Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label People MD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People MD. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

20070717 Annapolis Mayor Ellen Moyer has a blog


Annapolis Mayor Ellen Moyer has a blog

July 17, 2007

Thanks for the Hat Tip from Maryland Politics Today (Mayor Moyer Is Now A Blogger)

… we learn that Annapolis Mayor Ellen Moyer has a blog. Friday, July 13, 2007 - Ellen Moyer's Bio

A blog is perfect for a mayor or any elected official for that matter. It facilitates getting your message out directly to your constituency and unfiltered…

How many times have ya heard an elected official say, gee, I wish that the paper would cover this or that event or initiative? If you mess-up, and that will happen, the paper will be sure to cover that – all the while overlooking all the positive things that are going on.

And if ya have the time, a blog can be helpful for the inevitable rumor control…

Good for Mayor Moyer…

And thanks again to Maryland Politics Today

####

Monday, July 09, 2007

20070709 Senator Pipkin This is Fiscal Magic at its Clumsiest

Senator Pipkin: “This is Fiscal Magic at its Clumsiest”

Proposed budget cuts will do nothing to fix the looming deficit

Press Release

For release: July 9, 2007

Contact: Mathew Palmer - 410.841.3639

Senator Pipkin: “This is Fiscal Magic at its Clumsiest”

Proposed budget cuts will do nothing to fix the looming deficit

“This is fiscal magic at its clumsiest,” said Pipkin. “For the Governor to suggest that $153 million in cuts, of which some will be replaced by federal dollars, some are simply not filling vacant positions, and still more is from the savings of shutting down the House of Corrections, is nothing more than window dressing.”

“I am pleased to see that the Governor is willing to make these types of efficiencies,” said Pipkin. “But there is much more work to do, and not a lot of time to do it.”

“I hope everyone in Annapolis is not going to point to these cuts and say ‘This is the best we can do, now we need to raise your taxes!’” added Pipkin. “As the Governor’s own spokesperson said ‘these are the first cuts, they certainly may not be the last’.”

Governor O’Malley’s meager cuts represent only ½ of 1% of the states total $30 billion budget and only 10% of the looming $1.5 billion deficit.

“Who’s kidding whom?” asked Pipkin. “I have suggested putting a lid on spending increases as an effective way to fix the budget shortfall, and that would save $955 million.”

Sen. Pipkin’s plan is a combination of holding the states spending growth to 2.5% for 2008, reallocation of a portion of the teacher’s pension and retirement back to the Counties where it is incurred, and legalizing video lottery terminals. The plan could net the state as much as $1.9 billion in combined savings and revenue for the 2008 fiscal year.

“This combination of belt-tightening, reallocation of fiscal responsibilities, and realizing revenue from slots, would allow the state to get its fiscal house back in order,” said Pipkin, “and would not dig even deeper into the pockets of the hard working families of Maryland.”

####

Friday, June 29, 2007

20070628 Linda Lamoned – again and again and once again

Linda Lamoned – again and again and once again

June 28th, 2007 by Kevin Dayhoff

On Tuesday, June 26th, 2007, Kim Zetter, a journalist working for “Wired,” broke the story on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator Linda Lamone seemingly “endors(ing) Diebold machines in marketing materials.”

Re-read the previous sentence. It is important.

When you read her piece, “Maryland Election Official Endorses Diebold Machines in Marketing Literature;” one can easily see that she spent a great deal of time on it, used cultivated sources, investigated it thoroughly, knew the issues and she broke the story. A story all of the rest of the vaunted mainstream media missed in Maryland. She nailed it.

Did you know that she broke the story?

Chances are great that you did not. Everyone is using her work, yet, except for one buried credit, “The use of her statements in the Diebold brochure was first reported Tuesday by wired.com, the Web site for Wired magazine;” the mainstream media and the Maryland blogosphere – for shame – is not giving her credit.

And this is wrong.

And the one credit she did get is buried so far in an article that if you did not know the issues, or care, and did not purposefully look for it – you would have easily missed it as the article in question was not overly forthcoming that the writer used Ms. Zetter’s work; almost paragraph by paragraph… - in the beginning as a springboard…

In the article, Ms. Zetter’s name was not mentioned and the “credit” was so off-hand and casual, the almost all readers would not be aware of all her hard work – and that she broke the story.

On another front, the crazier thing of it all is that if the Maryland blogosphere treats a colleague in this manner how are we to expect the mainstream media to treat us better?

For other posts about the phenomena of on-line journalists working hard and breaking stories or adding insight to a fast moving story; only to have the main stream media pick it up and not properly attribute the material – click on: Media Commentary MSM Give credit where credit is due.

Now – click on: “Maryland Election Official Endorses Diebold Machines in Marketing Literature” by Kim Zetter and then click on: “Election official criticized over ad” by Melissa Harris – and do a side-by-side comparison. Print them out if you need to. I’ll remain relatively agnostic - - you draw your own conclusions.

To Ms. Harris’s credit, she took the story and ran with it. She did a great job diving-in and bringing forth more information to our attention. But why not give Kim Zetter credit for breaking the story in a prominent manner at the top of the story?

And maybe it is not Ms. Harris’ oversight. For all we know perhaps her original copy did appropriately feature the person who did the original work and an editor messed with it.

Some of the additional depth of Ms. Harris’ coverage piques one’s curiosity… For example, the matter of the YouTube video But that information has been out there for a while and I, for one, am willing to toss it up to the fact that perhaps Ms. Harris decided to give the matter that extra effort – that has been lacking on the part of the institution for which she works, in the past. Ms. Harris obviously worked hard on her piece… where other reporters were more willing to give Ms. Lamone a pass…

In an e-mail exchange with Ms. Zetter, she was extraordinary gracious and professional.

