Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Fair Elections Rally

The Fair Elections Rally is scheduled for
December 3, 2 pm at Bayfront Park in
Sarasota. ACLU & Common Cause are two
of the sponsors, along with other Voters
Groups, including Voting Integrity Alliance.

People from Miami-Dade and
Broward Counties are also participating.
Rev. Charles McKenzie will be MC and a speaker.
Ed Helm has been asked to do
a Mark Twain relevant piece and has
confirmed. There will be musicians and
singers too. Jim Glover is a musician and
singer who has a great "Voting Machine"
song which he will perform.

It will be fun as well as
supportive of the efforts
in election reform in Sarasota County
and all around
Florida, including our own Pinellas
County.

Rita Ferrandino and Michael
Barfield (ACLU) are local managers of the Rally.
It is a non-partisan event ....we are
in need of Republicans who might speak on
the Fair Elections, VVPB, issues too.

Please join us and say some words in support of
fair elections.

Thanks & Regards,

Betsy Valentine

Update and clarification: The rally was a huge success, many local leaders were cut from the list of speakers to keep the schedule tight, and the event was strictly nonpartisan.

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Thursday, October 19, 2006

Choices for a better Congress, Monday October 16th, 2006

Re:
District 9 Article
District 10 Article

To Phillip Gailey
Sptimes.com/letters/
Re: Choices for a better Congress, Monday October 16 th, 2006

On Monday, October 16th, 2006, the St. Petersburg Times recommended two Democrats and three Republicans for Congress, claiming the culture in Washington needs to change. Re-electing three incumbent Republicans will not bring change. Change will begin to occur if and when a majority of the seats in Congress are ever held by Democrats.

I would believe the two rural seats may well change to Democratic control due to the continuing and revolting revelations of corruption amongst the Republican Representatives. The two rural Representatives, Brown-Waite and Putnam, may not survive the public reaction, regardless of their personal actions. Kathy Castor will breeze into Jim Davis' old seat with no problem.

My gripe is with your choices in the Districts 9 and 10 races. In the Bilrakis- Busanski race, you say "voters have a clear choice: They can vote for a familiar name and the status quo, or for a change in Washington." You then recommend Busanski. That is the correct call, because Gus Bilrakis is an empty suit.

But in the Samm Simpson – Bill Young race, you say Simpson cannot match Young's experience and accomplishments, and you recommend Mr. Young. It seems his experience is born of longevity. His accomplishments in supporting Bush's failed foreign policies have brought nearly three thousand dead American service people while setting back American diplomatic influence a hundred years. Meanwhile, as head of the Appropriation Committee, he managed to get some money for beach replenishment and a few road projects, even as Ted Stevens of Alaska netted some 380 million for a bridge to nowhere. And where is Congressman Young's outrage concerning Mike Foley's sexual stalking of children? Have we heard a peep from him on all the Republican corruption that is finally coming to light?

No, a vote for Young is a vote for a familiar name and the disgusting status quo. Vote Samm Simpson for Congress District 10, and clean up Washington.


Sincerely Yours,

Christopher S. Brudy
Betsy Valentine for State House 54

Unprinted Editorial

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Unpublished editorial reply

Re: http://www.sptimes.com/2006/09/17/Opinion/Helm_drives_Democrats.shtmlHere is the reply that was never published:
Re: Helm Drives Democrats Editorial, 9/17/2006

Your editorial attack on the Democratic Party Chair Ed Helm was not unexpected, considering the TIMES’s long history of animosity towards Helm. What was a surprise was your attack against your own editorial masthead policy of “merely to tell the truth”.

Your claim that Helm “sought to defeat his party’s strongest candidates” is just plain wrong, unless your measure of strength is the large sums of money given to some Democratic candidates by Republican developers and their handful of Democratic henchmen who seek to bulldoze all affordable housing in Pinellas and replace it with high-rise condos populated by the well-to-do who will subscribe to the TIMES to boost your falling circulation numbers. These Republicans and their henchmen always support the most bland of Democratic candidates who, if elected, will act like Republicans and bend to their and their lobbyist’s will and not truly represent the people who elected them.

