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Merrick Redux

A few days ago I reported that the Groton Democratic Town Committee had endorsed Dick Blumenthal, along with a number of folks running unopposed for state or federal office. I noted, somewhat snarkily, that the vote was aimed at Merrick Alpert, which indeed it was. That post drew a rebuke from a “Serious Dem” in the comments1 , who spouted a number of Alpert’s talking points, including the schoolyard “Chicken Dick” taunt. Why, if I didn’t know better (which I actually don’t), I’d think that Merrill opened a gmail account just to post that comment.

So, let me indulge myself with an extended meditation on Alpert and his candidacy.

I met Merrick back in 2006, I believe, when he tested the waters for a congressional race. Concluding quickly that Joe Courtney had the nomination in the bag, he stepped back, most likely figuring he could wait for 2008, after Joe’s eventual loss. That didn’t pan out for him. He struck me as ambitious (not surprising for an aspiring politician), bright and self absorbed. He’s also charming, I’m told. He has, in short, all the standard flaws of most politicians, so one can’t fault him too much for that. (One reason I’ve always really liked Joe Courtney is that he is a genuinely nice guy, someone you can like unreservedly) When Merrick moved to Groton we encouraged him to join the town committee, and to get involved in local politics. But we had misjudged our man. Merrick heard a call, a call that only he could hear, to greater things. Not for him to earn his stripes. He had, after all, built his resume and there was no need to get involved in the nitty gritty of governing, when he could tell heartwarming stories about his return from Kosovo, etc. ad nauseum.

According to Merrick he spent an entire night in conversations with his wife, searching his soul to determine whether he had been called to take down a sitting Democratic Senator who was, in his opinion, seriously corrupt and extremely offensive to Merrick’s sensibilities. He felt so strongly that he had no choice but to roll out his campaign on Fox News, repeating the talking points on Dodd that they had been pushing for months. The commenter attacked our town committee for passing a resolution that implicitly attacked Merrick (we did not, in fact, endorse Dodd at that point, nor did we mention Merrick by name). I authored that resolution and I’m glad I did so. It barely squeaked by, to tell the truth, not because there were a lot of Merrick supporters (there weren’t ) but because some people thought it was premature. In my own opinion Merrick should have played up the razor thin margin; instead, like the amateur he actually is, he chose to play the victim. I think that resolution, and the press it received (largely because of Merrick braying about it) helped take some air out of his campaign at a critical time.

Dodd, in the end, stepped aside. He probably had a number of reasons, but one of them surely was his interest in seeing that the seat was retained by a Democrat. It was a hard thing to do, but he did the honorable thing, something rare in politics. Merrick Alpert was never more than a burr in his side as far as his re-election effort was concerned. To the extent that Merrick really entered the race because of his outrage and despair over Dodd’s alleged lapses, that reason disappeared after Dodd’s withdrawal. Had Merrick declared victory and withdrawn, he might have salvaged a bit of respectability. He might, in other words, have done the honorable thing. Instead he trained his guns on Blumenthal by validating absurd Republican attack lines. Merrick is seeking election to a post as a legislator. The primary function of a legislator (though you would never know it nowadays) is to enact laws. Alpert is currently attacking Blumenthal for spending his life enforcing those very laws. He has done it, not just by and large, but overwhelmingly, in the best interests of the people of Connecticut and with unquestioned integrity. I don’t necessarily agree with every stand he’s taken, but I can’t see how anyone who claims to aspire to the United States Senate can denigrate the importance of the office he has held. By definition, an attorney general engages in litigation. Blumenthal has done that, and done it well. Why is that bad?

Merrick is now running as the “progressive” in the race and I’ll grant him that his positions at the moment are as complete as his resume. Do I believe in his sincerity? Not really, but it’s a rare politician you can trust. I certainly can’t believe he’s as good as his word. Here he is a few months ago, speaking of the campaign to come against Blumenthal:

But how, he is asked, will he persuade people he’s the better candidate? “What I won’t do,” he says, “is speak negatively of him.”

He can hardly say Blumenthal attacked first. Blumenthal has ignored him, by and large.