She wrote, in part:

“I'd much rather they write about the subject and not credit me than that they not write about it at all. And the Baltimore Sun reporter did do a good job with her piece.

“What's more, it was only because a number of reporters started calling

the governor's office that he asked the ethics commission to look into

the matter. I'm not sure my blog post alone would have achieved that.”

Methinks that Ms. Zetter is being a bit humble. That said, her professionalism in this context is to be applauded. Many other journalists have not been so magnanimous…

And again, to emphasize - - with the teamwork of Ms. Harris working the story and Ms. Zetter’s initial hard work - things happened. That is the way it should be.

It also would be important for the mainstream media give “the on-line partner” all the credit they are due. In a side-by-side comparison of Ms. Zetter’s story and Ms. Harris’ story, wouldn’t you think that perhaps a few more attributions were in order?

I guess, we should reward Ms. Harris and the Sun for giving Ms. Zetter the fleeting credit they did give her. It’s progress…

Nice work Ms. Zetter – and Ms. Harris…

Moving on to the Linda Lamone matter itself; this is a train wreck.

During the previous Republican administration, the Baltimore Sun was loath to attribute any problems to the darling of the Maryland Democratic Party and the Democratic leadership in the Maryland General Assembly…, Ms. Lamone.

In previous coverage of any number of synthetic (and real) problems during the previous Republican administration, the Baltimore Sun “owned” their coverage. The Sun read like a talking points memo of the Maryland Democratic Party.

Now that challenges persist in spite of campaign promises, many of the articles; on say the hiring and firing of state employees, or the electric rates matter, now feature that “Republicans are saying,” or Republicans charge….” Not that the problems have their “own” legitimacy, as in under the previous coverage of the previous administration…

Delving more into the Linda Lamone train wreck, it will curious as to whether or not she will be held responsible for her alleged job performance issues or for that matter, her conduct on the job. After all, she has been taught for four years that she can do whatever she darn well pleases and the Baltimore Sun and the Maryland Democratic leadership will cover for her and protect her.

Click on “Linda Lamone.” Or read my September 20, 2006 Tentacle column, “Lamoned, again.”

The conduct of Maryland's primary election on September 12 is a national disgrace. We've been "Lamoned!" Linda Lamone, that is. You know - the Democrats' state elections administrator for life.

[…]

You can bet the farm that if the state elections administrator had been appointed by Gov, Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., there would be screaming from the front page to the last, criticizing the governor and calling for the administrator's head.

[…]

The Sun was quick to say in a September 14 article: "Lamone, for her part, said she was "horrified" by the problems that snarled the start of voting on Tuesday but she attributed most of the problems to the largely autonomous local election boards - especially in Montgomery County and Baltimore - not anything that her office or its staff did wrong."

But then, in the same article The Sun says: "The state Board of Public Works did not approve the final order for all of the necessary equipment until July 26, a vote that was delayed by questions raised by board members Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., and Comptroller William Donald Schaefer."

Darn it - well, of course. How could we all be so stupid? It was the governor's fault after all.

Remember, Ms Lamone, "appointed by the State Board of Elections with Senate advice and consent," essentially has a job for life as a result of the 2005 Maryland General Assembly's "Linda Lamone - appointment for life legislation." Remember: 2005 SB 444/HB 675: "State Elections Office and State Elections Advisory Committee" sponsored by Sen. Paula Hollinger and Del. Shelia Hixson?

Blair Lee, in a March 3 Gazette column, "Paybacks are hell," puts it into perspective best. He calls to our attention a Sun article of February 21, "Voting-System Debate Colored By Party Politics."

In the article the paper editorializes on a comment by Governor Ehrlich: ''I no longer have confidence in the state Board of Elections' ability to conduct fair and accurate elections in 2006."

The Sun suggests that this "was Ehrlich's shabby attempt at intimidating the board and suppressing voter turnout... and replacing the state elections administrator, Linda H. Lamone, with someone the administration favors."

Mr. Lee writes, "From time immemorial, state law allowed governors to appoint the state elections administrator - the person who oversees state elections. And for decades, Democratic governors appointed loyal Democrats who could be trusted to keep an eye on the party's interests."

"When Ehrlich became governor in 2003, the Democratic legislature changed the rules . now Linda Lamone can only be removed by an 80 percent supermajority of the full elections board and even when removed she keeps her job until her successor is approved (if ever) by the state Senate, controlled by Democrats!

"In other words, at the prospect of a GOP governor the Democrats installed a Democratic elections-administrator for life. Yet, none of this made it into the Sun's story about ''playing politics" with the elections board. Which raises this question: at what point do reporting omissions create an untruth?"

The answer to our problems is to have the United Nations, former President Jimmy Carter - and perhaps representatives from Zambia, Serbia or Thailand - be official observers for the upcoming Maryland general election.

[…]


The Linda Lamone story will no doubt be continued.

Meanwhile, increasingly, Marylanders get their cutting edge and breaking news from the blogosphere. When a journalist picks up a story, most responsible journalists are quick to link and credit the mainstream media covering the story.

We only ask that the courtesy be reciprocated. Is that too much to ask?

####

Monday, January 15, 2007

20070114 Baltimore remembers Harlow Fullwood


January 15th, 2007

Baltimore’s WJZ Ch. 13 web site is carrying an AP story on Mr. Harlow Fullwood passing away.

http://wjz.com/topstories/local_story_014101033.html


(AP) Baltimore, MD Baltimore businessman and philanthropist Harlow Fullwood Junior has died. He was 66.


