Swamp in Action - Oregon version

'Draining the swamp' is an expression that I have mixed feelings about as it could be construed as a threat to innocent and ecologically significant wetlands.

If, however, it is a necessary step towards cleaning up and restoring something degraded and defiled by decades of accumulated toxic crud, well - I'm all for it.

I had intended an essay on the Oregon May 17 Primary, and made some reference to it in another comment - that one about my preferred (among a half dozen) candidates to take on incumbent Ron Wyden: Ibrahim Tahir.

Sorting through the prospects for Republican nominee for Oregon governor was time and thought-consuming as there are 19 candidates. Two I could eliminate quickly as one only had Twitter and Faceplant pages and I am on neither and one dropped out for health reasons.

Without going into tiresome details, there are two, maybe three candidates with some level of name recognition and $$: Bud Pierce - a physician and former Marine and Christine Drazan, a one-term legislator and the clear establishment pick.

Normally, this might all not be such a big deal as Dems have had a lock on the governorship for decades, but a popular former Dem legislator, Betty Johnson - with a considerable amount of campaign resources available is running as an independent. And incumbent Kate Brown (who, fortunately for Oregon and herself cannot run again) has the distinction of being the most unpopular governor in the country. Thus, Republicans have their best shot in decades at a win.

FWIW, Johnson and a couple of the D candidates would be a considerable improvement over what Oregon has currently - IMHO.

Anyway, Blue Republic's preferred candidate - after research and soul search is Kerry McQuisten, 37 year-old mayor of Baker, Oregon. Lacking a lot of money and establishment backing she has been building grassroots support, but now looks (along with most other candidates) to be excluded from an important televised debate. Just how that winnowing process came about and to whose benefit is the subject of a news release I just received from her campaign. I'm quoting nearly all of it for its detail about the workings of the toxic swamp - Oregon version:

NEWS RELEASE

Gubernatorial candidate Kerry McQuisten says Oregon election corruption blatant in recent candidates poll

Baker City, OR—April 21, 2022—Today, Florida-based Jeff Reynolds of PJ Media broke a story from Oregon regarding a shocking example of voter manipulation. Link HERE: Will The 2022 Red Wave Hit Oregon? – PJ Media

In coordination with that coverage and resulting interview requests, Republican gubernatorial candidate Kerry McQuisten issued the following statement:

“Hello, everyone. As a grassroots candidate, I had a front row view of Oregon’s establishment swamp on full display last week, and I intend to fight it tooth and nail.

“Here’s what happened. Candidates were notified recently that Oregon media would host a televised Republican gubernatorial candidates debate on April 21. Participation in this event would provide a huge bump to qualifying candidates, and was a critical step in this election. Seven criteria were listed in order to make the TV debate. I immediately met the first six.

“The seventh, a score of five-percent or higher in a scientific poll, seemed like a slam dunk based on the traction of my campaign and past polling. I was shocked to receive notice that I had scored abysmally low on a poll and would not be allowed on television. The more I looked at the results of all the campaigns, the more disbelief I felt, as nearly none of them reflected what I was seeing boots-on-the-ground or when compared to other polling. In fact, only one candidate seemed to benefit from the poll, and that candidate was Christine Drazan whose popularity had jumped remarkably.

“Was this jump the result of TV ads alone? Or was it something more?

“I didn’t want to be one of those candidates who whines when things seem unfair, or who points fingers at my competition. I didn’t want to rail against the left-leaning media as I know that could just look like sour grapes, frankly, and speaking out might harm my own campaign.

“But I took a look at the poll. It was conducted in one afternoon, which is odd for any poll. Voters across the state commented that they had received calls days earlier and were asked questions similar or identical to those on that poll. Could those who were called have been pre-screened for their responses? Perhaps we’ll never know.

“I then looked at the margin of error. 4.3%. Statistically speaking, nearly every candidate fell within that margin of error, making the poll unusable, but yet it was used. A minimum poll sample of 520 individuals was also used. 68% said they were undecided and didn’t make a selection, meaning around 167 individuals made up the entire response. On that number alone, again, the poll should have been tossed; it still wasn’t.

“Strangely, a Constitution Party candidate was included into the middle of the strictly Republican poll. Why? This candidate would not even be on the primary ballot. This was the third reason in a row that this poll should have been considered null and void.

