Of the Christians, By the Christians and For Whom?

While we all know much about the inner workings of Calvary, how many people know an Evangelical Christian became mayor of Rio Rancho last week, with the participation of less than 20% of the voters?

I don’t care about anyone’s faith until they push themselves on me. But that’s a tenet of evangelism, isn’t it? That I’m going to Hell and they have a duty to change that?

As an aside, I can’t find a website for Jackson’s campaign or advocacy group. Does he eschew the Web? That’s even weirder than opposing Darwin. mjh

Rio Rancho Mayor Kevin JacksonRio Rancho Observer Online
Jackson upsets Owen’s re-election bid
By TOM TREWEEK/OBSERVER STAFF REPORTER

Jackson’s 2,817 votes topped the 2,527 earned by incumbent Mayor Jim Owen, with District 1 councilor Mike Williams receiving 1,291. Those results, are unofficial until Friday when votes will be canvassed.

ABQjournal: Months of Campaigning End Today By Joshua Akers, Journal Staff Writer

Mayoral candidate Kevin Jackson’s campaign is deep in the red. The candidate reported about $17,600 in campaign donations and expenditures of nearly $37,000. [mjh: That’s about $13 per vote.]

According to the report, Jackson has loaned himself about $18,000 for campaign expenses in the past month.

“We didn’t raise the money we thought we would,” Jackson said on the eve of the election. “We believe in this campaign, and we put in our own money to push the campaign forward.”

ABQjournal: Jackson Rio Rancho’s Next Mayor By Joshua Akers, Journal Staff Writer

Political newcomer Kevin Jackson is Rio Rancho’s next mayor …

It was a low turnout, with a little over 14 percent of the city’s registered voters casting ballots in the race for mayor. …

Jackson is president and founder of the New Mexico Family Council. Its purpose, he has said, is to strengthen families in New Mexico by improving marriages and helping families make good decisions.

The Albuquerque Tribune: Local
Rio Rancho leader says he can detach advocacy
By Megan Arredondo, Tribune Reporter

Joe Monahan, a political analyst who covers New Mexico politics on his blog site, said Rio Rancho is a more conservative town than Albuquerque.

Socially conservative voters tend to turn out in smaller, municipal elections, he said.

“In typical elections, the demographics will tilt older and more conservative,” Monahan said.

With that kind of voter turnout, a grass-roots campaign tends to seal the deal, he said. Tuesday’s election saw 6,635 voters cast ballots out of 35,000 registered voters.

The Albuquerque Tribune: Local
Rio Rancho Elections: The race up the hill
By Megan Arredondo, Tribune Reporter

Getting around: Jackson would like a mass transit system, preferably a bus system. Not everybody has a car, particularly the elderly, he says.

A bus system would reduce traffic and pollution, he says. [mjh: OK, we’re cool.]

ABQjournal: Rio Rancho Turnout Among Lowest in N.M. By Joshua Akers, Journal Staff Writer

Rio Rancho voters are some of the most apathetic in New Mexico when it comes to municipal elections— if you go by the numbers.

With only 18.2 percent of registered voters bothering to go to vote in Tuesday’s election, the city had one of the state’s lowest turnouts. …

“The big story in Rio Rancho is 82 percent of the people didn’t bother to go to the polls,” Sanderoff said. “Apathy, a lack of any sense their vote would make a difference— skepticism, cynicism, apathy are all at play.”

TURNOUT STATEWIDE

Here was the turnout in some of New Mexico municipalities that held elections on Tuesday:
BERNALILLO: 27.4 percent
BLOOMFIELD: 20 percent
BOSQUE FARMS: 36 percent
CORRALES: 35.7 percent
DEMING: 32 percent
ESPAÑOLA: 21 percent
LAS VEGAS: 33 percent
LOS RANCHOS: 10.2 percent
RATON: 22 percent
RIO RANCHO: 18.2 percent
ROSWELL: 26 percent
SANTA FE: 30.4 percent
TAOS: 39.2 percent

[mjh: Is this really a democracy anymore?]

Spill spoils argument

Spill spoils argument EDITORIAL

One argument in behalf of drill ing for oil in the Arctic Na tional Wildlife Refuge is that it can be done without damaging the pristine nature of this world-class nature preserve.

