Alabama Politics in
Doc’s Political Parlor
& Home of Lawn Mower Repair

June 24, 2006

Saturday 6/24/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 7:45 am

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/115114076556210.xml&coll=2 – Alabama’s  per pupil expenditure hits record level while number of children in poverty increases to 51.6%.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/115114063956210.xml&coll=2 – Siegelman jury breaks for weekend, deliberations to resume on Monday.

http://www.al.com/business/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/business/115114078656210.xml&coll=2 – Court rules state’s business privilege tax is unconstitutional.

http://www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/115114066156230.xml&coll=3 – New child safety law goes into effect July 1.

http://www.al.com/news/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/news/115114065856240.xml&coll=1 – Abramoff says Mississippi casino money went to Riley’s campaign for governor in addition to Christian Coalition.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060623/APN/606230737 - Cheney reportedly coming to state next month to raise funds for Riley campaign.

http://www.timesdaily.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060624/NEWS/606240326/1011 - Lynn Greer may attempt to regain House seat.

FROM TODAY’S ANNISTON STAR:

Editorials

Reed spreads loot, not Gospel

In our opinion

06-24-2006

The New Testament book of Hebrews warns followers of Jesus Christ against “forsaking the assembling of ourselves together.” Biblical scholarship as well as a common-sense reading of the passage make clear the intent: Christians ought to meet regularly in order to encourage each other.

In modern times, Christians do this in churches, some grandly designed and others more humble.

Apparently, though, for one leader of the Christian right, Ralph Reed, who’s caught up in a massive lobbying scandal, these places of exhortation aren’t just for spreading the gospel.

They are, instead, places where someone like Reed can trumpet his access to these believers. By connecting these churchgoers to the causes of Indian casinos, Reed earned $5.3 million, according to a new report from a Senate committee investigating the actions of Jack Abramoff, who earlier this year pleaded guilty to crimes associated with his influence peddling.

The new report does not charge Reed with criminal activity or even of having knowledge of Abramoff’s wrongdoing. However, the details of Reed’s work and his use of the religious as pawns are mighty damning.

This is the short of it:

• Choctaw Indian casinos near Philadelphia, Miss., did not want Alabama to have a lottery or even expanded gambling because it might cut into business.

• Abramoff helped the tribe by enlisting Reed to help keep Alabamians from approving a lottery or expanding video poker.

• Reed and his lobbying agency arranged for front groups to launder casino money and then funnel it to the Alabama Christian Coalition and another anti-lottery group. Those funds were used in a campaign to ultimately defeat a state lottery.

In stepping up to the job, Reed, according to the Senate report, “claimed that no firm had better relationships than his with the grassroots conservatives in Alabama.”

He listed contacts at several conservative advocacy groups in Alabama and singled out knowledge of “leading evangelical pastors such as Frank Barker of Briarwood Presbyterian Church in Birmingham.”

The report then outlines Reed’s bragging about his company in an e-mail to Abramoff.

“Century Strategies has on file 3,000 pastors and 90,000 religious conservative households in Alabama that can be accessed in this effort,” Reed wrote.

The whole story is quite distasteful. Abramoff was involved with several congressmen and Bush administration officials who either have or may soon face federal charges.

Reed’s part is just one facet, but here in Alabama it takes on greater import. Taking the sincere faith of Alabama Christians and exploiting it for the cynical purpose of protecting gamblers is disgusting.

The list of those who ought to be ashamed is long.

Editorials

Helping out the rich

In our opinion

06-24-2006

Here’s what you have to remember to be a good Republican these days: Eliminating the estate tax helps the little guy, but raising the minimum wage hurts him.

House Republicans yesterday pushed through a bill to roll back the estate tax. They have argued that the levy hurts small businesses and family farmers but have presented little, if any, evidence to back up that claim.

The legislation would enable tens of thousands of people who inherit millions to avoid the estate tax and reward those inheriting the biggest fortunes with substantially lower rates of taxation. The Senate will vote on the proposal next week.

People who want to kill the tax altogether believe that this bill, should it become law, will make abolition of the tax easier because it reduces the eventual cost of repeal.

But the reason the eventual cost of repeal would seem relatively small is that the cost of the tax break the House just passed is so big. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates that the tax cut and interest payments on a higher federal debt would cost $762 billion during the first 10 years that the law is in place. It’s no secret who will have to make up the brunt of that shortfall, either in the form of new taxes or budget cuts: poor and working-class Americans.

While House Republicans were busy gift-wrapping their latest present for the rich, Senate Republicans made sure they deep-sixed a bill to raise the minimum wage. The argument against increasing the minimum wage is that it would put such a large burden on employers — especially small businesses — that it would force them to lay off workers or not make new hires.

But the Economic Policy Institute found that no significant job losses were caused by the most recent federal minimum wage increase, which, by the way, was way back in 1997. And a 2004 study by the Fiscal Policy Institute on state minimum wage increases (over a dozen states have raised the wage floor above the federal level) found no negative impact on employment among small businesses.

The federal minimum wage has lagged far behind inflation the past several decades. If it had kept pace with inflation since 1968, it would now be $8.80 an hour. Instead, it’s stuck at an unconscionable $5.15.

The GOP’s legislative actions this week provide Democrats with the makings of a good story to tell voters in the fall about Republican priorities. Here’s hoping that the Democrats have the spunk to offer a full-throated telling of it.

June 23, 2006

Yesterday’s Happiness

Filed under: Off-Topic — Danny @ 11:17 pm

Mmmmm… baseball

Who Gets Alabama’s Tax Giveaways?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 9:32 am

The Center for a Better South has released a new report today called DOING BETTER: Progressive Tax Reform for the American South. They offer eleven ideas to make taxes fairer in 21st century economies.

Idea #10: More tax accountability leads to better decisions.

Each Southern state should annually publish a comprehensive tax expenditure report to provide more accountability and information to lawmakers so they can make better decisions.

Quick, give me just 30 seconds before your eyes glaze over. This is important.

