Tales From the 8th

Doron Taussig, of the City Paper, has a story this week on my favorite City Council district- the 8th.

The occasion of Taussig’s piece is the fact that, yet again, in the upcoming general election, Donna Miller has three opponents, giving her an easy ride into office. The reality, of course, is that Miller, in a general election, will not be beaten unless that independent candidate has massive amounts of money to fund a ground game and door to door, intensive campaign that can convince reliable Democrats not to vote for her.

The article gives the rundown on the district that many here are familiar with. But, I thought now, a little bit removed from the election, it might be useful to go into a little bit of details from my dad’s campaign, and from what I learned about our two other ‘progressive’ candidates. (Yeah, the quotations imply something.)

And, if I were in the 8th? I would without question vote for Jesse Brown, who in my opinion is by far the best candidate of the bunch.

OK, where do we begin?

First, I guess I mine as well state upfront: I thought my dad did an amazing job as a candidate, in terms of stump speeches, talking with people, getting volunteers, etc. He had no organization behind him, no base to lean on, and it made it all really difficult. That said, despite everything and despite the other two candidates, I think he could have won. There were some basic mistakes the campaign made, that if he ever were to run again, would not happen. But, it was his campaign, and everyone who was inside it thought there were some serious flaws, and they weren’t fixed. So, that is his responsibility as ‘the guy.’ This was a low-information campaign. And to really unseat an incumbent with the party behind her, you had to really have a better strategy at getting those low-information voters. It did not happen. So, point blank, he sort of blew it, first time candidate or not. It would have been hard- but he could have won, and he didn't.

So, lets start on what I learned about the lessons I take away from the various players in the election:

Candidate One: Greg Paulmier.

Greg Paulmier is a guy who cares about his neighborhood and his neighbors. I think everyone gets that. He is also a total, 100 percent megalomaniac. During the campaign, Greg was basically going around telling people his goal was in reality to come in second place, which he thought would set himself up to win when he... ran for the fourth time. Seriously. He really does not seem to have any concept of all the ill-will that he has built up.

Greg also talked a lot about progressive groups backing a single candidate. When every progressive group save NOW (which Bass is a board member of) endorsed my dad, and Greg was booted from the ballot, did he decide to support one candidate? Of course not.

In fact, when he was removed, Greg’s ward was going to support... Donna Miller, because the goal was not for her to lose, it was for him, and only him, to win. But, why go on about him? I think everyone pretty much understands him at this point.

Candidate two: Cindy Bass.

When Bass originally was asked about booting Paulmier from the ballot, she said something to the effect of ‘if you cannot fill out forms, you shouldn’t be in office.’ Cindy, unfortunately, did not seem to pass her own test. In fact, she was recently referred to the DA’s office, because she never followed some of the most basic, fundamental campaign finance laws. For example, Cindy did not even authorize a political committee.

She also did not file a finance report in the last week of the campaign until I mentioned it on YPP. When the campaign was over, it was not until a Gar Joseph column that she filed her final report. Oh, and late in the game she accepted money from Chaka Fattah far above campaign contribution limits. In other words, she currently has an unauthorized committee, with illegal contributions in it. (Still there, I think, as a gift/nest egg from Congressman Fattah.)

So, if you consider following laws, especially campaign finance laws, as something marginally considered ‘progressive,’ then I am really not sure Cindy should be considered for progressive support in the future. (Whether she is running for Council, State Rep, whatever.)

The media:
What can I say? The Philly political media basically had a blackout of the District Council races. As I mentioned a while back, I thought the print media did a decent job of covering the Mayor’s race. But in the 8th? There was basically nothing until almost the last week of the campaign. If reporters feel like they have some civic responsibility to help inform the issues, then they need to really look themselves in the mirror before the next set of political races. Really, the only thing that got press in the Council races were ballot challenges, and things of that nature.

