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Michigan Democrats manage to punch themselves in face with BOTH hands

by: Eclectablog

Mon Feb 14, 2011 at 09:00:15 AM EST


At the 2011 Michigan Democratic Convention this past Saturday, attendees got to watch their party leadership punch itself in the face with not just their right hand but also their left.

State Party Chairman Mark Brewer faced a challenge to his seat from only one other candidate, Detroit TV producer Ron Scott. I sat in on the 8:30 a.m. (ugh) Progressive Caucus meeting where both Brewer and Scott made impassioned pleas for our votes. Brewer promised that he'd learned his lesson from the 2010 midterm election and thing were going to change. We can only hope so.

Scott got up and gave a fairly eloquent speech in which he informed us that the $1,000 nomination fee was akin to a poll tax imposed on black voters in the South and that he was NOT going to pay to run. This proved to be his downfall.

Later that day, they got around to the vote. First, they had to accept the convention rules committee report. The first signs of trouble started then when a large contingent of Scott supporters demanded that the rules report NOT be accepted. Clearly they wished to change the rules to eliminate the $1,000 nomination fee that Scott objected to. In pure Mark Brewer fashion, they were ignored, and the rules report was quickly approved while the Scott folks yelled and jeered.

Then came the parade of party dignitaries. Some good speeches, some not-so good speeches and no less than three videos later, we were ready for the chairman vote. Because most of the convention-goers had been there since 8:00 a.m. and it was now 6:00 p.m. -- an hour later than convention was supposed to run -- many had left and those remaining were cranky and ready to cast their vote and then leave. Jocelyn Benson got up to nominate Brewer, a job the former Attorney General candidate David Leyton was supposed to have but, because they ran so late, he had left for another engagement.

After Brewer was nominated, the emcee asked if there were any other nominations. This was when things got ridiculous. The Ron Scott supporters desperately tried to nominate him but found only silent microphones. So they started shouting. The emcee then informed the crowd that Mr. Scott was not eligible because he had not followed the nomination rules (no mention of the fee so many in attendance did not realize this was the reason) and that his nomination would not be accepted. One minute later they had moved to vote in Brewer by unanimous consent, received a second and administered a voice vote, declaring Brewer the winner.

So, two things here. Mr. Scott should have known the rules and paid his fee. It's not something new this year. It's not something to keep Detroit African Americans from running as he seemed to want to portray it in his speech that morning. If he didn't like the rule, he should have endeavored to change it.

And Brewer's handling of the vote was a lesson in how to widen any existing divisions within the party. Scott was not likely to win anyway. There were an array of different ways to handle this but, instead, they chose to ram the vote through in such a manner that they are guaranteed to have angered a large contingent of folks in the party.

So this is how we will enter the 2012 election season after being clobbered so epically in 2010: with two black eyes. One from Ron Scott. And one from Mark Brewer.

Leadership? Hardly.

I'm just sayin'...
=============================
Cross-posted at Eclectablog.com.

Eclectablog :: Michigan Democrats manage to punch themselves in face with BOTH hands
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Few Things... (4.00 / 2)
My wife and I were also there at the Progressive Caucus -- sorry I missed you. Anyway...

1. As you note, the MDP Rules haven't been significantly changed in several cycles.

1a. As an Alternate to the Rules Committee from the 11th District this time around, I didn't see anything weird or unfair in the Rules...though the writing could be clearer. But I digress.

2. Any person truly interested in BEING the Chair of the Michigan Democratic Party -- as opposed to whatever motivation drove Ron Scott to belatedly and half-heartedly declare -- would A) Know the MDP Rules (again, agreeing with you), and 2) Have been organizing and campaigning for more than four days.

3. Candidates for public office at all levels pay filing fees. It's not "pay for play" -- it helps defray (in a small way) the costs of handling elections. For the MDP, the up front fee to run for Chair has a similar ostensible purpose -- to help defray the costs of running the Convention.

4. Paying a fee to run for an office is NOT a "poll tax." Poll taxes, literacy tests and all that other Jim Crow crap were used to deter VOTERS from VOTING. Ron Scott is perfectly welcome to call the $1,000 fee unfair -- or "pay to play" -- but it is not a "poll tax."

4a. Just to really put a stake in this "poll tax" nonsense... Membership in the MDP is required before you can vote for Party Chair. MDP membership costs money (less if you're a student or can claim hardship). Therefore, the  question is entirely moot, since everyone involved -- including Mark Brewer and Ron Scott -- paid their "poll taxes" (annual membership fee) at least 30 days in advance!


One thing about the filing fee (4.00 / 4)
For 'real-world' offices (at the township/county/state level), there is a way to get around that: Gather petition signatures. There is no way to get around that in the MDP.

I do agree with you, though, that it is not a poll tax.

Great Lakes, Great Times, Great Scott


[ Parent ]
Hmmm (0.00 / 0)
From all that's been written about this lately, I come away with a few things...

- It was absolutely shameful for Mr. Scott to refer to the fee as a "poll tax," but given his line of activism, this rhetorical bomb-throwing is exactly his MO.

- There probably shouldn't be a filing fee, or if there should be one, it should be symbolic/nominal.  Or, as Scotty said, if you're going to keep the $1,000 at least allow for petition.  It just doesn't seem to be very democratic, in fact, it sounds like the type of fee Republicans would levy to play the game.

- I don't have much thought on Mark Brewer, either way.  I'd eventully like to see the party be given a fresh face, and probably someone who can at least play the part of being more inclusive of more ideas and strategies.  But, no one has stepped forward; so, lacking that, meh.


Scott broke the "Love Money Rule" (0.00 / 0)
Back in my native Virginia, when I was still a wet-behind-the-ears YD, I played gopher at a meeting of prominent funders talking to a prospective candidate. The 2nd or (3rd) question in was "How much money have you raised so far?" The prospective candidate hemmed and hawed about how much he would probably get if he got the nomination, and he was promptly struck with a version of the "Love Money Rule":

"If you can't get 50 of your family and friends to give you $50 a head just because you're you, you've got no business running for any office."

Part of being State Party Chair of ANY state is the ability to raise funds. Even if your plan is to have fish fries and bake sales, but you demonstrate that you can consistently raise many thousands of dollars doing it, it gives you some degree of credibility. Scott obviously wasn't serious about offering a credible alternative to Brewer.



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