Alabama (and other states) gives away tremendous sums of money in tax giveaways or incentives. Everybody else, of course, has to make up the difference. How much money does Alabama give away in tax breaks? We don’t know.

These tax breaks are formally called tax expenditures. According to the report, “Across the U.S., 38 states had some form of tax expenditure report in 2004.” But not Alabama. You want to know how much Alabama’s education, Medicaid, or prisons cost us? No problem. It’s public information. How much do the tax giveaways cost us? We don’t know.

You want to know how much Alabama’s education, Medicaid, or prisons cost us? No problem. It’s public information. How much do the tax giveaways cost us? We don’t know.

If we want to give Mercedes mega-millions in tax incentives to move here and create jobs, I’m not saying it’s a bad idea, but we should know what it is costing the state, what it is costing you and me. If we want to continue all the other tax breaks, that might be a grand idea, but if the rest of us are paying to make up the difference then we should know how much they cost. If everybody has to pay a little extra tax elsewhere so I don’t pay sales tax on my dry cleaning, well, that’s fine, but we should know the cost of our tax giveaways. You don’t know, I don’t know, and the legislators don’t know.

Most of these breaks gets passed into law and stay on the books for years without review. The rest of us pay more to make up the difference. We should know how much these tax giveaways cost us.

Why shouldn’t we? Tax accountability is a good thing. We should press our legislators to have Alabama join the other 38 states that publish tax expenditure reports.

More information is good.

Friday 6/23/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 7:32 am

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1151054639126190.xml&coll=2 – State Board of Education agrees to adopt policy to require that they and they and two-year college system staff members disclose relatives working in the system.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1151054633126190.xml&coll=2 – Siegelman jury reports that they are deadlocked, judge asks that they continue their efforts.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1151054526126190.xml&coll=2 – Ethics complaint file against Alabama House Minority Leader.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1151054345126190.xml&coll=2 – Alabama’s 25-year-old higher ed desegregation case headed back to court – trial set for early fall.

http://www.al.com/opinion/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/opinion/1151054220126220.xml&coll=1 – Editorial questions motives of Republican leadership in Congress’ continued efforts at ending estate tax.

http://www.dailyhome.com/opinion/2006/dh-editorials-0623-editorials-6f22v2446.htm - Editorial criticizes this week’s Senate action to refuse to raise minimum wage.

http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/news/060623/donation.shtml - Siegelman says that contributions to his efforts to bring a lottery to Alabama are similar to contributions that supported Riley’s ill-fated Amendment One effort.

http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/opinion/editorials/060623b.shtml - Editorial calls for elimination of estate tax AND increasing of minimum wage.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060623/NEWS/606230306/1012/editorial1 - Editorial uses the state’s failure to remove racist language from constitution as evidence that Voting Rights Act should remain in effect.

FROM TODAY’S ANNISTON STAR:

Op-Ed Columns

Christ haunts our culture

By James L. Evans

06-23-2006

Southern literary icon Flannery O’Connor once said, “By and large, people in the South still conceive of humanity in theological terms. While the South is hardly Christ-centered, it is most certainly Christ-haunted.”

That’s a startling image to associate with Christ. A haunting is a disembodied appearance of a formerly embodied existence. Did O’Connor believe that Christ was disembodied in our culture?

It’s strange to even pose the question. The heart of the Christian faith is the incarnation — the belief that God became fully human in Jesus of Nazareth. Being fully human, he lived and died, after which he was raised bodily from the grave. Christians believe that with the risen Christ in their midst, they constitute the body of Christ in the world.

But embodiment is more than just theological name dropping. We can paste a “Christian” label on almost anything. But just because the outside of the box says Christian does not mean Jesus is on the inside.

For instance, there’s a coalition of Christians in Montgomery who, in the name of Jesus, religiously oppose any sort of tax increase — for any purpose. They believe it is a cardinal virtue to pay just as little tax as possible. These believers fear taxes as if they were a satanic ritual. Now, obviously this coalition is free to pursue whatever tax free state they want, but in the name of Jesus?

Nowhere in the Holy Bible will we find anything about the particular sacredness of not paying taxes. In fact, Jesus made it abundantly clear that if taxes are due, we should pay them.

Furthermore, this same coalition of Christians, along with some other faithful folk, is busy fighting to keep Alabama’s outdated state Constitution from being rewritten. They are afraid a new one will leave God out.

If ever there was anything Christ-haunted, it is this state Constitution. It certainly invokes God’s name in the opening pages. And supposedly it was written by godly men seeking God’s will. The end product, however, is one of the most ungodly social and economic systems ever devised.

The effect of a disembodied Christ shows up in other ways even more troubling than mere economics and politics. There is always just under the surface of our genteel hospitality a simmering anger. This anger shows itself frequently in a style of Christian preaching that seems to offer God’s love with one hand, while swinging the clenched fist of God’s wrath with the other.

In our Christ-haunted culture we forget that God said vengeance is not ours.

Truth is, we forget a good many things in a Christ-haunted world. We forget about loving our enemy, or even just our neighbor. We forget about forgiveness seven times seventy. We forget about the second mile, the other cheek and peace on earth. We forget about judge not and do unto others.

We also forget about the least of these. We forget about them a lot. This is the most telling clue of all that ours is a Christ-haunted culture. When we forget about the least of these our brothers and sisters, Christ is not embodied in our lives. At least that’s what Jesus said.

The only way to end this haunting is through a proper incarnation — a fleshing out of our theology, both private and public. It requires not only bearing Jesus’ name, but also his words and his way. Only to the extent that we are willing to do this will Christ be embodied in our world.

James L. Evans is pastor of Auburn First Baptist Church. He can be reached at faithmatters@mindspring.com.

Editorials

Maybe ‘super nice’ isn’t all that great

In our opinion

06-23-2006

Larry Powell, pollster and communications professor of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, looked at the upcoming gubernatorial contest between Democratic nominee Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley and the Republican pick, Gov. Bob Riley, and predicted that there would be little, if any, mud slinging. “We may,” he said, “come up with a super nice campaign.”

Well, that would be fine, if a super nice campaign were also one that confronted Alabama’s problems and proposed realistic solutions — which, at this point, seems unlikely.

