PUMA in WA will unite together!

PUMA stands for "People United Means Action!" You may know that there is another, more defiant meaning for the acronym P.U.M.A. There will be no unity in the Democratic party until the voices of the 18 million voters who support Hillary Clinton are heard and heeded.

We are motivated to action by our shared belief that the current leadership of the Democratic National Committee has abrogated its responsibility to represent the interests of all democrats in all 50 states. They are misleading our party and aim to mislead our country into nominating an illegitimate candidate for president in 2008. Our goals are fourfold:


1. To support the candidacy of Hillary Clinton in 2008 / 2012.

2. To lobby and organize for changes in leadership in the DNC

3. To critique and oppose the misogyny, discrimination, and disinformation in the mainstream media, including mainstream blogs and other outlets of new media

4. To support the efforts of those political figures who have allied themselves with Hillary Clinton and who have demonstrated commitment to our first three goals

DAILY Rasmussen Poll:

The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows Barack Obama attracting 49% of the vote while John McCain earns 46%.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Mark Warner Will Deliver Keynote Speech on Tuesday - NOT HILLARY!

On Tuesday, August 26th, which happens to be Women's Equality Day, and the anniversary of women first obtaining the right to vote in the United States, Mark Warner will deliver the keynote address, not Hillary. Makes perfect sense, right? Unbelievable - and it get's worse on Wednesday.... More...

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1131ap_democratic_convention_speakers.html

HONOLULU -- Senate candidate and former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner is scheduled to deliver the Tuesday night keynote address at this year's Democratic National Convention - the same role that launched Barack Obama to national prominence four years ago.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama's rival during the Democratic presidential primaries, is also scheduled to speak that night, Aug. 26. But Warner is being given the plum position, according to an e-mail that Obama campaign adviser Mike Henry sent to Virginia supporters late Tuesday.

Henry's e-mail, which was provided to The Associated Press, included a quote from campaign manager David Plouffe.

"Mark Warner is not afraid to challenge the status quo to bring people together and get things moving," Plouffe's statement read. "It's that kind of spirit and innovation that resulted in his selection as keynote speaker on a night when the convention program will focus on renewing America's economy."

Clyburn (the guy who smeared the Clinton's as racist) gets Wednesday's plum spot.

http://www.thestate.com/local/story/488309.html

House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, a Columbia Democrat, is scheduled to speak Aug. 27 at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, a prime Wednesday speaking spot.

Clyburn said Tuesday he hasn’t prepared his speech yet but will keep with the theme of the day, national security.

It’s a coveted spot on the convention calendar, which includes a keynote address that evening from the yet-to-be-named vice-presidential candidate.

Other speakers who have been named so far include Michelle Obama, wife of presumptive nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois and U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York, who ended her presidential bid in June.

The third most powerful member of Congress, Clyburn is responsible for securing South Carolina’s “First in the South” primary in January. In the primary, Obama secured 55 percent of the vote, a landslide victory.

Clyburn said it’s possible for Obama to build on the primary win and take South Carolina during the November general election.

Meanwhile, Republicans and some Democrats are predicting South Carolina will remain a red state.

On Tuesday, Clyburn also shrugged off his ongoing rift with former President Bill Clinton. Last week during a media interview, Clinton described Clyburn as a former friend and said Clyburn had a hand in turning Clinton’s comments about Obama into racial incidents.

“I never said anything that ... was unkind,” said Clyburn. “All I said was Bill needs to chill.”

Clyburn said he only used the term “chill” because he was cold while doing the interview outside in Myrtle Beach.

“It was just a take on the weather,” he said.

— Gina Smith


And Michelle "never proud of my country" gets Monday, along with 9% Nancy.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2008/08/10/2008-08-10_michelle_obama_to_shine_as_star_of_conve.html

"WASHINGTON - Hillary Clinton may have landed a plum keynote slot at the Democratic National Convention, but she'll be playing second fiddle to Michelle Obama - who will speak on opening night.

Convention planners announced Sunday that Barack Obama's wife will anchor the prime-time schedule on Monday, Aug. 25, to open the four-day Denver convention. Hillary Clinton had already accepted Obama's invitation to deliver the keynote on the second night.

A Democratic press release Sunday called her "a champion for working families and one of the most effective and empathetic voices in the country today."

Obama's vice presidential nominee will be Wednesday's prime-time headliner. As previously announced, Obama will deliver his acceptance speech on Thursday night from Invesco Field before more than 65,000 onlookers.

The Clintons can hardly complain about getting short shrift in Denver - Bill Clinton speaks Wednesday night, though not in prime time, and Chelsea Clinton will introduce her mother's Tuesday night talk. Even so, Obama's closest Senate pal suggested yesterday that Bill Clinton is still sulking over his wife's loss to Obama.

"I think Bill Clinton is hurting, I'll be honest with you," Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin told "Fox News Sunday."

But Durbin predicted the ex-President will pull out of his funk before long."

So yeah, pretty much a big f*ck you to the Clinton's.

Thank you so much for your courage and integrity!

Thank you for having such courage and integrity in making this long over due historic event happen! I am so thankful we have delegates like you who signed the petition so all delegates can vote for their candidate.

You are so very brave!

All of America will be watching the televised historic occasion of the 88th Anniversary of women's right to vote, commemorated in the speech of Senator Hillary Clinton on August 26th, 2008. The whole world will be listening as the rightful co-presumptive nominee Senator Hillary Clinton's name is read as the first still viable women presidential candidate ever to be on the roll call for all delegates to vote on at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. More...

This great milestone in the history of women speaks not only to the progress of the stature of women in the US, but also serves as a beacon of light and hope for women and thereby for all people worldwide. Never before has the American public demonstrated its commitment to women's rights being equal to human rights more fully than by casting 18 million popular votes for a woman candidate - proving without question that the citizen voters of our country have equal faith in a woman to guide our country as our nation's leader, the President of the United States.

