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Election 2008

Donna Edwards' Campaign Is Bellwether for Progressive Challengers

By John Nichols, The Nation. Posted February 2, 2008.


Donna Edwards contest against the corporate-friendly House incumbent Al Wynn is one of many key Dem primary races this election.
Donna Edwards on PBS
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Maryland Congressional candidate Donna Edwards did not need a memo from a pollster to tell her the subprime mortgage crisis would be an issue in her 2008 race. Campaigning on the doorsteps and at Metro stops of her racially and economically diverse suburban Washington district, she heard women talking last summer about how a credit crunch might cost them their homes. Edwards, one of a new breed of savvy policy wonks and strategists who are leaving the public-interest community to bid for major elected office, knew how to respond. Months before Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama began promising to fight to keep middle-class families in their homes -- and with an urgency that is still missing from the response of House and Senate Democratic leaders -- Edwards called for radically revising the 2005 bankruptcy bill as part of a plan to protect homeowners from financial ruin.

It didn't hurt that the incumbent Democrat she's challenging in Maryland's February 12 primary, eight-term Congressman Albert Wynn, voted for the bankruptcy bill, favored by commercial banks, which have contributed $185,917 to his campaign. But for Edwards, this was about more than political positioning. "Prince Georges County has the highest rate of foreclosures in Maryland, and my ZIP code has the highest rate of foreclosures in the county," says Edwards, a veteran activist on issues of concern to women and working families. "When I talk about why we need a different kind of Democrat in Congress -- someone who sides with consumers, not corporate interests -- people understand exactly what I'm talking about."

Score another point for Edwards. With support from the Service Employees International Union and other key unions, environmental groups and liberal activists with Democracy for America and Progressive Democrats of America, she is given a fair chance of upsetting Wynn, a corporate-friendly Democrat who voted to authorize Bush to attack Iraq, pass Vice President Cheney's energy bill and protect pharmaceutical companies from consumer-friendly reforms.

The Edwards-Wynn race is a bellwether contest in the fight for the soul of the Democratic Party. That fight is at least as likely to be determined in this year's Congressional primaries as in a stilted race for the presidency, where both Clinton and Obama are eyeing the middle ground they expect to occupy in the fall. These local primaries have national importance, as they could answer an essential question: will a Democratic Party that muddled its message after gaining control of Congress in 2006 advance a progressive brief in the post-Bush era?

No matter what happens in the presidential race, Democrats are likely to finish 2008 in a stronger position than they started. Acknowledging the inevitable at the start of an election season in which their President's approval ratings are in the dumps and a nasty recession is taking shape, House and Senate Republicans are retiring at dramatically high rates. Open-seat contests across the country are ripe for partisan shifts in a year when voters tell pollsters they're inclined toward candidates with a D after their name. In addition, vulnerable Republican incumbents face stiff challenges. So it is that Democrats, who now hold a bare 51-to-49 majority in the Senate -- relying uncomfortably on Connecticut Independent Joe Lieberman's tenuous allegiance to their causes -- speak of picking up open Republican seats in Colorado, New Mexico and Virginia and of defeating Republican incumbents such as Minnesota's Norm Coleman and New Hampshire's John Sununu. And so House Democrats look to pad their thirty-one-seat majority, with good prospects of gaining seats GOP incumbents have abandoned in the recession-wary states of Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

But what will Democrats in power do in 2009? Will they be as disappointingly cautious and unfocused as the Democrats of the 2007 Congress, who frustrated not just the party's base but a broader electorate that gives the Democratic Congress lower ratings than the Republican White House? Or will they develop the progressive agenda and display the strategic sense needed to give meaning to all this year's talk of "change"?


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John Nichols is The Nation's Washington correspondent.

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Donna Edwards Gets It!
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 2, 2008 1:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good for her! The only way the Democrats are going to save themselves is via the primary process. You've got to throw out the old trash - the Harry Reids, the Nancy Pelosis - and replace them with real, live Democrats.

I don't have to explain to most AlterNet readers how jaw droppingly frustrating it is to witness the most criminal administration in American history and then to hear the House Speaker proclaim that "impeachment is off the table". With Democrats like that, who needs Republicans? I ask you!

Are you the party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt or are you the party of Zell Miller?

Dear Donna,
Fight the good fight, lady! We've got our fingers crossed and our hands folded....