Riley has announced that Alabama “is on the right track” and is promising more of the same. That track, says Baxley, is “warped,” and she promises to straighten it out.

But what does this mean?

It means that Riley is going to run as what you would expect a Republican nominee to run as — the champion of the Business Council of Alabama and, eventually, the rest of the GOP faithful. Forgiven by most for his attempt at tax reform, Riley can count on the Big Mules to pull him along and they, in turn, can count on him to act as their kind of Republican should act.

Meanwhile, Baxley has the support that a Democrat must have to win.

Recently, down in Mobile, the lieutenant governor (and lieutenant governor candidate Jim Folsom Jr.) were warmly greeted at the Alabama Education Association Leadership Conference, where AEA Executive Secretary Paul Hubbert told the assembly that “if Bob Riley had been the kind of governor that we wanted him to be, we wouldn’t have had to override the veto” of the AEA-backed teacher pay raise.

To underscore their support for the AEA agenda, Baxley and Folsom promised to protect the Education Trust Fund from those who wish to raid it.

And there it is.

Two of the biggest “special interests” in the state — education and business — choosing sides and squaring off against each other, while the candidates and the parties cheer them on.

That, unfortunately, is at the root of our problems today.

Rather than bring these interests together, our politicians thrive on the division. And Alabama loses as a result.

Democrats will denounce the governor as anti-education. Republicans will claim that if Baxley is elected, Alabama’s robust economy will collapse.

It is the same old song and dance. But at least this time, it looks like they will be “super nice” about it.

June 22, 2006

Post-election Primary Top Ten Summary

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 11:17 am

I continue to get a lot of hits for the various questions of the Top 10 Most Interesting Questions to Be Answered by the Primary Elections.

We posed the questions before the primary elections and re-visited them afterward. Latecomers to the party might appreciate a summary post of links to the post-election looks we took with the questions.

Click the links below to go to the original post-election discussion for that question.



Top Ten Most Interesting Questions to Be Answered by the Primary Elections
#1. Who will control the Senate? - Revisited - What happened in the key races that determine who will be Senate President Pro Tem?
#2. Are Roy Moore and his group finished as a powerful influence in Alabama politics? - Revisited - Amidst the post-election flurry of articles on this very subject, I’d like to take a moment to remind you who asked the question before the election.
#3 & #4. Is Alabama Power ‘the big winner?,’ and Will money trump name-recognition in the Republican Lt. Governor’s race? - Revisited together - Two intertwined questions.
#5. Is Secretary of State Nancy Worley vulnerable in the Democratic primary? - Revisited - This one was easy to answer after the fact.
#6. How did the ALFA slate do? - Revisited - ALFA is clearly one of the most important and powerful political forces in the state. How did their slate do?
#7. Is Republican AG candidate Mark Montiel a contender or a pretender? - Revisited - Not a hard question to answer after the election.
#8. Who will be the most noteworthy newcomer among primary winners? - Revisited - Among the possibilities we named beforehand, we looked to see how they did.
#9. Will the Democratic nominee for governor win the primary without a runoff? - Revisited - Interesting beforehand, easy afterward. Most of the observations about why this was an important question were in the post asking the original question.
#10. Who is “one and done?” - Revisited - Who looked vulnerable to be one-term-only legislators, and how did they do?

FYI: I also recently took a look at how the slate endorsed by the Business Council of Alabama did and drew a few comparisons with ALFA’s endorsements.

Thursday 6/22/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 5:48 am

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/11509680358970.xml&coll=2 – Judge meets with jurors, offers more instructions in Siegelman case.

http://www.al.com/business/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/business/11509680768970.xml&coll=2 – Former SouthTrust CEO Wallace Malone establishes charitable foundation with $60 million endowment, says 90% of grants will go to Alabama programs.

http://www.al.com/opinion/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/opinion/11509678978970.xml&coll=2 – Editorial applauds decision of Supreme Court to refuse to reconsider prohibition against execution of juveniles in capital offense cases.

http://www.al.com/opinion/birminghamnews/elard.ssf?/base/opinion/1150881669302570.xml&coll=2 – Eddie Lard’s commentary on the impact of Birmingham area elections of legislative and local officials on transit issues.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060622/NEWS/606220318/1001 - GOP stalls action to extend Voting Rights Act.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060622/NEWS/606220315/1012/editorial1 - Editorial praises efforts of Corrections Commissioner to reduce county jail backlog.

FROM TODAY’S ANNISTON STAR:

Speak Out

Speaker’s Stand … Estate tax benefits most Alabamians

By Presdelane Harris
Special to The Star

06-22-2006

Alabama Sens. Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions recently voted again to abolish the estate tax, our nation’s only tax on great accumulations of inherited wealth. Their concern for the “not-so-least of these” concerns me — especially now that the Senate will vote soon on a huge reduction in the estate tax.

Why is abolishing a tax paid only by multimillionaires and billionaires a national priority right now? Our nation is at war, our federal debt is $8.5 trillion, and we are rebuilding the Gulf Coast.

At a time of war, when many Alabamians have made enormous sacrifices through their service in the military or state National Guard units, another tax break for the superrich is a stark inequality of sacrifice.

Voting for tax cuts is politically easy in Washington. Explaining how you’ll fill the gap is hard. How do our senators plan to replace the $1 trillion in revenue that will be lost in the decade after complete repeal? If they cut spending to pay for this tax cut for billionaires, what programs will be targeted? Most likely it will be the programs that benefit our children, our seniors and our low-income citizens.

Very few people pay the estate tax. According to newly released IRS data, only 278 Alabamians owed any estate tax in 2004 (out of the 46,716 state residents who died the previous year). That’s just 0.6 percent of all Alabama estates. In 2009, under existing law, only estates over $3.5 million for an individual and $7 million for a couple will be subject to the tax. By 2009, only a couple dozen of the wealthiest families in Alabama will pay.