Remember this is already 36 years after Shirley Chisholm declared her goal of becoming the "real, viable candidate", as a woman for President of the united states, Hillary Clinton has finally achieved that dream, not only in earning the title of first "real, viable candidate", but going far further, she is not only viable but has earned the right to be considered one of two possible nominees, she has demonstrated that a woman not only can, but if nominated, will win the white house for the Democratic Party.

The path to the White house for women has happened in struggles and quantum leaps forward. Embedded in the path's milestones along the way, are other firsts. Echoing the media bias that forced Senator Clinton to suspend her campaign, were the calls of the media and power elite 36 years ago, for Shirley Chisholm to give way so that Al Sharpton, a man who although a well known figure had comparatively little qualifications. Justly, and to her credit Shirley Chisholm refused to give way, and while she did not achieve her ultimate goal she did place her name on the roll-call and thereby irrevocably made another step forward on the path to the white House for woman, which could never be erased from history. Humphrey, the candidate who won the popular vote in the democratic primaries, but lost the nomination to McGovern on technicalities, graciously released his African American delegates to allow them to vote for Ms. Chisholm as an African American Democratic candidate for President of the United States however history has no mention of the gesture supporting the fact that she was also a woman.

This historic event is seen as crucial to the positive image of the Democratic Party. Party delegates represent 18 million constituents who voted their conscience in primaries and caucuses for Senator Clinton. Many party members, delegates, and their constituents view this year's convention as a golden opportunity to demonstrate that democratic principles are the cornerstone of the party, through an open and honest convention and nomination process.

Again thank you so much for making this possible!


Roger@DemocraticPartyNSC.org
www.DemocraticPartyNSC.org
We the people sentinels for
our endowed inalienable rights


Obama’s Dual Citizenship Disaster: an Overview [Update]


Posted on NOQUARTER By TexasDarling
Email: susanunpc@gmail.com
Site: http://texasdarlin.wordpress.com

Update: This post consists of theories based on extensive research. It would be nice if the candidate himself answered some straightforward questions about his background, and produced a valid birth certificate.

Since the story broke late Saturday that Barack Obama’s real Birth Certificate, now in Republican hands, has the name Barry Soetoro and not Barack Obama, as we predicted a couple of weeks ago, I notice that many people are still confused about the implications of dual citizenship for Obama.

The matter is somewhat complex, so I’ve decided to try to provide a summary, with the help of resident expert “Judah Benjamin.” More...

Indonesian Connection

Soetoro is the name on Obama’s Birth Certificate (BC) because a new BC was issued when he was adopted by Lolo Soetoro, his step-father. His original BC, which we assume was issued for Barack Hussein Obama at birth, would have been sealed at the time of the adoption.

Barry Soetoro probably acquired Indonesian citizenship in approximately 1965-1966, and may still hold it. He possibly changed his legal name back to Barack Hussein Obama as an older child, teenager, or adult, possibly never did — but even if he did, this procedure would not result in a change to the BC. (If he never legally changed his name back, I imagine his current name on the Presidential ballot would be invalid.)

The Birth Certificate published by Obama on his campaign website (still there, by the way) and distributed to the media was forged because the real BC on file is in the name Soetoro, an identity he apparently wanted to hide from the American people.

I am getting reports from different sources that Obama traveled to Pakistan in ‘81 with an Indonesian passport.

Prior to 2007 (and possibly earlier), Indonesian law did not permit dual citizenship. Thus, if Obama actively kept his Indonesian citizenship, his US citizenship could be challenged.

I suspect that Obama may have dumped his Indonesian citizenship at some point along the way, to advance his political career. But I would not be shocked if he still holds it. This question, however, should not overshadow the serious problem of hiding his Indonesian identity from the electorate.

Kenyan Citizenship

I personally doubt that Obama holds Kenyan citizenship. If he did, he could be stripped of his US citizenship under US law.

Barack Hussein Obama probably was a citizen of the British Crown (first two years of his life) and, effective 1963, a citizen of Kenya by virtue of his father’s nationality.

Under the Constitution of Kenya, he would have automatically forfeited his citizenship at the age of 21 unless he affirmatively “claimed” it. If he took some action to keep his citizenship, that’s a big problem because 1) Kenya prohibits dual citizenship and 2) the US does not recognize dual citizenship with Kenya. Further under the Kenyan Constitution, given his circumstances, he could only have kept Kenyan Citizenship, if he had it, by means of a Ministerial, Prime Ministerial, or Presidential Decree. (Of course, Raila Odinga is Prime Minister of Kenya and Odinga’s father, Oginga Odinga, was Vice President of Kenya and Barack Hussein Obama, Sr, was a close ally of the older Odinga.)

If Obama retained his Kenyan citizenship and helped campaign for his cousin Odinga, that is especially problematic under Title 8 of the U.S. Code, the relevant language of which is:

a) A person who is a national of the United States whether by birth or naturalization, shall lose his nationality by voluntarily performing any of the following acts with the intention of relinquishing United States nationality—

(2) taking an oath or making an affirmation or other formal declaration of allegiance to a foreign state or a political subdivision thereof, after having attained the age of eighteen years…

Again, I don’t think that Obama has Kenyan citizenship. I think that the Rocky Mountain report and Andy Martin’s work are poorly sourced on this point. I sometimes get the impression that Kenya serves as a diversion from the REAL PROBLEM, which is his Indonesian connection. It would be shocking to get actual confirmation of current Kenyan citizenship.
Electability & Eligibility Issues

These revelations raise several troubling issues for Obama’s electability and eligibility.

Foremost, there is the concerted attempt to cover up his Indonesian background and dual citizenship/identity from the electorate.

Secondly, there is a potential Constitutional problem with a POTUS having held dual citizenship, and Obama knows it; thus, the deception.

