Artsweek, Education and Validation
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 06/07/2012 - 21:44Another blog post reflecting some of my thoughts as I run for State Representative, and try to be a good dad at the same time.
It's been a tough week. I'm trying to get a couple projects off the ground and as potential partners in these projects have interviewed me, they've questioned whether I am up for the project and have made me feel inadequate. I know that these are projects that will be significant challenges for me, but I believe I can do them, and that the criticisms were unwarranted. Nonetheless, I ended up feeling a bit invalidated a couple times this week.
I suspect others often run into this, especially if they are seeking to grow and expand their boundaries. As I tried to process my feelings, I remembered a great YouTube video, Validation:
I'm here to get validated.
You! You are awesome!
It made me think about what is going on in education in America. Our system has become so focused on standardized testing that education seems to be more about invalidation than about validation. You hear education wonks making comments about 'acceptable yearly progress', and not about how awesome our students are.
All of this came to mind as I visited Arts Week at Beecher Road School. The art on the walls, celebrating the creativity of the Beecher Road Students is truly awesome and I was glad to visit the reception with my daughter Fiona.
She is busy campaigning for me, and if I get elected as State Representative, some of the credit will have to go to her. One parent she introduced me to wanted to hear my thoughts about education. We talked about the problems with teaching to the test and having very myopic views of how to measure the success of teachers and administrators. We talked about school districts cutting sports and arts, two of the great ways that students can be validated.
Perhaps most importantly, we talked about that great factor in students' success, parental and community involvement. There were a lot of parents at the reception. There were lots of students being told they are awesome, and I suspect this is one of the things that has greatly contributed to the success of Beecher Road School.
I talked about how my campaign is not against the Republican Incumbent, it is against apathy. It is about getting people more involved in the electoral process, in their community. It is about improving educational outcomes by getting more parents involved in the schools their children attend.
To all of you that are getting more involved, by attending events like the Arts Week reception, by reading this and other blogs about what is happening in the community, and by joining discussions, "You! You are awesome!"
The Patch State Legislative Debates
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 06/06/2012 - 21:47Below is a blog post that I have submitted to the Bethwood Patch. I've also modified it slightly as a post to the Orange Patch. In true political style, I'm claiming victory in the first debate on Patch and I look forward to many more.
When I accepted the Democratic Nomination for State Representative in the 114th Assembly District here I Connecticut, I talked about how I'm not running against the Republican incumbent. I'm running against apathy. I'm running to get people more involved in their communities, both politically, and in terms of community service. I'm running against an intellectual apathy where people don't know who their State Representative is or what is happening up in Hartford.
When I was asked to start blogging on the Bethwood Patch, I hesitated. I've been maintaining my personal blog for eight years. I'm writing on a health care blog for my work. I didn't need another outlet for my writings.
On the other hand, I recognized the benefit that blogging might bring to me as a State Representative candidate seeking to get more people involved. The Bethwood Patch could be a great platform to stimulate debate.
Well, this week, my opponent has started to blog on the Bethwood Patch. I'm very excited and view it is a small victory for my campaign. I am managing to get others more involved and more informed, if simply by getting my opponent to post here.
I look forward to her sharing posts where she talks about her views on the issues and what she has done for the people of Woodbridge, Orange and Derby. I look forward to her allowing comments on the posts so that we can have an open, honest, and friendly discussion about the issues that should matter to all of us in this district.
It would be great of the 114th Assembly District could set an example for other districts where there would be an ongoing friendly discussion about the issues between the candidates for office.
Let's start off with a friendly welcome to my opponent for State Representative.
Follow the Money
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/03/2012 - 20:05One of the most memorable lines from Watergate was "Follow the Money", and I've been looking a lot at various donations recently. As a newly minted State Representative candidate, I need to raise $5,000 in donations between $5 and $100, with at least 150 of the donations coming from people living in Woodbridge, Orange, and Derby, the towns that my district includes parts of.
This is part of Connecticuts Citizen's Election Program. If I raise money from these sources, I will receive a grant from the state to finance much of my campaign. The program is designed to limit the influence of money in politics and make it easier for more people to run for political office. I'm a big supporter of this program.
One of the biggest supporters of this program is Chris Donovan, who is running for Congress in the Fifth Congressional District. Unfortunately, he hired a finance director who didn't seem to share those values and who has now been arrested by the FBI for trying to hide donations.
Governor Malloy has spoken out about how despicable this was, and I hope that the Governor will back up his words with actions by signing the "Act Concerning Changes to Campaign Finance and Other Election Laws" which would make it illegal for organizations to hide independent campaign expenditures in Connecticut elections. This bill was introduced by Chris Donovan.
I've encouraged people to contribute to Chris Donovan's campaign, and I continue to do so. One of the old lines about free speech is that the antidote to "bad" free speech, isn't limiting free speech, instead it is counterbalancing it with more "good" free speech. Something similar applies in campaigns. An important antidote to people illegally trying to buy influence in politics if for individuals to become more involved in campaigns, giving of their time and money.
There are other parts of our lives where small donations can have an important effect. As an example, one of the doctors where I work will be running in the New York City Triathlon next month. He is doing it to raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
When I visited his fundraising page, I glanced at the list of donors in the right hand column. I was glad to see the names of several of my coworkers on this list, as well as some of my social media friends.
Money can be a corrosive influence in politics, but it can also be a tool for good, and I'm glad to see my coworkers and social media friends working together for good.
Please, think about how you can use your money for good.
Fact Checking Connecticut Newspapers
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 06/02/2012 - 13:16It has been interesting for me to read various newspaper articles and editorials about the arrest of Chris Donovan's former finance director. Following the issue closely has revealed just how poorly Connecticut's paper are really doing in covering important state news.
