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Monthly Archives: November 2008

Exit Poll Analysis Suggests Obama Victory Due to Surge in Youth and Minority Voting

26 Wednesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

The United States saw dramatic increases in voting from traditionally underrepresented groups, including minorities and young voters, according to a new analysis released this week by Project Vote. If borne out by systematic analysis of the voter rolls, this change in the electorate is evidence of the power of successful voter registration drives and an indication of the strong inclination of voters to participate in the process when candidates address their issues.

Countering the conventional wisdom that the voting population on November 4 did not change as dramatically as predicted, the analysis, The Demographics of Voters in America’s 2008 General Election: A Preliminary Assessment, demonstrates that African-Americans, Latinos, and young voters cast millions more ballots in 2008 than in 2004.

“The analysis estimated that about 5.8 million more minorities voted in this year’s presidential election than in 2004, while nearly 1.2 million fewer whites went to the polls,” wrote Greg Gordon of McClatchy Newspapers. “The figures appear to reflect the success of Project Vote and other liberal voter registration groups in registering millions of young, poor, elderly and minority Americans to vote in recent election cycles.”

According to the analysis, African-Americans cast nearly three million more ballots nationwide in 2008 than in 2004-an increase of 21 percent. The total votes cast by Latinos went up by 16 percent-more than 1.5 million-and young Americans aged 18-29 cast 1.8 million more votes, a nine percent increase.  That the overall totals did not increase significantly compared to 2004 was in part due to a decrease in voting by white voters.

In addition to presenting an analysis of ballots cast from the United States as a whole, the memo by Project Vote consultant and Ph.D. candidate Jody Herman and Barnard College political science professor Lorraine Minnite examines several key states in detail, including Colorado, Florida, Missouri, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

The Project Vote data is preliminary, and does not speak to “turnout,” which is traditionally a measure of the percentage of the voting-eligible population that shows up to vote. Project Vote expects to release a full report on turnout in the 2008 election in 2009 when government survey data on the voting-eligible population comes available. Yet, this preliminary analysis indicates that a significant shift occurred this year.

“There is no doubt that this surge in voting by Americans of color and young people had a powerful impact on the outcome of the election,” said Michael Slater, executive director of Project Vote, in a press release issued today.

“Separate opinion polls and election results themselves indicate that an overwhelming majority of African-Americans and Latinos backed Obama,” according to Gordon.

“Thus, the appearance of an African-American presidential candidate with a sympathetic message may have prompted the nation’s minorities to vote at levels approaching white voters — if final state vote counts do not upend Project Vote’s figures,” wrote AlterNet‘s Steve Rosenfeld last week. “Its findings also suggest the U.S. electorate is not an inflexible assembly of voting constituencies, but has segments that are mobilized — or demobilized — depending on the year, candidate and message,”

In an email exchange with Rosenfeld, Frank Sharry, executive director of pro-immigration reform group, America’s Voice, said “neither the turnout increase among Latinos — nor the swing in support to Democrats — were surprising.”

“Telling people you don’t like them and don’t want them is not a winning electoral strategy,” wrote Sharry. “But that is what the Republican Party has been saying to immigrants, Latino immigrants in particular, for the past four years. No surprise, then, that record numbers of Latinos turned out in 2008 and that the swing away from Republicans to Democrats among Latino immigrants in particular was dramatic.”

Fiddling while Rome burns

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

calendar, Checkers Speech, mink, Nixon, republicans

The Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute (a conservative group) issued a calendar with “glamour” shots of notable conservative women wearing, I kid you not, fur. Just in time for the holidays. Given the current state of the economy you’d think they’d go for respectable republican cloth coats.

An ounce of prevention — part one

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2008 election, Joe Goeke, missouri, Velda City

Who could blame African Americans in St. Louis for wondering whether deliberate malfeasance at the Board of Elections caused the ridiculous waits in line at some of the predominantly black polling places? Sure, waits of an hour or even two were common throughout the metro area in the morning. And granted, most of the polling places in North St. Louis County didn’t have any longer waits than other places in the area.

But the real problem polling places were all in neighborhoods with a high proportion of African-American voters. The voters themselves were dogged and good humored. And the Obama campaign posted people at each poll to do what they could to relieve the stress–including bringing donuts and White Castle burgers to the longsuffering.