The “natural-born” clause of Article II is commonly understood to relate to the place of birth, but more accurately relates to loyalty to country as Commander in Chief. That was the original intent of the founding fathers. In McCain’s case, there is no question because of his circumstances (born on military base to 2 US citizens, later joined the military, never had anything to do with Panama, etc.). In Obama’s case, it’s not nearly so clear, especially given his travels, relatives, and associations in some of these other countries.

In my mind, however, the biggest problem is that Sen. Obama has intentionally concealed his background, Indonesian identity, citizenship, and the fact that he was at one time Muslim.

What else is he hiding?
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Credit must be given to Judah Benjamin, historian and former journalist, who has provided ground-breaking research on the factual and legal issues related to Obama’s Indonesian connection and dual citizenship; to Polarik for breaking the story of the COLB forgery; to Techdude for his analysis (currently incomplete); to Dr. Kate for her tireless research efforts; to Michele, for bringing us a new COLB; to JimJ for his courage; to the No Quarter team for endless support; and to all the other writers and readers dedicated to the truth.
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READ these previous stories for more background information (in reverse chronological order):

Letter to New York Secretary of State by Michtell Langbert

ACT NOW: Contact Hawaii Attorney General by TexasDarlin

Eligibility Challenge, State-by-State: ACT NOW by Dr. Kate

Obama: The Forged COLB and a New Mystery by Judah Benjamin

Obama: A Disaster Waiting to Happen, Legal Challenges Imminent?
by Judah Benjamin

Obama Hides Indonesian Identity, Fake Birth Certificate Explained by TexasDarlin

Birth Certificate: Obama, Soetoro, or Dunham by TexasDarlin

The Paper Trail: Obama’s Indonesia Background by Judah Benjamin

Obama the Indonesian: ‘Citizen of the World’? by TexasDarlin

Divided Loyalties: Obama’s Eligibility Problem, Part 2 by Judah Benjamin

Divided Loyalties: Obama’s Eligibility Problem, Part 1 by Judah Benjamin

Obama’s Birth — Questions Remain by TexasDarlin

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DISCLAIMER/COPYRIGHT: This article presents draft and preliminary opinions, viewpoints and information, all of which is subject to change. It is intended to be strictly theoretical and hypothetical, in an effort to examine and vet the background, qualifications, and eligibility for U.S. President of a serious candidate and public figure who is standing for that office. The assertions made herein are believed to be true by the author based on good-faith efforts to research the facts related to a public figure running for public office. In the event that documentation deemed to be reliable by the author comes to the author’s attention disproving one or more of the assertions made herein, corrections will be published.

Nothing herein should be quoted, cited, copied, or otherwise used or shared in whole or part without providing a link to the original source on the No Quarter or TexasDarlin blog, and acknowledging the author, TexasDarlin, which is a pseudonym. Nothing in this article should be used in a way that misrepresents the author’s meanings.

Cross posted from my blog, TexasDarlin

Voter Registration Is the New Battleground

By COREY DADE and JOHN D. MCKINNON
August 12, 2008; Page A4

As Barack Obama tries to draw hundreds of thousands of new voters to the polls, Republicans are beginning to scrutinize registrants' eligibility as both sides draw a major battle line over voting rights.

Republicans are moving to examine surges in voter registrations in some states. A Republican lawyers group held a national training session on election law over the weekend that included campaign attorneys for Sen. John McCain and other Republican leaders. One session discussed how party operatives can identify and respond to instances of voter fraud. More...

Republicans said they are particularly worried about prospects for fraud in Virginia and Pennsylvania, and are beginning to comb thousands of new registrations in those states for ineligible applicants. In some cases the huge numbers threaten to swamp their efforts -- and those of state and local governments to verify and process applications.

Election officials in Virginia and other states say there is no evidence of widespread fraud so far. Numerous studies have found fraud and other voting irregularities in past elections to be infrequent and generally not prevalent enough to influence the outcomes of most contests. Some Republican lawyers say that despite the huge numbers of new registrations in some areas, this year's problems could be fewer compared to prior years, because of improved procedures and tougher rules.

Obama campaign general counsel Bob Bauer last Tuesday said in a memorandum to campaign supporters that their own voter legal defense operation is under way, earlier than those of previous Democratic campaigns, including legal counsel on the ground in 50 states. The campaign is working closely with the Democratic Party, which said it has spent three years building a voter-protection program that includes more than 18 paid staff and 7,000 lawyers. The personnel deployed Aug. 1 and are dealing directly with local elections officials.

In just about every election, understaffed polling sites, malfunctioning voting machines and outdated voter data are reported. Such bureaucratic problems often are rolled into the divide between Democrats and Republicans over who should vote and how -- a battle that has become more intense since the 2000 Florida recount.

Traditionally, Democrats favor fewer checks on verification and greater access to voting to encourage larger turnouts, particularly among lower-income and minority voters, who tend to favor Democrats. Republicans usually push for closer monitoring, in such forms as laws with strict requirements for voters to present identification, which can result in lower turnout.

The nonpartisan Brennan Center for Justice, which monitors elections, projects registrations this year will surpass the total from any previous single election year, building on momentum from the record 20 million registrations for the combined election cycles of 2004 and 2006. Newcomers helped drive turnouts for the Democratic primaries, which drew roughly 19.5 million more voters than in 2004, according to the Democratic National Committee.

"State elections systems have shown signs of stress, and there's a serious concern that they won't be able to handle the number of voters," said Wendy Weiser at the Brennan Center.

In Pennsylvania, where improper registrations have been a problem in past elections, state officials say rolls have increased by about 230,000, to 8.4 million, since the 2006 midterm elections. Some observers believe the large increase could invite more potential for voter-fraud problems, said Lawrence Tabas, general counsel of the state Republican Party. "When you get so many new registrations like that at record numbers...it's very difficult for people to monitor the validity of it," he said.

