• Televised Debate Announced

    The UVA Center for Politics and NBC 12 Richmond have announced agreement on a televised debate in October between gubernatorial candidates Tim Kaine and Jerry Kilgore. Russ Potts will be invited “if he demonstrates at least 15 percent support in public polls.” Professor Larry Sabato will moderate.

    From the press release:

    This 2005 gubernatorial debate will take place in the Richmond studios of NBC 12 and will be made available via satellite for live broadcast to all television stations regardless of network affiliation. It will be up to each station to decided [sic] whether to carry the debate; citizens are encouraged to contact their local station to urge that they carry the debate. While specific details will be negotiated in the near future, the format will be similar to that of the gubernatorial debate that the Center for Politics hosted in 2001.

    All you Potts fans, hope Rasmussen or Mason-Dixon calls you.


  • Will the Real Tax-and-Spender Please Stand Up?

    The Kilgore campaign has resumed its characterization of Tim Kaine as a “tax and spend liberal,” citing the following evidence:

    • Bringing Teacher salaries to the national average – $1.16 billion (Fiscal Impact for HB2075, 2005),
    • Small Business Health Care Tax Credit – $540 million (Fiscal Impact for SB1255, 2005),
    • Full Funding of Education – $1 to $1.2 billion (Richmond Times-Dispatch, June 2, 2005),
    • Phasing Out the Death Tax along the federal phase-out – $216 million (Fiscal Impact for HB4, 2004).

    And those are just the highlights of a long laundry list.

    Fair enough. Kaine probably does deserve the label “tax and spend liberal” (along with half the General Assembly, including a lot of Republicans). But unless Kilgore’s position is that he’s a tax-and-spend moderate — yeah, I’d spend more money, too, but not as much as the other guy — he needs to detail what he would cut from government spending and how.


  • Rats in Government

    Rats are infesting the Patrick Henry Building off Capitol Square, which, due to renovation work at the state Capitol, will serve as temporary home to the governor’s office and the General Assembly during the 2006 session. The Department of General Services has moved aggressively to get rid of the rodents, says director of engineering and buildings Richard Sliwoski, but “the rats are pretty smart.”

    The Richmond Times-Dispatch has the story here. The symbolism speaks for itself.


  • Googling the New Guy

    The Virginia Economic Development Partnership has announced that Jeffrey Anderson will be the new executive director of the organization, replacing the retiring Mark Kilduff. Anderson previously was executive vice-president of global integration for BearingPoint.

    In selecting Anderson, the Partnership bypassed the entire economic development profession. An executive recruiting firm hired by the VEDP screened 150 candidates over five months. Executive Director of the VEDP is quite a plum job, paying up to $200,000 annually and offering much more flexibility in hiring and firing staff than is available in state agencies.

    A Google search on Anderson reveals a fascinating career message board hosted by BearingPoint. Two anonymous posters had some unflattering things to say about him, here and here.

    I wonder if the search firm checked those comments out. They might be accurate; they might be jealous sniping. Those of us in the blogosphere are acutely aware of the pros and cons of anonymous posting. Would we want to be judged by anonymous criticism? Is there any other way to get contemporaneous criticism of a candidate’s performance without looking at unfiltered commentary on blogs and message boards? Lord knows only good stuff comes in the candiate’s application packet.


  • Potts Gets Hinkled

    Richmond Times-Dispatch columnist Bart Hinkle has completed his trilogy on the three candidates for governor with today’s look at independent Russ Potts. See my commentary on the previous looks at Kaine and Kilgore here. Potts, it seems, has not advanced much of a platform and has hardly been a model of consistency during his political career.

    Look for the adoring editorial boards of the Daily Press and other papers to quickly try to rehabilitate Potts by offering up the great liberal compliment: he’s “evolved.”

    Update: As always, Norm looks deeper into the Potts phenomenom.


  • Hide the Women and Children. The Rebellion is Here!

    The Aug. 8, 2005, edition of Bacon’s Rebellion has been posted online.