Perhaps the most glaring error is that several newspapers such as The Day are reporting, Donovan to sit out special session as FBI probe continues. The heading is inaccurate. Speaker Donovan will participate in the special session, however, as the article goes on to state, he "will temporarily relinquish his leadership role during the state legislature's forthcoming special session". The Patch is similarly reporting, House Speaker Chris Donovan Won't Take Part in Upcoming Special Session. In The Patch's case, it does not appear that the article corrects the error in the headline.
Matt DeRienzo is also particularly sloppy in his editorial, OPINION: Chris Donovan’s betrayal of Connecticut’s working families. He writes,
On Thursday, the FBI arrested his finance director, charging that Donovan, or “Public Official Number 1,” as he is referred to in court documents, used his position as speaker to squeeze campaign contributions out of businesspeople affected by pending state legislation he controlled and then hide it from the Federal Elections Commission.
However, that's not what the FBI said. The affidavit talks about the conspirators hoping to get the Speaker to oppose a certain bill, but there is no indication that the Speaker even knew of the effort, let alone tried "to squeeze campaign contributions out of businesspeople". I'm fairly disappointed in Matt, because in other cases, he has tended to rely on facts instead of conjecture or hyperbole.
The Day goes on to have an editorial, Malloy should veto law targeting debates. This is one of the most factually inaccurate editorials I've read in a long time. The law they are talking about does not target debates, particularly the debates that they mention in the editorial.
In election campaigns dominated by moneyed interests and misleading and downright dishonest advertisements, there is nothing quite as honest, straightforward and informative as candidate debates.
So our General Assembly has passed what is alleged to be campaign finance reform legislation that does nothing more than discourage, if not eliminate them….
Let's say this newspaper joins with WTNH Channel 8, as it has often done in the past and hopes to again, to televise a debate for U.S. senator and invites the candidates for the office to appear and journalists from the two news organizations to ask the questions….
I tried to add a comment to this. Their system requires that a person be a member to comment, so I signed in, and still it won't allow me to comment, so I'm sharing the comment here.
"In election campaigns dominated by moneyed interests and misleading and downright dishonest advertisements, there is nothing quite as honest, straightforward and informative as candidate debates."
For debates well run debates where the sponsoring organization is not supporting or opposing candidates in the debate, perhaps this is true, however, many recent debates seem to be little more than sideshows in the political circus.
The issue with Chris Donovan's former finance director is about information about donors being hidden. This is the big problem that needs to be addressed. The campaign finance reform bill before Governor Malloy addresses this issue without threatening fair and honest debates.
Unfortunately, the bill only addresses Connecticut state elections, since Federal elections, like the U.S. Congress race that Chris Donovan is in, and a U.S. Senate debate, such as you mentioned in your editorial are under the jurisdiction of the Federal Elections Commission where the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling has precedence.
The Connecticut law, if signed by Governor Malloy, would apply to independent expenditures which support or oppose a candidate. I certainly hope that the debates that The Day is involved with are fair and honest, and not supporting or opposing candidates. Debates that do support or oppose candidates would be a travesty that would even further diminish the reputation of news organizations.
However, given the misinformation in The Day's editorial, I have to question the honesty and straightforwardness of its editors and a certainly hope that The Day provides a subsequent editorial recanting this one and providing accurate information.
The public does need to be diligent to make sure that elected officials cannot be bought and that their staffers properly do the job they are hired to do. Yet the public also needs to be diligent to make sure that the fourth estate is properly doing its job, and so far, it appears as if in several cases, the fourth estate is has not been up to the task.
Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/01/2012 - 06:38If March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb, how does May go out and June come in? In terms of the weather, it has been beautiful, although a little warmer a couple days than I would have liked. Yet from a personal perspective, it has been quite a ride.
My own campaign for State Representative has been taking off a bit more slowly than I would like. It seems like everyone is pretty busy right now, myself included, and things just aren't getting completed.
In politics, there has been other things happening. In 2008, I supported John Edwards in the primary. I liked his focus on the issues of poverty. His personal failings soon became known and he was recently tried for campaign finance violations. While it was pretty clear that his personal actions were reprehensible, it was far from clear that they were campaign finance violations. In the end, the jury acquitted him on one charge, and couldn't come to agreement on the other charges.
Then, here in Connecticut, Chris Donovan's Finance Director has been charged with violating campaign finance laws. I also support Chris Donovan, and I was very disappointed to hear this. A lot of people are quick to react, leaping from the arrest of an aide to the conviction, in their minds, of Donovan himself, calling this the end of Donovan's career. It's still way to early to tell what will happen with this. I still support Donovan, barring anything incriminating coming out about him, as opposed to any of his staffers.
Donovan did quickly fire the staffers and take on Tom Swan as his new campaign manager. Swan is a great campaign manager, and has been a leading voice against political corruption. We'll see how he handles this campaign. The biggest issues are probably that whether or not Donovan can be bought, the crisis came about because, to some, it appeared that he could be bought, and the actions of his campaign staff reinforces this image. On top of this, it may make it much more difficult for Donovan to fundraise over the weeks leading up to the primary.
On a final note, yesterday, SpaceX's Dragon capsule returned to early, with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. I listened to the NASA stream of the re-entry and splashdown, and was old enough to remember the astronauts coming back from the moon and splashing down in the ocean. It was a curious deja vu. I thought about a blog post I wrote for work, close to a year ago about the end of the shuttle program. At the time, it was sad to see a program that carried so many hopes and dreams come to an end. Yesterday, it was great to have old symbols represent a new horizon of hopes and dreams for exploration.
Hopefully, this will play out in the political arena as well.
So, I start the new month with the customary Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, and wonder what sort of luck this month will bring.