Velda City, of course, was the worst of the worst, as this report from a roving poll monitor for the St. Louis Voter Protection Coalition explains.

One young African-American man vented at last Thursday’s Board of Elections open meeting about the long lines being a form of intimidation, a way of keeping blacks from voting. But the chaos at some polls resulted more from carelessness than from deliberate efforts to disenfranchise anyone.

At Velda City, for example, eight machines were delivered, but–for lack of room–only three were set up. This was occurring at the city hall, so why didn’t the mayor scream bloody murder to the Board or just make another room available? Judge Joe Goeke, the director of the Board of Elections, said at Thursday’s meeting that when he found out about the problem at 4:00, he called Velda City and was told that they didn’t have room to set up the other five machines. Goeke informed them that they had damn well better find some more room. Now. And they did.

But considering that the first black man ever to run as a presidential candidate from a major party was on the ballot, Goeke–if he took his job seriously–could have, should have, sent people to take a look at polling places in African-American neighborhoods and moved them to larger quarters if necessary. Blacks turned out to vote at three times the usual rate, so one little room in city hall was obviously going to be inadequate. There was an empty grade school a block away. Aargh!

And who is to blame for the confusion about whether voters could mark paper ballots without waiting for privacy booths–confusion common at polling places across the county. The Board decided the week before the election that voters need not wait for a booth. But the election judges at Velda City, and at many other polling places, believed that voting any old where was not allowed.

The decision to let voters mark ballots on any hard surface was taken at the urging of voting rights groups. Too bad the Board didn’t follow through with letting the election judges know about it–though the board members, Goeke in particular, did crow that the election protection people had been wrong, wrong in criticizing him for not printing more paper ballots than he did.

Another problem that the St. Louis Voter Protection Coalition–as well as the Obama campaign–tried to head off in areas of high black population was the dampening effect on voters of police presence at the polls. The law allows officers to be at a polling place only in response to a specific problem or complaint. One roving poll monitor for the coalition explained what happened when he saw a police officer hanging around Berkeley Middle School:

Well, I went in, I went to talk to the officer. I said, “Hey, your presence here could be intimidating to people coming to vote, so can you please, you know …” She said “Oh, I’m sorry, my sergeant told me to keep an eye on these cars. Some cars got broken into. But I’ll, you know, I’ll take off.” I said, “OK, great.” You know, problem solved.”

Uh, then I went to Dellwood Recreation Center where I heard there was another police presence. And I went up there, and there was a cop, you know, standing in line, you know, in uniform, wearing his gun and talking to voters in line. I said, “Excuse me, sir. Could I have a word with you?” He said, “Yeah, what’s up?” And I said, “You know, you being here is intimidating people from voting. Or it could. Police arent’ supposed to be hanging around polling places unless they’re on official duty.”

He told me that he was talking to his family and that he was done talking to me. Then I called the command center, and he received a call on his radio about ten minutes later. Then he received a call on his cell phone about twenty minutes later. And then he stared me up and down for about twenty more minutes and he left.

There was no conspiracy among police departments to intimidate voters by hanging around polls. It was more just that a stray cop here and there couldn’t resist acting like a tough guy.

The St. Louis Voter Protection Coalition offered several ounces worth of prevention to the Board of Elections–most of which the Board chose not to implement. But there will be other elections, and the Coalition is already working to head off the problems they know will come next time around.

Meanwhile in St. Louis

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 19 Comments

It’s election filing season. Yesterday was day one of filing. Most of the noteworthy stuff occurs on the first and last days of filing (with occasional news in-between), here’s the list

Filing for Mayor: Mayor Francis Slay (D) and Former Alderman Irene J. Smith in a rematch of 2005 where Slay won 66%-31% over Smith.

Incumbents have filed in Ward 1 (Troupe), Ward 5 (Griffin), Ward 7 (Young), Ward 9 (Ortmann), Ward 11 (Villa), Ward 13 (Wessels), Ward 15 (Florida), Ward 17 (Roddy), Ward 19 (Davis), Ward 21 (Jones-King), and Ward 27 (Carter). Ward 23 is rumored to be open (and four candidates have filed), Ward 3 and 25 have non-incumbents filed and no incumbent filed yet.

Candidate filing ends January 2nd, the primary is on March 3rd, the general election is on April 7th. From what i’ve noticed on the other side of the state, STL City Politics is never really boring, even if the drama in this election will end after March 3rd.