Fullwood died from advanced stages of diabetes at the Manor Care nursing home in Baltimore County.


Fullwood was a former police officer, Baltimore Colt football player and Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise owner.


He founded an organization called the Fullwood Foundation. In its 19 years, the organization helped hundreds of young people attend college.


Fullwood died shortly after the 19th annual Fullwood Foundation breakfast this afternoon.


####

Thursday, January 04, 2007

20070102 UN Sec Ban to fill two UN posts this wk with controversy

UN Sec Ban to fill two UN posts this wk with controversy


January 2nd, 2007 – January 4th, 2007


Fox News is carrying an Associated Press article on its web site that indicates that when former United Nations secretary Kofi Annan left the building, we may have gone from the frying pan to the fire.


Add to our woes with the UN is the fact that we no longer have the calibre of individual in former UN ambassador John Bolton to look after our best interests…

New Secretary-General to Fill 2 U.N. Posts This Week, Could Bring Controversy

By Liza Porteus, Tuesday, January 02, 2007

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,240800,00.html

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

AP NEW YORK — New Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is expected to announce his picks for two of the top posts vacant at the United Nations this week, a spokeswoman said Tuesday — and one of those choices could be controversial.

Ban, the former foreign minister of South Korea who started his new job Tuesday, will soon make public his choices for under secretary-general for administration and management and the head of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

The administration and management job traditionally has gone to an American, but this time, it could be different.

Press reports over the weekend indicated that Ban might choose Alicia Barcena of Mexico to head up the administration and management office, but that report has not been confirmed. Barcena is the former chief of staff of Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who left that position late last year, making way for Ban.

The appointment of a non-American to the job would be a "disaster" for the U.S.-led effort to reform the U.N., according to one U.N. official.

Read the rest of the article here. Prepare to be annoyed.

For more reading go here: Bolton US Amb to the UN John, UN

####

Saturday, December 30, 2006

20061230 Crablaw calls to our attention a Sun article on Tom Schaller’s book

Bruce Godfrey at Crablaw calls to our attention a Baltimore Sun article on Tom Schaller’s book

December 29th, 2006

Writing for the Baltimore Sun, Andrew Green has a piece about UMBC professor Tom Schaller’s book, “Whistling Past Dixie: How the Democrats Can Win Without the South.”

A big thank you to Crablaw for calling the article to our attention.

In his post, Mr. Godfrey encourages his readers to be sure to read Mr. Green’s article.

I agree.

However, I’m encouraging “Soundtrack” readers to also
be sure to read Crablaw’s post about Dr. Schaller’s book.

For a previous post about Dr. Schaller and his book, please read: “
20061030 Appearance on the Mark Steiner Show.” And for other mentions of Dr. Schaller in “Soundtrack,” please click here.


I have come to really appreciate Dr. Schaller.
When I appeared on WYPR’s Mark Steiner show last October 30th, 2006, he was wonderful to chat with about current events, politics and the issues. To be certain, we agreed on very little, however, he was fun and engaging and kept it intellectual.

To be sure, we need more Dr. Schaller’s in the "public intellectual."
[1]

I have not read the
book; however, it is on my short list of “must” reading.

I have several colleagues who have read it and were excited about Dr. Schaller’s out of the box insights and fresh pragmatic approaches.

It is not really fair to comment on the book without reading it, nevertheless, my uninformed view is that Democrats will still have problems with some their party’s liberal positions in the Western United States. Positions on gun ownership comes to mind quickly.

Reading Mr. Green’s article reminded me of the “banter by way of song,” between Neil Young and the lead singer of “Lynyrd Skynyrd,” Ronnie Van Zant in the early 1970s.

What many in the public were not aware, is that the two talented songwriters and performers were quite good friends.

Nevertheless, on Mr. Young’s third album, one of my all time favorites, “After the Gold Rush,” released in 1970, there was a song entitled, “Southern Man.”

The lyrics
[2] to “Southern Man” were a biting critique of Mr. Young’s understandings of race relations in the south in the 1960s.

Ronnie van Zant responded with “Sweet Home Alabama,” in which he attempted to portray what was good about the south. (“Sweet Home Alabama” was written by Ed king, Ronnie van Zant and Gary Rossington.)
[3]

Mr. Green writes that “Virginia Democratic strategist and "Bubba vote" guru David W. "Mudcat" Saunders,” has taken umbrage with Dr. Schaller’s book.

Hopefully Mr. Saunders and Dr. Schaller can be great sports and get together some time and talk about the book and the future of the Democratic Party’s presence and strategy in the south.

That would be a great public forum at say, UMBC or UVa - - or somewhere. How about William and Mary in Williamsburg? Dr.
Simon Stow could be the moderator. (See “20061005 Breakfast and a class at William and Mary.”)

Read Mr. Green’s Baltimore Sun article here.

Read Bruce Godfrey’s Crablaw article here.

Buy Dr. Schaller’s book here.

Kevin

####



[1] Andrew Green wrote on December 27th, 2006 in the Baltimore Sun: “Schaller, 39, is a bespectacled, fast-talking political science professor who has been trying for the last few years to work his way into a career as a liberal talking head, or, as he calls it, "public intellectual."


[2] Lyrics to Neil Young’s 1970 "Southern Man"

Southern man; better keep your head; Don't forget; what your good book said; Southern change; gonna come at last; Now your crosses; are burning fast; Southern man.