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: Donna Edwards Gets It! Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
She Would Have My Vote
Posted by: Sissy on Feb 2, 2008 4:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gads, I wish I were able to vote for her, I would in a heartbeat.

Not only do we need to "take back our country", we need to do it with candidates such as she and to coin an old phrase, we need to "throw the bums out". I found in the news today that once again we learn that Harry has "okayed" the Bush FISA plan and as usual The Texas Turd gets his own way. So folks, to put it mildly "we've been screwed and not even kissed by our own party." I am furious to say the least.

So much for putting the dems back in control.

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"Cautious Democrats?" The author was too kind.
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Feb 2, 2008 4:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I call em sellouts, DINOs and crooks - unless they really piss me off.

If we upset a few incumbents, replace em with good progressives, their single votes won't have that big an impact - but their overall effect could be huge! I want every sellout DINO in office to lose sleep over this. I want em to wonder if the internet is gonna spawn a viable and relentless opponent for them in the next cycle. I want em to have nightmares - even when they're awake.

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Now this is where we CAN make a difference
Posted by: Rod on Feb 2, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
DNC leadership is non-existent. Hillary/Obama was forced down our throats. Well, with enough progressives in congress the president has no power. Concentrate on the house and senate primaries and races, and in your state government too. If enough progressives are elected, the nospineocrats and rethugicans will need to get their support to make anything happen, and then maybe hopefully somethings will change. Now it is our only hope.
Rod

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Then support Cindy Sheehan and the rest...
Posted by: truthteller on Feb 2, 2008 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of the Progressive movement, no matter what party they come under. I've met Ms. Edwards. She's the real deal. She rocks! Those of us who find ourselves prematurely left out of the Presidential race, with the withdrawls of Kucinich and John Edwards should look to Greens and independents like Sheehan and probable Green Party Presidential nominee Cynthia McKinney.

I have sworn I will not help to perpetuate the same old, same old, tired, triangulating "Defeatocratic", DLC corporate sell-out politics. I will not vote for Clinton, or Obama; or locally, for my Congressman, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer. They have sold out the American people for power and profit. If it costs us the White House again to get rid of them - so be it.

I urge anyone reading this who can afford to, to support Cindy Sheehan's effort to unseat Speaker Pelosi, Dennis Kucinich's House re-election campaign, any progressive who runs against Hoyer and any other obstructionist member of the Democratic leadership, as well as Cynthia McKinney's Green Party Presidential bid. The only thing those running the show understand is power and money, and we need to take away their power and rebuild a truly progressive Democratic Party - for the working people.

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» Sorry - but this is Utter Garbage Posted by: Mister_PsyOps
I canvassed for Obama today in Donna's district
Posted by: johnclark on Feb 2, 2008 3:01 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We saw a lot of homes for sale in this quiet, well kept, middle class neighborhood. Although I live in the 8th, I'm doing all I can to get Ms Edwards elected. With the energy for Obama around here, I can't see how she could possibly have yet another election stolen form her.

Yes, the Nation piece doesn't go into detail about the problems we had with the vote in 2006, Diebold DRE's, of course (this will be the last elections with them, thank God). All over the state, pols opened late for lack of Republican officials (this is Maryland, after all). The mess in Montgomery (parts in 4th), and, in Prince Georges (my county), machines found in a parking lot, Greens who registered Democrat for the election told they weren't in the system, even though they had voting cards proving they were registered Democrat, stories of ballots missing names ... We also had a close County Exec race in '06, with our candidate "losing" by a few thousand votes.

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NOW on PBS focuses on Donna Edwards race
Posted by: joelscorp on Feb 2, 2008 6:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Learn and see more about this Maryland race in particular, and the struggle in general for Democrats to deal with their split identity from a recent NOW on PBS program called "Democrats Divided 2008." See it for free at:

http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/403/index.html

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Soul? What soul?
Posted by: texshelters on Feb 3, 2008 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When did the democrats lose their soul? Many years before Pelosi was born, perhaps when President Woodrow Wilson brought us into WWI at the behest of corporate interests. Rep. Pelosi used to represent me in San Francisco until she voted for NAFTA. That is when I finally learned my lesson on corporate power in America. Profits rule and the workers and the environment suffer. That said, we can certainly elect a more worker friendly politician, and there are a few out there.

Peace,
Joe "Tex Shelters" Callahan

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