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~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

Show Me Progress

Tag Archives: Saint Louis

Random Observations of Progress on MLK Day

19 Monday Jan 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Barack Obama, Martin Luther King Jr., Saint Louis

Here’s Martin Luther King, Jr’s famous “I Have A Dream” speech in full on YouTube:

When I was a child, my uncle asked me to find the full text of this speech and copy it for him, as he had recently joined the Toastmasters and wanted copies of famous speeches. I was only a kid without walkable access to the library, so I did what I could: I copied the excerpt that everybody is familiar with out of the “Martin Luther King, Jr.” entry in the Encyclopedia Britannica (we had a six year old set at the time), and typed it up on the screen of our Commodore 64. Twenty five years later, I can watch the full speech any time I have access to a computer, which is 90% of my day.

Forty-six years after Martin Luther King, Jr made that historic address at the Lincoln Memorial, back when it was still legal to bar a white woman from marrying a black man and de facto legal to stop black people from voting, we’ve elected a black man to be our president, with unprecented popularity and support for a president-elect. At the same time, on the YouTube page of King’s speech, comments had to be turned off because of all the hateful racist slurs directed against him, one of the most intelligent and gifted orators in our history. We still have a long way to go.

My hope is that the changes in my experience, from growing up without direct access to information to having it at my fingertips, will continue to help us along in the path toward King’s dream. It might be hoping too much, but then again, even a year ago prominent voices told me that Obama could not be elected president because of his race. It’s human to hope, and I’m not giving that up.

Friday Public Art Blogging

16 Friday Jan 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

inauguration, missouri, public art, Royale, Saint Louis

Fitting for the inaugural weekend, I present to you reproductions of the famous Shepard Fairey Obama prints on the side of the Royale in Saint Louis, by day and by night.

Photos courtesy of a Creative Commons license by Flickr users MBK and prettywarstl, respectively.  

Slay's Armstrong Williams is… The Saint Louis Post-Dispatch?

05 Monday Jan 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Antonio French, Francis Slay, Mayor, pub def, Saint Louis

Antonio French has a post up about Saint Louis Mayor Francis Slay allegedly buying good coverage by the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, the largest daily paper in the state. A couple of weeks ago, the Saint Louis American exposed Slay money funneled to a couple of local African-American newspapers, and there’s no question that the P-D’s coverage of Slay has been pretty favorable.

However, the way Slay is supposedly paying off the P-D is… well, cheap. Slay has apparently directed city lobbyists to press Jeff City to “support local newspapers” in the upcoming legislative sessions. That’s a triple bank shot, at least. I can’t imagine that they would give him years of favorable coverage only on the vague promise of some city lobbying to an unsympathetic target like the Republican-dominated lege.

More likely, the editors and/or reporters just plain like Slay, and their comfort and ease with him lead them to blind spots regarding his weaknesses. It’s happened with all sorts of leaders, from George W. Bush to John F. Kennedy.

I found a greater scandal (which is to say not that big a deal) in something Antonio mentioned in comments, namely that the P-D has a Community Advisory Board which advises them on editorial stances. Sounds harmless, but a) it assumes that the reporters who cover the city are clueless and distant from the communities they are covering, and b) the CAB includes people like the mayor, the mayor’s chief of staff, and Paul McKee, some of the very people the P-D should have been investigating.

Maida's In

02 Friday Jan 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Francis Slay, Maida Coleman, Mayor, missouri, Saint Louis

Maida Coleman is officially throwing her hat in the mayoral race. Looks like Slay’s got another four years, especially if Smith doesn’t drop out.

The back rooms of St. Louis

18 Thursday Dec 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Arch City Chronicle, Francis Slay, Gentry Trotter, missouri, Saint Louis, Saint Louis American

( – promoted by Clark)

Earlier, I wrote a diary explaining why I am not a fan of current St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay.  This is how I started the post:

Below are some reasons why I think anyone who believes in the values expressed by the Democratic Party should not support the candidacy of Francis Slay for St. Louis Mayor.  I think all of these reasons fit into a general theme: in every local issue of substance, Slay has sided with the rich and powerful over the working class and the disenfranchised.  In my opinion, one of the most important things about the emergence of the netroots in recent years has been that it pushed us towards a more meritocratic system.  That is, in the traditional system, the power brokers in the media and the political establishment decided what ideas could even be heard and discussed, and they were very bad at doing so (often because they had vested interests in certain ideas).  The emergence of blogs allowed good ideas to get a wide audience simply because they were good ideas, and not because they had to get the approval of someone in power…

I don’t get the feeling that I convinced many people.  The main argument against me (IMO) was not so much that Slay is a great mayor, but rather that there were no other candidates who seemed like they were better choices.  I now present exhibit B, a column from St. Louis American political blogger “Political EYE”, which I think makes a pretty strong case that we should replace Slay with a different mayor, even if that other candidate is not everything we had always hoped for in a mayor.  I’ll include some choice quotes below the fold, but you really need to read the entire post.  