That argument, never really credible, is in serious disrepute today as clean-up crews struggle to contain what, at this point, is the sixth largest oil spill ever on Alaska’s North Slope. And it comes as Congress once again struggles over whether to include projected oil revenues from ANWR in the budget authorization bill.

Isn’t it time to give this issue a rest and get on with bigger fiscal issues without spoiling the environment? …

Doesn’t it make sense to leave some oil for the future, when extraction techniques should pose less environmental risk? Or are we so absorbed with satisfying our gluttonous appetite for oil that we care not a fig what the next generation does in a petroleum-exhausted world?

Both Senate and House should reject efforts to reinsert this divisive issue in budget deliberations.

Leave No Industry Behind — The Endangered Endangered Species Act

If there is anything the Radical Right hates more than the New Deal (and all of FDR’s legacy), it’s the Endangered Species Act. mjh

ES&T Online News: Hidden ties: Big environmental changes backed by big industry by PAUL D. THACKER

Lobbyists and industry officials who once pushed for the president’s Healthy Forests legislation now collaborate with Rep. Pombo to alter the Endangered Species Act.

Since President Bush took office, Republicans have successfully pushed through major reforms that target regulations for power-plant emissions and the management of federal forests. During his 2004 campaign for reelection, the president praised his Healthy Forests initiative as “a good, common-sense policy.” This year, the Republican-led Congress is gearing up for yet another “common-sense” reform to a major piece of environmental legislation—the Endangered Species Act (ESA). …

The movement to alter ESA is being led in Congress by Rep. Richard Pombo (R-CA), a rancher from California and the powerful chair of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Natural Resources. …

To write the bill, Pombo called on the help of Steve Quarles, a lobbyist who works for the timber industry. “I spent a great deal of time with Pombo’s staff,” Quarles told ES&T, and during that time he helped write the bill. …

Practically a Washington, D.C., institution, Quarles has long worked to shape environmental laws to favor corporations. During the debate over the president’s Healthy Forests legislation, Quarles lobbied for its passage on behalf of the American Forest and Paper Assoc., the largest trade group for the forest products industry. Previously, he represented the American Forest Resource Council (AFRC), a group that lobbies for management of public lands to favor industry.

Wigley, too, has a long history with the timber industry. … For the 2002 elections, Wigley raised $327,100 from timber companies, such as Weyerhaueser and Boise Cascade. This money was then handed out to Republicans running for state offices in Oregon. Before joining OFIC, Wigley worked as a press officer for Georgia Pacific, one of the world’s largest forest-products corporations. His biography also states that he is a graduate of the American Campaign Academy, a group created by advisers to former Rep. Newt Gingrich to train Republican political operatives. …

Jim Peterson of the industry-funded Evergreen Foundation was quoted calling Project Protect a “hardball approach” to get the president’s bill signed. “It’s not a warm, fuzzy PR campaign,” he said. “It’s a fight to the finish. We intend to work behind the scenes with industry associations with much of the PR off the radar screen by design.” …

Wigley wrote in February 2005, he revealed his own views on Project Protect. “When I directed the healthy forests battle two years ago, I had to change the way the forest products industry talked,” he wrote. “We didn’t change our goals—just the way we communicated.” …

“Some people call it Astroturf,” said Ken Gross, a lawyer who specializes in ethics and campaign-finance cases. Unlike traditional grassroots groups that may consist of local activists meeting in someone’s living room, these new operations are backed by corporate money and run like professional political campaigns. “It’s not mom-and-pop; it’s highly sophisticated, with well-compensated people. …”

An October 2005 Harris Poll found that 74% of Americans believe that “protecting the environment is so important that requirements and standards cannot be too high, and continuing environmental improvements must be made regardless of cost.”

Senate urged to safeguard species act By Erica Werner, Associated Press Writer

As a Senate committee prepares to take up revisions to the Endangered Species Act, nearly 6,000 biologists from around the country signed a letter Wednesday urging senators to preserve scientific protections in the landmark law.

The House passed an Endangered Species Act rewrite last year that many scientists and environmentalists viewed as extreme. Interest groups are lobbying to ensure that legislation expected soon from the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will be an improvement.

“Unfortunately, recent legislative proposals would critically weaken” the law’s scientific foundation, said the letter organized by the Union of Concerned Scientists. The 5,738 signers included six National Medal of Science recipients.