“Instead, Bud Pierce and Christine Drazan were allowed into the televised debate based on this deeply flawed data, an outcome set to affect the entire primary election. Two candidates out of 18 wouldn’t have been much of a debate, so a ‘leaning toward’ number was randomly factored in, allowing two other male candidates, but arguably not Ms. Drazan’s strongest competitors to date, into the debate.

“I decided to look even deeper into the poll, and this is when it became clear that speaking out or not speaking out was no longer a matter of campaign strategy. This was a matter of right and wrong, and I had to do what my conscience knew was right and let the chips fall.

“I found that J.L. Wilson’s firm, Nelson Research out of Salem had been tapped to perform the poll. According to a Willamette Week article, Wilson’s other firm, Public Affairs Counsel, covered the cost.

“Upon closer scrutiny, I discovered that J. L. Wilson has financial ties to one current Republican gubernatorial candidate, and only one: Christine Drazan.

“See, Wilson is also a registered lobbyist with the State of Oregon for nearly 50 different organizations and companies ranging from Oregon Wild to 7-Eleven. As we know, Ms. Drazan came into this race quickly and substantially funded through lobbyist connections. More specifically, over her two years in the legislature and into this campaign, her PAC, Friends of Christine Drazan, received hundreds of thousands of dollars both directly and indirectly through J. L. Wilson’s clients.

“What we have here is one of the most shockingly corrupt, inappropriate cases of election manipulation in recent memory. We have a television station contracting with a polling firm whose lobbyist owner has a vested interest in seeing one specific candidate make it through the primary. This goes beyond a conflict of interest.

“Oregonians, we have a huge election integrity issue out in the open right now, and we have the chance to stop it before the ballots even drop. I believe this situation needs investigated for criminal wrongdoing. I believe if Christine Drazan gets through the primary, or if any deep state establishment-selected milquetoast moderate does for that matter, we will lose the general election as Oregon Republicans always do. The honest, salt-of-the-earth conservative base will once again sit on their ballots. These lobbyists and their benefactors don’t care about saving our state. They are power brokers, catering to the left just as frequently as to the right. This level of corruption on my own side of the aisle contributes in large part to why Oregon’s good, honest Republicans lose races and why Oregon stays blue. If you, voters, allow this to go by unchecked, Republicans will once again steal defeat from the jaws of victory. I’m here to do everything I can to stop that from happening.

”I’m a ranch kid from northeast Oregon. I’m a small city mayor. I’m a business owner not a politician. I’m also one of you and I’m trying to save my state. It is high time we drain the Oregon swamp, and it starts now because this election is our last chance. Thank you for listening.”

Campaign website KerryMcQuisten.com

Share
up
7 users have voted.

Comments

Shahryar's picture

perhaps that's what you're looking for. Unfettered access to guns, banning abortion, banning critical race theory even though no one in public schools teaches it.

"we're spending our time focusing on horrific plans like implementing Critical Race Theory (CRT), which I would ban, into the classroom"

I hate Tina Kotek, though, so I'll likely vote for whoever runs against her.

up
3 users have voted.

@Shahryar

banning critical race theory even though no one in public schools teaches it.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eJNE1Ii330&t=1s]

(suggest just going to 23:00 for those with a low tolerance for woke-blather)

But basic skills optional...

Assessment of Essential Skills Waiver
The Oregon Legislative Assembly passed SB 744 which directs the Oregon Department of Education to review state requirements for high school diploma options, as well as to review state requirements related to demonstrations of proficiency in Essential Skills. Allowing for this review, students will not be required to show proficiency in Essential Skills as a condition of receiving a high school diploma during the 2021-2022, 2022-2023, and 2023-2024 school years.

https://www.oregon.gov/ode/educator-resources/essentialskills/Pages/default.aspx

up
0 users have voted.
Cassiodorus's picture

@Blue Republic and insist that all of our schoolteachers teach their students that racism is totally kewl and bitchen. Yeah, that's the ticket!

Or maybe not.

Since opponents of critical race theory want broad definitions, here's a broad definition offered by the New York Times:

“It is a way of seeing, attending to, accounting for, tracing and analyzing the ways that race is produced,” she said, “the ways that racial inequality is facilitated, and the ways that our history has created these inequalities that now can be almost effortlessly reproduced unless we attend to the existence of these inequalities.”