    With all humility, I would draw bloggers’ attention to my own column, which germinated a couple of weeks ago as a post on this blog:

    The Shucet Effect
    If the rest of state government had kept pace with VDOT over the past three years, Virginia could have cut spending by nearly $900 million. Don’t tell me there’s no waste left in government!


  • “Dulles rail is starting to look like a vanity project”

    When the Washington Post editorial board starts having misgivings about a major rail transportation project, it’s time to start considering an exit strategy. The estimate for the first phase of the project–Falls Church through Tysons Corner to Reston–has ballooned from $1.5 billion to $2.4 billion.

    Update: Road to Ruin has more.


  • In the ‘Pick on Somebody Your Own Size’ department…

    I publicly challenge Tucker Watkins, George Allen’s aide and Kilgore surrogate at the Cantaloupe Festival, to a Blue v. Red “Belly-Bump” at the Virginia Peach Festival in Stuart, Virginia on August 12.


  • Is the Problem with Education a Lack of Funding?

    Richmond Mayor L. Douglas Wilder doesn’t think so. Here’s what he said in his column published this morning in the Richmond Times-Dispatch:

    Those who continually cry about lack of funding won’t acknowledge that Richmond is the best-funded system per pupil among its peers (Roanoke, Hampton, Lynchburg, Newport News, Portsmouth, Petersburg, Hopewell, Danville, Norfolk), and sits among the top 10 of all systems in Virginia.

    Richmond is at the top of the list regarding truancy and drop-outs. Average daily attendance is well below the state average, even though many schools don’t take roll call until after 11:30 a.m. The student population is in steady decline, falling from 26,136 in 2002-03 to an expected 23,400 in 2005-06. We’re spending twice as much for half the student population that once numbered 50,000 students. Even allowing for inflation, that makes no sense at all.

    I cannot merely say, ‘Leave it to others to see the job through.’ It is your job and mine. Every part of our society must demand what is right and criticize what is wrong. We must instill the pride in the community, the professionalism in those who teach and administer our children, [and] recognize and … instill in our youngsters the intrinsic value of education.

    As long as we define the “problem” with public schools as a lack of money, we’ll never solve the problem, and we’ll never have enough money.


  • Blade Axes Craddock

    Recently, some Virginia bloggers have been busy commenting on a WashingtonBlade.com story about Chris Craddock, the Republican candidate for the 67th Delegate District who recently defeated in last June’s primarry the former RINO incumbent, Gary Reese.

    The WashingtonBlade.com story, entitled โ€œRepublican Candidate Defends Anti-Gay Primaryโ€ quotes Craddock as saying โ€œChristian and gays despise each other.โ€

    Iโ€™m not surprised that a publication like the Washington Blade would go out of its way to libel and misquote a conservative candidate. After all, they are on a mission: Promoting an extreme gay agenda, tearing down family units, and the moral fiber on which this country was founded.

    What is surprising, however, is that professed serious Virginia bloggers would give any credence to the propaganda coming from the extremists at the WashingtonBlade.com.

    Folks, here is Craddockโ€™s entire quote, which the WashingtonBlade.com utterly misquoted by taking it entirely out of context:

    “Many people say that Christians and gays hate each other, but I think we need to treat each other with respect.”

    Obviously, the WashingtonBlade.com is only interested in promoting their agenda and will go to great lengths to distort a conservative candidateโ€™s record. Candidates shouldnโ€™t waste their time talking to so-called reporters from organizations like the WashingtonBlade.com who are only interested in promoting their biased, extremist agenda.


  • So many blogs, so little timeโ€ฆ

    My recent absence from this blog was due to my increasing commitments on a number of fronts: Family, business, and other political activities as they relate through my involvement with the Virginia Club for Growth.

    Although blogging is a lot of fun, it also requires a lot of time. Faced with a limited number of hours that can be devoted to this activity, it becomes necessary to take some extended breaks from time to time.

    I also canโ€™t help but wonder whether blogging can have a serious positive impact on changing the course of Virginia politics. The number of regular bloggers is rather limited and those that participate are already committed to a particular political philosophy.