The Republican secretary of state in Alabama has asked the Justice Department to investigate claims and monitor polling sites on Election Day. On the Republican National Committee's Web site, an interactive U.S. map is used to track recent fraud allegations, proven or not, in a number of states. An RNC official said the Web page was launched in August 2007 and is compiled using news articles.

The efforts are on a collision course with those of Sen. Obama, whose strategy hinges on the success of efforts to boost the number of first-time voters, particularly among African-Americans, and people under the age of 30.

Other efforts are aimed at registering new voters around the country. In the largest effort, Project Vote and Acorn, a community organizing group, are teaming up with the aim of registering 1.2 million people nationally by Labor Day.

Project Vote's executive director, Michael Slater, acknowledged occasional problems with voter registrations, but said that many are the result of poor record keeping. He said a greater risk comes from Republicans' efforts to police the rolls. "We don't have a real history in the last 10 to 15 years of large-scale voter fraud," he said. "What we do have a problem with is getting everyone on the rolls and making sure their votes are counted."

Sen. McCain's campaign is keeping distance from rank-and-file Republicans' efforts to police the new registrations. "State and local parties have the primary responsibility for monitoring local voter registration and identifying problems," Trevor Potter, the campaign's general counsel, said in a written statement provided to The Wall Street Journal in response to questions. But, he added, "Our view is that advance monitoring of legal developments can avoid real legal problems later on -- especially on Election Day."

The St. Louis weekend training session, held annually by the National Republican Lawyers Association, featured a session on voter fraud and possible Republican responses. The panel included Sen. McCain's Election Day coordinator, Michael Roman, as well as Foley & Lardner lawyer Cleta Mitchell, a vocal critic of Democratic-allied groups' efforts to fight what many Republicans regard as necessary ballot-integrity safeguards.

Ms. Mitchell warned about what she regards as a long pattern of abuses in registration by groups such as Acorn and their Democratic allies. "We're all for getting people involved in the process...and getting them to the polls," she said in an interview later. "What we're not for is registering fake people at fake addresses, and creating barriers to trying to identify voter fraud where it exists, which is everywhere. It's a growing problem, because of the professional vote-fraud denier industry."

She urged lawyers working on behalf of state and local party groups and campaigns to monitor new registrations. She also pointed out that Sen. Obama himself -- in his past life as a community organizer -- was "involved" with some of the groups that have been responsible for abuses in recent years.

Obama campaign spokesman Corey Ealons said, "Then, as now with his national campaign for the president, Barack Obama has always worked to inspire individuals to exercise their right to vote. He sees that as a key to his victory this fall."

Years before he took elected office in Chicago, Sen. Obama ran Project Vote's operation there. This year Acorn's political action committee, which the organization said is entirely separate from its voter-registration operation, has endorsed Sen. Obama's campaign. The Obama campaign has said it doesn't accept financial contributions from the PACs of interest groups that both register voters and endorse candidates.

Write to Corey Dade at corey.dade@wsj.com and John D. McKinnon at john.mckinnon@wsj.com

Will Obama Fight the Health Care Fight?

By Marie Cocco

WASHINGTON -- Before the energy-price crisis, before the mortgage crisis, before the credit crisis and the banking crisis, there was the crisis in health insurance that is in reality a crisis in care.

This crisis has deepened in recent years as the number of uninsured has climbed and out-of-pocket costs for those still with insurance have soared. It has become common knowledge that a serious illness -- even among those with insurance -- can plunge families into bankruptcy. Though "problems paying for gas" topped the financial challenges people listed in the most recent Kaiser Family Foundation health tracking poll, "problems paying for health care and health insurance" ranked third -- just behind job concerns but well ahead of paying for food, dealing with credit card debt and paying the mortgage. More...

So it is downright shocking that there was a tussle over what the 2008 Democratic platform would say about the party's generations-long, bedrock commitment to health care for all Americans. In short, presumptive nominee Barack Obama did not draft a statement keeping that pledge. He presented instead his plan as one that would provide "access to" affordable and comprehensive health care. A coalition of liberal activists and Hillary Clinton supporters managed to negotiate a change so that the platform says the party is "united behind a commitment that every American man, woman and child be guaranteed to have affordable, comprehensive health care." Inclusion of the word "guaranteed" was the crucial point.

On the surface, this may look like a victory for Clinton supporters or even for the far larger group -- that is, millions of Democrats -- who have long believed that the promise of guaranteed, universal health care is a fundamental principle of their party. I am less certain, and it's not because I know that politicians can discard party platforms faster than they rid themselves of scandal-tainted donors.

It is because Obama did not campaign during the primaries on a plan that would achieve universal coverage, and indeed, excoriated Clinton for her proposal to mandate that everyone have it. In fact, even some of those involved in achieving the small health-care victory take little solace from it. "I'm not sure that Obama will actually pursue the same kind of idea that we had inserted in the platform," says Donna Smith, who lobbied the platform panel as a member of Progressive Democrats of America. "I think we will have to pursue our congressional representatives to bring legislation forward."

Smith is not a Clinton delegate, or even a convention delegate. She and her husband Larry were featured in the Michael Moore film "Sicko" because they were forced into bankruptcy and lost their home trying to pay the out-of-pocket costs stemming from her treatment for uterine cancer and his for heart disease. "Our purpose was not to attack the party," says Smith, who says she wants Obama to be elected and describes herself and her husband as "good and loyal Democrats." But certain lines have to be drawn.

"To say you're going to provide affordable coverage to people is not the same as giving them health care," she says. "Just because you have insurance coverage does not guarantee you access to the care that you and your doctor decide you need. And people with insurance understand that."

Most Democrats do, too.

In 1992, the party's platform said everyone should have "universal" access to health care "not as a privilege, but as a right." In 1996, a party chastened after the collapse of President Bill Clinton's health care initiative nonetheless committed itself to "ensuring that Americans have access to affordable, high-quality health care." In 2000, the platform noted that "for 50 years, the Democratic Party has been engaged in a battle to provide the kind of health care a great nation owes its people." In 2004, the platform said this: "We believe that health care is a right and not a privilege."