My own overriding concern (I can’t speak for the rest of the Town Committee, but I’m fairly sure they would agree) is to hold the Senate seat for the Democrats. I’ve known Dick Blumenthal for years. He’s an honorable guy. I don’t agree with some of his positions, most notably on the military tribunals issue, but I’m a realist. Even if I assumed Merrick really believed the stuff he is saying (and I have reason to believe he doesn’t) I would be faced with the following realities:

1. Merrick was unable to raise money even when he was challenging Dodd. Even the right wing nutcases that you would expect to donate just to make trouble, took a pass.

2. Merrick is still unable to raise money, not from anyone, including the people who are pouring millions into Bill Halter’s campaign. Why is that, I wonder?

3. The eventual candidate will probably be running against Linda McMahon, who is ready to spend millions of her own dollars on this campaign. Better to have our candidate start out with a huge advantage in the polls, total name recognition, and high favorability ratings, than be someone running even or behind, with little name recognition, and a so far proven inability to make much of a dent in the public consciousness-someone whose public identity can be transformed into anything McMahon wants to manufacture, if he could ever get the nomination, which he can’t.

4. Merrick’s current campaign, when you get beyond the juvenile name calling, is a combination of bashing the eventual candidate and cynically appealing to the Naderite streak in the progressive community. Merrick has all of Nader’s ego without any of his accomplishments. The pure among us might differ with me, but I truly believe if Nader had butted out in 2000, rather than set his sights on assuring a Republican victory, we would be a lot better off right now. Merrick cannot win the nomination, and cannot be elected if he wins. That’s the practical fact of the matter. If Blumenthal were a truly objectionable candidate, like Blanche Lincoln, that might not matter. A challenge from the left, however insincere, might make sense. But Blumenthal is a good guy, and he’ll be a good Senator. He’s also running a serious campaign. Merrick might want to make a virtue out of his lack of money, but that argument is the last refuge of a failed candidate. Merrick can do only one thing in this race: weaken Blumenthal.

The commenter asked why the GDTC did not wait to hear what Merrick had to say, or wait until closer to the convention, to make our decision. On a practical level, we took the vote the same day we appointed delegates, which seems reasonable, and we have only one more meeting before the convention. But, getting down to cases, we all know Merrick. He hasn’t, to my knowledge, shown any interest in coming to see us again (he was a member until recently but hasn’t attended since the night we passed the resolution I authored) and nothing he could say could change the facts on the ground, to which I’ve alluded above. Why should we wait?


  1. It took me over a day to approve the comment, for which I apologize. I was in Boston. The hotel where we were staying was hosting a nerd convention of gaming programmers or something. The place was crawling with geeks, and according to the concierge, they were using all the available slots on the hotel’s wireless system. So, although I knew from the email on my Iphone that the comment was awaiting moderation, I had no practical way to approve it.?


GTDC endorses Blumenthal

The Groton Democratic Town Committee unanimously endorsed Richard Blumenthal for the Democratic nomination for the United States Senate. The endorsement was widely perceived as a blow to former GTDC member Merrick Alpert, in whose support no voice was raised.

The committee also endorsed Joe Courtney for Congress, Nancy Wyman for State Comptroller, Andy Maynard for State Senate, Fred Palm for Judge of Probate, Ted Moukawsher for State Representative from the 40th District, and Elissa Wright for State Representative from the 41st District. All of these candidates are running unopposed for their nominations. The committee also endorsed Kevin Lembo for Lieutenant Governor, with the understanding that it would support the eventual gubernatorial candidate’s choice, should he or she want someone else.

Getting back to Merrick, he has been labeling Blumenthal a “chicken” for not agreeing to more debates. Why is politics the only profession in which schoolyard taunts are considered anything other than bizarre behavior?


Amazingly well preserved

Could this be true?

Happy Birthday to My Happy Meal

(via Americablog)

If so, we really need good health care in this country.


Same as it ever was

A cartoon from 1934, unearthed by my wife.


For the record

Several publicity hungry attorneys general have filed suit to have the Health Care bill, or portions thereof, declared unconstitutional. They are using the same overheated rhetoric that the Republican Congresspersons and Senators used. To us sane people, particularly us sane lawyers, the idea that this mild mannered health care bill is an “unprecedented expansion of government power” is bewildering. 14th Amendment anyone? Presidential war-making powers? Any of a hundred other examples?