I saw cotton; and I saw black; Tall white mansions; and little shacks. Southern man; when will you; pay them back? I heard screamin'; and bullwhips cracking; How long? How long?

Southern man; better keep your head; Don't forget; what your good book said; Southern change; gonna come at last; Now your crosses; are burning fast; Southern man.

Lily Belle, your hair is golden brown; I've seen your black man; comin' round; Swear by God; I'm gonna cut him down! I heard screamin'; and bullwhips cracking; How long? How long?


[3] Lyrics to Ed King, Ronnie van Zant and Gary Rossington’s Lynyrd Skynyrd’s early 1970’s “Sweet Home Alabama:”

Big wheels keep on turning Carry me home to see my kin Singing songs about the southland I miss Alabamy once again And I think its a sin, yes

Well I heard mister young sing about her Well, I heard ole Neil put her down Well, I hope Neil Young will remember A southern man don’t need him around anyhow

Sweet home Alabama Where the skies are so blue Sweet home Alabama Lord, Im coming home to you

In Birmingham they love the governor Now we all did what we could do Now Watergate does not bother me Does your conscience bother you? Tell the truth

Sweet home Alabama Where the skies are so blue Sweet home Alabama Lord, Im coming home to you Here I come Alabama

Now muscle shoals has got the swampers And they’ve been known to pick a song or two Lord they get me off so much They pick me up when I’m feeling blue Now how about you?

Sweet home Alabama Where the skies are so blue Sweet home Alabama Lord, I’m coming home to you

Sweet home Alabama Oh sweet home baby Where the skies are so blue And the governors true Sweet home Alabama Lordy Lord, I’m coming home to you Yea, yea Montgomery’s got the answer

Saturday, December 09, 2006

20061208 Popularity and success could not save Gov. Ehrlich

'A Wipeout Election' Popularity and success couldn't save one Republican governor from the Democratic tide.

Tuesday, December 5, 2006 12:01 a.m. EST
Hat Tip: GOPCharlie – Thanks

In case you missed it, (I had missed it and can’t thank GOPCharlie enough for calling it to my attention…) Brendan Miniter, who has a most excellent column on the
Wall Street Journal’s Opinion Journal, has written a fascinating vignette of Maryland Governor Robert L. Ehrlich.

'A Wipeout Election'
Popularity and success couldn't save one Republican governor from the Democratic tide.
BY BRENDAN MINITER
Tuesday, December 5, 2006 12:01 a.m. EST



ANNAPOLIS, Md.--In the four weeks since losing his bid for re-election, Gov. Robert Ehrlich has been braced by an outpouring of support from constituents. Each day he reads some of the thousand of letters and emails that have come in and marvels as one after the other expresses regret for his defeat.

But every so often, the governor told me on Friday, he comes across a letter of a different sort. These come from residents who say that they're "sorry" that they couldn't support him "this time," but that if he runs again they'll likely vote for him then.

Here the governor, the first Republican chief executive the state has seen in more than three decades, pauses. We're sitting in a private study in the governor's mansion, and over some 90 minutes a half dozen of his top staff members will trickle in and take a seat. None possess an answer to the question he now asks: "How do you respond to that?"

[…]

He lost last month because the Democratic voters who had supported him four years ago decided this year to use their votes to "send a message" to Republicans in Washington.

[…]

Read the rest here.

####

Thursday, December 07, 2006

20061204 An excellent essay on Gov Ehrlich by Jay Nordlinger




Editor’s Note: A version of this article appears in the current National Review.
Republicans and conservatives suffered a lot of losses last month, on Election Day. In fact, they — we — had almost nothing but losses! And one of the toughest we sustained was that of Robert L. Ehrlich, the governor of Maryland. He was a true-blue Reagan conservative, and he presided over one of the most liberal and Democratic states in the Union. He won an amazing election in 2002, but lost this year to Martin O’Malley, the mayor of Baltimore.

That 2002 election seemed a special gift: Ehrlich beat a Kennedy, lieutenant governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, who was a national star. He did so by a margin of 51 percent to 48. Ehrlich has said many times that conditions had to be perfect for him to win, and that he and his team had to run a perfect campaign. The conditions were, indeed, perfect, and so was the campaign. But Ehrlich could not manage reelection, losing to the relatively likable and canny O’Malley by seven points. Thus has one of the brightest Republican stars been sidelined, maybe permanently.

An unusual fellow, Ehrlich: He went to Princeton, doing his thesis on Solzhenitsyn. ...


[...]

Read the rest here. It is well worth the time.


Monday, December 04, 2006

20061204 Bolton Submits Notice






UPDATE: Fellow Maryland Blogger Alliance member, The Baltimore Reporter shares his thoughts: Bolton Out
UPDATE: It is only fair to call to your attention that Crablaw and Joisting for Justice disagree with me about Senator-elect James Webb… I really respect their opinions and they articulate their views compellingly, colorfully and persuasively and it is only appropriate that you should also read their posts, for balance. Especially since I don’t feel really balanced at the moment over the John Bolton matter. It only makes my colleagues more human and likable when they are like - - soooo wrong on the “James Webb matter.” I’ll feel better in the morning. Some spiced walnuts would help.


Fox News wrote a story on the resignation of U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton’s resignation that simply puts an exclamation mark on this whole sad and sorry Kabuki Morals Play.

As much as the resignation caught many of us by surprise - - it was to be expected. Much of the conversation by the Democrats about bi-partisanship is just that – cheap and empty talk; so that they may get the sycophant mainstream media writing cheery, sugarcoated stories about how wonderful and magnanimous they are going to be after the last election.