Thinking of shopping at Wal-Mart this Holiday Season?

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

If you are, I’m sure the Chinese will be psyched.

Wake Up Walmart, who I’m working with, has a great new video up highlighting the perils of supporting the Bentonville behemoth.

In their quest to cut costs, Walmort outsources more and more jobs overseas. It’s come to the point where 70% of Walmart products are now made in communist China. “In the race to the bottom, Walmart gets ahead and the middle class falls behind,” the ad warns.

I know I’m just kind of preaching to the choir about how ugly Walmart’s business practices. But in the spirit of the holiday season, I’d like to invite you to do one of three things:

1. Send this ad to your friends and family. Walmart’s low prices are deceiving and in this struggling economy, a lot of good people might be fooled. It’s important that we get the word out about the high cost of these low prices.

2. Visit WakeUpWalmart.com today and learn how you can help. With the election over, if you have time to join the good fight, we could always use your support.

3. Blog about how the Obama administration should have a say in curbing Walmart’s ugly business practices. This isn’t only a case of a corporation out of control; it’s a case of worker abuse, shoddy environmental practices and an active union-busting agenda.

We’re fighting for more than just winning elections. We are fighting for a more progressive America.

In this time of economic peril, it’s more important now than ever. I urge you all to join the fight and send a strong message to Walmart!

St. Louis events for week of Nov 24 – 30

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Hopefully, everyone has some time off this week and gets to enjoy it, and if you have some free time in your schedule please check out some of these great events.  Also, I’m with Markos Moulitsas: if you’re going to eat turkey rather than tofurkey this Thanksgiving, please consider buying free range .  

This week’s events:

Monday, Nov. 24.  National Columnist and strong advocate against Proposition 8 Dan Savage is going to be speaking tonight at WashU.  He’ll be speaking at LabSci 300 starting at 7 PM and you can RSVP here.

Tuesday, Nov. 25.  I-Squared, a part of the International Institute of St. Louis, will be serving traditional Thanksgiving Dinners to immigrant and refugee families from 6 to 8 at 3654 Grand Avenue as part of their monthly dinner series.  RSVP at this link.

Wednesday, Nov. 26.  The Latin American Forum will be showing “When the Mountains Tremble,” a movie about a battle between the Guatemalan military and a nearly defenseless Mayan population.  The movie will be at the Oak Bend Branch Library (842 South Holmes Ave.) and starts at 7 PM.  More info is at the IOW calendar.

Thursday, Nov. 27.  Lydia’s House is holding a Gingerbread House Silent Auction from top chef’s around St. Louis from 10 AM to 8 PM.  All profits go to Lydia’s House, a shelter for domestic violence survivors.  More info is at this link.

Friday, Nov. 28.  Yippee!  It’s buy nothing day!

Saturday, Nov. 29 Manchester United Methodist Church is hosting a huge Fair Trade Market this weekend.  It looks like they have a great schedule of events.  Check it out here.  

Sunday, Nov. 30.  The Community Arts and Media Project is hosting a “Thankstaking Potluck”, in solidarity with the indigenous people of North America.    They’ll be showing “Broken Rainbow,” a 1985 documentary film about the government-enforced relocation of thousands of DinĂ© (aka Navajo) Native Americans from their ancestral homes in Arizona.  More info is at the CAMP homepage.

Have a fun and meaningful week,

Adam

Let's Keep it Going

24 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

From what I’m hearing and reading, there are a lot of Obama supporters eager and willing to charge into the next phase of party building in Missouri.  Now that we’ve been trained to ID voters, discuss their issues and persuade them to vote for Obama, why let the fire go out?  Why not set up permanent Democratic offices around the state with the goal of continuing to build party support, recruiting and grooming candidates for 2010, and pitching in to support President Obama and Governor Nixon when their policies and ideas are attacked by the other side?

There must be a way to coordinate with the party’s state-level apparatus other than just access to the VAN (although that IS a really neat system.)  What if we could talk the state committee into budgeting some funds for basic things like rent, utilities, internet connection, etc.  Groups with at least some track record and decent organizational skills could apply for grants, e.g., $12,000 per year, spelling out their goals and timetables.  E.g., Identifying a set number of Democrats in a specific geographical area.  OR sponsoring monthly or quarterly political events/fundraisers.  Or setting up committees like those proposed by former Chair of the Mo Party, Roger Wilson.  That was a good idea, but nothing came of it.  If there are new volunteers joining local clubs and central committees who have great ideas, why not nurture them by providing a physical space for them to meet and work?  AND a permanent, year-round local phone number easily accessed by phone book or online.  