Farming and running a business are hard, and many businesses fail, but not because of the estate tax. If the estate tax is a threat to family farmers or small business owners, as our senators claim, they should name such an entity in Alabama that has been put out of business because of the estate tax. Faceless anecdotes don’t count in this debate anymore. If you’re planning a $1 trillion vote, the people of Alabama deserve to see your evidence.

Sen. Sessions has been vocal in his support for abolishing the so-called “death tax,” cloaking his arguments like he is the protector of the common man. The phrase “death tax” itself is part of the deception. As an African-American, I am puzzled by his claims that abolishing the estate tax is beneficial to African-American entrepreneurs in Alabama. Robert Johnson, the wealthiest African-American man in America, would certainly benefit from repealing the tax. However, many thousands of Alabamians — black and white — would benefit from the services funded by keeping the estate tax.

Sen. Sessions talks about how the estate tax is a form of “double taxation,” but in truth, many of the assets of the estates subject to the tax have never been taxed.

The estate tax raises a lot of money from those people most able to pay. It provides an incentive for wealthy individuals to give to charity, including hospitals, colleges and foundations that serve our communities in Alabama. It causes the rich to care for the “least of these.” The estate tax exemplifies a larger tax fairness principle — those who have paid too much should pay less, and those who have paid too little should pay more.

Both Sens. Shelby and Sessions have repeatedly voted for estate tax repeal. This vote puts them out of step with the majority of citizens in our state.

Presdelane Harris is organizers’ team leader of Alabama Arise.

 

Op-Ed Columns

We still need Voting Rights Act

By Karen K. Narasaki
Progressive Media Project

06-22-2006

Congress should renew the Voting Rights Act. The provisions mandating language assistance for voting are particularly important.

A few members of Congress have challenged the language assistance provisions, which became part of the Voting Rights Act in 1975.

With a few exceptions, immigrants seeking citizenship are required to learn English. However, voting materials can often be confusing and complicated, even for those who speak English as their first language.

Even many native-born citizens have a difficult time navigating complex election materials because of language barriers.

Voters with limited-English skills are American citizens, and like all American citizens, they, too, have a stake in our democracy. They build businesses, work hard to provide for their families, pay taxes and serve in our military. Our country is better served when we ensure they have full access to voting, which is one of the most fundamental acts of citizenship.

Sadly, many American citizens for whom English is a second language continue to face obstacles when participating in the political process. In the last election, monitoring groups documented several instances around the country where hostility and abuse occurred.

In 2005 in Washington state, one man challenged the right to vote of more than 1,000 people with foreign-sounding names. He targeted voters with names that, he said, “have no basis in the English language” or “appear to be from outside the United States,” while omitting voters with names that sounded American-born, like Smith or Powell.

In Bayou La Batre, Ala., when a Vietnamese-American ran for local office, supporters of a white candidate were challenging the eligibility of only Asian-American voters.

And in Boston in 2004, poll workers at one site segregated white voters and minority voters into two separate lines, trying to speed up the voting process.

Federal language assistance provisions could help ensure that all citizens are safeguarded against such discriminatory treatment.

Protections provided under the Voting Rights Act have helped increased voter participation among Asian-Americans, Latinos, American Indians, and Alaskan natives. In San Diego County, Calif., for instance, voter registration among Latinos and Filipinos rose 20 percent within six months after the Department of Justice’s language protection enforcement action in 2004.

Elected officials can then be more responsive — and accountable — to communities’ needs. And officials can become more representative of their constituents. In 2002, Harris County, Texas, was required to offer language assistance to Vietnamese-speaking voters. Just two years later, a multilingualVietnamese-American candidate won a state legislative seat for the first time in Texas.

The enormous benefits of higher voter turnout and participation outweigh the nominal costs to state and local jurisdictions for providing language assistance. According to a 2005 Arizona State University study, a majority of jurisdictions covered by the language provisions reported incurring no additional costs for providing language assistance.

Regardless, there ought not be a price tag on a more inclusive democracy.

The language-assistance provisions expire next year if Congress does not act soon. Congress must reauthorize them to ensure that advances for minority voters are not rolled back.

A healthy democracy depends on maximizing — not impeding — the ability of citizens to cast their ballots.

Karen Narasaki is president of the Washington-based Asian American Justice Center.

June 21, 2006

Peace Takes Courage

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 6:59 pm

Ava Lowery is a 15 year-old girl from Alabama with a website called Peace Takes Courage. She makes internet animations/videos that express her political and social concerns that apparently are making a splash. Here is some video of her being interviewed on CNN.

I really can’t say anything better about this than what Wheeler has already said on Alablawg.

If you are unmoved by her piece with pictures of wounded Iraqi children set to the music of children singing “Jesus Loves Me,” then you are more stoic than I.

BCA (& ALFA) Candidates in the House

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 4:28 pm

This is a follow-up to a similar post about the Senate. We are looking a bit at how candidates (particularly the “non-incumbents”) endorsed by the Business Council of Alabama did in the recent primary election. We are also seeing where their endorsements differ from ALFA’s.

The colors indicate races where the Business Council and ALFA endorsed the same candidate and endorsed opposing candidates.


For House seats, BCA nominated 20 candidates, and ALFA nominated 19.

In two races BCA-endorsed candidates faced off against ALFA-endorsed candidates. In HD 25, challenger Mac McCutcheon (endorsed by ALFA) defeated incumbent Ray Garner (backed by the BCA). In HD 88, incumbent Mac Gipson (backed by BCA) defeated challenger Bill Harris (endorsed by ALFA).

In the twelve races where they endorsed the same candidate, their candidates won seven times, lost three times, and two are in run-offs.

Three “non-incumbents” received endorsements from both groups. Greg Wren won the nomination for an open seat in HD 75, David Ozment lost to incumbent Jeremy Oden in HD 11, and A. J. McCampbell is in a run-off with Christopher Spencer in HD 71.