It certainly hurt my dad, at least a little bit, when the papers endorsed Bass. So, I sent an email to the Inky, saying hey- Bass did not even file a campaign finance report, and wondering how that would effect them. My claim, easily checked with a quick phone call, was ignored as coming from the son of a candidate, too emotionally invested. The editorial boards of the papers constantly decry the status quo, but, when a Council candidate was running directly against that, they just ignored it. (And, I also mentioned to them that Cindy herself was driving around with her nephew, trailing a Fattah van, with her nephew hopping out to taking down signs for her opponents.)

And, on a personal note, in a City with a quarter of the population in poverty, there was that snide, arrogant note in the Inquirer editorial about my dad being a ‘populist,’ as if that was a bad thing. I will never, ever, ever, ever, forget just how stupidly out of touch that comment was.

The wards, and the system:
For all that talk of reforming the ward system, etc, let's be clear: Out of all the wards in the district, the 9th Ward was the one and only one, to actually hold a vote on who to support. If they actually held elections, maybe something would have been different. But, that is the system- totally ward leader driven.

Additionally, what was also clear was just how the judicial election process fuels this whole thing. In the last week or so of the campaign, Donna Miller's campaign coffers were swelled with huge donations from judges that the Part steered her way. That is, in effect, how she was able to afford to have about 16 people at each polling place.

------------

People have asked me whether my dad will run again? Well, I ask him the same thing all the time! The campaign was incredibly stressful though, on everyone involved, on our family, on our family's friends, etc. so, I have no clue. I hope he does, because he would flat out be great. But will he? I have no idea.

The 8th can and should be won by a progressive, whether that is my dad or someone else. Bass and Paulmier, however, do not count.

Festivus for the Rest of US

OK, so, a lot of amazing things came out of this too, that I have touched on before, but should say again:

For example: The amount of people that volunteered countless hours over and over during the campaign was staggering. A little bit of it was about my dad, but the most part was that it became about a lot more than him. I hope future candidates can figure out how to tap into the 8th District's penchant for activism in the same way. The people of the district, really were amazing.

I add this, because, while I stand by everything, it sounds a little too much like the Festivus Airing of Grievances. And, OK, it is almost exactly like the that, but, cest la vie.

8th Councilmanic District Challenge

Since I am fairly sure that Brian Rudnick, the Rev. Jesse Brown, + Jim Foster all read this blog, I hereby request that all of them join us at Drinking Liberally: Mount Airy this coming Thursday, 10/18, at the Mermaid Inn, 7673 Germantown Ave., at 7:00 PM. Let's discuss this rationally, + agree on who will be the one independent candidate to run against DRM. If not, the district will be stuck w/4 more years of DRM's comatose services.

-Z

lessons from the 8th??

As a long time resident of the 8th, I‘ve been frustrated by the inability of progressives to unite around a candidate who could beat DRM. The focus has always been on trying to get some of the challengers to step side.

But as Taussig states:

The simple reality is that most politicians are, by nature, ambitious. Stepping aside goes against their instincts.
"It's hard, when you have a candidate who's put in the research, built a team, to say to that person, 'I don't think you should run,'" says Bass.
The candidates know this about themselves, and tend not to begrudge one another their right to run. Rudnick, for instance, says he doesn't "believe anyone should be in a position to make that decision."

Many progressives are just not comfortable trying to push someone out of the race. And as we know, it usually doesn’t work.

Rather than trying to force someone out, in the 8th (and in other races where candidates are splitting the progressive vote) progressive organizations need to try harder to unite behind one candidate. The combined force of these groups might ultimately convince marginal candidates to leave the race.

But although preferable to trying to force individuals to end their campaigns, this strategy is probably just as difficult. A group of progressive organizations (PFC, NN, Liberty City, NOW, ADA etc.) which endorse in local races came together last primary to form a coalition, Take Back Our City. The website (www.takebackourcity.org) provides a kind of one stop shopping for progressive voters who can see the endorsements decisions made by these groups and their criteria for endorsements.

