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Washington Post endorses "insurgent" progressive Donna Edwards ...
By Joshua Holland Posted on August 30, 2006, Printed on December 16, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers//41084/
Yesterday, Don drew a parallel between Donna Edwards -- a grass-roots candidate for Maryland's 4th CD -- and Connecticut's Democratic senate candidate Ned Lamont.
He's right, in that Edwards' opponent Al Wynn has all the dishonesty and go-along-to-get-along in his politics as Joe Lieberman. But having met and chatted briefly with both Edwards and Lamont, my personal observation is that she is far more progressive, passionate and charismatic than Lamont (whom I liked -- don't get me wrong). She also isn't a gazillionaire who can self-finance a costly campaign -- she's fought a great uphill battle to get where she is, a stone's throw from unseating a super well-connected vichy Democrat opponent.
Wynn, like Lieberman, is deeply entrenched in the DC establishment and a darling of the corporatocracy. That's why I almost spit up my cornflakes this morning when I saw that the Washington Post -- a megaphone for that very Beltway establishment if ever there was one -- is endorsing Edwards' campaign (which they did, regrettably, refer to as an "insurgent campaign"):
REP. ALBERT R. WYNN has represented Maryland's 4th Congressional District since 1993, and in that time he has never faced a serious challenger. This year, in Donna Edwards , he does. Ms. Edwards, a lawyer and foundation executive with a distinguished record of civic activism, is Mr. Wynn's opponent in the Sept. 12 Democratic primary. Tough, articulate and knowledgeable, she is one of the smartest and most impressive newcomers in Maryland politics. [...] She has championed a higher minimum wage, campaign finance reform and an array of environmental issues, and she fought for legislation to curtail domestic violence.[...] Ms. Edwards worked for Mr. Wynn as a clerk in the 1980s, when he served in the Maryland House of Delegates. Initially she backed him for Congress, but since then, she says, Mr. Wynn has betrayed the principles that first got him elected. In making that point in a debate with Mr. Wynn this month, she left him out of sorts and on the defensive. No wonder. As we've noted in the past, Mr. Wynn has often seemed more involved in playing the role of a kingmaker in Prince George's than in his duties in Congress. On key federal issues, he has cast himself as the most bipartisan member of Maryland's congressional delegation. That's great in theory, but too often his votes have been at odds with good government and the interests of his constituents. He has backed the estate tax repeal, a measure that benefits the richest Americans at the expense of the poor and middle class. He supported the Bush administration's energy bill in 2003, offering subsidies to oil and gas companies even as they were headed toward record profits. He has flip-flopped on fuel efficiency standards and opposed campaign finance reform. And he has tried to clear the way for casino gambling in Prince George's. All in all, it is a lackluster record. On the war in Iraq, Ms. Edwards has scored points by attacking Mr. Wynn as Maryland's Joseph I. Lieberman -- a supporter of the war portrayed as too close to the Bush administration. Mr. Wynn backed the war at the outset, but he has since recanted, saying he was misled by bad intelligence. More to the point of today's debate, both candidates are calling for a U.S. withdrawal, a scenario that we believe would leave chaos in its wake. Mr. Wynn insists he has been a successful pork-barrel politician; we suspect Ms. Edwards, razor-sharp and relentless, would be at least as effective. We disagree with her on some important issues, but we are convinced she would be the more forceful, principled and effective representative. Wow. Do you sense something in the air?
Find out more about Edwards run here.
Joshua Holland is a staff writer at Alternet and a regular contributor to The Gadflyer.
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View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers//41084/
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