House Candidates
(Incumbents marked with ‘*’)
Dist. BCA Endorsed ALFA Endorsed Outcome
6 Sue Schmitz* (D) Won
10 Mike Ball* (R) Won
11 David Ozment (R) David Ozment (R) Lost to incumbent Jeremy Oden
14 Ken Guin* (D) Won
15 Pat Moore (R) Led race, Run-off opponent has died, open seat
18 Johnny Mack Morrow* (D) Johnny Mack Morrow* (D) Won
22 Albert Hall* (D) Won
25 Ray Garner* (R) Mac McCutcheon (R) McCutcheon defeated Garner
43 Mary Sue McClurkin* (R) Mary Sue McClurkin* (R) Won
45 Albert Morton* (R) Albert Morton* (R) Lost to challenger Owen Drake
47 Jack Williams* (R) Jack Williams* (R) Won
48 Greg Canfield (R) Run-off with Della Fancher, open seat
56 Priscilla Dunn* (D) Won
58 Oliver Robinson* (D) Won
61 Allen Layson* (D) Lost to challenger Alan Harper
64 Greg Albritton* (R) Greg Albritton* (R) Lost to challenger Harry Shiver
67 Yusuf Salaam* (D) Yusuf Salaam* (D) Won
70 Bryant Melton* (D) Won
71 Artis ‘A. J.’ McCampbell (D) Artis ‘A. J.’ McCampbell (D) Run-off with Christopher Spencer, open seat
73 David Grimes* (R) David Grimes* (R) Won
75 Greg Wren (R) Greg Wren (R) Won nomination for open seat
79 Mike Hubbard* (R) Mike Hubbard* (R) Won
88 Mac Gipson* (R) Bill Harris (R) Gipson defeated Harris
102 Chad Fincher (R) Run-off with Ben George, open seat
105 Spencer “Jack” Collier* (R) Spencer Collier* (R) Run off with Henry Barnes. Won

The Business Council endorsed four candidates who were non-incumbents. Greg Wren won in HD 75, David Ozment lost (to an incumbent) in HD 11, and two are in run-offs (Greg Canfield in HD 48, and A. J. McCampbell in HD 71).

So for the six legislative candidates (including two for the Senate) who were endorsed by the BCA and who were not incumbents, this is what we have:

6 races: 2 wins, 2 losses, and 2 in run-offs

Two of the 16 incumbents they endorsed lost: Albert Morton (HD 45) and Greg Albritton (HD 64). One is in a run-off (Spencer Collier in HD 105).

ALFA-endorsed “non-incumbents” I covered elsewhere.


The last observation I am going to make about this is that while BCA and ALFA each endorsed 30 candidates, the Business Council endorsed only six “non-incumbents,” and all but one for open seats. By comparison, ALFA endorsed 11 “non-incumbents” and four of them were challenging incumbent legislators. May we conclude that BCA is a bit more satisfied with the status quo?

BCA (& ALFA) Candidates in the Senate

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 12:29 pm

I had mentioned as an aside at the end of an earlier post that it might be fun to check back to see how candidates endorsed by the Business Council of Alabama (pdf file) did in the primary elections.

And as I looked back at BCA’s endorsements, I thought it might be interesting to compare them to ALFA’s endorsements to see what we could learn. The BCA’s interests and ALFA’s interests often fit neatly into one candidate, but occasionally they endorse different candidates. I mentioned before that I find it more interesting to see how endorsed candidates did who were not incumbents. (You can look here at the review of how ALFA-endorsed “non-incumbents” did.)

Let’s forge ahead (complete with color-coding for races when BCA and ALFA endorsed the same candidates or opposing candidates).

Both BCA and ALFA endorsed 30 legislative candidates.

BCA endorsed 10 senatorial candidates, ALFA endorsed 11. They endorsed seven of the same candidates, six incumbents and one in a race for an open seat. The one loss among those was Gerald Dial in Senate District 13.

There was only one race in the Senate in which a BCA-endorsed candidate opposed an ALFA-endorsed candidate. Challenger Scott Beason (endorsed by ALFA) defeated BCA-backed incumbent Jack Biddle in Senate District 17.

Senate Candidates
(Incumbents marked with ‘*’)
Dist. BCA Endorsed ALFA Endorsed Outcome
1 Bobby Denton* (D) Won
3 Arthur Orr (R) Arthur Orr (R) Won nomination for open seat
5 Charles Bishop (R) Won nomination for open seat
7 Phil Dotts (D) Lost nomination for open seat
11 Jim Preuitt* (D) Jim Preuitt* (D) Won
13 Gerald Dial* (D) Gerald Dial* (D) Lost to Kim Benefield
14 Hank Erwin* (R) Hank Erwin* (R) Won
17 Jack Biddle* (R) Scott Beason (R) Beason defeated Biddle
19 E. B. McClain* (D) E. B. McClain* (D) Won
24 Bobby Singleton* (D) Won
25 Larry Dixon* (R) Larry Dixon* (R) Won
31 Jimmy Holley* (D) Jimmy Holley* (D) Won
34 Rusty Glover (R) Open seat, Run-off with Chris Pringle

The BCA endorsed two candidates who were not incumbents. Arthur Orr won the nomination; Phil Dotts did not. Of the eight incumbents they endorsed, two lost: Gerald Dial and Jack Biddle.

I have covered ALFA-endorsed “non-incumbents” elsewhere.

I have decided to break this into two posts.

Next: BCA (& ALFA) Candidates in the House

Wal-Mart Debate

Filed under: AL Issues, National Politics — Danny @ 10:10 am

The Economic Policy Institute released a report last week titled “The Wal-Mart Debate: A False Choice Between Prices and Wages.”

Not sure why Wal-Mart inspires passionate debate, but I find that it does. Some findings in the report:

  • A robust set of research findings shows that Wal-Mart’s entry into local labor markets reduces the pay of workers in competing stores. This effect is largest in the South, where Wal-Mart expansion has been greatest.

  • Wal-Mart could raise wages and benefits significantly without raising prices, yet still earn a healthy profit. For example, while still maintaining a profit margin almost 50% greater than Costco, a key competitor, Wal-Mart could have raised the wages and benefits of each of its non-supervisory employees in 2005 by more than $2,000 without raising prices a penny.

