San Diego Goddam! The June 3rd Election And Why You Should Care

by on May 8, 2014 · 1 comment

in Economy, Election, Health, History, Labor, Organizing, Politics, San Diego

San Diego downtownbayBy Doug Porter 

I borrowed the first part of this headline from one of my favorite songs by Nina Simone, who sang about a certain southern hellhole of a state of mind as her response to the murder of Medgar Evers in Mississippi; and the bombing of a church in Birmingham, Alabama that killed four black children back in 1964. The song speaks to the level of angst and frustration I’m starting to feel about the upcoming election.

Bad things are more likely to happen and good things probably won’t happen if you and your friends pass on your obligation as citizens to vote come June 3rd. Starting today and in the coming weeks we’ll be talking about those possibilities, so you need to (please!) pay attention.

Fast forward 50 years from Ms. Simone’s lament and there are 8 million eligible but unregistered voters in California. Of the 17.7 million voters that are registered to vote in the Golden State, only about one third will bother to cast ballots in the upcoming June 3rd elections. That works out to 14% of the total population deciding how things will be for next few years.

In San Diego county, the Registrar of Voters mailed out an all-time record 840,000 ballots on Monday. Voting has already started. And people can still register to vote (you can do it right here) in the upcoming election until May 19th.

California’s June ballot includes every Congressional and state Assembly seat, and the even-numbered state Senate seats. All the top-level statewide seats are on the ballot, but because the gubernatorial race is not expected to be competitive, that could also affect turnout.

So let’s turn that negative into a positive. If you are a liberal or progressive voter, you might want to consider crossing party lines on June 3rd and voting up gubernatorial tea partyish candidate Tim Donnelly, because a second place finish (with our new primary system) by the Twin Peaks Assemblyman would put him at the top of the fall ticket and discourage GOP turnout. And just think how amusing the TV ads will be…

The Really Serious Stuff is all local this time around. Today I’ll touch on two of those contests: the race for Superior Court Judge, seat 20 and Propositions B & C in the City of San Diego. I promise there will be more in coming days, so stay turned.

A Heavy Duty Billboard for Carla Keehn

The last time we heard much about a judicial race in San Diego was a few years back when we woke up one day to realize that birther and conspiracy theorist Gary Kreep had won an election for a seat on the bench.

Voice of San Diego recently examined what’s coming up with the judicial set for the June election and found plenty of reasons why you should care:

Let’s face it: The election of Gary Kreep might’ve been the zenith of San Diego’s judicial races, in terms of pure bewilderment.

That race had everything – everything being two men with unfortunate names (Kreep narrowly beat Garland Peed), one of whom was a prominent “birther.”

This time around, San Diego will have to settle for a candidate who’s defended white supremacists pro bono and once wrote that a judge he was facing should be disqualified “by virtue of her permanent disability as a Negro racist;” and an incumbent with a drunk-driving conviction who was also admonished by a state commission for incorrectly putting a woman in custody for five days.

Carla Keehn is the former prosecutor who has stepped up to challenge San Diego Superior Court Judge Lisa Schall, the second judge mentioned in the VOSD snippet.

carla posterChallenging a sitting judge is a big no-no in local politics. The incumbent was endorsed by DA Bonnie Dumanis (an endorsement since removed from her website), and is endorsed by City Attorney Jan Goldsmith, the Alliance of California Judges and all 127 sitting judges in the San Diego Superior Court.

They’ve been some serious double dealing backroom type deals made and then (sometimes) unmade as local politios have attempted to enforce the “Thou Shall Not Challenge a Sitting Judge” rule.

Keehn is making sure she can no longer be ignored, having posted four billboards at prominent locations alerting the public to the past conduct of Superior Court Judge Lisa Schall.

Corporate Rule Trumps Local Control? (You Pick)

BDECR_Square_PinkThe expected TV advertising campaign underwritten by multinational corporations opposed to the Barrio Logan Community plan has begun and it’s only marginally more truthful than the pack if lies they peddled during their drive to get the measure on the ballot.

Over at Voice of San Diego, Andrew Keatts pointed out the obvious implications that this measure has for other neighborhoods.

But city leaders feared what happened in Barrio Logan would set a precedent for citywide involvement in local planning decisions.

“I think it would be a huge mistake,” City Councilman David Alvarez said when Barrio Logan’s plan passed. “It would send the wrong message to all of San Diego, and all the community plans that are being updated. One special interest group could just derail community plan updates. That’s very dangerous.”

While we at SDFP have covered this issue in depth, I’d like to give a shout out to the City Beat editorial from a month ago:

The Barrio Logan Community Plan is good for the residents of Barrio Logan because it gives them what most other San Diegans take for granted: protection from polluting industry. It creates the kind of buffer zone that you would insist upon in your neighborhood. It will be confusing to voters whether to vote yes or no. Just remember, a yes vote preserves the community plan. Commit this to memory: Vote yes on Props. B and C.

Then there was this post from Environmental Health Coalition advocate Georgette Gomez on Facebook last night:

I don’t like to speak about the No on B and C campaign but I just received a copy of one of their flyers, and this what they said…”Over 2,000 new housing units to be built in an industrial area”..Now what’s important to understand, is the fact that in the new plan, future housing is plan to be built north of Chicano Park or North of Cesar Chavez Street. Last time I checked that is NOT and Industrial Area…Point being is that this is how the CEO of the Shipyards and the head of the Chamber see Barrio Logan.

It turns out that bit about the 2000 new housing units also appears in the ballot argument against the Barrio Logan Plan.

Asked about whether or not the City Planning staff could be prevailed upon to make a correction on this assertion, Ms. Gomez replied:

Good question, the planner is Not allowed to speak on the issue, new boss orders. The new boss I mean the new Mayor.

So I’ll end today with a video of Nina Simone singing Mississippi Goddam, the song that inspired today’s column.

 This is an excerpt from Doug Porter’s daily column at the San Diego Free Press.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Jeffeck May 8, 2014 at 4:41 pm

As it relates to the election, be careful what you ask for …you just might get it…. This aint the 60’s anymore there cuz. Berkeley is full of conservatives nowadays.

You sure you libs wanna let the truth get a full view rather than the fairy tales you feed the low information voters?

BTW.. Jerry Brown will win and serve his last term in office since he will term limited out… It is a sad day when Guv’ner Moonbeam is the voice of reason in this state.

Two more 60’s/ 70’s slogans for ya whilst Cali sinks into economic morass over liberal policy:

The times they are a changin’
Your time is gonna come

Wait the millenials wake up and see what the libs/progressives have left them. Gonna be hell to pay

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