That being said, I have to say that the prospect of success for this lawsuit is fairly good, considering that, if one simply looks at the state of the law today, it totally lacks merit. We no longer live in a country where the judicial system conforms to certain norms. That period in our history ended with Bush v. Gore. It only takes 5 votes to overturn this law, or gut it, and it can be done for the most specious of reasons, no doubt dressed up in language that would lead the ignorant to believe that the result was absolutely compelled by prior case law. There is no reason to think the present court will hesitate to do what it needs to do. Note also that the attorneys general had the ability to forum shop, to file in a district where they will likely get a sympathetic judge, in a circuit where they will get a sympathetic Circuit Court, so that the Supreme Court might be able to strike down portions of the bill while making itself look moderate by narrowing the lower court decisions.

Personally, unless one of the five drops dead soon (tis a consummation …) I give the attorneys general a 50/50 chance of winning. I am writing this now just to be able to say you heard it here first, should it come to pass. I hope I’m wrong, but the fact is that we currently have a lawless court. If they don’t like this bill, and decide they must deliver for their base (Justice Thomas wife just started a group designed to siphon money from the tea party yokels by whipping up their fear and anger), they will find their way clear to sweeping away more than a century of jurisprudence.


Who wrote these rules?

Republicans are shutting down the Senate to protest the Health Care bill. There’s a rule that says you need unanimous consent to hold hearings after 2:00 PM. Why would anyone have proposed such a rule? Why would anyone have voted for it?

It’s really time for the Democrats to turn the “nuclear option” tables on the Republicans. They don’t have to do anything now. They can just state as fact that if the obstruction doesn’t stop, the rules get radically changed on January 3rd, 2010 and there’s nothing the Republicans can do about it. The Republicans will pick up some seats in the Senate, but they’ll still be in the minority, as they will in the House unless I miss my bet. Right now the Republicans feel free to abuse the process because there has been nary a hint that anyone is serious about stopping them. It’s time to stop them. The Democrats are the ones with the most to gain if the filibuster is abolished. It has traditionally been used to stop progressive ideas and to preserve the most reactionary aspects of the status quo, e.g., lynching in the South, apartheid in the South, etc.


The Times incorrectly corrects itself

A few days ago I noted that the Times had once again stated as fact that James O’Keefe had posed as a pimp when he visited Acorn offices during his infamous “sting”. I pointed out that that “fact”, along with many of the other “facts” stated about this event have long since been disproven.

Today, the Times issued a correction (and no, I am not claiming it is response to my post), which merely compounds the error:

Several articles since September about the troubles of the community organizing group Acorn referred incorrectly or imprecisely to one aspect of videotaped encounters between Acorn workers and two conservative activists that contributed to the group’s problems.

In the encounters, the activists posed as a prostitute and a pimp and discussed prostitution with the workers. But while footage shot away from the offices shows one activist, James O’Keefe, in a flamboyant pimp costume, there is no indication that he was wearing the costume while talking to the Acorn workers.

The errors occurred in articles on Sept. 16 and Sept. 19, 2009, and on Jan. 31 of this year. Because of an editing error, the mistake was repeated in an article in some copies on Saturday. (Go to Article)

The fact is, that as I stated in my previous post, O’Keefe never posed as a pimp, at least not while he was with the Acorn people. You can read Acorn’s own analysis here (and I think you’ll find it convincing) as well as the independent report of Scott Harshberger, here, where he states:

The videographers represented that they needed help and had been turned down elsewhere, and that Ms. Giles was a dancer and Mr. O’Keefe was a college student trying to help her. Although Mr. O’Keefe appeared in all videos dressed as a pimp, in fact, when he appeared at each and every office, he was dressed like a college student – in slacks and a button down shirt. Ms. Giles, however, was dressed as she appears in the videos.

The report, by the way, notes that more often than not, the Acorn employees saw through the act. Giles did sometimes claim to be a prostitute trying to get away from an abusive pimp, so I won’t even take issue with the fact that the media always reports the “sting” as her posing as a prostitute, but there appears to be no evidence that either she or O’Keefe ever claimed that he was a pimp.

