Sunday, April 29, 2007

 

Caucus vs Primary

i bring this post from Citizen Steve at Washington Outsiders.......



Sunday, April 29, 2007
WA. Democrats Vote to Keep Presidential Caucuses
From 790AM - KGMI Local News:
Democratic Committee Votes for Caucuses Washington's Democratic Party will continue using caucuses instead of the presidential primary election. At a
meeting held yesterday in Bellingham, members voted against an amendment that
would have used the primary election in choosing delegates. Republicans also
mainly use caucuses, but have allocated delegates to varying degrees based on
the primary results. They will meet in June to decide what to do next year.
On Thursday, the Bellingham Herald carried an editorial urging the Democrats to use a Presidential primary instead of caucuses. If the editorial board had any chance of influencing the Washington State Democratic Central Committee, they blew it with their closing sentence: "We hope the Democrat Party faithful meeting here Saturday understand that and will honor it." (the online edition was corrected to read "Democratic Party" after the print edition went out.)It wasn't possible to scrap next May's Presidential primary because the Washington State Republican Party uses the primary to pick a token number of delegate to their convention. So it's the Republicans who are responsible for the $9.7 million of taxpayer money to be spent on the primary. Part of the Herald's editorial said:

Democrats prefer to pick their convention delegates at sparsely attended caucus
meetings. Those meetings require interested people to spend several hours
talking about candidates before agreeing on whom to support.
And they seem to think it's a bad thing to spending several hours (once every four years) being part of the process of picking the Party's Presidential candidate. The General Election is there for citizens to decide which political party's candidate gets elected, but first the party's have to pick candidates.There's more to democracy than just putting a mark on a ballot. Shortly before he was ousted, Saddam Hussien held an election in Iraq and being the only one on the ballot he got 99% of the votes, of course.Democracy is a process. I can understand how folks who feel aligned with the Democratic Party would want to have a say in who the Presidential candidate is. But to have a say, they have to show up at the caucus. That's all it takes. Anyone who shows up and declares themself a Democrat can participate. The sparse attendance isn't because anyone is turned away at the door. Democracy isn't a spectator sport, you have to turn out if you want to play. full post

Saturday, April 07, 2007

 

a great community celebration







we had a wonderful evening with friends filled with music, food and celebration. the students performed beautifully. it was an honor to be part this evening.......


De Colores Fundraising Dinner and Celebration Honoring Cesar Chavez


“The end of education should surely be service to others. We cannot seek achievement for ourselves and forget about the progress and prosperity for our community. Our ambitions must be broad enough to include the aspirations and needs of others for their sake and our own.” — Cesar Chavez







About Community to Community Development (C2C)
Community to Community Development is a place-based, grassroots organization committed to creating alliances in order to strengthen local and global movements towards social, economic and environmental justice.





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