This is provocative enough that I am going to excerpt some more here…

Wal-Mart essentially gives people the ability to buy food, apparel, household goods, and furniture at reduced prices. As seen in Figure A, the share of expenditure in each of these categories has shrunk over time. By contrast, the expenditure shares on health care, housing, and transportation for families have gone up over time. These cannot be bought at Wal-Mart, yet they constitute an ever-growing share of American household expenditures. In short, the benefits from the same price effect in Wal-Mart’s product areas are shrinking over time. The real pressures on family income are coming from items that can’t be bought at Wal-Mart. These products and services can, however, be bought with higher wages.

The idea that encouraging Wal-Mart’s expansion constitutes a progressive endeavor that will provide big benefits to poor Americans in the future is misguided; truly progressive policy should focus on the big-ticket items in most families’ budget—health care, housing, and education.

Some critics claim that Wal-Mart puts a burden on state governments because it does not adequately compensate workers. The report states, “A recent internal Wal-Mart memo revealed, for example, that 46% of Wal-Mart workers’ children are uninsured or on Medicaid. This compares to 29% for large retailers and 32% for all retailers.” So are taxpayers subsidizing Wal-Mart and its profits?

I find this reading very thought-provoking. If you are even a little interested in this issue, I suggest that you read the whole article.

Wednesday 6/21/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 5:43 am

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1150881979302570.xml&coll=2 – Census figures reflect shift in state’s population during first half of decade.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1150881962302570.xml&coll=2 – State ranks low in new study of students graduating from high school.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1150881817302570.xml&coll=2 – Alabaster city officials consider proposal to not participate in sales tax holiday and instead, give sales tax collections from that weekend to city’s schools.

http://www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/1150881751302540.xml&coll=3 – Deliberations continue in Siegelman trial.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060621/NEWS/606210309/1012/editorial1 - Editorial praises Supreme Court decision not to reconsider prohibition of capital punishment in cases involving juveniles.

http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/opinion/editorials/060621b.shtml - Editorial supports requirement that Medicaid recipients show proof of citizenship.

FROM TODAY’S ANNISTON STAR:

Editorials

Can George Jr. revive populists?

In our opinion

06-21-2006


With so much attention being paid to the struggle between the social conservative and business conservative wings of the state GOP, the party’s populist element, which has done so much to carry it so far, seemed relegated to the sidelines in the last election. Now George Wallace Jr. appears determined to revive Republican populism and with its support become the party’s nominee for lieutenant governor.

It’s not surprising that in recent years Alabama’s GOP leaders have tried to forget the folks to whom Wallace Jr. is appealing. For years his father kept these voters loyal to the Democrats. So successful was he that as long as the senior Wallace was running for governor, the Republican Party was a political afterthought.

When George Wallace Sr. left the scene his supporters drifted, some say bolted, into the GOP. With their support, Republicans elected not only governors, but a group of lesser lights, many of whom were, like Wallace Jr., once Democrats.

In the June 6 primary this group was strangely silent. Roy Moore and his slate might have appealed to them, but didn’t. They were cut loose. Some voted Democrat because they were more interested in local races. Some stayed home. And some voted for that old familiar name – George Wallace. Only Junior this time.

But not enough.

Luther Strange, the business candidate, got the most votes.

But not enough.

So we have a runoff.

And George Wallace Jr. is trying to rally the populist wing of his party and restore it to a position of power.

It will be difficult. The issues he pushes — reign in corruption with a stronger ethics commission, no lobbyist giving gifts to lawmakers — haven’t caught on. But lately we are beginning to hear a bit of daddy in the son. He is out there equating “big Luther” with “big Lobbyists” – attacking “big” is seldom a losing strategy in Alabama. And claiming Strange is the candidate of “a committee of 15 in Birmingham,” residents of “the tiny kingdom” of Mountain Brook, might also make points for Wallace.

And it might not.

But either way, by reviving, energizing the populist wing of the GOP, the ones so often derided as Wal-Mart Republicans, George Wallace Jr. will give Republican and Democratic strategists a lot to think about in November.

June 20, 2006

Tuesday 6/20/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 6:43 am

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1150795219293730.xml&coll=2 – State ready to implement requirement that Medicaid recipients provide proof of citizenship.

http://www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/1150794925293770.xml&coll=3 – Siegelman attorneys say the prosecutors file motion asking judge to modify his instructions to jury as deliberation continues.

http://www.al.com/news/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/news/1150795003293760.xml&coll=1 – City panel formed to foster racial harmony schedules forum on immigration issues tonight in Huntsville.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060620/NEWS/606200337/1001 - U. S. Supreme Court refuses to reconsider order prohibiting execution of Alabama inmate convicted of crime committed as a minor.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060620/NEWS02/606200328/1009 - New poll shows Riley with huge lead over Baxley in governor’s race.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060620/… - Editorial praises Corrections Department’s efforts at reducing number of prisoners in county jails.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060620/NEWS/606200306/1012/editorial1 - Editorial attributes Riley’s strong showing in poll to strength of Alabama’s economy.

June 19, 2006

Monday 6/19/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 6:57 am

http://www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/115070884726580.xml&coll=3 – Jurors resume deliberations today in Siegelman corruption trial.

http://www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/115070853226580.xml&coll=3 – “The Political Skinny,” The Mobile Press-Register’s weekly roundup from Mobile, Montgomery and Washington.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060619/APN/606190611 - New report reflects that US charitably giving reaches levels of that prior to end of the tech boom.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060619/NEWS/606190302/1012/editorial1 - Editorial calls for Alabama officials to undertake study of application of death penalty in wake of  U.S. Supreme Court decision to consider whether lethal injection is cruel and unusual punishment

FROM TODAY’S ANNISTON STAR:

Editorials

Immigration and conservatism

In our opinion

06-19-2006

Alabamians are not happy with the way President Bush is handing the “immigration problem.” According to a recent survey, 64 percent of those responding rated his performance on the issue poor to fair. Alabamians want the National Guard to patrol the border. Alabamians want a fence. And Alabamians want to make it a crime to employ illegal immigrants.

In short, Alabamians want the president to get tough. But who would he get tough with, here in Alabama?

