Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Archive for November 2010

Thank you, Nancy ** UPDATED **

Thank you for all you have done for the people of this country during your legislative career. Thank you for being a strong and effective Speaker of the House for the past four years. Thank you for standing strong for policies that would help all Americans, not just a favored few. Thank you for all of the bills you ushered through the last two congresses, whether they eventually became law or not. Thank you for being the President’s strong right-hand during the fight for health care reform. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Sincerely yours,

Dem-leaning Independent voter

** UPDATE **

Nancy Pelosi has announced she will seek the Minority Leader position.

Read her letter after the jump

Returning to Sinai

My triumphant return to the Motley Moose (I know many of you were concerned I had been KIA in a recent raid by Sarah Palin; these rumors were false, but we lost some good meese out there…)!

You can catch the full, original article (with one spiffy photo) here .

T-Shirt Escapism Open Thread

Alright.  We had a bad night last night.  We should think soberly and determinedly where and how to commit energy to push back.  But I’m tired.  And tired of compulsively sparring with changevancaulfieldagain2012.  So here’s a game we used to play back in Brooklyn.  Try to come up with the most awkward, disturbing, or unwearable t-shirt slogans.

Note from Ed: You can Generate Your Own T-Shirts here at Jellymuffin.com and just paste the code – though you might want to cut the first center code, and will need to delete the last embed line.  

Mid Term Peri Mortem: Open Thread

Well, was it a ripple, wave or Tsunami? My take from across this troubled pond is somewhere in between. Or, as Shaun Appleby put it, a mudslide rather than a landslide. (Though a mudslide, even if shortlived, can be pretty damn scary, as this video from Afghanistan shows)

The Republicans win control of the House, but the Democrats keep the Senate. Hey, it’s not good. But not as bad as 1994 when Clinton lost both.

How do you think this will pan out? And who should we blame the most?

2010 Election Night Open Thread

Ripple, wave, or tsunami, who knows? It will all play out over the next few hours.

The earliest poll closings are listed below:


• Indiana

• Eastern Kentucky

7:00 pm ET

• Florida (except Western panhandle which close at 8 pm.)

• Georgia

• Western Kentucky

• New Hampshire

• South Carolina

• Vermont

• Virginia

Keep an eye on Indiana’s 2nd and 9th district results. These are two close races. A loss in the 9th won’t be much of an indicator, but a loss in the 2nd where Democratic Rep. Joe Donnelly is running for re-election could be a bad portent.

Which races are  you watching?

Full list of poll closings after the break:

GOTV: You think YOU’RE screwed? A Cautionary Tale from Britain

Six months ago, Britain’s left had an enthusiasm gap too.

Prior to the General Election of May 2010, a lot of progressives were disaffected with the Brown Premiership, jaded after 13 years of New Labour. However, despite the makeovers and compassionate conservatism, the Tory Party still wasn’t detoxified from the days of Thatcher and Major. David Cameron hadn’t sealed that deal. So many people I know decided to experiment with their votes.



Our first ever Prime Ministerial TV Election Debates had a huge impact too. For the first time the leader of the smaller third party, the Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg, got equal billing with major party leaders Gordon Brown and David Cameron. He looked plausible, articulate, and could throw his hands up in Ronald Reagan fashion (“there you go again”) when the two big party leaders slugged it out.

For a while the papers were filled with Cleggmania. The media narrative was all about this new force in British politics. The polls spiked up and Mark Penn explained how consumer politics had changed the UK forever. Many ‘progressives’ (like my son and his mother) decided to vote tactically. They were bored and disappointed with New Labour not being radical enough. So why not go for a more radical alternative? The Lib Dems were different. They must be more progressive. (No less an authority than Jerome Armstrong on MYDD told me they were way to the left of Labour)

As it turned out, the swing to the Lib Dems wasn’t great. Come election night, thanks to anomalies of first past the post, there were actually fewer seats for them. But the Lib Dems had, in the seat where my son and his mother live, stolen enough votes from Labour to let the Tories in.

More importantly, for the first time in living memory there was a ‘hung parliament’ with no one party with an overall majority. And what happened next? Our first Coalition government since World War II.

Now you’d think, given the overwhelming overlap of policies, especially on welfare, Europe and Green issues, this would have been a Labour/Lib Dem Coalition. But thanks to the Parliamentary mathematics, the abrasive style of Brown and the subtle shift in Lib Dem thinking since Clegg had taken over, a Conservative Lib Dem Coalition was created.

Of course, we on the left immediately called it the ConDem Coalition, but the public liked to see Cameron and Clegg outside Number Ten together. They looked young. They looked different (even though they went to the two most elite private schools in the country). Meritocracy, pragmatism, youth and reasonableness had returned the the land. The cameras flashed. The media fawned.

But follow me below to find out how tactical protest voting ended in tears….

Why Democrats are “Cowards,” and why I can’t blame them

I had a great debate with a co-worker of mine who’s a leftie radical. She said to me that the Democratic Party needs to stop “being afraid of voters and being afraid of the media”

She’s right. The caveat being they have every reason to be afraid of voters and of the media, because those are what decides if they get to implement the policies they fight for. Because they’ve been burned over and over again in the past century by voters who claim they want policies, only to reject them when the attempt is made to implement them.  

Oops, I Broke It…

A funny thing happened on the way to the polling this morning. Showing up at Scotts Valley town hall, I proceeded through the process until I found myself faced with a touch screen and some helpful volunteers. With firm hand and the determined will of a Free Person Exercising his Franchise, I poked and prodded my way to the end and hit “Review”.

Two of my votes didn’t count.

Restoring Sanity (To A Nation In Need Of Meds)- UPDATED

I’m back in New York after my weekend trip to Washington, D.C. to be one of 215,000 people to stand on the National Mall demanding sanity.

For me, someone so cynical and hopeless, it was important to be around those I rarely see or hear. Those who are rational and who just want things to work out. Those who reject the partisan fighting and the teabagging that has so enveloped our society. Those who, however, remain quiet.

So I left work early on Friday and traveled with my cousin and her fiancee to Washington, to be a part of the Rally to Restore Sanity, because there is very little sanity right now.