Securing that right is as important now as it was four, or even 50, years ago. When gas prices recede, when the housing market stabilizes and fears of imminent job losses ebb, there will still be an unconscionable gap between the glory of American medical science and the ability of millions of people to get the most basic care.

Obama avoided an intra-party brawl over the health platform. The unanswerable question is whether he will be as determined, as president, to take on the much larger -- and excruciatingly harder -- health-care fight.
mariecocco@washpost.com

By the way, here's McCain's healthcare plan: "We want a system of health care in which everyone can afford and acquire the treatment and preventative care they need. Health care should be available to all and not limited by where you work or how much you make. Families should be in charge of their health care dollars and have more control over care." Sound similar?

Democratic Party Collapses into “stiff-arm” politics

**************************************************************
One Patriot wrote the letter below to the governor – please follow suit then gently very gently Please encourage the delegates, (email within) to have the courage to stand up for democracy! We now have the opportunity – we caught the Dem’s red handed strong arming these delegates– and we should take this to the press. Please take this information and go viral with it NOW! Be gentle with these Delegates they have been strong and need our appreciation and our support !!!!!! More...

These are not superdelegates these are the elected delegates committed to Hillary. They are being pressured not to sign a petition allowing Hillary to have her name placed in nomination during roll call just as many before her have in the past! We need 300 and could easily fall short. Rendell is trying to stop the Democratic process in PA! Tell Rendell this is wrong and support the Delegates for standing strong
**************************************************************

From: “Rachel A. Moore”
<rachel@padems.com>

To: akessler@wolfblock.com ; barbzs@yahoo.com ; bcooper@wcupa.edu ; bdonahower@yahoo.com ; bradkop@yahoo.com ; burnsjb@co.washington.pa.us ; butkovitz1118@msn.com ; cacooke42@gmail.com ; carolf126@comcast.net ; cgeorge@pahouse.net ; cod3699@cup.edu ; colleen@burketts.org ; connie.slye@gmail.com ; cottage82@gmail.com ; cparker@pahouse.net ; d.fillman@afscme13.org ; d.kinross@verizon.net ; Dan.Onorato@alleghenycounty.us ; DauphinDemsDiane@comcast.net ; dbarnes@montcopa.org ; debra4303@comcast.net ; dfrankel@pahouse.net ; dhart@bacweb.org ; dscott@dc47.org ; dtive@tivelobbying.com ; edsdc85@yahoo.com ; erafalkomcnulty@comcast.net ; glawrence@lowey.com ; gnealh@gmail.com ; greg.scott2@gmail.com ; gregoryhold12@hotmail.com ; guridy@aol.com ; guys@bedford.net ; hendrce8@yahoo.com ; herrlk@embarqmail.com ; hizzonr@msn.com ; hkinser@wojdak.com ; hratner@verizon.net ; igolfwt@aol.com ; infosundaysun@yahoo.com ; j.tait@afscme13.org ; jamesrsheppard@gmail.com ; jardini@alltel.net ; jjordan@pft.org ; jjsnyder@windstream.net ; jlynch@mercyhurst.edu ; jmhoeffel@comcast.net ; joeknox@comcast.net ; jsellers@lu19.com ; jsinnott@erie.pa.us ; jtarka1293@aol.com ; jtesterman@psea.org ; kkcampbell@local108rwdsu.org ; klborski@comcast.net ; lam@millesq.com ; leslie.k.carter@phila.gov ; lfarinella1421@hotmail.com ; litz@mbcomp.com ; lmcleaish@psea.org ; lorrib433@aol.com ; maa@hangley.com ; mal@ekmelaw.com ; maria.q.sanchez@phila.gov ; mariaciuf22@aol.com ; marjorie@sas.upenn.edu ; mbtasco@aol.com ; mbuflaw@netzero.com ; mcdermo427@aol.com ; mcrossey@psea.org ; mdivecchio@eriecountygov.org ; mibbutters@yahoo.com ; michelebortner@comcast.net ; mxg2@psu.edu ; nicknewe12@aol.com ; npmills@comcast.net ; pastorquann@bbcforchrist.org ; peggygrove@comcast.net ; pgiding@philaflcio.org ; psjanvey@aol.com ; rjsestak@sestakforcongress.com ; rlw@patreasury.org ; Rob@robhop.com ; roie929@aol.com ; rovnerr@dial-law.com ; rubyehusband@verizon.net; chw307@comcast.net; hratner@verizon.net







Dear Clinton Delegates,



Please see the following memo from Mary Isenhour, Executive Director. Should you have questions or concerns, do not hesitate to contact us at the number below.



Thank you,



Rachel Moore



Rachel A. Moore, Office Director

Pennsylvania Democratic Party

300 North 2nd Street, 8th Floor

Harrisburg, PA 17101

ofc. 717.920.8470 / fax 717.901.7829



TO: All Clinton Delegates

FROM: Mary Isenhour Executive Director

DATE: August 11, 2008

RE: Nomination

If anyone approaches you about signing a petition to place Senator Clinton’s name in nomination at the Democratic National Convention, the Governor has asked me to ask you to refrain from signing such a petition until we know what Senator Clinton and Senator Obama have worked out. As always, please feel free to let me know if you have any questions.

**************************************************************
Governor Rendell,

I am very disappointed in you and the position you’ve taken to squelch the democratic process that our forefathers fought so hard to establish. Your action to ask democratic delegates to suppress the support for the presidential candidate they were elected to support is regrettable. I don’t understand why the Democratic Party wouldn’t let the process work and insist on nomination prior to finalization of the process. The Democratic national convention was established to nominate a presidential candidate through the voice of the people, the people of this great nation. I certainly hope it was not established to “stiff-arm” people to nominate a candidate, not of their choice or the choice of the people. Otherwise, we’ve become like so many other nations in the world that pretend to have democratic process, but the choices are made by the elite few. And the process sometimes ends in acts of violence to make sure their candidate of choice is elected, as in the recent past in Pakistan.