Slightly less than 2 percent of our population are immigrants, and only about a quarter of those are thought to be illegal. That’s less than .5 percent of all of us. We are talking about some 24,000 people — men, women and children. That is not a lot of folks.

So why all the fuss?

Self-proclaimed “conservative” politicians say it’s about job competition. Illegal workers take the lowest-paying jobs, and in a state where so many people make their living as unskilled workers, illegals threaten livelihoods. But the greatest outcry over the undocumented doesn’t come from Alabama workers. It comes from these politicians on the right, who apparently see illegals as the new gays — someone to get voters stirred up over.

The same politicians say Alabamians are upset because illegals overburden our social system and pay no taxes. But they do pay taxes — particularly sales taxes, those regressive levies on which our social services depend.

Yet from all the protesting, promising and posturing, you would think Alabama was being overwhelmed by a foreign, illegal invasion.

But it isn’t. And illegal immigration is not a serious issue here. But it is used as a serious political ploy, because politicians — you know which ones — have made it so.

Which brings us to the irony revealed in the poll mentioned above.

Among the solutions stirred-up Ala-bamians favor is the issuing of a “national identification card,” which every legal resident would be required to carry. Around 71 percent of those polled said this was a good idea.

But wait a minute. One of the great concerns among traditional conservatives has always been an intrusive national government, one that keeps tabs on its citizens, collects information about them and stores that information where it can be retrieved and used in ways no true conservative would want it used. And for years, traditional conservatives have warned that a national identification system was a step in that direction.

Now the conservative outcry over illegal immigration has resulted in demands for what once was, and in some quarters still is, feared.

Sow the wind … So they say.

June 18, 2006

Sunday 6/18/2006 DAILY NEWS DIGEST

Filed under: Uncategorized — G @ 6:41 am

http://www.al.com/opinion/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/opinion/11506224387010.xml&coll=2 – James Tucker’s commentary on the need to “transform mental health” by delivering mental health services in community-based settings.

http://www.al.com/opinion/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/opinion/11506221977010.xml&coll=2 – Commentary sees recent Senate proposal to make English the “national language” as racist.

http://www.al.com/opinion/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/opinion/11506222057010.xml&coll=2 – Commentary by state NAMI leaders call for state to improve its mental health services.

http://www.al.com/news/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/news/11506226037040.xml&coll=1 – Both Wallace and Strange seeking Mo Brooks’ voters.

http://www.al.com/news/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/news/11506224827040.xml&coll=1 – Counties take first steps toward implementing limited home rule.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/… - Lawyers on both sides of Siegelman corruption case accuse other of playing to the media and personal attacks.

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060618/OPINION0101/606160373/1012/OPINION - Commentary by president of Montgomery chapter of NOW sees proposed measure to outlaw abortions “pushes women into second class citizenship.”

http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060618/OPINION01/606160382/1012/OPINION - Editorial praises success of Alabama Reading Initiative.

 

From today’s’ Anniston Star:

Op-Ed Columns

GOP hopes to reap dividends on immigration issue

By George Will

06-18-2006

Geographically, Pennsylvania is a long way from Laredo. But politically, every state may be a border state this year. As evidence, consider a radio ad being run by Rick Santorum, a Republican seeking a third U.S. Senate term in a state that has voted Democratic in the last four presidential elections. Titled “He Needs Glasses,” the target is Santorum’s opponent, Bob Casey:

“Bobby Casey announced his support of a Senate bill that grants amnesty to illegal immigrants, shocking hardworking taxpayers all across Pennsylvania. Now Casey’s trying to wiggle out of it by saying the bill doesn’t offer amnesty and requires illegal immigrants to pay their back taxes.

“Either Casey didn’t read the bill, or he’s trying to deceive you. The Washington Times reports the legislation gives amnesty to 11 million who are here illegally, and paves the way for 66 million more immigrants to enter the country. The bill also forgives two of the last five years of back taxes for illegals, something the IRS would never do for you.

“This Casey-supported bill even gives illegal aliens Social Security benefits for the time they were here illegally. Fortunately, Rick Santorum voted against the bill and Rick’s leading the fight to make sure it never becomes law.

“Now you know the advantage of having in our corner a fighter like Rick Santorum.”

Whether or not the word “amnesty” is apposite concerning what the Senate bill does is a matter of opinion. And you can judge for yourself the plausibility of 66 million new immigrants by reading the report, by Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation (www.heritage.org), that helped strengthen the House’s insistence on an “enforcement first” policy. The claims about taxes and Social Security are true enough.

Leaving aside the merits of the Senate bill, and considering the ad simply as political ammunition, it packs more punch than what one hears from Democrats this year. (House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi: “We have two oilmen in the White House. The logical follow-up from that is $3-a-gallon gasoline. There is no accident. It is a cause and effect.’’) The “He Needs Glasses” ad features the third-ranking member of the Republicans’ Senate leadership attacking legislation that passed the Senate even though a majority of Republican senators — 32 of 55 — voted against it. Supported by 39 of 44 Democratic senators, this “Casey-supported” legislation has two key features — a guest worker program and a path to citizenship for most of the 11 million to 12 million illegal immigrants — that are supported by George W. Bush and that are the two main reasons why Republicans oppose the bill.

Many Republicans, looking for a silver lining on an abundance of dark clouds, think the immigration issue may be a silver bullet that will slay their vulnerability. The issue is, as politicos say, a “two-fer.” Opposition to the Senate bill, and support for the House bill, puts Republican candidates where much of the country and most of their party’s base currently is — approximately, “fix the border, then maybe we can talk about other things.” And opposition to the Senate bill distances them from a president who, although rebounding recently, has approval ratings below 40 percent in 29 states.

Republicans very much want to pass an immigration bill as proof their party can govern. For that reason, there is no reason to expect Senate Democrats to compromise by passing something like the House bill. Nothing very different from it has any chance of being accepted by the House. So, assuming, as it seems safe to do, that the House-Senate conference fails to produce a compromise acceptable to both houses, when Congress returns to Washington after the Labor Day recess the House may again pass essentially what it passed in December, just to enable Republicans to campaign on the basis of a clear and recent stance against exactly what Santorum’s ad stands against.