If we’ve learned nothing else from Howard Dean and Barack Obama, we’ve learned that “top of the ticket” candidates getting all the resources doesn’t work.  Building the party from the bottom up does.  Does anyone else think it’s worth approaching the state committee about this?

Oh, so now the last eight years of incompetence is our fault

24 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Dana Perino, dubya administration, Howard Kurtz, media criticism

Howard Kurtz at the Washington Post does a schtick on dubya administration spokesperson Dana Perino.

…From her [Dana Perino] vantage point, the rise of the blogging culture has damaged journalism. With mainstream reporters posting blog items throughout the day, “it’s snappy, sarcastic. It doesn’t necessarily engender trust between the reporter and the press people.” And she sees the growth in “analysis” pieces as an excuse for some reporters to vent “what their feelings are about an issue…”

Blogging culture. Yeah, the great unwashed asks all those impertinent questions and demands answers. Unlike real journalists.

A tale of several Springfield campuses

24 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

When the election was all set and done, John McCain won 57/41 in Greene County, Missouri. But George W. Bush won 62/37 in the same county.

If you were to look at the map on 15-24 from the census…

You’d find three red spotted areas, which are overwhelmingly college kids. Two blocks are the MSU campus, and the other is the Evangel campus. Other high 15-24 areas are close to the MSU campus, with two exceptions in Orange, which are around Drury (417) and Baptist Bible College (638). So how did these areas vote on November 4th?

[Checking the number of people in Dorms, the Evangel block has 1047, the two MSU blocks have 2043 and 1031. Baptist Bible has 575 in their block. Drury is split with 235 in the Orange block and 394 in the block north of that. Three Census blocks between the Drury radius and the MSU base also have Dorm residents]

In the case of MSU, we find some splitting of the heavily student areas. Precinct 3B, 4B, and 9B.

Evangel’s campus appears to be split between 22A and 30B. Drury’s campus is mainly in 20A with some housing in 22C. Baptist Bible College is also split with parts of campus in 20B and 22C. Essentially everybody got divided somehow.

So, here’s the locations of precincts that will be mentioned here. 3-B voted at Catholic Campus Ministries. 4-AB voted at Asbury United Methodist. 9-B voted at South Street Christian Church. 20-AB voted at Courthouse Rotunda. 22-AB voted at Pathways United Methodist. 22-C voted at Central Christian Church. 30-AB voted at Cooper Tennis Complex.

A disclaimer before we get to the results: The number of college students voting from their campus location is not exactly high due to those who (a) aren’t registered or (b) are registered in their home town. As well, due to the composition of some precincts, non-students will outvote the students. The last point is the best argument for claiming that one of the four colleges mentioned here is not a secret liberal hotbed.

The results from 3-B showed a turnout of 52% (1299 votes) and these percentages for Democrats.

62.2% Obama, 62.1% Nixon, 52.1% Page, 63.4% Carnahan, 55.95% Zweifel, 58% Koster, and 45% for Richard Monroe.

3 voters didn’t cast a valid vote for President, 75 didn’t cast a valid vote for Governor, 153 didn’t cast a valid vote for Lt. Governor. Between the drastic drop-off rate and Obama’s huge percentage compared to Nixon and Carnahan, this is pretty much campus country, results-wise.

4-AB results (1321 votes cast, 55.6% turnout): 64.5% Obama, 69.6% Nixon, 55.2% Page, 69% Carnahan, 61.4% Zweifel, 61.1% Koster, 49.7% Monroe. 1 voter didn’t cast a valid Presidential vote, 44 didn’t cast a valid Gubernatorial vote, 105 didn’t cast a valid Lt. Gubernatorial vote. Any precinct where Richard Monroe beats Roy Blunt is a diehard precinct.

9-B results (1437 votes, 50.9% turnout): 64.5% Obama, 66.15% Nixon, 54.6% Page, 66.6% Carnahan, 57.7% Zweifel, 58.8% Koster, 46.6% Monroe. 5 ballots without a Presidential vote, 69 without a Gubernatorial vote, 134 without a Lt. Gubernatorial vote.

