• Conservation Voters Endorse Kaine, Deeds and Four Delegates

    The Virginia League of Conservation Voters has endorsed Tim Kaine for governor, Creigh Deeds for attorney general, and the following four candidates running in House of Delegates primaries:

    • Joe May, R-Leesburg
    • David Toscano, D-Charlottesville, running for Mitchell Van Yahres’ seat
    • Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond, running in Viola Baskerville’s seat
    • Peter Schmidt, R-Virginia Beach, running against GOP incumbent Harry Purkey

    Said Executive Director Lisa Guthrie: “These candidates … demonstrate a whole-hearted commitment to conservation in the commonwealth.” The League hasn’t posted the press release online yet (that I can find), but here’s the website.


  • Rapid Response Not Always a Panacea

    Tim Kaine is being praised for not letting the “attack ad” aired by the Republican Governor’s Association go unanswered. I wonder, though, if the “answer” doesn’t open Kaine up to more attack ads. “Turned Richmond Around” isn’t a theme that I think will resonate with most Virginians. To the extent that the City of Richmond is in the news for budget battles and crime, it’s hard to make the case that it got “turned around.”

    I still think Kaine’s best selling point is “Warner, Con’t.”


  • Gilmore Endorses McDonnell

    Former Gov. Jim Gilmore has endorsed Attorney General hopeful Bob McDonnell of Virginia Beach in his contest with Richmonder Steve Baril. Sayeth the Roanoke Times:

    In a press conference outside the Henrico County courthouse, Gilmore called McDonnell “uniquely qualified” to hold the office that Gilmore himself occupied from 1994 to 1997. Gilmore served as governor from 1998 to 2002. “I’ve thought about it very carefully for a long time,” Gilmore said. “I’m absolutely convinced that Bob McDonnell is the man I want to endorse for attorney general.”

    Baril’s response: The former governor “is repaying his political debts. … “Bob McDonnell is the career politician and is building his campaign on lots of endorsements.”

    As a practical matter, do endorsements like these make a difference? Conceivably, there are voters out there who don’t know much about either McDonnell or Baril, but they know and trust Gilmore, so they’ll take his word for it. On the other hand, there are other people–yes, even Republicans–who don’t like Gilmore. Wouldn’t an endorsement of McDonnell sway them to vote for Baril? Are gathering endorsements really worth the trouble?


  • Now the Washington Post’s Michael Shear Has a Blog

    Any good political reporter picks up lots of juicy nuggets in the process of covering his/her beat that just aren’t worth writing a full-length story about. But the morcels could well translate into two-three paragraph items that could feed a blog. That, it seems, is the motivation behind the blog maintained by The Washington Post’s Michael Shear. Check out his “Race to Richmond: Notes from the Virginia Governor’s Race” blog.

    It’s not very profound — I suppose he saves his deepest thinking for his articles — but Shear seems to be posting an average of one item per day, so blogophiles might consider adding it to their list of bookmarks. It will be interesting to see if other political reporters follow his lead.


  • Transportation Studies Needed

    In the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Bart Hinkle pleads for someone, anyone, to study transportation in Virginia.


  • Vote Early, Vote Often

    Just kidding… But you can vote early. Steve Baril’s campaign extends this thoughtful public service message to anyone planning to be out of town on June 14 but still would like to vote for his or her favorite candidate in the primary. Your options:

    • Fill out an application at the Registrar’s Office (click here to find your nearest office)
    • Print out the application, which you can find here. And then fax or mail it to your local registrar’s office (see previous link).

  • Republican fissures run all the way to Washington

    In a page right out of the Mark Warner/Preston Bryant playbook, Senate Democrats and a dozen centrist Senate Republicans, led by–who else?–John McCain–have handed Bush and Frist their backsides in a ringing repudiation of the Republican Right’s my-way-or-the-highway philosophy of governance. Frist fired his vaunted nuclear option, all right–into his foot. Who are the winners? America! America! God bless America!


  • A book on Vinginia politics coming mid-July

    “Today, I am concerned about what progress means. Some of our candidates espouse not leadership, but bargain basement visions. โ€œVote for me, Iโ€™m cheaper,โ€ they say. Instead of inspiring us, instead of calling us to large actions like building community college systems, they are consumed with tedium, with the process of taxing our cars and houses, and such.”–Alan Diamonstein

    “I was joined in my first year in the House by Dr. W. Ferguson Reid, a Richmond Democrat, and the first black member of the House since Reconstruction. He was cordially accepted by his colleagues on the floor of the House, but that acceptance did not extend beyond the Capitol grounds.”–Vince Callahan

    “It was always clear that secrets were expected to be kept, and that any indiscreet behavior was not to be broadcast or ever mentioned again. I followed those rules then, and I follow them now.”–Eva Tieg-Hardy

    “I said many times during the 1990s, and have often commented since then, that our successful reforms represented a victory, not for Republicans, but for the people of Virginia.”–George Allen

    “These country folk stuffed brown paper bags with hand-me-down clothes that their own children could no longer wear, and they brought them to church to pass along to my siblings and me.”–Paul Harris

    “In politics, for example, my dad never voted for a Republican because, even if he admitted the GOP candidate were โ€œa good man,โ€ helping him get elected would โ€œtake a spoke out of the wheel,โ€ the metaphor implying that the Democratic Party rolled the general welfare forward.”–Paul Akers

    “The worst thing about Jay Shropshireโ€™s funeral, other than its necessity, was not being able to schmooze with him about it later.” –Margaret Edds

    ‘Notes from the sausage factory,’ Barnie Day, Becky Dale, publishing mid-July, Brunswick Books, 434 pgs.