The cost of this, paid in the coin of lost support among Latinos, the nation’s largest and fastest-growing minority, may be reckoned later, for years. Remember this: Out West, feelings of all sorts about immigration policy are particularly intense, and if John Kerry had won a total of 127,014 more votes in New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado, states with burgeoning Latino populations, he would have carried those states and won the election. But for now, the minds of Republican candidates are concentrated on a shorter time horizon — the next four and a half months.

George Will’s e-mail address is georgewill@washpost.com.

 

Op-Ed Columns

Democrats must reclaim a true center

By David Sirota
Special to The Washington Post

06-18-2006

If Democrats ever want to regain their status as a majority party, they must move to the center. But that means moving to the real center — one very different from Washington’s definition of the term.

Inside the Beltway, Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, D-Conn., is called a “centrist” because he still supports President Bush’s misguided policies in Iraq; Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del., proved his centrist credentials when he helped gut consumer bankruptcy protections; Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., is a centrist because he votes for corporate-written, wage-destroying trade deals. And former senator John Breaux, D-La., now a corporate lobbyist, was labeled the ultimate centrist after working to stop Congress from cracking down on the drug and health industry profiteers who backed his campaigns.

These are just a few examples of how many high-profile Democrats promote the Beltway’s idea of centrism — focused on perpetuating the status quo and abetting the influence of corporate interests that finance political campaigns. But with a centrism like this, so far outside the real center of public opinion, no wonder the Democratic Party keeps losing congressional elections.

On the Iraq war, for instance, polls show a majority of Americans want a timetable for drawing down troops. On economic policy, most Americans support stronger government regulations to protect citizens. On trade, polls show the public is widely suspicious of free-trade deals that have destabilized the middle class. And on health care, surveys show that about two-thirds of those asked want a government-guaranteed universal health-insurance system — even if it means tax increases.

The Republican-controlled Congress seems too out of touch and too corrupt to care about, much less resolve, any of these issues. Democrats, therefore, could make serious gains, but only if they reject Washington operatives who preach split-the-difference strategies that have led to repeated election defeats.

Anger at the Bush administration’s misguided policies on Iraq is bipartisan, meaning that Democratic candidates who take a strong position in favor of an exit strategy will be able to attract Democratic and traditionally Republican voters. Similarly, on economic policy, the Republicans’ conservative base is increasingly ready to bolt if a bold, establishment-challenging alternative is offered. (A 2005 public opinion survey by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, for example, showed that about half the GOP’s core voters support the “government guaranteeing health insurance for all citizens, even if it means raising taxes” and an astounding three-quarters support an increase in the minimum wage.)

These are votes ripe for the Democrats’ taking. But, sadly, they are being neglected. Democratic congressional leaders still publicly say there will be no official party position on Iraq. Meanwhile, a faction of Democratic lawmakers continues to vote for corrupt GOP economic policies, such as a bankruptcy bill written by the credit-card industry, an energy bill written by the oil industry, a Central American Free Trade Agreement that further depresses American wages and Bush tax cuts for the wealthy that drain resources from health-care programs.

These Democrats seem all too comfortable in the minority, and all too complicit in Washington’s pay-to-play culture — and they are undermining the party’s ability to hone an authentic message.

Thankfully, a movement is building outside the Beltway that will help the Democrats in spite of themselves. Thousands of online activists are pressuring Democratic incumbents to get more aggressive on Iraq and to stop supporting Big Money interests on economic issues. In some districts, they are fueling serious primary contests, such as the recent effort against Lieberman.

Meanwhile, Democratic governors and state legislators are pushing major ethics reform packages and bills to force corporate America to pay its fair share of taxes and worker benefits. These positions are helping state-level Democrats win in some formerly Republican strongholds. By pursuing similar policies at the national level, and rejecting Washington’s faux centrism, Democrats will be able to reclaim a congressional majority.

David Sirota, a Democratic strategist, is author of “Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government — And How We Take it Back” (Crown).

June 17, 2006

Riley Reaches Out - Or Not

Filed under: Uncategorized — Danny @ 1:22 pm

As long as we are talking about events not happening, as we just were, I feel I should set the record straight about the story mentioned on APTV’s For the Record that residents in Senate District 11 received automated calls with Republican Gov. Riley’s voice urging them to vote for Democratic incumbent Jim Preuitt. This apparently did not happen.

For the Record host Tim Lennox was clearly not passing the story along as a news item, saying only that he had heard from a caller that Riley was making calls on behalf of a Democratic Senator. One of his guests quickly asked if he was talking about Preuitt, implying that he also had heard the story. Lennox acknowledged that he was.

The fact that both Lennox and his guest had heard it seemed to suggest the story was true. What it really said, apparently, was that someone had worked to spread the story.

SD 11 Republican nominee Jim Hethcox followed up with us on the story. Like Mr. Hethcox, I also talked to Wetumpka Herald reporter Vicki Terrinoni (who couldn’t have been more pleasant, btw) who said that Riley’s office told her that Riley didn’t participate in any calls like that. She also spoke with Jim Preuitt who told her that he was not aware of any such calls made on his behalf.

Clearly you can’t lie very easily about whether or not communities of folks received automated phone calls using your voice, so I believe that the calls must not have happened. We would be hearing more about it if they did.

For the Record archives has the conversation here at about the 14:20 mark in the recording. Though Lennox said he received the phone call on Sunday before the election, the story was not verified and he rightly did not mention it on the air until Tuesday evening at the close of the polling.

Who would concoct a plan to try to plant a story like this? Who would benefit from a story that Riley preferred Preuitt over Barton in the Democratic primary race? With some district residents, I suppose, the story might benefit Preuitt - though those residents might be less likely to vote in the Democratic primary anyway. Challenger Barton would benefit from district Democrats unhappy that Preuitt was aligned with a meddling Republican governor. I suppose we will only be able to speculate.

Does anyone have more to add?

Most of this ground was covered in the original post and its comments, but many would have missed the follow-up as it unfolded over several days.

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