Omigod! Scandalous!

Or, alternately, we might argue that anyone who would want to ban the teaching of such a thing, in the unlikely event that "critical race theory" happened to make it into some high-school upper-class Advanced Placement course, is 1) a meddling asshole and 2) totally out of their depth.

The on-the-ground reality is that "teaching," in a public or private K-12 context, doesn't really go so far anyway. Ever wonder why there's such a big college market for courses in remedial English and Math? It's because there isn't really anything efficacious about the notion of compelling people, no matter how young, to "learn" anything. On-the-ground realities supporting this conclusion include:

1) The fact that there is a rather tight noose around what teachers are allowed to teach anyway. Teachers aren't allowed to teach anything that parents or politicians or their higher-ups in the school hierarchies would object to. It's been this way since schooling was invented; school "reform" merely made it worse, by its constant denigration of the teaching profession.

2) The fact that school "reform" dovetails well with the professional lives of politicians, whose function in today's government is to fool the public while taking money from special interests. The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, for instance, was the product of a partnership between the McGraw family, the people who own the enormous test-prep publishing company McGraw Hill, and the Bush family, which produced two of our Presidents.

3) The fact that the structure of students sitting in classrooms and listening to teachers is itself a rather severe limit on what can and can't be learned. That structure, it might be added, was not developed with learning in mind: mandatory schooling, public or private, was devised in the 19th century with the goal in mind of domesticating the children of an underpaid, underfed, and overworked working class. See e.g. David Nasaw's book "Schooled to Order" for the documented historical particulars of schooling.

4) The reality that critical thinking invariably seeps into any and all matters of curriculum. The appearance of critical thinking can be intentional, if perhaps in some low-pressure circumstances in nice well-off neighborhoods teachers are allowed to teach critical thinking, or it can be unintentional, when the students recognize (as so many of them do) that their teachers are in fact crap and that the purpose of their being in school is to give their parents a break from child-tending so that said parents can be obliged to perform tasks of wage labor. There's a broad ethnographic literature on this second manifestation of critical thinking: start with Paul Willis' "Learning to Labour" and Peter McLaren's "Schooling as a Ritual Performance."

Thus the notion that "critical race theory" is being taught in schools, and that our politicians ought to do something about it, appears as a diversion. The real issue is that politicians invariably fool the public while catering to a system ruled by political donors, and that, lacking any real accountability, said politicians are prone to invent diversions like how they're going to save the schools by banning "critical race theory."

up
2 users have voted.

"The most revolutionary thing one can do is always to proclaim loudly what is happening." -- Rosa Luxemburg

Shahryar's picture

I'm not sure what the Blue refers to. Maybe Blue Republic means you're part D, part GOP. After visiting Tahir's website I can tell you I don't like him either. He's another guy who doesn't understand the obvious reasons why Biden won. Another guy who can't fathom how people hated Trump, how Biden could have gotten so many votes when it's clear that mail-in voting did it.

I'll put him on my list of "I hate them all" candidates.

up
3 users have voted.

@Shahryar

ok, I guess you're a Republican
I'm not sure what the Blue refers to. Maybe Blue Republic means you're part D, part GOP

To clarify the 'Blue Republic' handle - it stems from a proposal put forward by Robin Koerner in a 2011 Huffington Post opinion piece. Given the inevitability of Obama's nomination and his by then clear record of warmongering authoritarianism, wealthy-centric economic policies and such and that the only non-corporate-vetted, peace oriented pro-civil liberties alternative out there was (in Koerner's view) Republican Ron Paul, Koerner proposed that peace and civil liberties oriented Dems and other progressive types support Paul in the primaries and, if necessary, register Republican to do so.

For myself, there hasn't often been much incentive to stay R there is has been even less to go elsewhere, especially in Oregon. And I'll stick by my contention that as far as civil liberties, peace and non-intervention and common sense go such action as there is is mostly to be found among Republicans these days, not that there aren't notable exceptions such as Gray Zone, Jimmy Dore, Naomi Wolf, Tulsi Gabbard...

Sounded about right to me, and with Oregon being a closed primary as registered Pacific (Green) Party (which I was at the time) I wouldn't be able to vote in the Republican primary without re-registering, so I did. And used the BR handle on the main sites I used to hang out on: Daily Paul and its successor, Popular Liberty (still the Gold Standard by which all other sites are judged). Used it on DK till they kicked me off...