We had hoped that there might be more commonality in endorsements, but it turned out that the only candidate that all the participating organizations had in common was Maria Quiñones Sanchez.

So what do we do? Do we keep electing candidates like DRM because we can’t unite behind one candidate??

Wish I had an answer.

Karen, I hear you. That

Karen, I hear you. That said, except for the group that Cindy was on the board of (and, I think you would admit, was preordained), my dad did get the endorsement of just about every progressive group out there. I don't think it really slowed Cindy from running. So, what do we do in the future? (Besides, of course, our unique "Greg Problem.")

And, by definition, a lot of these endorsements come late, as groups want to see what kind of campaigns candidates are running. At that point, almost no invested candidate will drop out.

I think some sort of Instant Runoff Voting (the IRV for Irv vote) would help a lot. But, that seems really far away.

Reality check in the 8th District

Let's get beyond the phony fog of deliberative analysis and lay the facts out on the table. Greg Paulmier is now, and always has been, a stalking horse for Donna Reed Miller and has been perfectly content with his ward and his narrow but consistent power base, figuring his time would eventually come. He is representative of a mind set many Philadelphians have - - so well described by Clea Benson at the last general election: "Most Philadephians are fuly aware their city is poltically corrupt from top to bottom, but keep it that way in case then need it for themselves some day" - - sort of Lincoln Steffans redux.

I met with all three candidates in the early stages of the primary at their request or that of their close associates. I have been researching and writing published commentary on the corrupt Philadelphia and 8th District governments for 10 years (see foster4reform.org for samples) and I think I had and have a better handle on just how pervasively corrupt and self-serving the Miller machine is and I put some of the more blatant examples on the table as what I believe is the only way you do politics when the public is dialed this far out of the process, and millions of dollars are squandered anually directly or indrectly through insider deals, front social service organizations, and phony non-profits, as is the case here.

None of the three candidates were willing to take the gloves off and indicated to me personally they did not want to run a hardball campaign and run the risk of alienating voters. Give me a break! These voters are being cheated out of their civil and civic rights and the proper use of their tax dollars by a narrow band of collaborators and the opponents are afraid to point that out when easily available data is essentially "low hanging fruit"?

To be fair, Irv Acklesberg did, on some occassions and in some appearances, use some of what he and I discussed, and part of what he first hand knowledge of in his prior role, but no where near enough was put on the table for the press to run with - - that is part of the problem - - you have to give the press red meat as they did little investigative work until very recently. Now there is a trail of expose work that begins to cover what most of us have known about for years, but could not get one journalist to print. (See John Sullivan and Nancy Phillips very recent Inquirer reports. Sullivan puts the spotlight on Germantown Settlement where it has always belonged, but there is much, much more to tell)

Cindy Bass came late to the campaign and made the conscious decision to run a more softball campaign and take advantage of her personal and political standing. It was not enough, even with the endorsement, and I told her so then. Greg and his "virtue is its own reward" campaign strategy is a joke, and Greg is much more clever in his politicing than his "Mr Nice Guy" persona leads many to believe. It is all about Greg and little about reform government.

I know far more about this district, its failures and what its real needs are than anoyone who is running in the general election. Not becuase I am a genius, but because I have spent a lifetime in this district and have been doing my research and homework agressively for 10 years and puting much of it in print in the Courier, Times, Local and occassionally the Inquirer. Some folks do not like my agressive style and have told me so, but when you have thugs and bullies in the schoolyard pushing you around and stealing your recess money someone has to take a poke at them.

Jim Foster
Independent Candiate
8th District City Council
foster4reform.org
215-438-4330

Well said, Jim

I repeat my challenge to you, Brian, + the Rev. Brown to meet at this coming Thursday's Drinking Liberally: Mount Airy, at the Mermaid Inn, 7673 Germantown Ave., from 7:00 PM until whenever.

We need to unify around one challenger to DRM, or else be stuck w/her for the foreseeable future.

So, I will ask you directly, Jim: will you join us at the Mermaid this coming Thursday?

-Z

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