Issue #345

Democrats take the offensive in culture wars After a generation of campaigns in which Republicans exploited wedge issues to win close elections, Democrats are now on the offensive in the culture wars. Democrats see social issues as potent for the same reasons Republicans once did, using them as a tool to both stoke concerns among moderate…

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Citizen Koch (Documentary), Tuesday 9/30

“Behind every Tea Party, there’s a billionaire. Or Two.” The 30th District Democrats are hosting a one-time private screening of “Citizen Koch”, a documentary by the directors of “Bowling for Columbine” and “Fahrenheit 9/11” with Michael Moore. Q&A immediately following the film. Tuesday, Sept. 30, 7pm-9:30 Century Theater, The Commons, Federal Way $10/ticket (purchase online…

September 23 Executive Board Meeting

The agenda for our September 23 Executive Board meeting (7pm, Renton Carpenters’ Hall) will include consideration of additional KCDCC endorsements for the November General Election. Please note that received candidate questionnaires are available here and that, as per KCDCC Bylaws 11.3 (passed in February), the only legislature, county, or local candidates who may be voted…

Issue #344

This is what’s truly at stake in the battle for Senate control Arguably the most significant consequence of a Republican Senate takeover in 2014 is absent from the campaign trail, and hardly registers in any polls asking Americans what their top election issues are. It’s not Obamacare. It’s not taxes or spending or immigration. It’s not…

Issue #343

The inflation cult: They’re always wrong, yet they persist Wish I’d said that! Earlier this week, Jesse Eisinger of ProPublica, writing on the Times’ DealBook blog, compared people who keep predicting runaway inflation to “true believers whose faith in a predicted apocalypse persists even after it fails to materialize.” Indeed. Economic forecasters are often wrong. Me, too! If economists…

Issue #342

Kansas election: GOP scrambles to save Pat Roberts The GOP’s political machine is kicking into overdrive to save a Senate seat in Kansas that’s suddenly complicating its path to the majority. With polls showing Sen. Pat Roberts in serious trouble against independent Greg Orman, top Senate Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Sen….

Issue #341

Democrats can win on Social Security—by fighting to increase it A new poll confirms that voters don’t just want their Social Security benefits protected, they want them expanded—in overwhelming numbers, across geographical distances, and crossing all party lines. It’s not just “liberals” who feel that way. Three out of four Republican voters support it. What’s more, voters say they’re…

Issue #340

Cities reject group’s push for ‘right-to-work’ A right-wing group’s attempt to impose anti-union “right-to-work” collective bargaining restrictions on city governments in Washington state suffered a major setback Monday as its propositions were deemed illegal by city officials in both Sequim and Shelton. Dozens of angry citizens crowded into the cities’ council meetings to decry the measures…

Issue #339

GOP’s Obamacare nightmare is coming true: It’s working For Republicans, the Obamacare reckoning has arrived sooner than expected. The politics of the health care law have undergone a sea change since its disastrous rollout last fall, when many conservative operatives were salivating at the prospect of a GOP wave in the midterm elections due to an…

Issue #338

Progressive left’s latest target: EMILY’s List Is the war on women—or on women’s groups, anyway—coming to the Democratic Party, too? With economic issues increasingly roiling the progressive left, a number of bloggers, activists, and liberal groups say EMILY’s List, one of the Democratic Party’s biggest power brokers for nearly 30 years, is increasingly on the wrong…