It’s good that John Adams, Jefferson Davis and Benjamin Franklin didn’t follow the party line; otherwise we would still be under the rule of the Queen of England. But then they were leaders not followers and thank goodness for that. You should have insisted that this nominating process continue to finalization at the Democratic National Convention, instead of bending to the party line.



I personally am frustrated with this entire process of counting some peoples votes and not others, popular vote in some states and caucus’ in others, six months of primary campaigns and when its your turn to vote only two candidates remain in the pool, and now “arm twisting” at the Democratic National Convention. I thought America was an example to the world in free elections and just electoral processes, but maybe I am mistaken.



Thanks,

David

PA Voter Related to a Delegate




Backers want Clinton nominated at convention

Carla Marinucci, Chronicle Political Writer
Tuesday, August 12, 2008

(08-11) 21:08 PDT --

A determined crowd of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's delegates - preparing to head to the Democratic Party's national convention in Denver - have begun gathering signatures to ensure her name is placed into nomination, insisting their effort won't take spotlight off presumed Democratic nominee Barack Obama. More...

Many of those involved in the campaign, which they say is a matter of respect and acknowledgement of 18 million voters who backed Clinton, argue that the nomination of the New York senator is a matter of historic and political precedent at such party conventions. And they're chafing at reports that the campaign of the Illinois senator is resisting the efforts - and even hoping to avoid a roll-call vote.

"Since 1884, we've had a roll-call vote. ... It's a nominating convention, not a coronation," said Garry Mauro, the four-term Texas land commissioner and past gubernatorial candidate who ran against George W. Bush - and who will go to his 10th Democratic national convention this month as a Clinton delegate.

With less than two weeks until Aug. 25, when Democrats open their nominating convention in Denver, the sentiment is typical of many Clinton delegates who say the nomination of the New York senator from the floor of the convention doesn't endanger Obama's presidential campaign - and could serve his cause.

The Obama campaign declined to comment on the story, but many supporters of the presumed Democratic nominee suggest that Clinton will get more than her share of high-profile face time and respect at the convention.

She is scheduled to deliver a keynote address on Aug. 26 - reportedly to be introduced by her daughter, Chelsea - and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, is delivering the prime-time address on the following night, when the vice presidential candidate is nominated.

Moving on

Still, "I don't think there's any harm in nominating Sen. Clinton at the convention," said David Serrano Sewell of San Francisco, one of the delegates at the forefront of the signature-gathering movement. "It will acknowledge the success we had, and it will give an opportunity for people to express themselves and get behind Obama and win in November."

Already, he said, Clinton delegates have more than half of the 300 signatures needed to put Clinton's name into nomination - and they fully expect to get more than enough by the time the convention begins in Denver.

"It's a simple thing to do, and it's the biggest sign of party unity," said Laura Spanjian, a San Francisco Clinton delegate who also supports the move. "If we do that one thing, the Hillary people can get past it - and move on."

Clay Dougherty, another San Francisco delegate for Clinton, said that "if the situation were reversed, the Obama people would feel the same."

"For the first time in a generation, it's been a close election ... and this was such a unique situation," he said, in which the first major African American presidential candidate competed with the first major female presidential candidate. "We need to honor both candidates," he said.

And many Democrats suggest that the move to accommodate Clinton's supporters may be politically smart.

"Sen. Clinton is going to do everything she can to make sure Sen. Obama is the next president - and that will include how the convention is handled and the role she plays," says Democratic strategist Chris Lehane, who was a Clinton supporter and a past White House spokesman for Bill Clinton.

But "polls out there show that older women are the potential swing demographic in this election," he said. "It helps Obama and the party ... to have her play a prominent role in the convention."

Under the rules of the Democratic National Committee, 300 valid delegate signatures are needed in order to place a candidate's name on the ballot - if the candidate agrees to it.

Bob Mulholland, an undecided California superdelegate, said that means "if a candidate's got delegates, then both names can be placed in nomination" - and the losing candidate, in this case Clinton, can declare, " 'Let's make it unanimous.' "

Or Clinton can be nominated and a surrogate speaking on her behalf can say, "The senator has declined, but let's vote on Obama," he noted.

A third option is that she won't allow her name to be nominated at all, he said.

Organized resistance

Mauro said that because it was such a closely contested election, he is mystified as to why the Obama campaign is resisting and even balking at a roll-call vote, according to some reports.

"Are these folks so new to politics, are they so arrogant, that they think he's different from every other nominee we've ever had?" he asks.

Serrano Sewell says one reason for the resistance may be that some Democratic officials have apparently mistakenly associated the delegates' activities with those of an independent group of Clinton supporters who call themselves PUMAs (which stands for "Party Unity My Ass"), who have pledged that they will protest outside the Denver convention.

He says there's no connection.

"We're not trying to drag Obama down," he said. "We're Democrats. We're precinct captains. We're fundraisers. We're the kind of Democrats Obama will need to win in November."

Dougherty says he's now waiting for a signal from Clinton herself about what might happen next in Denver.

"If she releases us for the sake of party unity, fine," he said. "But she hasn't done that. The campaigns are talking - and I respect they need to come to an agreement that makes both sides happy."

E-mail Carla Marinucci at cmarinucci@sfchronicle.com.

NPR interviews PUMAs Darragh Murphy and Pamela Merritt

Now first off, I am just plain glad this happened. Any discussion of roll call at Denver in the wider mediasphere is good. Specially NPR is even a better place, it is listeners of this demographic that really need to do a lot of soul searching. And they can have an effect if they put their mind to it.