Virginia Senator-elect James Webb only served as iconography for the personal animus many of the Democrats feel for President George W. Bush, when he was rude to the president, as reported by
Michael D. Shear, a Washington Post Staff Writer on Wednesday, November 29, 2006. George Will said it best: “Jim Webb is not what Washington needs more of.”

We are all entitled to our feelings; however respect for the office requires folks to at least be cold and professional.

Former Marine James Webb is certainly entitled to his disagreement with the president and there are few folks who have earned as wide a berth as Senator-elect Webb, as a result of his courageous service in Vietnam and by way of the fact that his son is currently serving in Iraq.

Parleyed carefully, Senator-elect could have been extraordinarily compelling and persuasive in helping develop and fashion a very necessary course correction in Iraq.

He squandered that opportunity by acting-out on his personally feelings. It was behavior unbecoming an officer and a Marine.

The Bolton resignation just throws salt in a wound started by Senator-elect Webb that many of us were willing to overlook, including this writer, because of the circumstances.

Unfortunately, there will be more slings and arrows and insults to come and once again, a self perpetuating and vicious cycle of attacks and reprisals will be rekindled in a city where they eat their young and look longingly for someone innocent for desert, just for pleasure of watching someone suffer.

If Ambassador Bolton’s nomination were to have made it out of the committee, the Senate would’ve confirmed. He is eminently qualified for the job and has performed admirably since his recess appointment a year ago.

In the Fox news story, “
Bolton Submits Notice Ending Service When Recess Appointment Expires,” White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said it well:

"You know, 58 senators have been on record as being for this guy and he can't get a vote. He has been incredibly successful as our U.N. ambassador, he has a record that everybody ought to be proud of, and instead he can't get a vote. And that is just ridiculous."

The president’s remarks as quoted in the Fox News article also resonated:

"It is with deep regret that I accept John Bolton's decision to end his service in the administration as Permanent Representative of the United States to the United Nations when his commission expires… "I am deeply disappointed that a handful of United States senators prevented Ambassador Bolton from receiving the up-or-down vote he deserved in the Senate. They chose to obstruct his confirmation, even though he enjoys majority support in the Senate, and even though their tactics will disrupt our diplomatic work at a sensitive and important time. This stubborn obstructionism ill-serves our country and discourages men and women of talent from serving their nation."

Not to be overlooked was Sen. George Voinovich’s commentary:

Bolton supporters, even some late to the game, also expressed disappointment. Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had objected to Bolton when he was up for consideration in the Senate panel. But after Bolton served for a year in the recess appointment, Voinovich said he was impressed by how effective Bolton had been.

"I am very disappointed that John Bolton will not continue in his role as ambassador to the United Nations," Voinovich said Monday. "Given the fragile nature of the world situation and the critical task of reforming the U.N., he should have been given an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor.

"I'm extremely concerned with him leaving since he's been so deeply involved with the situations in Iran, Syria, Lebanon and North Korea and has been working in concert with fellow ambassadors toward true U.N. reform," Voinovich said.


But Senator John McCain really has the final word:

Other Republicans, including Arizona Sen. John McCain, said Bolton's departure is a loss for the United States and a terrible commentary about the state of politics in Washington.

Bolton's "resignation today is less a commentary on Mr. Bolton than on the state of affairs in the U.S. Senate. For over a year, Democrats blocked his nomination in the Foreign Relations Committee, preventing an up or down vote on the Senate floor. In so doing, they have deprived America of the right man at the right time at the U.N.," McCain said.


Memo to incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware and Senator John Kerry - - just shove it.

On this one, coupled with how the president’s two Supreme Court nominees were treated; at some point in the future, if some Republican members of Congress want to get in touch with their feelings on a future critical issue brought forth by the Dems, that is really important to them; I will be more than willing to turn a blind eye.

Something this egregious must have consequences.

Kevin


20061204 UN Ambassador John Bolton calls it quits

UN Ambassador John Bolton calls it quits

December 4, 2006

Hat Tip: Mrs. Owl

In what is being suggested is a surprise move, Baltimore born and raised and McDonogh graduate, John Bolton, has announced his resignation as U.S. Ambassador to the UN.

This is not a step in the correct direction as we attempt to adjust our course in Iraq and continue to face threats and challenges to our national security on a world-wide scale – and the UN always seems ready and willing to aid and abet those who have the worst intentions for the United States and Israel..

Down the road, should we ever have a Democrat president, this is one for which we need to retain an acurate memory - - as it is petty liberal partisan politics at its worse.

Perhaps the next time the Republican leadership in Congress wants to give a pass to a Democratic president’s nomination out of deference to the president and in the interest of comity; this needs to be remembered.

For previous posts on Ambassador Bolton click here.

For Maryland Blogger Alliance member,
Soccer Dad’s past in-depth analysis – go here.

For my take on Ambassador Bolton in
The Tentacle, please read:

August 2, 2006,
Confirm Joltin' John Bolton , Kevin E. Dayhoff: “On March 7, 2005, President George W. Bush nominated Baltimorean John R. Bolton to be the United States ambassador to the United Nations. It is time for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee - as well as the entire upper chamber - to confirm our Maryland-bred leadership in the U.N…”

MSNBC says, “
John Bolton resigns as ambassador to U.N.,” and has a video…

Meanwhile
Fox News is carrying the Associated Press story.

For CBS’s left-leaning take:
U.N. Ambassador John Bolton To Step Down:”

(CBS/AP) Unable to win Senate confirmation, U.N. Ambassador John Bolton will step down when his recess appointment expires soon, the White House said Monday.

