Weblog

Friday, 06 June 2008

Sunday, 19 November 2006

Saturday, 11 November 2006

Saturday, 04 November 2006

  • Currently Listening
    It's Time
    By Michael Bubl�
    "You and I"
    see related

    And this is why I'm still a registered voter in Orange County...

    I'm not going to tell you that if you don't vote, that you'll die...BUT....

    For all my folks in Garden Grove, DON'T VOTE for TAN NGUYEN this TUESDAY.

    O.C. Candidate Is Disowned

    Republicans urge their House hopeful to quit over a campaign letter scaring Latino voters.
    By Christian Berthelsen, Mai Tran and Christopher Goffard, Times Staff Writers
    October 20, 2006

    Orange County Republican leaders urged their own congressional candidate to withdraw from the race Thursday after he acknowledged that his campaign was involved in sending out a letter intended to scare off Latino voters.

    Tan Nguyen, a Vietnamese immigrant waging an uphill battle against a longtime Democratic incumbent in central Orange County, faced a battery of questions from state attorney general's investigators and possible civil and criminal liability for voting rights violations.

    With a political firestorm growing less than three weeks before the Nov. 7 election, Nguyen said Thursday that he had fired the campaign's office manager, who he said helped produce the letter, but that he had no prior knowledge of it.

    His account was contradicted by the chairman of Orange County's Republican Party, who said he had been told by the mail house that sent the letter that Nguyen was personally involved in its development.

    The episode was a jarring reminder of what some observers call Orange County's history of xenophobia and voter intimidation, an ugly distinction that Republican leaders say they've tried hard to bury.

    Just days ago, Nguyen had been largely overlooked as a quixotic challenger to Democratic U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez, running a largely self-funded campaign that had little support from the Republican Party apparatus.

    But the racially charged letter sent to an estimated 14,000 registered voters in Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Anaheim brought sweeping, national condemnation from both political parties.

    Written in Spanish, the letter stated at one point: "You are advised that if your residence in this country is illegal or you are an immigrant, voting in a federal election is a crime that could result in jail time…."

    The letter evoked memories of the 1988 race for the 71st Assembly District in Orange County, when the local GOP hired uniformed guards to stand in Latino neighborhoods with signs stating, "Non-Citizens Can't Vote." Even when it paid an undisclosed sum to settle a lawsuit, the GOP doggedly denied wrongdoing.

    That is not the case today, as Republicans rush to condemn the letter. With the election 18 days away, politicians from the U.S. Senate to the state Senate on both sides of the aisle emerged to denounce the mailing, and several advocacy groups said they would hold rallies today and Saturday urging authorities to fully investigate the matter and prosecute anyone involved.

    At the same time, Republican officials on Thursday quickly sought to distance themselves from Nguyen, with several calling for him to bow out of his underdog campaign.

    Nguyen has hired a lawyer and met with investigators from the state attorney general's office Thursday.

    Addressing questions about the letter publicly for the first time, Nguyen said his office manager "took it upon herself to allow our database to be used to send out the letter. It was disseminated without my authorization or approval."

    The office manager, whose name was not made public, had been working for Nguyen since he opened his campaign office. He said the employee had access to a database of Democratic voters, which he bought to send mailers to 73,000 households.

    Nguyen denied any involvement.

    "People are pointing fingers saying that I did it, and that's going to get cleared up," he said. "I want to get the truth out so people can vote for candidates for the right reasons."

    The office manager could not be reached for comment.

    In an interview Thursday, Orange County GOP Chairman Scott Baugh said representatives of the Huntington Beach mail house hired to send the letter told him Nguyen had been directly involved.

    "It has been relayed to me that Mr. Nguyen himself was involved in expediting this particular mail piece," Baugh said. "He called the mail house and asked them to do it."

    Christopher West, owner of Mailing Pros, said in a phone interview that he wouldn't confirm or deny that Nguyen was involved. He added that he had spoken with investigators from the attorney general's office and had told them "the whole enchilada."

    Another person familiar with the investigation, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the campaign office manager gave the database to a volunteer, who paid for and oversaw the production of the mailers.

    Baugh, who called the letter "reprehensible and stupid," said the party's executive committee voted unanimously to ask Nguyen to withdraw from the race.

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has called the letter "a despicable act of political intimidation and a hate crime," while Democratic gubernatorial hopeful Phil Angelides called it "the latest in a disgraceful pattern of efforts to intimidate Latino voters" by Republicans.

    Rep. Sanchez said she hoped voters who received the letters would get additional correspondence, perhaps from the California secretary of state's office, encouraging them to vote. She said she was horrified that an immigrant was involved in such a scheme.

    "To have an opponent who is an immigrant who is suppressing the immigrant vote is disgusting and sad," she said.

    Nguyen "owes an apology to these 14,000 people. Someone needs to send out a letter to these people to explain that we want them to vote."

    Nguyen said he would not withdraw from the race. "We're winning and we're going to win," he said.

    Nguyen has made halting illegal immigration part of his campaign against Sanchez, who is Orange County's only Democratic member of Congress.