Both Darragh and Pamela were excellent. They were composed, lively, quick, and happy sounding. The last was important since the host Michel Martin (Click here to see the NPR story and hear the audio) kept pushing the angry Hillary voter agenda. Both lady pumas did well on that score. All in all a good show, but the host let her slip show, I think.

Please advise all your friends to post these links in their blogs.

Barack Obama Needs to Carefully Handle Hillary Clinton's Supporters

August 11, 2008 10:24 AM ET | Bonnie Erbe

One media outlet described the release of the draft Democratic platform as a "compilation of Obama stump speeches," with just a nod to former candidates Sen. Hillary Clinton and former Sen. John Edwards.

But a close Clinton ally tells me the Clinton camp is quite happy with the platform's inclusion of language to the effect that Clinton placed 18 million "cracks" in the glass ceiling (an allusion to her winning 18 million votes during the primaries).

That said, there are heated discussions ongoing "as we speak" between Clinton's representatives and the now Obama-controlled Democratic National Committee over Clinton's role at the convention. The big question is whether or how to acknowledge her win of almost 1,900 delegates (1,896) to Obama's 2,229. More...

One would think with his nomination now secure, Obama's people would be happy to take the high road and acknowledge Clinton's accomplishments. Particularly since a new poll shows some 24 percent of her former supporters say they will either vote for rival Sen. John McCain or not vote at all.

Not so, says my source. With the Democratic Convention just weeks away, it is still unclear whether Hillary Clinton's name will be placed in nomination or included in the roll call at the event. At a recent event, Clinton encouraged her supporters to yell and scream at the convention, but to then unify the party.

In the video, she says, "I happen to believe that we will come out stronger if people feel that their voices were heard and their views were respected. I think that is a very big part of how we actually come out unified. Because I know from just what I'm hearing that there's this incredible pent-up desire. And I think that people want to feel like OK, it's a catharsis,we're here, we did it, and then everybody get behind Senator Obama. That is what most people believe is the best way to go. No decisions have been made. And so we are trying to work all this through with the DNC and with the Obama campaign."

Clinton and Obama released a joint statement earlier this week affirming they'll work together. Yet my source tells me "togetherness" is not the tone used to describe negotiations between the camps. The Clinton people want to employ some method used at a prior convention. It was suggested to me, for example, that the roll call could be announced, but before the voting started, Clinton could come to the podium and tell all her delegates to cast votes for Obama. Diane Mantouvalos is cofounder of the website JustSayNoDeal.com. She told me by phone from Boston this week that many Clinton supporters won't be satisfied if the Obama camp denies Clinton delegates an opportunity to be seen and heard at the convention: "Democracy isn't something you negotiate. It is only fair for her delegates to cast her vote."

Ellen Moran is the executive director of Emily's List, which endorses pro-choice female Democratic candidates for office. The group backed Clinton before she ended her campaign in June. Now Emily's List won't endorse but is supporting Obama. She told me in person this week:

"What I think we'll see at the convention is Senator Clinton and Senator Obama working together and many of our supporters working together to show real unity...to elect Obama and to elect Democrats up and down the ticket this November," she said. "You might say that women voters hold this election in the palm of their hands. And certainly every Democrat running—and Obama is no exception—will have to continue to work to win those women over. "

Mantouvalos told me that without Clinton supporters behind him, Obama cannot beat McCain: "We contend [that lack of unity is] the reason Senator Obama is in a dead heat with a 71-year-old Republican, and—no disrespect for Senator McCain, but age is a factor to many voters. He represents the incumbent party, [which] most of the American people are unhappy with. Why is it that they are tied right now?"

Mantouvalos believes it is because a large chunk of Clinton's 18 million supporters are upset the Obama campaign has not been more gracious toward Senator Clinton and has done little to reach out to her former supporters.

Eeny-Meeny, Chile Beany, the Spirits are about to Speak!








Posted on August 11, 2008 by riverdaughter and reposted here to share. Click to read More...

It was two months ago when I wrote the first couple of posts on the PUMA movement. In one of those posts, I wrote about how they were going to frame us:
Like adolescents, they insist on making their own decisions and yet expect us to get them out of a jam later. They hate us because of who we are and yet they need us in order for them to get what they want. And the superdelegates are the too permissive parents who are giving in to them because they can’t handle the screaming and guilt trips that will follow if they don’t.

This is where we come in, PUMAs. We will fill the role that the superdelegates have abrogated. It is our job to say “no”. We do not want to lose in 2008. We do not want another four years of Republican rule. We want 4 years of intelligence, competence and courage in a time of what will surely be a very critical time in our nation’s history. Terrorism is still out there. There are two wars going on. Our military is stretched so thinly that our national security is compromised. We have an energy crisis and many families are hurting. Our financial institutions got themselves over their heads. And there is a serious environmental catastrophe at hand in global warming.

Now is not the time to put a love object in office, a weakling who will be entirely dependent on his power elite enablers. Or worse, he may be a dissembler who has barely disguised his contempt for the voters.

There will be a lot of calls for “Unity!”. But let us acknowledge what this really is. “Unity” is a weapon that the party is going to use against us. It is the emotional blackmail of the teenager. “If you don’t let me have my way, it will be all YOUR fault if something bad happens!” “If you don’t get in line, it will be YOUR fault if we lose.

Of course, the old political blogosphere, especially the Big Orange Cheeto, has been foaming at the mouth for about a month now about how we are going to lose the election for Obama and it will be all our fault if McCain wins. We now have the pundits making this same case. Listen to Diane Mantavoulos and Susan Estrich debating the matter on To The Point today (Click on the Hillary tab at the bottom). As Susan spins it, our movement is going to end up electing McCain and it’s better to give a show of quiet unity at the convention, no matter what. She waxes nostalgic about how she was a young’un in 1980 when she worked to get Ted Kennedy the nomination. “Ahh, yes, those were the days. We were all babes in the woods and had no idea what we were doing” stuff.