The White House had argued in recent weeks that Bolton had demonstrated his value and professionalism in the job and deserved to be confirmed. But even a Senate still in Republican hands didn't have the numbers to make it happen, CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller reports.

Bolton's nomination has languished in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for more than a year, blocked by Democrats and several Republicans. Sen. Lincoln Chafee, a moderate Republican who lost in the midterm elections Nov. 7 that swept Democrats to power in both houses of Congress, was adamantly opposed to Bolton.

President Bush gave Bolton the job temporarily in August 2005, while Congress was in recess. But the appointment expires when Congress formally adjourns, no later than early January.

Although Mr. Bush could not give Bolton another recess appointment, the White House was believed to be exploring other ways of keeping him in the job, perhaps by giving him a title other than ambassador. But Bolton informed the White House he intended to leave when his current appointment expires, White House deputy press secretary Dana Perino said.

Mr. Bush planned to meet with Bolton and his wife later Monday in the Oval Office.

As late as last month, Mr. Bush, through his top aides, said he would not relent in his defense of Bolton, despite unwavering opposition from Democrats who view Bolton as too combative for international diplomacy.

The White House resubmitted Bolton's nomination last month. But with Democrats capturing control of the next Congress, his chances of winning confirmation appeared slight. The incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Democratic Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, said he saw "no point in considering Mr. Bolton's nomination again."

Actually, I see no point in Senator Biden. What a waste.

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

20061128 Comptroller-elect Peter Franchot’s transition team

Comptroller-elect Peter Franchot’s transition team

November 28th, 2006


Now this is a diverse, bi-partisan and

very bright transition team. In spite of my past impressions of Mr. Peter Franchot, this team impresses me.

Some of the brighter bulbs are: retiring Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan; former Gov. Harry Hughes; former GOP senator Howard Denis; and “former Baltimore County Sen. F. Vernon Boozer, once the Senate’s GOP leader, and state Sen.-elect George Edwards, current leader of the GOP in the House of Delegates.”

But perhaps one of the brightest is former Marine and Vietnam Veteran John Bambacus. Senator/Mayor Bambacus served as a Special Assistant to U.S. Senator Charles McC. Mathias, Jr., from 1979-82 and is a former GOP Senator (District 1, Frostburg, 1983-91) and mayor of Frostburg.

Gov.-elect O’Malley would have been smart to have put some folks like Senator Bambacus, or McDaniel Professor Dr. Herb Smith or UMBC Professor Dr. Tom Schaller on his transition team.

All three are arguably some of the top political science and history minds in Maryland today. (Yes, there are others, like former Secretary of State John Willis, Harford County Executive David Craig... let’s not belabor the point…) Folks who can look at the challenges of governance with a broader view than the many special interest advocates on his team. (See my November
Tentacle column, "Now Comes The Hard Part.")

For someone who campaigned on not being beholden to special interests, Gov.-elect O’Malley’s transition team was quite a surprise for many of us. Hey, he didn’t ask me my opinion. I wish he had.

Anyway,
Len Lazarick, writing for The Examiner, wrote a piece on Comptroller-elect Franchot’s transition team on Nov 22, 2006:

BALTIMORE - Not that there’s any competition between Comptroller-elect Peter Franchot and Gov.-elect Martin O’Malley, but Franchot’s transition team is bigger than O’Malley’s, and is co-chaired by an ex-governor and the mayor’s former primary opponent.

llazarick@baltimoreexaminer.com

Read the rest here.

Monday, November 20, 2006

20061119 John Bolton and his recent remarks on the UN

John Bolton and his recent remarks on the UN

November 19th, 2006


Baltimore native John Bolton has once again called to our attention the lunacy of the UN.

The Baltimore Reporter has a must read post on the U.S. Ambassador to the UN, John Bolton: “Wow, read this:.”

The U.S. Ambassador to the UN, John Bolton, launched a scathing attack on the United Nations Friday.

Read the rest here. It is well worth the time…

The Baltimore Reporter concludes with:

“And the Dems want to get rid of this guy! As Curt said, the United Nations continues to make a mockery of themselves with these self-serving resolutions brought on by some of the worst of the worst on this planet. He could not be more right. He could not be more right. How many resolutions has there been against Palestine and Hezbollah compared to Israel?

The UN should either be reformed or shut down. And only a man like Bolton will do it.”

I’ll add one more “should.” In my August 2, 2006
Tentacle column, I wrote: “Confirm Joltin' John Bolton:”

“On March 7, 2005, President George W. Bush nominated Baltimorean John R. Bolton to be the United States ambassador to the United Nations. It is time for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee - as well as the entire upper chamber - to confirm our Maryland-bred leadership in the U.N…”

Read the rest here.


Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

20061030 Appearance on the Mark Steiner Show

Monday, October 30th, 20006 appearance on WYPR’s the Mark Steiner Show
with UMBC Professor Tom Schaller

Finally posted Thursday, November 7th, 2006. Sometimes my life is not my own…

To listen to the audio of the October 30th, 2006 appearance, go here. (If you use Mozilla Firefox, you can bring it up in another tab and keep working with the show playing …)

Pictured above is Dr. Schaller doing a stand-up after the show, outside of the WYPR building on Charles Street.

On Monday, October 30th, 2006, I had the pleasure to appear on WYPR’s “The Mark Steiner Show” with UMBC Professor Tom Schaller for a discussion of the upcoming Maryland elections. Mr. Steiner is certainly an accomplished veteran and come to find out, so is Dr. Schaller.

Thomas F. Schaller, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).