So, let’s venture north.

20-AB results (1082 votes, 44.8% turnout): 52.6% Obama, 58% Nixon, 43.6% Page, 57.8% Carnahan, 49.2% Zweifel, 51.6% Koster, 40% Monroe.

22-AB results (1379 votes, 53.6% turnout): 53.8% Obama, 65.6% Nixon, 48.7% Page, 67% Carnahan, 55% Zweifel, 56.4% Koster, 45.6% Monroe.

22-C results (918 votes, 47.3% turnout): 60.6% Obama, 67.9% Nixon, 54.2% Page, 66.1% Carnahan, 59% Zweifel, 61.9% Koster, 51.35% Monroe.

30-AB results (1687 votes, 49% turnout): 39.4% Obama, 51.9% Nixon, 35% Page, 50.50% Carnahan, 42% Zweifel, 42% Koster, 32.1% Monroe.

As for comparing this to 2004 (an inexact science due to the possibility of precinct line changes), Kerry got around 55% in 3B, 4, and 9B. 20A and 20B were separate in 2004, but if you combine them, you find that Bush won 59/40 in 20AB. Bush won 52/47 in 22AB. Bush won 55/44 in 22C. 30A and 30B were separate in 2004, with 30B going 75/24 Bush. Combining 30A and 30B tells us that Bush won 68/32 there, compared to 59/39 McCain in 2008.

And here’s a map of the precincts we covered with their results if you’re totally lost

Conclusions..

a) This has pretty much always been the best area for Democrats in Springfield, right?

b) I’m pretty sure that the Baptist Bible College is getting heavily outvoted in 20 and 22C.

c) Evangel is probably outvoted too, but the majority of voters in 30 are with them, so it fits into what we’d expect.

d) Student precincts have low turnout, and presumably a sizable number of kids registered in places they haven’t lived in for years.

e) Feel free to do the math on the results to figure out if Obama won Springfield. It’s possible.

And for fun, famous alums of these schools include Bob Barker (Drury), Congressman Roy Blunt (MSU), Jerry Falwell (Baptist Bible), Royals owner David Glass (MSU), Cheaters host Joey Greco (Evangel), Fmr. Gov. Bob Holden (MSU), Former AL batting champ Bill Mueller (MSU), and Congressman Todd Tiahrt (Evangel).

Honorable mention to these Greene County precincts for giving Obama over 60%: 2A, 3A, and 9A (66.7%!)… ok, maybe I should have featured 9A, any precinct where Richard Monroe almost defeats Roy Blunt by 20%..

So, any thoughts, comments, or urgent corrections?

A village idiot coughs up another giant hairball and prepares to clutch her pearls

24 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cocktail weenies, media criticism, Sally Quinn

The villagers who throw those cocktail weenie parties for all the cool kids inside the beltway are sharpening their knives.

Do you remember this from ten years ago?:

the (not so) mighty Quinn

…Actually, it could be said that Sally Quinn has been floundering around for the last couple of decades, when she failed first as a journalist, then as a novelist, before emerging as a hostess in a Washington society that even she admits is in its death throes. Which brings us to a central question: Who appointed Quinn as the mouthpiece for the permanent Washington establishment, if there is such an animal? A peek into Quinn’s motives reveals a hidden political agenda and the venom of a hostess scorned, and ultimately, an aging semi-journalist propped up by a cadre of media buddies, carping at the Clintons because they wouldn’t kiss her ring…

The self-appointed arbiter of the inside the beltway cocktail weenie circuit is at it again.

via Corrente:

A Church for the Obamas

By Sally Quinn

Saturday, November 22, 2008; Page A15

…the matter of where the Obamas will choose to worship is drawing a lot of interest in Washington and elsewhere…

…I would like to recommend Washington National Cathedral…

You sanctimonious fool, everyone knows all your wingnut friends delighted in the “Obama is a secret Muslim” meme the Mighty Wurlitzer floated about during the campaign. And you want to presume to tell the next President of the United States where he and his family should worship? It’s none of your damn business.

Why should we care what you think?

And then there’s this:

United States Constitution, Article VI

…but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.

So if the Obamas don’t attend the church of your choice are you gonna say they “trashed the place?” Just asking.

I hope Obama does appoint Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. It’d be worth it just to watch Sally Quinn’s head explode.

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