In fact, Helm did not recruit Norm Roche to run against Commissioner Harris. Harris, by his actions in 2004 in supporting Republican Ronnie Duncan against Democratic candidate Roche, did the best to recruit Roche in 2006 as a candidate. If Commissioner Harris thinks that the fact that he is African American gives him license to openly support Republicans and then come, hat in hand, to the Democratic Party for a free shot at election, then he—and others of like mind—are sadly mistaken.

You questioned why the Democratic Party turned to Helm for leadership, and further on answered your own question by stating that the “…Democratic Party may not have been particularly effective in the past…”. They are sore losers in the Democratic Party as a result of our recent election for chairman and they are doing everything possible to disrupt the party and ensure a Republican victory in November to embarrass Chairman Helm, and they may very well succeed in the short term. In the long term however, they will fail. In a few short months, with Helm as chair, we have witnessed a three-fold increase in membership on the Democratic Executive Committee, the decision-making body of the Democratic Party in Pinellas County. For the first time in memory, we have more activists supporting the Democratic Party than the Republicans have under their chair, Tony DeMato. This is the result of new energy and enthusiasm in the Democratic Party as a result of Helm’s victory. I might point out, in fairness, that I am one of the six Democratic Party District Chairs (out of eight) that supported Helm in his quest to become chairman. We saw up close the failure of direction and leadership over the past several occupants of that office. We saw Helm’s election as an opportunity to rescue and restore the Pinellas Democratic Party from years of failure, indecision and defeat.

I’ll admit that working with Ed Helm is not for the faint of heart. He is truly a whirlwind to behold. Being passionate and attempting to right a sinking ship is not an easy task, and Helm goes at it with the “pedal to the metal”, and he is fearless in his determination to push his crybaby critics (including the ST. PETERSBURG TIMES) aside.

As for your view that Helm “has done his party real harm with black voters, who are usually reliable supporters of Democratic candidates”, you could not be further from the truth. For too long, the Democratic Party has taken the Black Community for granted, and has looked at them as a monolithic block that can be depended on to deliver their votes to Democratic candidates. The Republican Party recognized this and seized upon it to enlarge their majority while paying lip service to goals such as “educational equality”, “economic opportunity”, and “family values”. What the Republicans really want is a breakup of our publicly-funded school system, and “opportunities” such as low-wage dead-end no-benefit jobs, and they attack any group that does not meet their puritanical standards.

The African American community is as diverse as any other group of Americans. The one thing they have in common is the color of their skin, a characteristic that has caused suffering and discrimination for hundreds of years, and continues still today. The time of the Democratic Party relying on two or three self-appointed African Americans to speak for their community is gone in Pinellas County. Chairman Helm has recruited a large and diverse number of blacks into the Democratic Executive Committee, and more are most welcome. This bodes well for the future of the African American community, and for the Democratic Party.

In closing, I never leave the house in the morning without reading the TIMES from front to back, and I believe you are entitled to your view. However, it would be wise to have your facts straight. Otherwise, your readers might be led to conclude that your publication is more suitable for wrapping yesterday’s dead fish.


Regards,
Jim Donelon
P.O. Box 379
Bay Pines, FL 33744
727-443-5534

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

New Resource for Democrats and Voters of All Types

Welcome to Democracy!

As Chair of the Pinellas County Democratic Party, I welcome you to post letters to the editor that newspapers will not print (please identify what newspapers you tried to have your letter to the editor published in as you submit your letter). Send any submissions to pinellasdemocrats@gmail.com

The Democratic Party in Pinellas is being revitalized! In the last two months, we have more than doubled our members. We welcome you to join us and support our terrific candidates (click here to check out the Pinellas Democrats website).

I will be posting information here about issues and political subjects about which I would like to hear your comments. Stay tuned. If you have a subject that you would like others to discuss, please let me know.

Ed Helm, Chair