Please, Susan. Kennedy had about 600 delegates tops. He was so far behind Carter it wasn’t funny. There was no possibility of overturning the will of so many *pledged* delegates. You weren’t suffering from youthful inexperience. You were suffering from stupidity.

This convention is a completely different animal. Hillary is well within striking distance, the superdelegates are going to decide it regardless of the nominee and once the credentials committee gets around to acting on Obama’s letter asking for MI and FL to be restored to full strength, he won’t have enough delegates to be the presumptive nominee anymore. (I suspect the Credentials Committee will meet at around 11:55pm on the day before the convention so he can ride this baby all the way to the end and make Hillary look like an usurper if she unsuspends her campaign. Yeah, we’ve got your number, Axelrod.)

What Susan seems to be missing, but what she oddly catches onto just before the segment ends, is that you can not fake unity. You can put Hillary’s delegates on mute. You can threaten and intimidate them until they are afraid of their own shadows, You can lie to them so they have no idea if they are supposed to vote for Hillary or Obama or Julius Caesar. It can certainly be made to *look* like 3400 pledged delegates voted in unison for The One while they all held hands and sang “I want to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony.” But the voters don’t give a flying f%&* When you have 36,300,000 million voters in your party and you choose to ignore a little more than half of them, all you end up with is frustration, not unity. You take away the voters right to influence at the convention. Remember “self-determination”? Yeah, we used to broadcast all around the world urging citizens of other countries to insist on it and accept no substitutes. But in this country, in this election year, it is perfectly OK to squelch the self-determination of half of your party for a predetermined outcome. That may be a very satisfying short term goal. Sort of like an orgasm with 75,000 of your closest friends in a football stadium. But when it’s over, the party is going to find that it screwed over the wrong people.

Hey, if the DNC and Obama and all his supporters want to go this route and bully, swagger, cheat, steal and suppress the party because they simply must have their way, well, there isn’t much we can do to stop them. THAT is the superdelegates’ job. If the superdelegates just go along to get along and nominate a guy who is over his head and unelectable, that’s their fault when he loses. We tried to talk some sense into them.

We are just voters who wanted to nominate the best person for the job. We may be shut out now, but come November 4th, we are going to have a chance to exercise our constitutional rights and tell the DNC exactly how we feel about being given a choice between a rock and a hard place.

Enjoy the afterglow while it lasts, guys.

***********************

You can find more on the subject at US News and World Report in an article by Bonnie Erbe: Barack Obama Needs to Carefully Handle Hillary Clinton’s Supporters.

A Third Palestinian Brother and the FEC Says “Hi” To Barack Obama

From NOQUARTER reposted here:

The The Real Barack Obama has a hot follow-up story I just couldn’t resist stealing.

Last week we saw where Monir and Hosam Edwan, two brothers from a Hamas Compound, who claimed to be lving in the non-existent town of “Rafah, Georgia,” contributed between $24,000 and $33,500 ( moving-target sum) to the Obama campaign. More...

Initially, the two jihadists brothers claimed that they bought T-Shirts from Obama’s website.

Then the Obama campaign claimed they returned the money to the Edwan brothers and forgot to report it to the FEC due to a technicality.

Then the Hamas-Sycophants Edwan brothers declared that they never received any refund from the Obama campaign at all.

As skunky as that all sounded, there is yet more.

It seems there is a third brother, Osama Edwan, who contributed to Obama’s campaign as well. He also disclosed that he is from the non-existent town of “Rafah, Georgia”.

Click here to see brother Osama Edwan’s donation to Barack Obama. Hamas sure is busy helping to make sure their Wink-Wink endorsement of Barack Obama sticks.

There’s still more to this story. I would say that the FEC wasn’t asleep over the donations of Monir and Hosam Edwan. So I don’t imagine an inquiry into Osama Edwan can be far behind. No doubt the Obama campaign will say they ‘refunded’ the contributions but “forgot” to report the entire affair to the FEC due to a “glitch”. After all, that’s what they claimed happened with Monir and Hosam Edwan’s contributions.

That Obama “technical glitch” sure seems to be an ongoing problem. It appears that the “technical glitch” the Obama campaign claims kept them from reporting that they “refunded” these illegal donations to the FEC occurred not once, but twice. The campaign didn’t report the “refunds” in their end of year report. But they also had a second formal oppotunity to correct their “glitch” via a response to a direct FEC inquiry–and they failed to do so.
Today, the Obama Report writes that Pamela Geller, who provides copies of the documents at Atlas Shrugs, discovered that

“… the FEC had sent two letters to the Obama campaign seeking additional information regarding contributions it received that appeared to exceed the $2300 legal limit.

Among those questionable contributions, were donations from Monir and Hosam Edwan.The Obama campaign responded to the first letter in May 2008, but apparently the FEC was not satisfied with its response and sent out a second letter to the Obama campaign on July 30,2008 requesting additional information for sixteen pages of questionable contributions, including several of Monir Edwan’s contributions.

So apparently, the Obama campaign failed to tell the FEC about the refunded money both in its original FEC report and in its response to the FEC’s letter in May of 2008 (5 months after they allegedly returned the money). Otherwise, the FEC would have had no reason to further question them about these donations in its follow up letter (in July) - which makes the Obama campaign’s claim - that it returned their donations in December - all the more difficult to swallow.
You can see the two FEC letters to the Obama campaign here and here. You certainly won’t get to see them on MSNBC or CNN.

So what about these contributions, Barky? I mean they are illegal and you know it. So if you “refunded” this money, how come you didn’t say so in writing to the FEC. Just asking. We’re also looking forward to reading your August 29th deadline response to the second FEC inquiry. I mean, when two terrorist sympathizers in Palestine start to look more honest that you look, it doesn’t bode well for a man who wants to be the President of the United States. You know what they say about three strikes, right?

I also suspect that the next question the FEC will ask is where exactly on the Georgia USA map is “Rafah”. But hey, I could be wrong