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Tag Archives: Jackson County Democratic Committee

Truman Gala in Kansas City – Jackson County Democratic Committee – June 1, 2019

02 Sunday Jun 2019

Posted by Michael Bersin in Democratic Party News

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Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Gala

The Jackson County Democratic Committee held its annual Truman Gala in Kansas City last night. In addition to honoring long time activists, party volunteers, and public servants, the dinner event included remarks by Jackson County Prosecutor and Missouri Democratic Party Chair Jean Peters Baker, Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway (D), and guest Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand (D).

State Auditor Nicole Galloway (D).

Senator Scott Sifton (D).

Jackson County Prosecutor and Missouri Democratic Party Chair Jean Peters Baker.

Senator John Rizzo (D).

Over three hundred individuals attended the event.

Kansas City Council member and Kansas City mayoral candidate Jolie Justus (D).

Representative Keri Ingle (D).

Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand (D).

Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway, Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand, and Representative Ashley Bland Manlove (D) participated in a panel discussion and took questions on the participation of the new generation of Democrats in the party.

Representative Ashley Bland Manlove (D).

Truman Days in Kansas City: Congressman Emanuel Cleaver

04 Monday May 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Emanuel Cleaver, Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

Congressman Emanuel Cleaver spoke at the Saturday night dinner for Truman Days held at the Hyatt Regency Crown Center.

Congressman Emanuel Cleaver (D) at Truman Days in Kansas City.

…[applause] [cheers] Thank you. [cheers] I think it’s important to know, it is important to know that had Jay Nixon not won the governor’s office we would be in terrible trouble. Missouri has nine members in the United States House of Representatives, four Democrats, five Republicans. All five, all five. One, two, three, four, five. All five. Five, four, three, two, one. [laughter] All of them opposed, voted against trying to stimulate the economy. All of them. And had he not been in the governor’s office we would have suffered the same fate as Texas. Texas, where I was born and I’m ashamed of [laughter] tonight. They’re turning their money back in. With record unemployment. With a devastating economy. And they don’t want the money. And so I hope everyone understands how gratuitous we are to have Jay Nixon come in to office as governor at such a time as this. [applause]

We are right now in the, in the beginning stages of a new, sweet spirit in Washington. It is a can do spirit. It is infinitely more compassion than it was before. I was there. I experienced it. It is different. One of the sad things is that our opposition party has concluded that they lost, not because of bad ideas, not because of a bogus excuse to go to war, but because they were not right winged enough. [laughter] And it’s, it’s kind of sad to see what has happened. All of the moderates that were in Congress are gone. There’s not a single Republican member of the House of Representatives in New England. They’ve all been wiped out.

Because they have bad ideas. We tried their ideas for eight years. And as a result Barack Obama ends up in the White House during the great recession. The nation was and still is in trouble. We’re expecting about three million more foreclosures around the nation. And the commercial real estate market is already in trouble, and no one knows exactly what’s going to happen there.

But the good news is that we have a new, bright, articulate, visionary leader in Washington. [applause] And there are those who criticize him because they say he’s trying to do too much. There are many, many ways of being a failure. Doing nothing is the most successful. [laughter] And that is one thing you don’t have to worry about experiencing. We are doing a lot…


…We just overhauled the credit card bill. It goes over to the Senate. [applause] Most people probably don’t even know that my amendment to the bill deals with college students. The United States sends out four billion credit cards a year. I’m sorry, four billion solicitations a year. I didn’t make a mistake and, and say four billion, meant four million. I meant four billion. And then they send these college students credit card when they go into college and during their registration week they get a subway sandwich and a tee shirt if they fill out an application for a card. And they sent my son a credit card last year who’s in college in California. I would die for him. I wouldn’t send him a credit card. [laughter] [applause]

But rather than helping they, they just criticize, condemn, complain, and cop out. And they say there’s no bipartisanship. I want to remind you the first so called bailout was not proposed by Barack Obama. It was proposed by George W. Bush and his secretary Hank Paulson. Let me also let you know that my mail, like my colleague’s, was probably one thousand to one opposing. That was the case for every member of Congress all around the country. Because people didn’t understand at that time how bad things were. It would have been an easy vote for Democrats to say, “We have an unpopular president in the White House. let’s just vote ‘no.'” But bipartisanship is what happens when you want the country to succeed. We carried the Bush-Paulson bill. We did. Bipartisanship. And then when Barack Obama came to office they just couldn’t accept it. They still can’t accept it. And so not one single Republican, not one. Even after he invited some of them to the White House for the Super Bowl. [laughter] Some of us were opposed to them going over [laughter], messin’ up the White House, doing the Super Bowl. But not one. Not one. You know one could have thought it was a good idea. Not one voted for. And so when you hear people on television talking about this bipartisanship, correct them quickly. We supported a weak, unpopular president because the nation came first. [applause] [cheers]

And the nation now realizes we are right and they are wrong. I mean John Boehner [R-Ohio] is a good guy, actually he’s a, he’s a good guy. He said on television, he said, “Well, you know these Democrats they just think different.” Yeah. [laughter] Yeah. [laughter] I mean, right on soul brotha, I mean. [laughter] Of course we do. [laughter] I’ve been trying to tell ’em, “We’re right, they’re wrong. If you’re right you think differently.” [laughter] [applause] [voice: “Yeah!”] They’ve been wrong for eight years. [applause] And the nation is tired of wrong. [applause] [cheers]

I mean they, I mean there’s torture. A nation’s greatness does not depend on how strong it is, but how it handles its greatness. This nation is too great to torture. And our president has stood up and said, “No more.” {applause] [cheers]

But we’ve got to be careful. We got to get Robin Carnahan [voice: “Yeah.”] in the Senate. [applause] We can’t take it for granted. It is true that the Republican brand has been damaged. There’s no question about it. If you look at the, the generic polling, what people prefer, Republican or Democrat, we are just continuing to move up. Further and further. But even at that we cannot afford to sit down. A line, the line between confidence and arrogance is very narrow. And we cannot afford to come across as arrogant. That reminds me of the folk who were wrong [voice: “Right.”]

