The Unknown Aristocrat

by: David Sirota

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 18:30


As I said earlier, it's pretty clear that Michael Bennet was appointed to the U.S. Senate solely because of his aristocratic credentials - ie. connections to money and Establishment power and Beltway insiders. It had almost nothing to do with his relevant experience, because if that was the basis for an appointment, every other major candidate had more of that. And, as the Denver Post notes, it had absolutely, positively nothing to do with his public positions on issues:

But while everyone from business leaders to political heavyweights to education reformers agree that Bennet is almost always the smartest guy in the room, his positions on nearly every key issue facing the country are completely unknown.

"Soon," Bennet said both during and after the official announcement.

Foreshadowing the hard-fought senate race expected in 2010, state GOP chair Dick Wadhams seized on Bennet's silence.

"His continued refusal today to state his positions on issues suggests someone who isn't clear where he stands," Wadhams said. And then he demanded to know Bennet's stance on an upcoming measure in the Senate that would eliminate the secret ballot in union votes.

 

One of two disconcerting realities is at work here: 1) Bennet's positions are known by the Establishment forces that got him the Senate job, and those positions aren't threatening to that Establishment (read: they are corporate conservative) or 2) Bennet himself doesn't yet have positions on the major issues.

I guess the latter would be better than the former in that it would hold out the possibility that Bennet will end up being a solid Democratic vote on issues like health care, ending the war, and the Employee Free Choice Act. But the fact that Colorado now has a senator whose never held elected office and therefore has no voting record*; has lived most of his life in D.C. and not in state; has served as a key adviser to a right-wing billionaire; and hasn't stated any public positions on key issues before the Senate highlights just how odd - and troubling - Ritter's appointment is.

*Note: I think having served in elected office - or at least having run for such office - should be a key qualification for a Senate appointment not as much for political/reelection reasons, but because in having done so, a candidate has built up something of a public record on many issues (whether that public record is actual votes or public statements) and therefore the citizens being represented have some idea of where that appointee actually stands.  

David Sirota :: The Unknown Aristocrat

Tags: , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
do you think there will be a competitive primary (0.00 / 0)
in 2010 for this seat?

Or will Colorado Democrats feel that's too risky?

I think it would be advisable to make Bennet live in fear of a Democratic primary. That probably would push him in a good direction on some votes.

Join the Iowa progressive community at Bleeding Heartland.


I may be missing something ... (4.00 / 1)
... but I believe Bennet has lived in Denver continuously since 1997, which is years longer than the diarist himself has resided in the Mountain West.  

Obviously, there's more we'd all like to know about his views, but the idea that he's not well-rooted in Colorado is puzzling, to say the least.

Moreover, what's wrong with folks with significant public policy experience who haven't run for office before? Isn't it nice to have a few Senators who never visited Chuck Schumer's office before serving?


LOL on Schumer (0.00 / 0)
I have this vision of candidates in Chuck's office being grilled on how much money they have raised and being schooled on how to do a presser every Sunday.

[ Parent ]
On Other Thing (0.00 / 0)
There is a great article in today's NY Times about the many routes to the Senate.  A good read considering all the talk about Senate appts.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01...



[ Parent ]
Ummm... (0.00 / 0)
I'm not running for - or asking to be appointed to - the U.S. Senate from the state. That's a HUGE difference.

Also, many of the major candidates for the office (Romanoff, Fitz-Gerald, etc.) have "never visited Chuck Schumer's office before serving."

Adam - here's a tip: look into the local nuances of races before you make blanket statements.  


[ Parent ]
I agree and in addition (0.00 / 0)
*Note: I think having served in elected office - or at least having run for such office - should be a key qualification for a Senate appointment not as much for political/reelection reasons, but because in having done so, a candidate has built up something of a public record on many issues (whether that public record is actual votes or public statements) and therefore the citizens being represented have some idea of where that appointee actually stands.  

In addition, the very act of running for an elective office is a sign of respect to
1. the democratic process itself and
2. enables the candidate to demonstrate to the public the candidate's compentencies, attitudes and approach to politics. and
3. It allows the candidate to learn about public issues and how to relate to the concerns of voters in order to turn that into some kind of rememdial action.

Campaigns force one to make decisions, take sides, order one's priorities,  that ordinary life allows one to keep unresolved, but in order to make legislation you have to know one's own mind...even about matters not in your area of experitse.

"Incrementalism isn't a different path to the same place, it could be a different path to a different place"
Stoller


[ Parent ]
running for office is an important proxy for these things (0.00 / 0)
But I think that serving as schools chief for a major urban district gives one a lot of experience with these things, and Bennet has demonstrated a great deal of talent so far.  (The Katherine Boo piece in the New Yorker is a good summary).

Yeah, I want a press conference, but he's certainly within the realm of "has done enough to be seriously considered".


[ Parent ]
Well (4.00 / 1)
Romanoff: Yale/Harvard/management consulting.  Well-respected by CO Republicans, which I'd think you'd think was a bad thing.  

Fitz-Gerald: a native New Yorker?  Heavens, no!