All the Times did in its correction was correct an assertion that wasn’t even made in the article in question-that O’Keefe was dressed like a 1970s era pimp stereotype. Is it so hard to point out that their entire story is at best unproven, and, given the weight of the evidence, false?

I don’t know why this situation particularly offends my battered sensibilities. Perhaps it’s the utter failure of the Democrats to rise to the defense of an organization that served their constituency, combined with the mob mentality displayed by the media in accepting the word of an obvious dick as gospel But those are everyday occurrences, so they really don’t explain it. Still, I find the whole thing singularly offensive.


A great big shining lie?

This morning Paul Krugman contrasted the approach of the two parties to health care: the Democrats trying to accomplish something for the public good; the Republicans engaged in cynical and destructive partisan politics. In the course of his column he observed:

And on the other side, here’s what Newt Gingrich, the Republican former speaker of the House — a man celebrated by many in his party as an intellectual leader — had to say: If Democrats pass health reform, “They will have destroyed their party much as Lyndon Johnson shattered the Democratic Party for 40 years” by passing civil rights legislation.

I just re-read Krugman’s column on line, and the following is appended to it:

Editors’ Note:
This column quotes Newt Gingrich as saying that “Lyndon Johnson shattered the Democratic Party for 40 years” by passing civil rights legislation, a quotation that originally appeared in The Washington Post. After this column was published, The Post reported that Mr. Gingrich said his comment referred to Johnson’s Great Society policies, not to the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

Odd isn’t it, that David Brooks gets to make up facts without corrections (well, with one correction, but not of the most egregious lies), but Krugman doesn’t, even if this facts are well sourced, as Krugman’s column directly quoted the story from the Washington Post. But was the Post story inaccurate, as Gingrich now claims, or did Gingrich feel it necessary to backtrack? Gingrich prides himself as a student of history, though he has obviously learned very little from it, but as a beneficiary of the Republican Southern Strategy he could hardly have been unmindful of Lyndon Johnson’s famous observation, made when he signed the Civil Rights Act:

We have lost the South for a generation.”

The important point, lost to people like Gingrich, is that Johnson signed the bill knowing fully well that he was giving the South to the Republican. He signed it anyway, because it was the right thing to do, a motivation entirely foreign to the Republican party. But, for purposes of our discussion today, we must only ask ourselves, wasn’t it this quite famous quote to which Gingrich was alluding when he went over the top yet again on health care?

If it makes the Dems feel any better, if Gingrich is right, they haven’t lost nearly as much as they lost back then. Mostly they’ve lost old white men, who they didn’t have in the first place.


The reality of health care reform

One of my son’s college friends, who we see each summer in Vermont,writes about the reality of health care reform for those who really need it. He’s a cancer survivor, still quite young, whose life choices have been severely restricted by his ability or lack of ability to get health care. The bill isn’t perfect, but all in all, it’s probably a good thing that we didn’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.


Dear Comrade Obama

Heil Obama!

Thank you glorious leader for bringing socialism and/or communism and/or fascism and/or totalitarianism to our country. I always knew that making health insurance slightly easier to get, slightly more affordable, and slightly more fair would bring us to a new era, freeing us from the shackles of capitalism and freedom. The day we have all awaited is now at hand.

I write today to offer my services to implement your grand vision. As you know, I have been a steadfast supporter (you can disregard certain posts that were inserted into this blog when I wasn’t looking) throughout the long and arduous struggle against truth, justice and the American Way. Now that we have conquered, it is time to enjoy the fruits of our victory.

I have but one request.

Please, mein Führer, can I be on the death panel? Ever since the summer it has been my ambition to sit in judgment. You can see me below, with some other aspirants, getting ready for our roles in this patriotic process.

I think we can all agree there are certain people that don’t deserve to live: the aged, the infirm, and the Republican. Now, with the death panel authority that I’m sure is buried somewhere in the bill, we can make sure that each is treated according to his or her deserts, and surely none shall escape whipping. You can count on me to ferret out the liberty loving swine that have, until now, stood between us and our communistic/fascistic/socialistic government run utopia. By the time I’m through, there will be no one left to watch Fox, and no Fox left to watch.

Please choose me, you won’t regret it.