“For species conservation to continue, it is imperative both that the scientific principles embodied in the act are maintained, and that the act is strengthened, fully implemented, and adequately funded.”

Even Spies Make Mistakes

FBI Cites More Than 100 Possible Eavesdropping Violations By Dan Eggen, Washington Post Staff Writer

The FBI reported more than 100 possible violations to an intelligence oversight board over the past two years, including cases in which agents tapped the wrong telephone, intercepted the wrong e-mails or continued to listen to conversations after a warrant had expired, according to a report issued yesterday.

In one case, the FBI obtained the contents of 181 telephone calls rather than just the billing records to which it was entitled. In another, a communication was monitored for more than a year after eavesdropping should have ended — although investigators blamed a third-party provider for the mix-up. …

“Despite the Bush administration’s attempt to demonize critics of its anti-terrorism policies as advancing phantom or trivial concerns, the report demonstrates that the independent Office of Inspector General has found that many of these policies indeed warrant full investigations,” [Rep. John Conyers Jr. (Mich.), ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee,] said.

But Justice spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the department is “pleased that the inspector general once again confirmed that there have been no substantiated civil liberties violations from the Patriot Act.”

Compassionate Conservative

Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | South Dakota ‘bans’ abortion by Robert Booth, et. al.

Representative Bill NapoliRepublican senator Bill Napoli said on the US TV channel PBS that most abortions were being carried out for “convenience”. He insisted, however, that exceptions could be made for rape or incest under a provision that protects the mother’s life.

“A real-life description to me would be a rape victim, brutally raped, savaged,” he said. “The girl was a virgin. She was religious. She planned on saving her virginity until she was married. She was brutalised and raped, sodomised as bad as you can possibly make it, and is impregnated. I mean, that girl could be so messed up, physically and psychologically, that carrying that child could very well threaten her life.”

Of course, we’ll need a Council of the Righteous to certify those virgins. And we’ll need a way to tell the virgins apart from the “spoiled” (whom it is OK to rape brutally). How about veils for the virgins and scarlet letters for the whores? mjh

Meanwhile, laws restricting abortions have been passed in El Salvador, Hungary, Poland and the Russian Federation, as well as the US.

In Poland the conservative Law and Justice party took power last October, and women’s rights groups now fear the country’s already restrictive abortion laws could be tightened further to deny abortions to rape victims and women with deformed foetuses (although Law and Justice has proposed no such measures).

At the European parliament, in Strasbourg, in November the League of Polish Families, an ultra-Catholic party, ran a controversial exhibition comparing abortion to Nazi death camps.

And in Mexico, where abortion law has been relaxed since 1995, Felipe Calderon, the presidential candidate for the incumbent National Action party, has cited scripture in stump speeches and trumpeted an anti-abortion party line – positions that proved critical in winning a three-way race for the party nomination.

Bring Him On!

DeLay Wins Tex. GOP Primary By Sylvia Moreno, Washington Post Staff Writer

Rep. Tom DeLay, facing an unusual four-way Republican primary, won the party’s nomination Tuesday, calling his victory a rejection by voters of “the politics of personal destruction.”

“I have always placed my faith in the voters, and today’s vote shows they have placed their full faith in me,” DeLay, 58, said in a statement issued by his reelection campaign.

“Democrat attacks and the politics of personal destruction were heavily used by my opponents in this Republican primary, and they were rejected just like they will be in November,” he said.

None of the reports I’ve read indicate when DeLay last got as little as 6x% of the vote or had 3 Republican challengers. Democrats should delight that Republicans have renominated him — he is THE poster child for the “culture of corruption.” Bring Him On! mjh

DeLay — under criminal indictment on a money-laundering charge; rebuked three times by the House ethics committee; and linked to former GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who has pleaded guilty to political corruption charges — faced his toughest primary race in his 22-year congressional career. Although he spent about $2 million, DeLay ran a low-profile primary campaign, focusing on reaching the most dedicated voters through direct-mail pitches and phone calls. He did not run any radio or television ads, reflecting the campaign’s belief that they would heighten the profile of the GOP primary and bring out anti-DeLay voters. …

“I’m honored . . . to defend this district from the funding and activism of America’s most radical Democrats,” he said. “Liberal activists like Barbra Streisand, George Soros and Nancy Pelosi all have a dog in this fight, and his name is Nick Lampson.”