Let me conclude, just telling you a story about a guy who had tried to put a light in his shed in the back yard. So he rigged up a dynamo battery to operate the light And once he got it all connected the light flickered, went off and on, and finally, the light went out. So he called a friend and said, “Look, I’m trying to rig up a light for my backyard shed. Can you come over and help?” So this friend who was an electrician worked around and he finally said, “Look, I cannot rig this in a way that would create enough power for the light to come on. But I can rig it, because you have enough power, for a bell.” Now, what does that have to do with us? A lot. It is infinitely easier to ring a bell then generate some light. It easier to make some noise then generate light. Light is what the nation needs during these days of darkness. [voice: Yeah.”] Light doesn’t make noise, it just shines brightly, makes people feel better, it tears away the darkness. And that’s what, that’s what’s happening around the country. We are tearing away the darkness. Now there are those who are still making noise. They don’t have enough power to generate light. So they just make noise. [voices] [applause] Noise. Noise. [applause] But the good news tonight. We have somebody [voice: “Come on.”] who can generate light and make noise. [laughter] [applause] ladies and gentlemen, our senator, Clair McCaskill [applause] [cheers]…

Congressman Cleaver after the conclusion of the Saturday night dinner.

 

Truman Days in Kansas City: photos from May 1st and 2nd

03 Sunday May 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

At the entrance to the Fire Fighters Hospitality Suite.

Dutch Newman (right) in a Hospitality Suite on Friday night.

The view at dusk from the 40th floor of the Hyatt Regency Crown Center.

At the beginning of the 5th Congressional District Club brunch on Saturday morning.

Missouri State Treasurer Clint Zweifel after speaking at the brunch on Saturday morning.

In the parking garage at the Hyatt Regency Crown Center. Yep, we’re at the right place.

The crowd, including dead trees media, gathers before the dinner on Saturday night.

Missouri Governor Jay Nixon (center).

Senator Claire McCaskill.

Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan.

Missouri State Auditor Susan Montee and Steven Bough, Chair of the Jackson County Democratic Committee.

Our good friends in organized labor attended Truman Days events in force.

Truman Days in Kansas City: Friday Night Hospitality Suites, part 2

02 Saturday May 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

Truman Days in Kansas City: Friday Night Hospitality Suites

Truman Days

It’s that time of year again!

A late night view from the 40th floor of the Hyatt Regency Crown Center, site of the Hospitality Suites for Truman Days.

We got to see a lot of good Democrats we’ve known for years, we got to meet a lot of new people, and we got to hear a good bit about the insanity of the republican majority in the Missouri General Assembly from people who are witnessing it up close during the present session.

Alexia Norris (left) and Kevin Stamps, Missouri Democratic Party (right).

In the parking garage at the Hyatt.

Truman Days in Kansas City: Friday Night Hospitality Suites

02 Saturday May 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

Blue Girl, RBH and I are covering the happenings at Truman Days, sponsored by the Jackson County Democratic Committee:

The view from the 40th floor of the Hyatt Regency Crown Center, site of the Hospitality Suites for Truman Days.

Leila Medley, Missouri NEA, former DNC member (left); Doug Brooks, DNC member and member of the Missouri State Democratic Committee (center); Courtney Cole, member of the Missouri State Democratic Committee (right).

In the Fire Fighters suite.

The Jackson County Democratic Committee meeting.

Jackson County Executive Mike Sanders (D).

Show Me Progress: at Truman Days in Kansas City

01 Friday May 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2009, Jackson County Democratic Committee, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

It’s that time of year. Tonight and tomorrow Blue Girl, RBH and I will be covering the happenings at Truman Days, sponsored by the Jackson County Democratic Committee.

Your diligent blog servants hard at work in the Hospitality Suites at Truman Days in 2008. Sometimes, just sometimes, there are a few perks.

The 2009 schedule of events:

Friday May 1st

5 pm Registration

5:30pm-Midnight Hospitality Suites

Saturday May 2nd

10:30am Brunch – 5th District Women’s Club

Featuring: Treasurer Clint Zwiefel

1-3pm Young Democrats Roundtable

2-6pm Hospitality Suites

6pm Social hour

7pm Banquet

Featuring: Governor Jennifer Granholm

All events take place at the Hyatt Regency, Crown Center, Kansas City…

Meanwhile, Jennifer Granholm is the subject of some speculation in the news in regard to the U.S. Supreme Court:

Friday, May 1, 2009

Granholm mentioned as possible Supreme Court justice candidate

Mark Hornbeck / Detroit News Lansing Bureau

Gov. Jennifer Granholm’s name is being bandied around today on the morning news shows as a potential replacement for U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who reportedly has told the White House he’s retiring.

Granholm, 50, a Harvard law graduate and former state attorney general and federal prosecutor, is mentioned as one of a handful of candidates who may be appointed by President Barack Obama to replace Souter, a liberal jurist and 18-year veteran of the high court…

Back to Truman days. We plan on talking to people (this is all about politics, you know), maybe snagging a few interviews about this and that, and generally basking in the warm glow of Democratic Party and organized labor celebration(s) with like minded folks. If you’re attending and you see us hanging around, taking photos, or trying to interview someone, say “hello” and hand Blue Girl and RBH a cold beer. They’ll appreciate it. I guarantee it.

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