    County officials said Nguyen met with Orange County Registrar Neal Kelley in August and asked him how illegal immigrants can be prevented from voting.

    "He wanted to talk about how to keep illegal immigrants from voting," said Brett Rowley, a spokesman for Kelley who sat in on the session. "That seemed to be his main concern."

    The letter warned that the state had developed a tracking system that would allow the names of Latino voters to be handed over to anti-immigrant groups.

    Information in the letter is false. Immigrants who become naturalized citizens, such as Schwarzenegger, can vote. An illegal immigrant who votes can be subject to jail and deportation, but the letter's assertion that the state had developed a system that would make it easy to track down immigrants or illegal residents is false.

    The letter was especially frustrating, Baugh said, "because we have been engaged in methodical efforts to open the party up."

    Some observers say xenophobia has long been part of the GOP playbook in a county that spawned Proposition 187, the 1994 ballot measure that sought to curb public services for illegal immigrants. It is also home to Jim Gilchrist, co-founder of the Minuteman Project for citizen border patrols, and Costa Mesa is the nation's first municipality seeking to train local police in immigration enforcement.

    "It's most natural that it would occur in Orange County," Nativo V. Lopez, president of Hermandad Mexicana, a Latino civil rights group, said of the letter. "It's a direct outcome of the type of anti-immigrant frenzy that still abides here."

    When Sanchez narrowly ejected high-profile Republican Robert K. Dornan from his central Orange County House seat in 1996, Dornan accused Hermandad of registering illegal immigrants to vote. The House Oversight Committee concluded that not enough noncitizens had voted to shift the outcome, and a grand jury declined to indict Hermandad or its officers.

    Peter Hinton, an attorney who represented plaintiffs against the Orange County GOP in the case stemming from the stationing of poll guards at voter precincts, said the letter indicated "that we're back in the dark ages."

    "I'm really quite shocked to learn that it's going on again," Hinton said. "I thought we'd come way beyond that. This is like the South before Martin Luther King Jr."

Thursday, 12 October 2006

  • My thoughts exactly

    Korea Policy Institute Provides Analysis and Pragmatic Approach Toward the North Korean Nuclear Issue

    LOS ANGELES--October 10--The U.S.-based Korea Policy Institute (KPI) releases a policy analysis of events leading up to North Korea's testing of a nuclear device on October 9.
     
    In September 2005, the United States, North Korea, China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia agreed on a basic trade: North Korean denuclearization in return for something approaching normal relations between the U.S. and North Korea. The latter agreed to "abandon all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs" on the grounds that both countries would "respect each other's sovereignty, exist peacefully together and take steps to normalize relations." However, four days after the agreement was signed, the U.S. virtually declared economic war on North Korea by imposing new financial sanctions with the goal of cutting off North Korean access to the international banking system.
     
    If this political maneuver had been a stand-alone action, then North Korea would not have tested its nuclear capability. However, since the Bush Administration came into office, it has, at times openly, at times quietly, continuously pursued a policy of regime change toward North Korea that flatly contradicts the Administration's rhetoric about wanting to pursue diplomacy with North Korea. Dr. Thomas Kim, Executive Director of KPI and Professor of Politics & International Relations at Scripps College writes, "Those who claim that North Korea's nuclear test is the result of a failure of U.S. diplomacy are wrong because this claim presupposes that the Bush Administration has actually engaged in good-faith efforts to negotiate with North Korea. On the contrary, ever since it came into office, the Administration has avoided being drawn into meaningful negotiations with North Korea."

    In response to those who argue that North Korea is not a reliable negotiating partner, Dr. Kim notes that North Korea's "actions on the very issues that currently bedevil U.S.-North Korea relations suggest that this is simply not true...The mere fact that the North Koreans did not process plutonium during the Clinton administration and voluntarily maintained a self-imposed ban on test firing missiles for 8 years tells us that North Korea is willing to make trade-offs about the very things that neoconservatives claim that North Korea is unwilling to trade away."

    Faced with a Bush Administration that has never committed itself to genuine diplomacy--not only in North Korea but virtually everywhere else in the world--the North Koreans are deeply skeptical that talking with a U.S. government unwilling to negotiate in good faith can lead to real progress. If the U.S. truly wants North Korea to come to the table, it must treat diplomatic negotiation as a starting point for dialogue, rather than as a reward for unilateral concessions.
     
    To read the full report, visit the Korea Policy Institute at www.kpolicy.org <http://www.kpolicy.org/> .

Top Tags - Weblog

[no tags]

christinie_weenie

  • Visit christinie_weenie's Xanga Site
    • Name: christine
    • Birthday: 7/26/1982
    • Gender: Female
    • Member Since: 5/9/2003

Weblog Archives

Don't worry - your calendar is here… to see it in action just click "Save" above and refresh the page.

About Me

  • i solemnly swear i am up to no good!

Pulse

christinie_weenie has no pulse!...

Photostrip

[no photos]

Recommended

[no recommendations]