CA-12

Lessig's Announcement

by: Matt Stoller

Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 20:28

Larry Lessig has launched his exploratory committee and two sites.  One of them is Lessig08.org, for his exploratory committee, and the other is Change-Congress.  He has made three points the centerpiece of his campaign - no money from PACs or lobbyists, no earmarks, and support for public financing.  I threw in $25 as I strongly support public financing of campaigns.  Whether he decides to run is still an open question, he's only considering it.

Here's Lessig's announcement video.  He's a remarkable communicator, and he is under no illusions that this race is a simple undertaking.

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Lessig Establishes Campaign Committee

by: Matt Stoller

Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 16:06

There's a draft fund for Larry Lessig on Actblue, but you might also want to check out this page on Actblue.  That's not a draft fund.

Lessig on Actblue

The special election is April 8.  

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What Would a Jackie Speier versus Larry Lessig Race Look Like?

by: Matt Stoller

Mon Feb 18, 2008 at 11:18

One of the most interesting special elections of all time could be shaping up in California's 12th Congressional district just below San Francisco to replace Tom Lantos.  Jackie Speier has quickly locked up establishment support and cleared the field for the April 8th special election date.

California's 12th, which takes in western San Francisco, is a Democratic bastion that CQ Politics rates Safe Democrat. Voters there gave 2004 Democratic presidential challenger John Kerry 72 percent of the vote and President Bush 27 percent. Lantos took 76 percent of the vote in his 2006 election and never received less than two-thirds of the vote in any general election since 1984.

Lantos endorsed former state Sen. Jackie Speier as his successor after his January retirement announcement. Speier quickly cleared the field of at least one potentially competitive challenger, state Sen. Leland Yee, and has landed endorsements from the state's two Democratic senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer , as well as Rep. Anna Eshoo of the neighboring 14th District, Rep. Mike Thompson, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

Speier, an attorney, ran for Congress nearly 30 years ago to succeed her late boss, Democratic Rep. Leo Ryan. Speier was one of several individuals who accompanied Ryan on a 1978 trip to Jonestown, Guyana, to investigate reported abuses at the People's Temple commune. Members of the group attacked Ryan and others at the airstrip as the group attempted to fly home. Ryan and five others were killed. Speier survived five gunshot wounds.

The district is heavily Asian-American, so clearing the field of Yee looked like a strong political move for Speier.  That is, unless, another white challenger jumps into the race, someone like Larry Lessig who brings his own base of support.  If Yee were in the race, my guess is that it would basically be impossible for Lessig to win, since he would not be able to consolidate the anti-establishment vote.

The themes in the race would be fascinating.  Already we see a 'Change Congress' site set up and linked off of the Draft Lessig blog, and Lessig has focused of late on corruption as a root cause of poor decision-making.  Speier is a very tough candidate, so beloved in the distrct that she has a bullet train named after her.  She was willing to take on Lantos in a primary, mostly on local issues but with some critiques of his foreign policy stances, so she is quite a fierce and ambitious competitor with high name ID.

I like both of these individuals very much, and I would love to see Lessig jump in.  The Silicon Valley area is seeing a surge in local Democratic activity and organizing, as it is a blue area that had let its grassroots atrophy.  That's a network into which Lessig would probably have to tap to compete with all the establishment support from Boxer and Feinstein, both of whom are radically out of touch in their own unique ways.

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Rep. Tom Lantos Dies

by: Lucas O'Connor

Mon Feb 11, 2008 at 10:36

AP/SacBee has the unfortunate news:

Rep. Tom Lantos of California, the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, has died, his spokeswoman said Monday.

Lynne Weil said that Lantos, 80, passed away at the Bethesda Naval Medical Center in suburban Maryland.

Lantos was the only Holocaust survivor in Congress and had a long record on human rights issues.

Lantos, who was elected to the House in 1980, founded the Congressional Human Rights Caucus in 1983. In early 2004 he led the first congressional delegation to Libya in more than 30 years, meeting personally with Moammar Gadhafi and urging the Bush administration to show "good faith" to the North African leader in his pledge to abandon his nuclear weapons programs. Later that year, President Bush lifted sanctions against Libya.

Lantos had already announced his retirement because of the cancer.  He becomes the second California member of Congress to succumb to cancer in this session after Juanita Millender-McDonald who passed away in April.

Tom Lantos was a giant and will be missed both as a legislator and a person.

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CA-12: Lantos Retires

by: Chris Bowers

Wed Jan 02, 2008 at 13:45

Sometimes, the threat of a primary challenge is enough. This now appears to be Jackie Speier's seat for the taking:

Rep. Tom Lantos, a California Democrat and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, announced on Wednesday that he will not seek re-election this year because he has cancer of the esophagus.

Lantos, 79, is the only Holocaust survivor elected to Congress and is known for his dedication to human rights issues. He is serving his 14th term as a House member.

While I don't doubt that health reasons fueled this decision by Lantos, I also think that he would have run for re-election had Jackie Speier not been such a serious threat in the primary. With only the primary threat or only the health issues, Lantos probably seks re-election. With both, retirement looks like the better option.

Outside of foreign affairs, Lantos was actually a very good member of Congress. However, foreign affairs was his focus, given that he was chair of the foreign affairs committee. It is important that the next chair of the foreign affairs committee is more of a progressive in that policy area. I also hope that Speier's is a strong progressive across the board, and not just on foreign policy.