The Koerner article (most of it):

If You Love Peace, Become a "Blue Republican" (Just for a Year)
Since you can't change the Democrat ticket, why not act where you can make a positive change, by telling the Republican party where you really want it to go. I offer you a special moniker to set yourselves apart: the "Blue Republican."
Robin Koerner
By
Robin Koerner, Contributor
Publisher, Watching America. Faculty, Foundation for Economic Education. Author

Jul. 7, 2011
The world lost its goodwill toward the USA when Americans voted for George W. Bush the second time around.

I don't endorse the idea that American politics should be dictated by foreign opinions but a reading of the foreign press over the last six years reveals that the first election of President Bush Jr. was largely excused around the world since no one could have known what this new president was going to do.

Moreover, America arguably didn't vote for him anyway in 2000.

However, the second election President Bush was not excused, because by 2004, the modus operandi of the Bush administration was clear. He wanted to 1) conduct wars against countries that did not threaten us (e.g. Iraq), 2) oversee large financial benefits to companies with which those in his administration were close (e.g. Halliburton), 3) establish a legal framework for riding roughshod over the liberties of private individuals who are not suspected of crime (e.g. Patriot Act), and 4) establish a massive federal apparatus to carry out such intrusions on innocent Americans in what is becoming a police state (e.g. domestic wiretapping, TSA etc... )

The more-or-less global delight upon Obama's election in 2008 followed largely from the hope that Americans had realized what a mistake they had made with Bush's second term and were therefore voting against the egregious actions of the then Republican establishment.

When most Americans voted for "Hope" and "Change," the above four objectives were at the top of their list of what they "hoped" would be "changed."

After two years, however, we now see that Obama 1) conducts wars against countries that do not threaten us (e.g. Libya, Yemen etc.), 2) oversees large financial benefits to companies with which those in his administration were close (e.g. Goldman Sachs), 3) supports the legal framework for riding roughshod over the liberties of private individuals who are not suspected of crime (e.g. Patriot Act), and 4) is growing a massive federal apparatus to carry out such intrusions on innocent Americans in what is becoming a police state (e.g. domestic wiretapping, TSA etc.. )

Put another way, when it comes to such things as the killing of innocent people, taking from the common man to support cronies, and the elimination of the basic values that make our lives worth living, we had the hope, but we haven't had the change.

Just as in 2000, Bush hadn't shown his true colors, in 2008, Obama had not either. A vote for either in those years was fair enough. But in 2012, if you vote for the Democratic nominee for president, you better have a moral justification that is SO good that it is a) worth killing innocent people who don't threaten you, b) transferring wealth to the rich and well connected, and c) the complete suspension of your right to privacy and such basic rights as protecting your child from being touched by a government official with the full force of the law behind him as he just follows his orders.

Do I labor the point? Good.

I don't believe that such a justification exists. I'm having difficulty seeing how a Democrat who voted for Obama (whom I supported) for the right reasons in 2008 can in good conscience do so again given that there is another candidate who has been consistent in his opposition to all of these things -- not just in words but in deeds.

If you've read my other pieces, you already know who he is. But if not, you should also know that Ron Paul has voted to let states make their own laws on abortion, gay marriage etc. and to let individuals follow their own social conscience -- even when he disagrees with them (as I disagree with him on some of these issues). In other words, he is consistent in his beliefs in civil liberty.
If you are a Democrat, and you sit tight and vote Democrat again "because you've always been a Democrat" or because you think that some group with which you identity will benefit more from Democrat programs than a Republican one, then that is up to you, and I wish you well. But don't you dare pretend that you are motivated primarily by peace, civil rights or a government that treats people equally.

That Ron Paul, who has been standing up for these principles quietly for half a lifetime, happens to be a member of the Republican party is a lot less important than the principles that we should be voting on. The fact that he is not a party guy should be obvious from his extensive differences in policy from his party and the fact that many think, given his views, he should not run as a Republican at all.
As Dr. Paul often points out, however, we live in a country with a corrupt political party duopoly... and the system is stacked against anyone who would run outside the two party system. So he's doing what he has to do. And so should we as Americans who love peace and freedom. It really isn't complicated.

