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Tag Archives: Roy Temple

Oh, my – part 6

12 Friday Jan 2018

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri Governor, social media

≈ 36 Comments

Tags

affair, Eric Greitens, facebook, governor, missouri, Roy Temple, social media

This morning from Roy Temple (D), via Facebook:

Roy Temple

Friends,

As some of you may have seen, Governor Eric Greitens has chosen to attack me via his attorney and suggest that I am somehow responsible for the predicament he currently finds himself in. Those are the actions of a pitiful man. As I said on Twitter last night, if he is looking for the source of his problems, he should start with a mirror.

He has made his choices and must now live with the consequences of those choices – all of them. He doesn’t get to pick and choose.

For his benefit, I hope that his attorneys are better lawyers than they are political analysts. If the information about the Governor’s infidelities was going to be used for maximum political impact, the time to use it would have been before the 2016 election. I had all of the information to do so then but didn’t. So there would have been no reason for me to choose to do so now.

I was aware of all that has come out to this point about the Governor (and more) prior to the election, but I knew that information because I had made a commitment to someone that if they told me the details I would not make them public without their permission. They didn’t grant that permission, so I didn’t go any further with it.
With that said, the basic fact of a Greitens affair was fairly widely known. This story is coming to light because of a welcome shift in the terms of how these matters are being discussed publicly, not because of me or the fact that I happen to be a Democrat.

Governor Greitens’ actions devastated the lives of real people and families. They deserved better than the treatment they have received from him.

Some may question the choices I have made in this matter. I can only say that I have tried to make the best choice available to me at the time that I was making it. I don’t believe the same can be said for the Governor.
As I mentioned on Twitter last night, I once asked Governor Carnahan how he tolerated some of the harsh criticism he received. He matter of factly said, “I don’t respect them enough to let their opinion bother me.” That perfectly captures my view of Greitens’ attacks on me.

I will wear the disdain of a man I hold in such low regard as a badge of honor. And I will wear it proudly.

Previously:

Oh, my. (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 2 (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 3 (January 11, 2018)

אַ שאַנדע פֿאַר די גוים and *IOKIYAR (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 4 (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 5 (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 4

11 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri Governor, social media

≈ 38 Comments

Tags

affair, Eric Greitens, governor, missouri, Roy Temple, social media, Twitter

This evening, via Twitter:

Roy Temple‏ @roytemple
Governor #Greitens’ attempts to lay his current predicament at my feet are pitiful. If he’s looking for the source of his problems, he should start with a mirror.
6:55 PM – 11 Jan 2018

Oh, my. That’s throwing an anvil.

Previously:

Oh, my. (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 2 (January 11, 2018)

Oh, my – part 3 (January 11, 2018)

אַ שאַנדע פֿאַר די גוים and *IOKIYAR (January 11, 2018)

The good news and the bad news for Democrats in Missouri

09 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

missouri, Missouri Democratic Party, republicans, Roy Temple, voter turnout

Duane Graham of The Erstwhile Conservative is disappointed in what he sees as the signs of the times embodied in Tuesday’s off-year elections. He concedes that it’s good that Democrat Terry McAuliffe beat right wing Republican Ken Cuccinelli in purple Virginia’s gubernatorial race, but he’s not too impressed with the margin of victory, 47.8% to 45.3%, especially since the Republican was so extreme that, among other signs of left-brain impairment, he “thought launching a website to help keep Virginians safe from sodomy was a great idea.”

Blue Girl here at SMP is also disappointed about the elections, specifically about the defeat of a sales-tax issue in Jackson County, and I think that she’s getting closer to the reason this election should make progressives uneasy when she attributes the reason for the defeat of Jackson County’s medical tax to “the fact that less than fifteen percent bothered to turn out and vote.”

We now have some verification that the low-margin of victory  in Virginia that leaves Graham feeling worried was the result of the same phenomena Blue Girl laments in Jackson County. As Kos of the DailyKos put it in his analysis of the McAuliffe’s narrow victory in Virginia, “we can’t win big if our people don’t vote.”

Getting Democrats out to vote is the big issue somebody’s going to have to tackle between now and 2014. You’d think it wouldn’t be that difficult. Who wants crazy politicians representing them? And if we’re correct in the belief that Todd Akin handed the 2012 election to Claire McCaskill simply by revealing himself as a radical anti-woman lunatic, it’s equally true that many of the state’s Republican politicians have been working overtime to make the point that there are plenty more like Brother Todd down on the farm. Just ask Vicky Hartzler about what the Chinese are doing with toasters if you doubt me.

There’s certainly no shortage of evidence that GOP lunatics are running the asylum when it comes to Jefferson City. What they have done – or ineptly tried to do – has often served as fodder for the laugh of the day in the national news outlets. A stroll down memory lane dedicated to the last year or so would find such icons of rightwing goofiness as proposed laws dedicated to protecting us from Sharia law and Agenda 21, unconstitutional efforts to nullify federal laws, efforts to suppress access to contraception, goldbuggery, even legislation that would make it illegal to legislate.

What they haven’t done is equally nuts. As the St. Louis Post-Dispatch noted earlier this year in an effort to explain the “party of no” label it had been emphasizing, Missouri’s Republians are nothing if not consistent: “No to health care. No to reasonable gun laws. No to cutting tax credits. No to equal rights. No to ethics reform.”

So, given these high levels of the crazy combined with ineptitude, you’d think 2014 and 2016 would be a waltz for Democrats, wouldn’t you? But maybe not. Democrats will still have to contend with gerrymandered districts made up of those die-hard GOPers who have bought lock, stock and barrel into the story about the Kenyan black man in the White House who wants to take their guns and stick them in concentration camps where they’ll be brainwashed until they’re willing to Sieg heil the communist overlords.