    In other words, the likelihood of changing any minds through extensive blog discourse is rather unlikely. So given my increasingly diminishing availabilityโ€”after all there are only 24 hours available in a dayโ€”I have to consider whether blogging is an effective medium for reaching out to the greatest number of activists and voters in general, with the goal of convincing them that we must bring back some sanity to our state governmentโ€”a government heading to fiscal ruin, given the unprecedented growth in government spending programs over the last decade.

    As my friend John Taylor of the Virginia Institute for Public Policy likes to say: It took Virginia 386 years to reach a $30 billion bi-annual budget, yet it took only one decade to double it to $60 billion! Folks we simply cannot afford such an out-of-control, burgeoning government. We need to instill some discipline in government spending and control the size and growth of governmentโ€”otherwise, weโ€™ll simply end up as another economic basket case, like California.


  • A Step Forward for Charter Schools

    In the debate over K-12 education, Virginians often forget that the Old Dominion is afflicted with one of the most centralized, top-down school systems in the country. Nowhere is the ossified nature of the bureaucracy more evident than in the paucity of charter schools. With only five charter schools in 2004-2005 (one of which is no longer operating), Virginia has fewer than almost any state in the nation.

    That may change. The U.S. Department of Education has awarded $450,000 to support three charter schools in Virginia: on each in Norfolk, Richmond and Charlottesville. According to the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the charter school in Richmond, the Leading Edge Academy, would serve 40 to 60 students who are behind academically.

    Said Paul Goldman, senior policy advisor to Mayor L. Douglas Wilder: “This should be seen as a breakthrough in Virginia, which has been very slow to look at [charter schools] and see tremendous potential. This is an additive, another way to reach students and maximize their potential.”

    Good for Wilder and Goldman. It’s fine to poor money into K-12 education, but money alone won’t solve what’s ailing Virginia’s school systems. We need some creative thinking and experimentation, too.


  • Note to Gays: You Won, Don’t Overreach

    Gay rights advocates must be tasting blood after the pasting applied to Del. Bradley P. Marrs, R-Chesterfield, for a fund-raising letter that coarsely alluded to the gay sexual orienation of a Richmond businessman who gave money to his opponent. It’s hard to explain otherwise why they now would be attacking him for writing the offending letter on stationery that “mimics official House letterhead.”

    According to Jeff Schapiro with the Richmond Times-Dispatch, gay-rights leaders are calling for a legislative ethics panel to investigate whether Marrs violated House rules. “The average person might reasonably understand this lettter to be an official communication from Delegate Marrs in his capacity as a member of the House of Delegates,” senior officials with Equality Virginia, the Log Cabin Republicans of Virginia, and the Lesbian Democratic Club wrote to House Speaker William J. Howell.

    Noting that it is common practice among legislators in both parties to send political mail on official-looking stationery, Paul Nardo, Howell’s chief of staff, said there would be no inquiry.

    Bacon to gays: Quit while you’re ahead. Gays achieved a remarkable victory in the Marrs brouhaha: Nearly every major political figure in Virginia condemned Marrs’ gay-baiting language. The incident established an important standard for Virginia politics: There is no place for gratuitous references to an individual’s “homosexual” orientation. Don’t obscure this step forward with a controversy over Marr’s choice of stationery.


  • Free Speech in Herndon

    The day laborer center controversy in the Town of Herndon has taken an ugly turn according to the Washington Post, with a talk radio show inciting anti-center phone calls to town hall and the town shutting down its phone system.

    This comes after the Planning Commission voted 4-3 against the proposal. The Town Council will vote later this month.


  • What’s next at ‘Little Mountain,’ sombreros?

    I was in the gift shop at Monticello today and could not find one item made in the U. S. Not one. And I spent nearly an hour looking. Even the quill pens and the Houdin bust replicas are made in Taiwan or China. And now we’ve passed CAFTA? (No, I didn’t spend a dime. I was tempted–those quills were nice ones.)