicians”? Greenberg prefers the political atmosphere in Oakland County, so does that entitle him to conclude that we are the “New America”?
Stanley Greenberg seems to have forgotten what begat the “Reagan Democrats” in the first place. Remember, we’re all supposed to be under “one big tent” now. Macomb County “gets it,”, but I’m not so sure Greenberg does.
(end of letter.)
To which I can only add: Good riddance to you, Stanley Greenberg. What a snob!
(recent photo)I'm a longtime political junkie. My interest in politics started even before I campaigned for Henry Wallace for President in 1948 at the age of seven. I retired in 2005 from Wayne State University after being a math professor there for 34 years. Until then I had taught mathematics, as well as some statistics and theoretical computer science, and published papers, since getting my Ph.D. at the University of Oregon in 1966.
I am now a (mostly political) blogger.
My You Tube moniker is politicalmusic.
<a href="http://www.verveearth.com/landing/medallion?id=13869" target="_top"><img src="http://www.verveearth.com/landing/showMedallion?id=13869&size=1" width="88" height="31" border="0"/></a>
(I would also like to generate some income from my writings. If anyone has any ideas on this, please contact me ASAP. gbachelis@gmail.com )
MATHSTAT TUTOR
I no longer do tutoring, but I can highly recommend Mike Rosen (cellphone: 248-242-2550). He has a master's in math, has taught at various local colleges, and has extensive tutoring experience.
I publish articles on Associated Content as mathpol. I post "jokes" on JibJab, as politicalmusic.
My other blogs are Keep Joe Lieberman, mathpol: columnist watch, mathpol: satirical pieces, mathpol: miscellaneous (my adventures as a heart patient, K-12 math education, and some related satirical pieces) and mathpol: personal reminiscences.
In addition to the blogs already mentioned, I have a blog at Freep.com as mathpol. I also have a blog on HuffPost's "Off the Bus"
I have a very old and bare-bones webpage from my days at Wayne State University, where you can find the grisly story of my involvement in the "math wars", 1996-99.
MY ARTICLES PUBLISHED on ASSOCIATED CONTENT
(I believe one has to register there in order to read articles.)
42. Joe Lieberman: Traitor or Mole? Senator Lieberman's Speech to the Republican National Convention
41. “Judas” Lieberman? And His Hawkish, Hawkish Ways. The Negative “Bipolar Effect” of the Internet on Political Discourse
40. Barack Obama's Selection of Joe Biden as His Running Mate.
39. What If John McCain Picks Joe Lieberman as His Running Mate? Plus: My Final Veep Predictions
38. "Asian Invaders" and Michigan Congressman Joe Knollenberg. (8/7/08)
37. The ABC’s of Barack Obama’s Campaign Difficulties. (7/29/08)
36. Obama's Soaring Rhetoric, Veep Choices, and Time to Give the Bum's Rush to Limbaugh. (7/26/08)
35. What's Wrong With This Tom Toles' Cartoon? (7/20/08)
west bloomfield, MI
gbacheli