Saturday, July 30, 2011

The Neo-Independent Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer 2011)



The Neo-Independent Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer 2011) was published on July 18, 2011.

The Summer NEO starts with a tribute to Dr. Fred Newman who passed away on July 3rd, 2011.

Contents

1. Deliberately Unsystematic Thoughts on a New Way of Running a Country by Fred Newman, excerpt from Chapter 4, The End of Knowing (Routledge, 1997)

2. How to turn Republicans and Democrats into Americans by Mickey Edwards, The Atlantic

4. How Obama Can Be a Non-Partisan President by Jacqueline Salit, The Huffington Post

5. Independents are Not Moderates by Sarah Lyons

6. Stats and Facts?: What the numbers may or may not say about independents by Omar Ali

Use the above link to read the new issue of The Neo-Independent.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Monday, July 25, 2011

Independent voters pin blame in debt gridlock

CBS News, July 23, 2011. Time is running out to raise the debt ceiling before the U.S. begins to default on its obligations, a deal appears to be nowhere in sight, and Democrats and Republicans only seem to be getting angrier at each other.

So, who's to blame for the debt lid gridlock in Washington?

"The Early Show on Saturday Morning" put together a panel of independent voters to address the question.

They were joined by two analysts of different political stripes who happen to be husband and wife: Margaret Hoover, who was an aide to President George W. Bush and is the author of "American Individualism: How a New Generation of Conservatives Can Save the Republican Party," and John Avlon, the senior political columnist for Newsweek and The Daily Beast.

Suffice is to say, the voters spread the blame around.



Some of the independent members belong to the New York City Independent Party Organizations.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Saturday, July 16, 2011

NY Party Leaders Keep a Grip on Special Elections

As a reader of this blog, you know how important open primaries are to me. In NY it is an ongoing fight. So here is an update on the upcoming Special Elections in NY.

In the age of the endless campaign and the political marathon, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has come up with a kind of electoral lightening round. On July 1, Cuomo announced that special elections to fill six empty Assembly seats, four of them from the NYC, as well as the Brooklyn/Queens seat in the House of Representatives left empty in the wake of the Anthony Weiner scandal, would take place Sept. 13.

While that may seem far away, on the downside of a summer that has only begun, it set off a rapid scramble. Nominating documents for party sanctioned candidates are due Monday, 10 days after Cuomo issued his proclamations. Candidates running without the imprimatur of their party had to amass signatures, vet and file them all no later than midnight of July 13.

These would represent tight deadlines any time of the year, let alone in July and during a period that encompassed a three-day weekend. How can rank and file party members, let along ordinary voters, influence the process?

The answer is, to a great extent, they can't. And that may very well be the point.
Under New York State law, special elections take an end run around primaries, putting the choice of party nominees entirely in the hands of the party leadership. On the day of the special election, voter select among the nominees of any party that they choose to be on the ballot. But in a state where many districts feature wildly lopsided party registrations, that comes down to little or no choice at all.

As a result turnout can be light to virtually nonexistent.

To take an extreme case, in a June 2009 special election to fill an Assembly vacancy in the Bronx, only 2.3 percent of voters turned out, according to a recent analysis by Citizens Union. Democrat Marcos Crespo won 1,457 votes to defeat Republican Leopold Paul, who got a mere 106 votes.

Statewide, the turnout in special legislative elections between 2007 and this June was only 12.3 percent. For the NYC alone, the number was lower, just under 10 percent.

Under state law, Cuomo did not have to call a special election, at least for the Assembly seats, according to the report by Citizens Union. If he had not, there been a primary for those positions on Sept. 13, which is primary day, followed by a general election in November.

Good government groups criticized Cuomo's decision to take the special election route instead. "We strongly disagree with this decision, which we believe will result in lower voter turnout, increased confusion at the polls and potentially higher costs to localities, the statement said. It went on to assail the special elections for empowering "the interests of party leaders, rather than presenting voters with a real choice of candidates at the polls."

Some editorial pages agreed. "Party leaders will now get to choose the candidates to run. That is not the way a democracy is supposed to work. Unfortunately, it’s the way things are done in New York," the Times wrote.

While the special elections will technically fill the affected seats only until the 2012 elections, the decision made in party backrooms over the past weeks are likely to have long-lasting effects, at least on the Assembly districts.

A special elections give its winner the mark of incumbency, an advantage whose effect in Assembly and State Senate races in New York can hardly be overestimated. The Citizens Union study found 26 percent of legislators in office on January 2011 had initially been chosen in special elections. In the State Assembly, 31 percent got to Albany this way.