Now, I know that the Republican party stinks to many Democrats and Independents who care about social justice and civil rights, but we all need to be smart and play the system to get the political outcomes we seek: you don't have to like a party or even identify with it to sign up as a Republican for a year to help make sure that the Republican primaries are won by the one representative who has always been for peace, has always voted against bailouts, and has always opposed the reach of government into your bedroom, your relationships and your person.

And if you are a Democrat or socially progressive Independent, you can't tell me you weren't hoping for all that from Obama.

Perhaps you see too much small-mindedness, or mean spirit or religious craziness in the Republican party. Sure you do. You can find all of them in spades. But since you can't change the Democrat ticket for 2012, why not act where you can make a positive change -- by telling the Republican party where you really want it to go... in the direction of peace and civil liberty (both of which, if you go back just a little way, can be found in the traditions of republicanism).

Just in case you need to make it absolutely clear for your friends at work that you have not gone to the dark side, I offer you a special moniker to set yourselves apart and give yourself a way back once you've done what needs to be done -- the "Blue Republican" -- to signify, of course, your liberal sensibilities and perhaps even your history as a Democratic voter. (Or why not just tell your friends that Bill Maher and Jon Stewart seem to have already gotten the message?)
I am aware that the main objection to Ron Paul from the left concerns his belief that private charities and individuals are more effective in maintaining social welfare than the government. To this I ask one question. Do you believe so much in the effectiveness of our current centralized delivery of social welfare that it is worth the war making and the abrogation of civil rights supported by both Bush and Obama's administrations? Moreover, while Ron Paul would look to transition out of the huge federally run welfare programs in the long-run, that's not where he wants to start: his immediate fight would be to bring our forces back to the USA and to re-implement the Bill of Rights.

Ron Paul's electoral weakness is not a difficulty in winning a presidential election. It is in winning a primary in a party with a Conservative constituency that includes the religious right and neo-cons. An influx of peace and freedom-loving independents and Democrats would change the math on the Republican side and potentially the future of America by setting up a presidential contest with a pro peace, pro-civil rights candidate (who could outflank Obama on those issues, at least, from the left).
Again, this isn't an endorsement of the Republican party or a claim that the Republican record is better than the Democrat on any of the issues discussed in this article. (It isn't.) It is not even a statement that Dr. Paul is some kind of panacea of American politics. Rather, it is to recognize simply that the one potential Presidential candidate who wishes to stop killing innocent people in foreign wars and stop transferring the wealth of poor and working Americans to the corporate elites happens to be -- this time around -- a Republican.

It is also to recognize that any other political choice is for a status quo in which all the issues that really matter (war and peace, civil rights) are settled for the military industrial complex and the interests of the State over the individual.

So what'll it be -- same old team allegiance or new, Blue Republicans?

Hope that helps.

up
3 users have voted.
shaharazade's picture

from Oregon you got lot of nerve. Your a freaking Republican who lives in Japan. The candidates your pumping suck! Why are you even here?

up
2 users have voted.

@shaharazade

FYI - I reside/work in Japan, I'm not a Japanese citizen. I have not not been an Oregonian since 1962 or thereabouts. Yes, I am registered Republican - I switched to R to be able to support Ron Paul's 2012 candidacy in Oregon's closed primary.

Prior to that, I was registered Pacific (later Pacific Green) Party from the early 90's when I helped found it. The party name itself and including Article One, Section 1 of the Oregon Constitution at the beginning of the party's mission statement were both my ideas. Prior to that I was a Democrat from when I first could vote (for McGovern) in 1972.

You are, naturally, entitled to your opinion of my preferred candidates. However, whatever your opinion of them do you think that it's a good idea to have corporate media types be the gatekeepers vetting which candidates they will allow to get exposure and be regarded as 'legitimate'?

Some people around, myself included, seem to think that is actually a BAD IDEA, even though it seems to be standard practice these days.

Why are you even here?

Oh, yeah. I'm here to engage in constructive and respectful dialogue with others on important (and sometimes trivial) issues of the day.

What about you?

Section 1. Natural rights inherent in people. We declare that all men, when they form a social compact are equal in right: that all power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are founded on their authority, and instituted for their peace, safety, and happiness; and they have at all times a right to alter, reform, or abolish the government in such manner as they may think proper.

Oregon Constitution Article One, Section 1

up
3 users have voted.