Obviously how much you make of the following will depend almost entirely on how trustworthy you think the source of information is.  The St. Louis American definitely has a history of being critical of Slay, but I personally don’t think the EYE would go out on this much of a limb without having at least some goods.  I note as well that the Arch City Chronicle followed up on this post without questioning the basic premise at all.  In fact, Dave Drebes had his own question.

The Political Eye column starts the central theme with this:

The EYE knows that money and positions change hands illicitly and off the books in this town, by virtue of being inadvertently caught up in the cell phone equivalent of a back-room deal regarding an attempt to pay off Fire Chief Sherman George. But Mayor Francis G. Slay showed more savvy than Blago.

I’m not even sure what in the rest of the article to cite, since it really is a huge list of pretty specifc innuendo, ranging from the police department to the fire department to publicists and even to the IT department.  Probably the most noteworthy is the EYE claiming to have been a part of some of the conversations in question:

Assuming everyone represented themselves truthfully in this deal n and it would have been foolish to bluff when the stakes were this high n a local developer had Slay’s go-ahead to make Sherman an offer. But even the developer was using an intermediary, a local activist who is no stranger to the deal table. This activist, unable to get a call back from Sherman over the Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday weekend (when Slay wanted to close the deal), called the EYE. The EYE then called Sherman, relayed his answers n always, “no” n back to the activist, who told the developer, who spoke to Slay or then Chief of Staff Jeff Rainford or both.

Like I said, you really need to read the whole article and judge for yourself.  But I think a system like this is ultimately bad for any institution, whether we’re talking about the federal government or the City of St. Louis.

It's a Beautiful Day in Saint Louis (W/ Lots of Pics!)

19 Sunday Oct 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Barack Obama, missouri, rally, Saint Louis

Crossposted to Daily Kos.

IMG_2564.JPG

The sun shines down over the Arch onto the crowd of 100,000 watching Barack Obama’s speech in St. Louis today.

For me, the most amazing thing about Barack’s speech in Saint Louis wasn’t or anything he said in particular, although it was a fine speech. It was the amazing crowd that had assembled to hear him speak. I’ve never seen Saint Louisans celebrate together so joyously, except maybe after a Cardinals World Series victory.

Even then, there was a sense of purpose and a spirit of unity than no sporting event could provide. The event was focused on the people in the crowd, and we knew it. Congressman Lacy Clay, Mayor Francis Slay, gubernatorial candidate Attorney General Jay Nixon, and finally Senator McCaskill spoke before Barack, but didn’t introduce him. Instead, that honor went to one of us, a high school math teacher, who talked about what was going on for him, his family, and his students, and why that lead him to support Barack Obama. When Barack spoke of job cuts and the need to bring jobs back to Missouri, a woman near me muttered “Bush cut my job and I wanted it back.” When Barack told the story of his mother fighting cancer and the insurance company at the same time, another woman near me yelled “That’s me right now!”

As for the speech itself, it was fairly boilerplate as far as policy details go, but he did have some good personal stories, including one about pie. What I liked best about the speech was his knack for weaving a sense of optimism about the future throughout the speech. When he talked about making college affordable, he repeated John McCain’s attack on him for “caving in to an interest group.” “Our youth are not an interest group – they are the future of our country!” he cried. And Obama wrapped up his speech with a passionate evocation of why we should not despair, why we should not get too bogged down in what is to the neglect of what ought to be:

We can do this. Americans have done this before. Some of us had grandparents or parents who said maybe I can’t go to college but my child can; maybe I can’t have my own business but my child can. I may have to rent, but maybe my children will have a home they can call their own. I may not have a lot of money but maybe my child will run for Senate. I might not be able to vote now but maybe someday my grandson can be president of the United States of America.

More pics below the fold.

It's a Beautiful Day in Saint Louis (W/ Lots of Pics!)

19 Sunday Oct 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

000, 100, Barack Obama, missouri, rally, Saint Louis

Crossposted to Daily Kos.

UPDATE: Barack talks about pie:

IMG_2564.JPG

The sun shines down over the Arch onto the crowd of 100,000 watching Barack Obama’s speech in St. Louis today.