[ Parent ]
There's one other possible explanation (0.00 / 0)
Bennet could be a compromise candidate chosen precisely because he doesn't have a record.  I don't know how factional the Colorado Democrats are, but I have read that unions don't like Hickenlooper, for example, and that other candidates such as Diana Degette and Frederico Pena publicly announced disinterest.

I'm not saying it is the case and I generally think that he got the job in part because he of support from Obama after impressing when he was on the list for Education Secretary, but it is another explanation.

Things You Don't Talk About in Polite Company: Religion, Politics, the Occasional Intersection of Both


No, not it (0.00 / 0)
Colorado Dems are not overly divided and Hickenlooper's relationship with unions isn't so bad they would veto him.

[ Parent ]
another day, another Democrat to slam (4.00 / 1)
Life is good for you, Dave.  Lather, rinse, repeat.   When can we expect your 'Tim Kaine is a closet Republican' column?    

Just A Thought (0.00 / 0)
but if you are going to criticize how people earn their living - this being the second time with Eric Holder being the first - you might want to give up your gig on Fox News.  There are readers like me that find it highly offensive that any prominent progressive would legitimize the mouth piece of the RNC regardless of what they are saying when being interviewed.  On election night I was so incensed that Fox News was advertising on MSNBC and CNN I e-mailed and called them to complain and tell them the reason I was watching the other channels was to avoid Fox's biased coverage.

I really don't care how people earn their livings as long as it is legal and wouldn't have raised it if you didn't keep criticizing others for their jobs.  People have to pay their bills and a job does not create an identity regardless of what people in DC and some areas of the blogosphere think.


Not paid (0.00 / 0)
I haven't made a dime from appearing on Fox News (or any other television station, for that matter).

But thanks for the meaningless comment based on a fallacy.


[ Parent ]
Regardless Of Whether You Get Paid or Not (0.00 / 0)
you still legitimize Fox by appearing on it.  And if memory serves me correctly there was a big effort by Kos, MyDD, etc to stop the Dem Prez candidates from debating on it last year for exactly that reason. I supported that and would urge all progressive liberal bloggers to abide by it.


[ Parent ]
Also... (0.00 / 0)
"A job does not create an identity"

It does in politics - especially when you've made millions working for a politically active right-wing billionaire.


[ Parent ]
Some Examples to Disprove Your Point (0.00 / 0)
Jon Corzine, who is pretty good, made his money running Goldman Sachs.

Howard Metzenbaum, a great liberal, made his fortune charging people to park at airports, hardly one of the great social endeavors of our time.

Kennedy money came from bootlegging and stock market games in the 1920s but they have done pretty well by America on the public policy front.

It is a dangerous game to judge people by their previous employers, even in politics.


[ Parent ]
NO NOT THIS AGAIN (0.00 / 0)
Stop it, please, I'm begging you.  

[ Parent ]
Sirota blasts anyone with a hint of (0.00 / 0)
not being "his kind of progressive."  His opinions are full of useless demagoguery and ideological purity.

Speaking of useless demogoguery (0.00 / 0)
you're completely missing his point. I don't think David means to say that Michael B isn't "pure" enough (although in passing I might recommend to DS to cut out the part abotu Bennet's Anschutz days ... it was only on the financial side of the Anschutz operation, and loads of very good Colorado liberals have that on their resume).

The point is that, quite clearly, this guy (whom I know and like) leapfrogged over literally a dozen or more better qualified, better known candidates simply by virtue of his connections. In my book, that should piss progressives off to no end. And then he shows up for his first presser and literally has NO POSITIONS ON ANYTHING! I mean nothing! Doesn't he follow politics? How lame is that?

I think Bennet will prove to be fine. But in a state like this with a great, deep Dem bench, and a relatively young freshman in the other Senate seat (i.e. no open seats in a long, long LONG time) to appoint a 44 year old who has only lived here for a decade, has never run for office and appears to have no opinions on major issues ... that just kind of sucks. I'll get over it.


[ Parent ]
Then Why Did Ritter Do It? (0.00 / 0)
I'd really like to understand.

[ Parent ]
Agreed (0.00 / 0)
I think Bennet is an odd choice but this tirade against him seems more than a little ridiculous.  I am more exercised about Kennedy who really has done very little and seems to be having some mid-life crisis where she decided all the sudden to join the family business.  Bennet does seem to have a commitment to public service based on his backgroud.

[ Parent ]
The Lottery (0.00 / 0)
Why not sell tickets and raffle off these "open" seat? It would be a way to bring elements of the current system out into the public while generating some cash for the state.

Sell a limited amount of tickets by public auction (Yes, Ms. Sarah, I sold it on eBay!) with a starting bid of $1. After tickets sell hold a drawing and pick the next "care-taker" Senator. No re-election (or election, even) rights are allowed, unless the winner wants to pay twice the price.

Fun and profit.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


USER MENU

Open Left Campaigns

SEARCH

   

Advanced Search

QUICK HITS
STATE BLOGS
Powered by: SoapBlox