April 2007
Monthly Archive
Fri 27 Apr 2007
Posted by ericbauman under
Democratic PartyNo Comments
2007 California Democratic Convention Update
Today the annual California Democratic Party Convention kicks off in San Diego. The convention runs from today, Friday, April 27, through Sunday, April 29, 2007. The theme for this convention is “California Democrats Leading the Way.â€
The convention will be webcast live throughout the weekend,
The following provides you information about the participation of National Democratic leaders and our constitutional officers and state officials throughout the weekend:
Friday evening: Chair’s Welcome Reception, with Presidential candidate Senator Mike Gravel and Congressman Jerry McNerney.
Saturday morning: Speakers include California’s Democratic statewide Constitutional officers and U. S. Senator Hillary Clinton.
Saturday lunch: Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez , Senate President pro Tempore Don Perata, and Congressmember Zoe Lofgren.
Saturday afternoon: Speakers include House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, U. S. Senator Barack Obama, U. S. Senator Christopher Dodd, and Congressman Dennis Kucinich.
Sunday morning: Speakers include former U. S. Senator John Edwards and New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson.
Remember, if you can’t be in San Diego, the convention will be webcast live throughout the weekend,with speeches and highlights to view and download! Click here for webcast.
We Democrats intend to leave our convention with a unified Democratic voice dedicated to winning back the White House in 2008!
Sun 22 Apr 2007
We are deeply saddened by the loss of Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald. We lost a dear friend. America lost a true fighter.

Congresswoman Millender-McDonald was a pacesetter on numerous fronts. She was the first African American woman in history to hold the chairmanship of the powerful Committee on House Administration; the first African American woman to serve on the Carson City Council; the first woman to hold the chairmanship of the powerful Insurance and Revenue & Taxation Committees of the California State Assembly in her first term; the first African American woman to give the national Democratic response to President Bush’s weekly radio address; the first Democratic chair of the Congressional Caucus for Women’s issues; and the first to be named Honorary Curator of the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach.
In her role on the Committee on House Administration, Congresswoman Millender-McDonald called the first election reform field hearing in history as she investigated widespread voter irregularities and disenfranchisement in Ohio.
In addition, she worked with former Secretary of State Madeline Albright and Ambassador John Miller on human trafficking and women’s rights issues around the world. She had spoken out against genocide in Darfur, Cambodia, and other regions where human rights are violated.
Congresswoman Millender-McDonald was recently rated as one of the five most effective Members of Congress in a University of California study because of her ability to work across the aisle to pass legislation.
Congresswoman Millender-McDonald’s legacy in fighting for justice and equality at home and abroad will be remembered.
On behalf of all Democrats, we extend our heartfelt condolences to Congresswoman Millender-McDonald’s family and friends. She will be sorely missed by all who knew her.
Eric C. Bauman
Chair
Los Angeles County Democratic Party
Sun 22 Apr 2007
Ensuring every vote counts in elections
By Dianne Feinstein - from The Sacramento Bee - April 22, 2007
The 2006 vote count in Sarasota County, Fla., exposed major weaknesses in our nation’s voting system. Nearly 240,000 voters cast ballots on Nov. 7. But when their votes were tallied, things didn’t square up: There were 18,000 fewer votes in the 13th Congressional District than were recorded in other contests on the same ballot.
So-called undervotes occur in every election. But the rate of undervotes on Sarasota County’s touch-screen machines was five times the rate seen on absentee ballots in the same contest.
Clearly, something went wrong. Was it a software glitch? Did poor ballot design lead voters mistakenly to overlook the congressional race? Was there tampering? We don’t know. After an investigation, Florida election officials say software was not to blame. But other experts say machine failure cannot be ruled out.
In the end, Republican Vern Buchanan was declared the winner over Democrat Christine Jennings, by only 369 votes. Thousands of votes were never recorded. And since the machines were not equipped to provide a paper trail that could be verified by the voters, we may never know what the true count was.
This sort of uncertainty is unacceptable. That’s why I am introducing legislation to reform our nation’s voting systems. The Ballot Integrity Act would:
• Require that all voting systems used in federal elections have a voter-verified paper trail, and ban the purchase of new voting systems that do not provide a paper trail.
• Establish a $600 million grant program to help states purchase voting systems equipped to produce a voter-verified paper trail.
• Create a $3 million competitive grant program to develop a voting system with a voter-verified paper trail, with full accessibility for the disabled.
• Require random public audits of electronic voting tallies, and open voting system software to inspection by independent computer analysts.
• Require that all voting places offer emergency paper ballots in case of system failures or delays.
These changes are critical to ensuring that every vote counts. To leave things as they stand today is to invite trouble.
The danger is real. In last year’s midterm elections, one-third of voters — 55 million Americans — cast ballots on electronic voting systems. Some jurisdictions have machines that leave a voter-verified paper trail; others do not.
In Sarasota County’s 13th Congressional District, recounts were conducted, but they were essentially pointless. That’s because the recount there simply entailed tallying the same electronic record again. And so the same flawed result was produced, with no way to find out why 18,000 votes went missing.
Inaccurate election tallies are an urgent problem, but so far they have not been addressed adequately. It has been more than four years since the Help America Vote Act, to reform federal elections, was passed by Congress and signed into law. But experts have identified several serious issues:
• The nonpartisan Election Reform Information Project found that new electronic voting machines may lack necessary security safeguards, and that statewide voter registration databases may not be accurate.