The show came on the heals of a column Dr. Schaller had just penned in The Examiner, on October 27th, 2006, “Will Ehrlich see first defeat of his political career?”

I keep running across Crablaw’s post: “Kevin Dayhoff on WYPR Marc Steiner show,” that reminds me that I haven’t posted about the show. You might say, that for several days, Crablaw has played the role of my “electronic wife.”

Crablaw, we will look forward to your analysis of the program. Hopefully you draw the same conclusion as I did, that the Schaller-Dayhoff show actually furthered intelligent conversation about the current state of pre-election politics in Maryland.

WYPR billed it on their web site as: “We're less than two weeks away from the elections which means the political ads are getting nastier and the papers are endorsing candidates. Marc and his guests UMBC Professor Tom Schaller and Political writer Kevin Dayhoff will discuss the political campaigns and strategies of candidates running for office in Maryland.”

Oh – the music was great: Music break one: "National Seven" by Wizz Jones
Music break two: "Reminiscing at the Blue Note" by Earl Hines.

Although I have done radio before; (once for a very brief appearance on WBAL after “Who is Max Cleland?and with Stu Kerr's radio talk show, "The Garden Club", on WCBM several times in 1989 and 1990 - - ages ago, in a previous life as a horticultural expert… I haven’t done it for awhile and was worried that I would be rusty. Oh yeah, I did plenty of radio and “stand-ups,” when I was mayor of Westminster

Mark Steiner and Dr. Schaller - -and the production assistant, Marcus Charleston, made it easy…

To state the obvious, radio is very different from writing columns. With columns, you can write and re-write and re-write a sentence over and over again until it is (hopefully) just right. Not so with radio. Once it comes out of your mouth, that’s it. Bam!

Oh, Dr. Schaller has a book out – you can find it here: Dr. Tom Schaller’s Book, Whistling Past Dixie: How Democrats Can Win Without the South on Amazon.com.

The Denver Post did a good question and answer on October 24th, 2006 about his book, in their series - - Washington and the West . It can be found here: Q&A: Author Tom Schaller on why Democrats should forget about the South

Like I said, Mark Steiner and Dr. Tom Schaller made the show easy. And I can’t wait to do it again.

Please enjoy the show.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Monday, November 06, 2006

20061106 Four Statewide Ballot Questions

Four Statewide Ballot Questions

For those in a hurry my view is: 1 (NO); 2 and 3 (Yes) and 4 (NO).

The official ballot language and background is located on the State Board of Elections website:

http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/questions/index.html

I’ve been getting quite a few last minute questions and commentary on the four statewide Maryland ballot questions.

I’m not aware if any of the Maryland Blogger Alliance members did anything on this – if they have, call it my attention and I’ll link it…

On Thursday, October 20th, 2006, the Washington Post (WaPo) did an editorial about the four questions – and a colleague also did an analysis…

- there appears to be some varying views on question number 1(WaPo – Yes; Me – NO; and my constitution-scholar colleague – NO). I’ve been told that Governor Ehrlich supports – says Yes to question No.1. The Governor supports this amendment because it memorializes the statutory requirements that already exist. I guess my suggestion to vote NO comes from being a former elected Chief Executive Officer who grew tired of legislative bodies that have enough votes to usurp and/or intrude upon executive function. It is already statute…;

;

And some firm consensus on the questions 2 by all three of us… (Yes); 3(Yes) and 4(NO).

_____

Actually, questions number 2 and 3 really are housekeeping and everyone ought to consider Yes on both questions.

As far as question 1, it just seems to me that if the governor were to be a Democrat, the Maryland General Assembly would have never passed the bill requiring the question… It just seems like so much of the situational ethics employed by a Maryland General Assembly pre-occupied with gotcha politics.

Question number 1 involves the perception that “Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s (attempted) to sell a parcel owned by the state to a business executive…”

In 2003, Governor Ehrlich asked state agencies to review all state assets to identify surplus assets that could be disposed of because they were no longer essential for state use. It is a typical management technique taken by any executive searching for greater efficiencies in operations.

I have had too many folks, who are strait-shooters; whose judgment I accept as objective, say that question number 1 is all about gotcha politics and making a mountain over a molehill.

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The Washington Post suggests Vote yes on the first three, no on the fourth.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/25/AR2006102501664_pf.html

Four Maryland Questions

Vote yes on the first three, no on the fourth.

Thursday, October 26, 2006; A24

MARYLAND VOTERS face four statewide ballot questions this year -- three constitutional amendments and a decision on whether to retain changes the General Assembly made this year to election law. The amendments should all pass, but voters should reject the election law changes.

Question 1 asks voters to approve a constitutional amendment to prohibit the Maryland Board of Public Works from allowing the sale of state land without the approval of the General Assembly.

Following an uproar over Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s attempt to sell a parcel owned by the state to a business executive, the legislature passed a law requiring that it sign off on land transfers.

Writing the rule into the constitution represents a basic check on the authority of the board -- an authority that is itself a part of the constitution. The amendment is far from onerous, allowing the General Assembly to delegate this power to a committee. Its adoption makes sense.

Questions 2 and 3 are both judicial housekeeping measures that ought to pass.

Question 2 makes constructive technical changes to the state's appeals process.

Question 3 ups from $5,000 to $10,000 the amount a plaintiff in a civil case has to seek in damages before he can demand a jury trial in a circuit court rather than a trial before a judge in a district court.

Question 4 deals with changes to election law that were so controversial that the state's highest court has already thrown out their centerpiece, an early voting system.

By the time the court acted, however, opponents of the measure had already gathered enough signatures to put the law on the ballot -- meaning voters get to decide whether to ratify its residue, which has already gone into effect.