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CA-12 Primary Heating Up

by: Matt Stoller

Tue Dec 18, 2007 at 08:08

I have a pretty full day today, which means light blogging.  But I noticed this story.

Former state Sen. Jackie Speier (D) has hired Alex Tourk to manage her likely primary challenge of Rep. Tom Lantos (D) in the San Francisco-area 12th district.

Tourk previously managed San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom's mayoral campaign.

Also likely to be a part of any Speier Congressional campaign are Democratic pollster Jim Moore and Democratic consultant Bill Cavala, whose specialties include general and direct-mail consulting. Cavala and Moore are both based in Sacramento.

Meanwhile, Lantos appeared to respond to the budding threat from Speier - who outperformed him significantly in a recent poll conducted for her campaign - by sending out a full color, multipage piece of franked mail to his constituents.

The mail piece touted his Congressional agenda, including his moves opposing President Bush's Iraq War policy. Lantos voted to give Bush the authority to use force in Iraq but has since become an opponent of the president's policy.

Ah, the blurring strategy.  This is a very standard move by incumbents when challenged.

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CA-12: Speier Claims 30-point Lead

by: Chris Bowers

Thu Dec 06, 2007 at 09:57

Jackie Speier, the former California State Senator who will almost certainly challenge Rep. Tom Lantos in the June Democratic primary, claims that she has a dominating, victory-is-assured type lead before the campaign even begins:

Congressman Tom Lantos (D-CA) might be on the verge of facing a really tough primary challenge. State Sen. Jackie Speier claims she has an internal poll that shows her beating Lantos in the primary by a 57%-27% margin. Speier has some name recognition built up after she ran for Lt. Governor in 2006, narrowly losing the Democratic primary, but she has not yet officially announced a campaign against Lantos.

If a primary challenger leads by 30 points before the campaign even starts, then the campaign is probably over before it begins. Incumbents don't come back from thirty point deficits. That just doesn't happen.

This is an interesting primary. Lantos is a Holocaust survivor, but Speier is of Armenian descent,  has a Jewish grandfather who feld Nazi Germany and also was a survivor of the Jonestown massacre (she wasn't a cult member). On the other hand, while Lantos has been very right-wing on several aspects of foreign policy, including Iran, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, he is also a member of the progressive caucus, with a very solid record on pretty much all other issues.

One thing is for certain: at 80 years old, Lantos is going to be replaced soon, and a Democratic primary challenge from his left on things like Iran and torture seems like a good way to do it. Assuming that the poll is accurate and genuine, and it appears to be both, it looks as though that is on the verge of happening.

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Tom Lantos to Get Primary Challenge

by: Matt Stoller

Mon Nov 19, 2007 at 16:21

Tom Lantos, who is one of the worst and most dangerous members of Congress with regards to Iran and Israel and one of AIPAC's top allies, is facing a primary challenge.

Looks like former Peninsula state Sen. Jackie Speier is indeed gearing up for what promises to be a big-money and highly charged Democratic primary run next June against 13-term Rep. Tom Lantos.

"It's Time!" declares an e-mail circulated by supporters to "friends" and "fans" this past week, announcing the first organizing meeting of the Jackie Speier for Congress Exploratory Committee on Tuesday at a home in Hillsborough.

Speier has been consulting with friends and supporters about a run since a poll conducted by allies in January showed her a 2-1 favorite among voters in the 12th Congressional District, which covers northern San Mateo County and parts of San Francisco.

Speier has since hired at least one staffer to start gearing up. Nonetheless, she told us late Friday that she hasn't made a final decision - and that when she does, we'll be among the first to know.

"The good news is Congressman Lantos has finally come back to the district," she said, a digging reference to his trip home this week for the holidays and to attend a congressional subcommittee hearing on the Coast Guard's role in the big bay oil spill.

Challenge or not, Lantos, who will turn 80 in February, said through his spokeswoman: "I fully expect to win the primary in June and the general election next November.

Lantos is the only holocaust survivor in Congress, and has been outspoken on issues of genocide.  He's also the Chair of the House International Relations Committee, and the author of the Iran Counter-Proliferation Act.  Lantos is a member of the progressive caucus, and has a progressive record on domestic policies.  On foreign policy, he is extremely right-wing, though he has distanced himself from the Iraq war after pushing aggressively for authority for Bush.

It's a fascinating and welcome development.  I don't know Speier, and I don't know if Lantos has been taking care of business in his district, but the generational argument might work.  You can expect AIPAC to dump money into this race, and for the antisemitism card to be used aggressively and repeatedly by older right-wingers rich and insecure Jewish men and defense contractors.  Younger progressive Jews like me are willing to step up and organize on behalf of less insane representation for our community, as we did against Lieberman in 2006.  I did enjoy being called a Hezbocrat during the Lebanon invasion, which took place during the Lamont-Lieberman race, as well as seeing Moveon and its mostly Jewish staff attacked by the American Defamation League's Abe Foxman because someone on an open forum they run made an antisemitic comment. 

This might be one opportunity to organize again, this time more explicitly against AIPAC, though I'd need to learn more about the district and the race before doing so.

Anyone in CA-11 know anything about this?

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