For me, the most amazing thing about Barack’s speech in Saint Louis wasn’t or anything he said in particular, although it was a fine speech. It was the amazing crowd that had assembled to hear him speak. I’ve never seen Saint Louisans celebrate together so joyously, except maybe after a Cardinals World Series victory.

Even then, there was a sense of purpose and a spirit of unity than no sporting event could provide. The event was focused on the people in the crowd, and we knew it. Congressman Lacy Clay, Mayor Francis Slay, gubernatorial candidate Attorney General Jay Nixon, and finally Senator McCaskill spoke before Barack, but didn’t introduce him. Instead, that honor went to one of us, a high school math teacher, who talked about what was going on for him, his family, and his students, and why that lead him to support Barack Obama. When Barack spoke of job cuts and the need to bring jobs back to Missouri, a woman near me muttered “Bush cut my job and I wanted it back.” When Barack told the story of his mother fighting cancer and the insurance company at the same time, another woman near me yelled “That’s me right now!”

As for the speech itself, it was fairly boilerplate as far as policy details go, but he did have some good personal stories, including one about pie. What I liked best about the speech was his knack for weaving a sense of optimism about the future throughout the speech. When he talked about making college affordable, he repeated John McCain’s attack on him for “caving in to an interest group.” “Our youth are not an interest group – they are the future of our country!” he cried. And Obama wrapped up his speech with a passionate evocation of why we should not despair, why we should not get too bogged down in what is to the neglect of what ought to be:

We can do this. Americans have done this before. Some of us had grandparents or parents who said maybe I can’t go to college but my child can; maybe I can’t have my own business but my child can. I may have to rent, but maybe my children will have a home they can call their own. I may not have a lot of money but maybe my child will run for Senate. I might not be able to vote now but maybe someday my grandson can be president of the United States of America.

More pics below the fold.

IMG_2559.JPG

The crowd extended all the way back to the Old Courthouse, blocks from the riverfront.

IMG_2557.JPG

On the way in, every Metrolink car was packed with people going to the speech from every part of Saint Louis, from wealthy suburbanites in the county to the working poor in North Saint Louis. The last time I saw it this packed was when Obama spoke at the Edward Jones Dome before the February 5th primary.

IMG_2566.JPG

If you look really hard, you can see Barack Obama standing at the podium. Ok, that’s pretty hard.

Barack podium.jpg

Can you see him now?

IMG_2571.JPG

The crowd was really cheering Barack on today. The woman in the bottom right corner yelled “That’s right!” on almost every point Barack made.

IMG_2578.JPG

IMG_2575.JPG

IMG_2577.JPG

Although signs were discouraged, a few enterprising folks put something together. The Republican for Obama hid his face to protect his secret political identity from his family and coworkers. The good people at the Rooster Cafe blended their marketing savvy with their progressivism for a little advertisement. It worked, too – located several blocks from the riverfront, there was an hour wait to get a table after the speech.

David Sirota in Saint Louis

02 Wednesday Jul 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

David Sirota, missouri, Saint Louis, The Uprising

http://farm4.static.flickr.com…

Last night in Left Bank Books in Saint Louis, David Sirota gave a short talk about his latest book, The Uprising.  I had not read the book, but I wanted a chance to see the man in person. For those of you who have no idea who David Sirota is, he’s a center-left populist pundit. He’s worked as a spokesman for Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and a strategist for Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer. He’s now a popular blogger, a best-selling author, a syndicated columnist, and an occasional guest on cable news shows.

David showed up a little late, although Jeff Smith, who was listed as his host, was even later (Jeff’s notorious for that.) David’s been on a book tour across the US these last few months, so he seemed a little tired but at the same time very comfortable with the format. Apologies for the blurry photos – David keeps his speaking rhythm by prowling and swaying back and forth in front of the crowd.

David’s talk is below the flip.

By “uprising”, David seemed to mean an upwelling of popular outrage into actual political clout. How that political clout was used would determine the legacy of the “uprising.” David began by drawing an explicit parallel between the present day and 1976, the last time that progressive forces had a real chance to wield power effectively. The post-Watergate elections of 1974 and 1976 ushered in a large Democratic majority in both chambers of Congress and a Democrat into the White House. Dissatisfaction with the government was at an all-time high. Yet the new Democratic government failed to achieve promised reforms, allowing the conservatives to seize the moment with Reagan and dominate American politics for twenty plus years.