  • Thank you, Jim Bacon…

    …for allowing me to rejoin this stable of thoroughbreds. My mother told me once, in a fit of exasperation, that she could leave me in a strange country and in two hours I’d know every loose screw and odd-ball within 200 miles. And that’s before she evey met any of ya’ll! I have spent my time away in productive pursuit of knowledge and understanding. I know my role here is to catch the spears you throw, and I am game for that. And while you’re limbering up, I’ll go over a couple of things I’ve reaffirmed as truisms: you can’t borrow yourself out of debt, you can’t pave your way out of congestion. I’m still having a little trouble with ‘human settlement patterns,’ but I have figured out why good Baptists don’t engage in intercourse standing up. They don’t want folks to think they’re dancing!


  • “Broadband Crawling Its Way to Exurbs”

    Today’s The Washington Post has published an article describing the difficulties that thousands of Washingtonians on the exurban periphery have getting broadband Internet access. Staff Writer Amit R. Paley quotes one woman as saying, “My husband is just screaming his brains out because it’s so slow,” she said. “It’s killing us. It’s absolutely killing us.”

    My reaction: Duh! What did you expect?

    A remarkable number of people who move into the exurbs, with their low taxes and low cost of housing, bring with them an expectation of an urban level of services. It just doesn’t work that way. Not only does scattered, disconnected, low-density development make transportation expensive to provide, it makes utilities expensive to provide, too.

    The Post quotes Steve E. Collier, vice president of emerging technologies at the National Rural Telecommunications Cooperative, as saying that subsidies from the federal government probably will be needed to ensure that high-speed Internet access extends to the most far-flung parts of the country. The Post doesn’t quote anyone mentioning the obvious alternative: If broadband is really important to you, don’t move to the stinkin’ exurbs! Or if you do move, don’t expect everyone else to subsidize your poorly planned locational decision!!


  • “Anti-tax PAC Targets GOP Delegates”

    The Richmond Times-Dispatch ran an article this morning about R. Jerry Parker Jr., the man who is bankrolling the Virginia Conservative Action PAC. VCAP has donated $10,000 to $25,000 to each of the six Republican primary challengers to incumbents who voted in favor of last year’s $1.4 billion tax increase. Parker has personally contributed $212,000 to VCAP this year — 85 percent of the money collected. Founder and CEO of Chesapeake Capital Corp. in Henrico County, a $1.6 billion hedge fund, Parker hired Republican activist Robin DeJarnette to run the PAC. Sayeth the T-D:

    Parker contends the tax increases were unnecessary, pointing to the eventual $1 billion surplus and an improving economy. “I’d like to play offense and say we need to reduce taxes,” he said. “We can’t even get there. We can’t even convince Republicans to hold the line.”


  • May 23 Edition of Bacon’s Rebellion Hits the Cyber-Streets

    The May 23 edition of Bacon’s Rebellion has been published. You can read it online here.


  • I have a dream

    It’s a gorgeous day out there today; I found myself daydreaming thinking of how things could be.

    I have a dream. DINOs and RINOs living together in harmony, spending their time on beautiful Shenandoah pastures, holding hands, loving each other and the whole world. No extremists, no party ideologies, no animosities, no partisanship; just the utmost collaboration between good men for the good of all in order to better our lives from cradle to grave. And of course, no limits on government spending–after all, how can you put a limit on doing good?

    But I soon came back to reality and came to recognize that such a place already exists. It’s called Utopia!

    Enjoy the beautiful day.

    PS. Iโ€™m sure the faithful readers of this blog, readily recognize the RINO acronym. For those of you who havenโ€™t heard of a DINO before please read โ€œDINO Sighting.โ€


  • Dulles Toll Road: Tolls increase tomorrow

    I couldn’t resist making another reference to the fact that the tolls are going up tomorrow by 67% to 100%, depending on where you get on or off. And not one penny of that money is going to be spent on improving the daily commute of the userโ€™s of the toll road. Rather that money is going to be wasted on the rail to Dulles boondoggle that does nothing to alleviate traffic congestion and will do a lot to attract even more traffic on this toll road and other adjacent roads, as building densities go up.

    And the wasteful spending has already begun, even before one additional penny was collected from the toll increase. As reported by channel 7 in Washington, the state is paying $480,000 for their PR blitz. Half-a-million dollars spent for TV ads advertising that the tolls are going up. Do you need a more flagrant example of waste of taxpayer dollars than this?


  • Passion in the Highlands

    No matter how you feel about NIMBYism, economic development, energy independence, or tax revenues, you have to be impressed that a number equivalent to 10% of Highland County’s residents turned out for a public hearing on an electricity generating windmill farm project.

    A decision on the project is expected next month.

    Here’s a question, though: At what point do Virginia localities that consciously deny tax-generating projects lose their credibility in calls for more state funding?