The congressional contest stands out as an exception to that pattern. While the contest to fill Weiner's seat in Brooklyn and Queens is the marquee race for Sept. 13 whoever gets the prize will likely have to find a new job in January 2013. With New York set to lose two congressional seats in the current redistricting, Weiner's fall left his Ninth District ripe for elimination.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Campaign to Lobby Congress



Independentvoting.org's has a new campaign calling on Congress to conduct hearings into the structural biases against independent voters.

It has gotten off to a promising and eventful start.

Use the above link to share some of the early highlights in the new
newsletter about the campaign.

Make sure to send in your stories, pictures and letters to Congress as the campaign grows.

Democracy wins when independents are included.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Thursday, July 7, 2011

NYS Redistricting Update

New York State will redistrict and lose 2 Congressional seats after the 2010 Census. We want a nonpartisan commission and not the legislators to perform the process.

Governor Cuomo has threatened to veto any redistricting plan that is not crafted by an independent or nonpartisan body.

"That would be a dumb reason to veto it," said , Assemblyman Jack McEneny (D-Albany), who added "I think that would be a very petty approach."

Governor Cuomo's response boiled down to this: Tough. "My position is crystal clear, has been for a long time," Cuomo said during a Syracuse appearance. "I will veto a plan that is not independent or a plan that is partisan."

"I want to have lines drawn that represent the people of the state of New York, not a particular assemblyman," Cuomo said.

By law, the Legislature must redraw legislative and congressional lines every 10 years based on the latest census figures.

If Cuomo follows through on his veto threat, the matter would be decided by the courts.

Let's hope the Governor stays true to his words.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Goodbye Fred

NYC Independence Party founder Fred Newman passed away on July 3rd, 2011. I returned to my birth state in 2000. I meet Fred in 2001 after joining the NY IP. Over the years I become part of the growth of the party, enjoyed his plays at the Castillo Theatre, and became a supporter of the All Stars Project. At an NYC IP Christmas party, I had Fred sign one of his books that was my gift.

So, GOODBYE Fred.

A year ago this month, NYC Independence Party founder Fred Newman spoke to City Hall about his health, the party's post-Bloomberg outlook and his ongoing feud with the State Independence Party.

Use the above link to read the interview.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Tuesday, July 5, 2011

NY's Undemocratic Elections

Found this on the Opinion pages of the NY Times for 7/05/2011.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Friday called for special elections on Sept. 13 to fill Anthony Weiner’s Congressional office and six vacant State Assembly seats. Party leaders will now get to choose the candidates to run. That is not the way a democracy is supposed to work. Unfortunately, it’s the way things are done in New York.

Federal law requires the governor to hold a special election quickly for a vacant House seat. New York State law says that “party nominations for an office to be filled at a special election shall be made in the manner prescribed by the rules of the party.”

That means Representative Joseph Crowley, the Democratic Party chief in Queens, will probably crown the next congressman in Mr. Weiner’s heavily Democratic district. The Republican bosses do it the same way. If an outsider wants to get on the ballot, he or she will have to collect 3,500 signatures by July 13. Who has that kind of ground operation?

This is even worse in state races in New York. Citizens Union reported recently that a third of the Legislature was first anointed as candidates in these back-room, special-election deals. Mr. Cuomo did not have to hand those six open seats to the bosses. State law says that the governor can call a special election to fill open seats in the Legislature or wait until the next election.

There is a regularly scheduled primary on Sept. 13, which is now the same date as the special elections. The general election is Nov. 8. The rules for these elections are not that great either, but the voters have more of a voice than they do in the special elections.

Mr. Cuomo should have allowed the state races to go through the normal process. He can now start making amends to New Yorkers by pushing to change the state’s special election laws, so the voters, not party bigwigs, get to choose who represents them.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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Friday, July 1, 2011

The Independent Version of Term Limits

With Washington locked in their current struggles, thinking more about their next campaign, and not doing the people's business, it is time for an independent term limit campaign.

Now that we represent a third of the electorate and the current crop of representatives ignoring the voter's polled most important issues:

1. More JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!!!
2. Bring the troops home.
3. The rich can afford to pay more.
4. We asked for a single payer health care system.

What can we do to change the current situation?

Maybe like the Tea Party Movement, we need to take the independent movement and use the ballot at the polls to perform our version of term limits and change what has become duopoly gridlock. I suggest elect more local, state, and federal independents so the mix includes enough representatives and we have more then two parties and coalitions will be required to get bills passed.

So you need to use your vote, take part in the search, volunteer, and maybe we can make a difference.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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