There are, however, sizeable pockets of sanity. I’m willing to bet that sprinkled throughout the state there are lots of reliable Republican voters who may not pay much attention to politics but have stayed with the GOP because it’s a personal or family tradition and they haven’t yet realized or they’re in denial about how crazy it has become. And finally there are all those citizens who would vote Democratic if they only ever made it to the polls. If there’s going to be any changes for the better in Missouri, somebody’s going to have to get the good word out to all these groups in a forceful enough fashion to get them all revved up to trash the crazy by, dare I suggest, next year.

Senator Claire McCaskill and Governor Jay Nixon, the top of the Democratic hierarchy in Missouri, may be fine people and are certainly preferable to their past Republican opponents, but they are, to put it kindly, somewhat lackluster and instead of helping to energize Democrats in Missouri, have concentrated on not poking the Tea Party wingers with sharp objects lest they bite. Good for them, but doesn’t do much to raise the kind of enthusiasm about the issues that brings folks out to vote.

Roy Temple, the new Chair of the state Democratic Party may – just possibly – offer some grounds to hope that a nearly moribund party can get it going again. Word is that he is aggressive and professional with lots of  hard-core experience – although some of it, like the inept Missouri Kerry campaign, may be a bit questionable. He does, though, seem to understand the need to address the dynamics of what he correctly identifies as 20 years of Democratic decline in Missouri.

There’s lots to do. Money to be raised. Effective, targeted, non-stop messaging machines to construct. The unions have worked well with the Democratic party in the state. Are there other organizations where joint efforts can be coordinated better? What about all those Democratic clubs and organizations? I can think of several in the St. Louis area alone – just teeming with Missourians who want to help, but don’t necessarily know how to do it in the most effective way. If Democrats in the state get going now, maybe they can begin to help pull Missouri out of its GOP doldrums. And then we can all sit back and watch pigs soar through the empyreum.

*Slightly edited for clarity.  

It’s going to be that kind of week

11 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

General Assembly, missouri, Missouri Freedom alliance, Roy Temple, Tim Jones, Twitter

From Speaker Tim Jones (r), in reference to his Missouri Freedom Alliance LLC:

Tim W. Jones ‏@SpeakerTimJones

Libelous, slanderous, defamatory innuendo by assaultive political adversaries…is not fact. 10:20 PM – 10 Sep 13

A reply from the Chair of the Missouri Democratic Party:

Roy Temple ‏@roytemple

Tip for @SpeakerTimJones: The truth doesn’t require so many practice runs. 10:27 PM – 10 Sep 13

Hey, he had his birth certificate with him.

When you stand up and fight you might just win

10 Tuesday Sep 2013

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Claire McCaskill, Democrats, HB253, Jay Nixon, legislative vetos, missouri, Missouri Democratic Party, Roy Temple

The New York Times today chronicles Governor Nixon’s smart tactics in the battle over whether or not his veto of HB253, the GOP’s rope-a-dope tax cut bill, will stand. While it’s not a done deal, the Governor has at least put up a fight and has a strong chance of prevailing:

As a Democrat facing a State Legislature with veto-proof Republican majorities, Gov. Jay Nixon of Missouri has not claimed big victories lately. So when he began stumping the state against a deep Republican tax cut that he had vetoed, he might have seemed to be on a political fool’s errand.

But over the summer, Mr. Nixon has turned the debate away from the Republican argument that lower taxes bring jobs and recast the tax cut as one that would hurt education and mental health services. The state’s school boards have rallied to his side. More than 100 of them have passed resolutions supporting the veto. And with a veto session set to begin on Wednesday, it is the supporters of the tax cut who are now pessimistic.

The most interesting part of the Times article, however, involved a comment from the brand new Chair of the Missouri Democratic party, Roy Temple:

“Democrats are often far too timid to stand up and call them [i.e., Republicans] out when they’re doing something that’s destructive,” said Roy Temple, the chairman of the Missouri Democratic Party, who spent several years in Washington as a political strategist. “There’s no political risk for pointing out when they’re doing things the wrong way.”

Welcome words after years of watching our state’s leading Democrats quake and quail in the wake of the Tea Party rout of 2010. Maybe it won’t only be the Governor who has discovered that he actually has a spine (although it may be the term-limited Nixon’s political ambitions that have lead to that belated discovery). Wouldn’t it be great to see Claire McCaskill shut-up about budget caps and come out swinging for measures to combat climate change?

Dream on you say –  and you’re probably right. The more important point, however, is that Temple’s remarks may signal a change in the state Democratic Party strategies and tactics which have been the very definition of timid – when they even exist. Maybe Temple will be the man who can not only build a strong, efficient organizational structure to serve the state’s Democrats, but can help to articulate a smart, aggressive strategy to help revive the party’s fortunes in Missouri.

Perhaps I’m reading too much into a few casual words. Perhaps it’s just wishful thinking – God knows there’s been little to nothing in the state to be positive about apart from Jay Nixon’s veto pen. But we have seen remarkable politicians emerge in the midst of red-state deserts – just think of Wendy Davis in Texas. Whether she runs for Governor next year or not, and whether or not she wins if she does run, she has established a beach-head for change. Here in Missouri we also have some thoughtful and articulate Democrats in our state legislature and elsewhere – but what we lack is a strong party organizational structure – something other than a lapdog for prominent state Democrats – to recognize and support their talents.  

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