• In two studies in 2006, the Brennan Center for Justice, at the New York University School of Law, found more than 120 security threats to voting machines. The Brennan Center also found a notable lack of scientific study of voting system cost, security and accessibility — especially for disabled voters.
The problems in Sarasota County are a warning that must be heeded. If similar problems had occurred in the last election in Montana or Virginia — states with tight U.S. Senate contests — control of the Congress might have been unclear.
The good news is that some states are beginning to act. Florida Gov. Charlie Crist has announced plans to replace touch-screen voting systems with paper ballots counted by scanning machines. Other states are considering similar plans.
These are moves in the right direction. But they are not enough. We must have uniform national voting standards.
The stakes are high. Inaccurate vote counts erode voter confidence. And if voters lose faith, they may give up on voting altogether.
Voting is fundamental to our democracy and is guaranteed by the Constitution. But the right to vote is diminished if we don’t count the vote accurately. It is imperative that Congress ensures that voter choices are recorded accurately, free from error or mischief.
Copyright © The Sacramento Bee
Fri 20 Apr 2007
FROM HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI - April 20,2007
The American People Are Ready For a New Direction In Iraq
This week, the House appointed conferees on the Iraq Accountability Act for reconciliation with the Senate version of the emergency supplemental. The legislation that Congress will send to the President’s desk supports our troops, honors our commitments to our veterans, holds the Iraqi government accountable, and provides for a responsible redeployment from Iraq.
Democrats are ready to work with the President to change the direction in Iraq, but the President must accept the facts and put aside partisan attacks and heated rhetoric:
Fact 1: The Pentagon confirms Congressional Research Service report saying the White House claim that Congress is delaying the funding for the troops is false. “The Pentagon says it has enough money to pay for the Iraq war through June, despite warnings from the White House that troops are being harmed by Congress’ failure to quickly deliver more funds.” [AP, 4/19/07]
Fact 2: Today, the President’s own Defense Secretary. Robert Gates, once again said that we cannot have an open-ended commitment in Iraq: “I’m sympathetic with some of the challenges that they [the Iraqis] face…[But] the clock is ticking.” [AP, 4/19/07]
Fact 3: Fully 70 percent disapprove of the way the President Bush is handling the war, and six in 10 Americans trust Democrats in Congress over the President on the war. [ABC News/Washington Post, 4/16/07; CNN Poll, 4/18/07]
The President continues to push for a war without end, while the American people believe it is time for a new direction. Democrats want to work together with the President to responsibly wind down this war.
House Democratic Leaders call President’s attention to crucial facts in Iraq war debate>>
Thu 19 Apr 2007
National Organization for Women
San Fernando Valley – Northeast Los Angeles Chapter
(818) 769-2035 info@sfvnow.org www.sfvnow.org
For Immediate Release: April 18, 2007
For Information: Jan B. Tucker (310.618.9596 or Cell 818.720.3719)
JUSTICE GINSBURG’S DISSENT IS CLARION
CALL OF ALARM FOR WOMEN’S RIGHTS
NOW Chapter Will Hold Forum on
Ramifications of Gonzales v Carhart Decision
The San Fernando Valley/Northeast Los Angeles Chapter of the National Organization for Women (SFV/NELA NOW) will hold a forum on the ramifications of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Gonzales v Carhart which today upheld laws that ban the “Intact Dilation & Extraction†method of terminating a pregnancy. The forum will be held Sunday, April 29, 2007 beginning at 12:00 noon at 11178 Burbank Blvd North Hollywood (Doctor Detox). Also on the agenda will be reports on local issues ranging from family law to discrimination and harassment in the workplace.
Linda Pruett, Co-President of SFV/NELA NOW said that “Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s dissent in the Gonzales case is a “clarion call of alarm for women’s rights.†Ginsburg, writing with the support of Associate Justices Souter, Breyer, and Stevens, said that:
In reaffirming Roe, the Casey Court described the centrality of “the decision whether to bear . . . a child,” Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U. S. 438, 453 (1972), to a woman’s “dignity and autonomy,” her “personhood” and “destiny,” her “conception of . . . her place in society.” 505 U. S., at 851-852. Of signal importance here, the Casey Court stated with unmistakable clarity that state regulation of access to abortion procedures, even after viability, must protect “the health of the woman.” Id., at 846.
And that:
Today’s decision is alarming. It refuses to take Casey and Stenberg seriously. It tolerates, indeed applauds, federal intervention to ban nationwide a procedure found necessary and proper in certain cases by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). It blurs the line, firmly drawn in Casey, between previability and postviability abortions. And, for the first time since Roe, the Court blesses a prohibition with no exception safeguarding a woman’s health.
Jan Tucker, another SFV/NELA NOW Co-President stated that “this decision is a wake-up call for doctors: what the U.S. Supreme Court did today, overturning by a single vote the decisions of six of the U.S. Courts of Appeals, is to take away a doctor’s right to choose the best medical procedure available to protect a woman’s health. At the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court has said that it’s okay to force a woman to maintain a compulsory pregnancy for a dead fetus when the safest way to remove it may be the Intact D&E procedure.â€
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