Making the Rounds: Obama Teams With Nurse in St. Louis

10 Tuesday Jun 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

2008 Presidential election, Barack Obama, hospital, missouri, Saint Louis

I went down to St. Louis’ Barnes-Jewish Hospital today to see a press conference with Barack Obama. He made the rounds with a young nurse early this morning as part of a commitment to spend time on the campaign trail with Americans all over the country as they go about their daily routine, and afterwards held a brief press conference where he contrasted his health care plan with John McCain’s.

I got there early in order to see if I could find out where the hospital was receiving media, because I wasn’t officially on the media list yet. I found the media entrance easily enough, but had to wait for the OK from the Obama campaign before I could go on to the room set aside for the press conference. Being held back for a bit was my first stroke of luck for the morning, because while the media waited outside to be wanded and their bags to be searched, I got to stand just inside the door in the AC watching and listening to patients and their families craning their heads for a glimpse of Barack, and the hospital staff assembled giddily discussing when and where each of them had seen Barack before: Forest Park Rally 2006, Union Station or the Moolah Theater 2007, Edward Jones Dome 2008. I also got to see David Axelrod walking in, hair disheveled as usual.

A very dedicated Obama staffer accompanied me on the elevator up, a member of the advance staff since last October. That was the last time she slept in the same place more than two nights in a row, but she was still sharp, even after waking up at 3:15am today. My hat’s off to her for calmly accommodating me even while managing a whole host of other issues.

Enough about the sideshow – let’s get to the main event. Barack Obama strode in to the media availability room preceded by Kate Mazsluf, the nurse who Obama followed making the rounds. She introduced him by calling him her “new co-worker”, and said that even though he was a senator running for president, he wasn’t half bad at providing care, either. She finished her remarks by emphasizing that she and her coworkers at the hospital shared his goal of providing quality affordable health care to all Americans.

Barack Obama took over the podium by thanking the hospital staff and administration and specifically his nurse partner this morning for allowing him to visit and managing it so smoothly. calling Kate a very good supervisor for him. After the soft intro, he quickly turned to McCain and very effectively.

He called out John McCain on his misleading speech to the National Federation of Small Businesses today, contrasting his own approach down the line with John McCain’s. Far from raising taxes, Obama would cut taxes for 95% of all Americans while McCain would create $300 billion in new tax loopholes and breaks for the wealthiest. “Calling McCain a third term of George Bush is in this regard unfair to George Bush. McCain wants to take it to a whole new level.” What’s more, McCain said that he will eliminate earmarks to pay for his tax cuts, when earmarks by a generous definition account for $18 billion in spending. Obama has a plan to shore up Social Security without cutting benefits or raising taxes on the middle class, while McCain wants to privatize it. He excoriated McCain and Bush on their opposition to raising the minimum wage. And finally, Obama turned to the reason for his visit, affordable health care.

He explained that the critical feature of McCain’s health care plan was rejected by the group McCain addressed today; a survey of small business owners revealed that 70% oppose repealing the tax break they get for offering health care plans to their employees. Obama also explained that while McCain claims to want more choice in health care, the truth is the opposite. When your employer drops your health care coverage and you can’t afford to pick it up yourself, even with the flimsy tax credit McCain claims will offset the added cost, you have less choice, not more. Obama will create a low-cost pool for small businesses that will add to consumer options, not decrease them, and provide funds for an electronic record-keeping system and more preventative care, which in total would lower family premiums by $2500 a year and stop the spiraling increases in health care costs.

Obama closed his introductory remarks strong:

It’s time to stop saying you are on your own to the insured Americans, to struggling families, and small businesses, and it’s time to reclaim the idea that Kate, the nurses and doctors and staff here at Barnes Jewish Hospital live out each and every day, that we all have mutual obligations to one another. That’s why I’m running for president.

A summary of the Q & A session is below the fold.

For the most part, the Q & A session was boilerplate, a bunch of questions about taxes, the Clinton campaign, and the war in Iraq that have been covered to death. The first question was a good one about mandates, an issue that’s been overcovered yet still poorly explained. Did he oppose mandates philosophically or was the lack of a mandate in his plan a political maneuver to entice Republicans to sign on to his plan?

Obama answered that his health care plan is built around the observation that Americans don’t lack access to quality health care because we don’t want it, it’s because it’s too expensive. Bringing costs down is the first priority. He acknowledged that there may be some “malingerers” who do not want to buy into the system because they are healthy and think they are invincible, but many of these were young people who would be covered until the age of 25 by their parents, according to his plan. If there were a sizable majority of others who weren’t covered and caused a systemic problem, he would seek to address them as needed.