They should vote it down.

The most important provision remaining requires the State Board of Elections, which has five members, to act on all matters by supermajority vote. This could disable the board from doing much of anything, requiring bipartisan agreement for every step. The law also gives the elections administrator, Linda H. Lamone, new powers to go to court to force local election boards to comply with the rules.

The cumulative result would be to shift power into Ms. Lamone's hands. As the General Assembly already has to go back to the drawing board on early voting, it makes sense to start over with the rest of the bill, too.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company

_____

The colleague who made the most understandable analysis on the four questions says: - No on question number 1; - yes and questions 2 and 3; and No on question number 4. I have pasted that colleague’s analysis here:

Understanding the Statewide Ballot Questions

The November ballot has four statewide ballot questions. The first three of the questions are Constitutional Amendments passed by the General Assembly and referred to the public for adoption. The fourth question is a referred bill on election law that was successfully petitioned to referendum by Marylanders for Fair Elections.

The official ballot language and background is located on the State Board of Elections website: http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/questions/index.html

Statewide Question 1 – Constitutional Amendment - Disposition of Park Lands

This question is a totally political ploy by the Democrat Party to stick it to Ehrlich. The policy is currently in place by statute.

There is no reason for it to be incorporated into the State Constitution.

But the Democrats wanted a rallying cry to bring the environmental community out to the polls against Bob Ehrlich in 2006 – so they made the bill a Constitutional Amendment.

In 2003, Governor Ehrlich asked state agencies to review all state assets to identify surplus assets that could be disposed of because they were no longer essential for state use.

It is a typical management technique taken by any executive searching for greater efficiencies in operations.

Over the last four years, the Democrats in the legislature placed a premium on finding issues to make the Governor look bad. They made sure that the Governor’s slots initiative did not pass. They spent over $1 million to determine that at-will employees were legally dismissed from their positions.

And they exaggerated the circumstances under which surplus land sales were being considered, including one instance in St. Mary’s County, in order to undermine the Governor’s significant accomplishments with the environmental community through his Chesapeake Bay initiatives.

The Governor supports this amendment because it memorializes the statutory requirements that already exist.

But it is simply surplusage to add it to the Constitution, it restricts Gubernatorial powers, the policy adds a layer of bureaucracy through General Assembly intervention into executive decision-making and it is on the ballot only for it’s value to turn out anti-Ehrlich vote.

It deserves a big “AGAINST” the referred law.

Statewide Question 2 – Constitutional Amendment – Circuit Court In Banc Decisions

Typically, a case heard in a county circuit court is heard by one judge. The Constitution provides that a party may appeal a circuit court decision to the circuit court sitting “in banc.” “In banc” literally means the entire bench but in contemporary practice provides for an appeal hearing before a panel of three circuit court judges. In the early history of Maryland, “in banc” review saved the time, travel and expense of traveling to Annapolis for an appeal before the Maryland Court of Appeals.

While making some substantive change to appeal rights in Maryland, this Constitutional Amendment can be characterized as housekeeping. When the Court of Special Appeals was created as an intermediate appellate court in 1966, it left a question that has not been addressed until this bill. If you are a party in a circuit court case and the other party appeals for an “in banc” review, you could lose your right to appeal the “in banc” decision because it would go directly to the Court of Appeals where the appeal is not automatic but instead is discretionary by certiorari. This bill guarantees the party that did not request an “in banc” review to have an appeal right to the Court of Special Appeals.

Bottom line: this amendment is needed to insure that the party that did not request the “in banc” review continues to retain an automatic appeal right. Vote “FOR” the referred law.

Statewide Question 3 – Constitutional Amendment – Civil Jury Trials

This is another bill that can be characterized as housekeeping. In 1998, the General Assembly increased the amount-in-controversy threshold under which one is entitled to request a jury trial in a civil case from $5,000 to $10,000. However, in a recent case, the Court of Appeals ruled that there is a common law right to a jury trial and that the General Assembly did not have the authority to establish the amount-in-controversy threshold because of a conflict between the Constitutional language and the common law in the Declaration of Rights.

This bill resolves this conflict and would allow the General Assembly to pass a bill next session to set the threshold – more than likely at $10,000. Some people would oppose this bill on the premise that anyone should be allowed to request a trial of one’s peers no matter what is at controversy.

However, under a greater efficiency in the courts rationale – I say vote “FOR” the referred bill.

Statewide Question 4 – Statewide Referendum – Election Law Revisions

Don’t let the preface to this bill fool you! Many of you signed petitions to bring this bill to referendum so that it could be defeated.

Even though the biggest atrocity in the bill – early voting – was struck down as unconstitutional by the Court of Appeals, there is still bad stuff in this bill for which the rest should be struck down by the voters.

Again, the Democrat leadership of the General Assembly injected pure partisan politics into our election laws.

The bill requires a supermajority vote (4 of 5 members) for the State Board of Elections to make any decisions – with 3 Republicans and 2 Democrats on the board, it means that the Democrats totally control any actions at the State level. It also handcuffs the Board’s powers thus yielding greater power to the incumbent State Administrator (who was given a job for life by an earlier bill passed by the Democrat leadership).

The law also consolidates considerable new powers in the State Administrator to be able to sue local election boards, to hold veto power over basic decisions made by local election boards and assist registered voters to sue their local boards.

Need we also remind you that this bill requires that every polling place be outfitted with the epollbooks that performed so poorly for the Primary election.

TrueVote Maryland and other good government election’s organizations say vote “AGAINST” this law – and so do I.

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