A shining moment was when someone from the Wall Street Journal tried to cast him as unfair to McCain, saying that while McCain’s spending plans don’t add up, “neither do yours.” Obama wasn’t having it. “That’s not true”, he said. “In fact, I could send you the article from your own paper that proves it.” (You could hear a few oooh’s in the press room at that.) Obama admitted that he didn’t have an itemized budget accounting for every last dime, but reasonable projections putting him in the ballpark did not compare to McCain, who came up “$282 billion dollars off.”

He also answered a couple of good questions on gun violence and food prices. Asked to comment on increasing gun-related murders around the country, Obama proposed two measures. He would restore federal funding to cops programs to put more police back on the beat and in neighborhoods. This would help urban as well as rural districts. Also, while affirming his belief in the Second Amendment, he also expressed the need to trace guns involved in crimes, and that blocking such traces was a mistake.

And on rising global food prices, he said there were a lot of interrelated issues. Rising global temperatures contributed to changing weather patterns and decreased production. For instance, every degree the average global temperature rises, rice production falls ten percent. That’s why he has a cap-and-trade plan to lower carbon emissions and curb global warming. And the US could do more to encourage production and stockpile food globally. Finally, high energy prices are exacerbating the rising cost of food, and research into alternative fuels can help bring prices back down.

There’s one point where Obama will need to be quicker. Jim Johnson, the guy who is in charge of vetting vice-presidential candidates for Obama, apparently has ties to Countrywide, the big mortgaging company in trouble over subprime loans. This was brought up, and Obama fumbled around a bit before finally answering that this guy is not a part of his campaign; he’s a guy doing a very specific temporary job unrelated to policy, and he won’t be part of an Obama administration. Fair enough, but he needs to get that out quicker.

The food prices question was su
pposed to be the last (a staffer yelled out “Last question!” before he took it) but he went on to answer two more, and I’m glad he did. The first was if he had a chance to reflect on the campaign and where he’s at now, and Obama admitted that he did. He said that he’s proud of his staff, and he feels “humbled and grateful to the American people for giving him this opportunity” and “humbled because we have a big job ahead of us.”

The final question was another tax gotcha question – did Obama say that he would defer tax increases on the wealthy if we were in a recession?

Obama said that was inaccurate, that what he really said was that he will always take facts into account (how refreshing!), and that if adjustments need to be made 6 months from now when he takes office, he would make them if necessary. (It’s sad that claims to adjust policies based on facts is in any way newsworthy.) And then he launched into a critique of Republican economic policy, pointing out the extreme inequalities that have arisen during Republican rule. He drew a picture of profits from rising productivity going almost exclusively to the top 1% and even more skewed to the top 0.1%, while the real median wage has remained stagnant and energy, health care and college tuition have skyrocketed. His policies are intended to reverse that trend.

My final stroke of luck this morning happened on the way out. It took me a little while to break through the gaggle of reporters and hospital staff to get to the elevator, but when I did, I ended up on the elevator with Obama’s nurse partner. She was very sweet and a bit shy, even as she realized her celebrity. Someone  asked her how she felt when she was picked to do this, and she said she thought it was a joke. She said he was a good sport and did extremely well for someone who had no practical training, and he really showed he cared. I asked her if she was nervous, and she replied, “No! Barack is not intimidating at all. I was only really intimidated by all the media.”

The elevator door opened. I bid adieu and walked home.

Blograiser Followup

22 Thursday May 2008

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Blograiser, Deb Lavender, missouri, Saint Louis

So we had our very first blograiser last night. It was much like our original idea, which was a blogger meetup (like last fall) + candidate + contributions to said candidate. 15 people showed up, not counting myself, Deb, and hotflash. Deb Lavender got checks totalling $190 at the event, plus whatever was donated on ActBlue (which is still an option, whether you’ve contributed already or not.) A couple of people promised more contributions at the event, so we’ll update with a total if they follow through. As an added bonus, Deb got to hand off cards and donor envelopes to a few Kirkwood residents who happened to be playing washers near us.

It was good to see Archpundit, Maryb2004, hotflash, duckhunter, ashriver and Rea Kleeman from this blog, and American Phoenix from Daily Kos. It was also nice to meet some of you lurkers. And Joan Landmann stopped by later on to chat, which was highly entertaining. We talked politics, sports, movies, and God knows what else till 11:00 over beers, burgers, pita bread and hummus. (I highly recommend the hummus next time you’re at the Royale – yum!)

We’ll be doing this again in the next few months, but we always hope to make things bigger and better. Suggestions are welcome. If you’re interested in doing a blograiser in another part of the state, I’ll be happy to do whatever I can to help out.

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