Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

Talking About Politics

November 5, 1996. I took my six-year-old daughter, Mairead, up the street to the old firehouse which was our polling location. We talked about the importance of voting and I cast my vote. Sure, it wasn’t particularly close that year, but it has always been important to me to get out and vote no matter how close the elections are.

Mairead was always very bright, and always ready for an argument, and I seem to recall that she felt it was unfair that she didn’t get to vote. After all, she was probably brighter and more informed than many of the adults voting. We probably talked a little bit about how laws were made and how when she was old enough, she could work on lowering the voting age.

Attorney General Blumenthal touched on this at the Obama Rally in Hamden, Connecticut last Saturday when he particularly thanked people that brought their children to the rally. We need to encourage civic involvement starting at an early age.

Twelve long hard years have come and gone. Mairead is off in college and I wanted to make sure she was registered and was going to vote. In response to an email I sent, she wrote, “I want to actually go to a voting place... Remember when you took me to the fire station for the '96 election? I've been waiting ever since.”

I suspect neither of Mairead nor I imagined what those twelve years would be like, or how historic her first vote would be. Yet perhaps that is an important lesson to all of us. Things that we talk about can carry greater significance than we think at the time, even if it takes twelve years to come to fruition.

I suspect the same applies to the comments we leave on blogs. At one blog I visit, a person posted a comment bewailing about the polarization of politics. That same person then went on to compare Obama to Hitler. Excuse me? I don’t think people that compare a U.S. Presidential candidate to Hitler has much ground to complain about other people polarizing politics.

In another discussion, I heard people complaining about how biased the media is and how bad it was that there weren’t going to be more debates. I remember many of the debates during the primaries where the moderator, typically a noted pundit or anchor from one of the major networks spoke more than the candidates. It reminded me of the old joke about a resort up in the Catskills. One person complained, “The food here is horrible” and the other replied, “Yes, and the portions are so small.”

I would love to see good debates that focus on the issues, and don’t resort to candidates and pundits yelling at one another about trivialities. I would love to see people on the web talk about politics without resorting to polarizing rhetoric, and I sure hope that a friend of Mairead will send me a picture this November of her wearing an “I Voted Today” sticker.

So yes, the portions of political dialog are small, the politics are too polarized, but to throw in another great quote, “There is only one thing worse than being talked about, and that’s not being talked about.” So, let’s talk politics. If we can be grown up, the way my daughter was twelve years ago, we can do it without polarizing rhetoric, but even if the best you can do is be divisive, let’s have a discussion.

Connecticut Obama for America Presidential Kick-off Rally

Hamden – Democrats from around Connecticut gathered in Hamden today to kick-off the final leg of the Obama for America Presidential campaign. Speakers included Sen. Chris Dodd, Representatives John Larson, Rosa DeLauro, Joe Courtney and Chris Murphy as well as Congressional candidate Jim Himes.

A highlight of the rally was a video Jen Just made of her experiences in Denver.

Besides the major speakers, Constitutional Officers, State Legislators activists and people from all walks of life attended. The auditorium was filled to capacity, as was the cafeteria and many of the halls. Depending on who you spoke with, between 1,200 and 2,000 people were in attendance.

There was voter registration, places to sign up to help not only the Obama campaign, but various Congressional campaigns, and advocacy groups. Joe Courtney spoke about the importance of registering new voters and how important each vote is, after his experience in an extremely close election. Rosa DeLauro received very loud applause as she came up to speak, and Sen. Chris Dodd noted that if all that Palin is doing is attacking, then she isn’t bringing anything new to Washington.

Many members of the new media, including Lon Seidman, Connecticut Bob and Gabe from CT Local Politics as well as many members of My Left Nutmeg were all at the event.

Additional pictures can be found in my photoset from the event.

Thinking about Citizen’s Journalism

Yesterday, Kim was out registering voters at the Milford Oyster festival. I stopped by and ran into Tessa Marquis and had an interesting talk about citizen journalism and I’d like to illustrate a few different points of this from recent events.

First, I’m no expert on journalism, so if what I’m suggesting doesn’t make sense, I apologize. However, it seems to me that there are three key aspects to any journalism endeavor. First, there is the gathering of information. Then, there is the ‘sense making’, finding a story line or narrative that is compelling, and then there is the distribution.

This gets to a key problem that live bloggers run into. Too often they are trying to gather information and make sense of what is going on all at the same time. This can draw them out of the moment, and they can miss important information.

So, when I am live blogging, or doing various forms of mobile social media, I try to simply gather information and get it distributed as quickly as possible. Then, when I get back home from an event, I can try to make sense, and write up a longer, more narratively interesting entry. What is nice about this approach is also the collaborative aspect. If people see my comments, photographs or listen to my audio posts, they can grab and do their own sense making out of it, even if the sense they make ends up much different than the sense I eventually make out of it.

My blog post yesterday is a good example of that. Local Politics is a picture that I took with my cellphone, which I added a small amount of text to and sent on to Flickr, which in turn posted it to my blog. Later, Mike Brown posted additional information about the candidates to help with the sense making process. When and if I get time, I hope to write up a more detailed post about the Oyster Festival, but the way things are piling up, that just may not happen.

So, if we break apart the information gathering part of the journalistic process from the sense making part, we may find that we want to apply the distribution to both the information gathering part of the process in addition to the sense making part.

As I have been working to get bloggers, delegates, and others going to Denver to submit their information via cellphones to sites like Twitter, Flickr, YouTube and so on, I’ve also been working on the distribution channels of this raw information. The DemConvention Room on FriendFeed is set up to pull in information from many such sources so people can look at a fairly raw, unedited feed, and then decide what they want to use for their own sense making.

CSpan is getting into this game as well. They have just set up an account on Twitter and have additional plans in place for their website, which will include aggregating messages on Twitter flagged with the #DNC08 and #RNC08 hashtags.

Here in Connecticut, Lon Seidman has set up http://ctgoestodenver.info/, a site that will have various content from the Connecticut Delegation in Denver.

As a final note, as I checked the DemConvention FriendFeed room, I saw a posting about one of the Denver bound bloggers who was in a serious accident.

Please do whatever you can to help the blogger and her family with the increased expenses this accident will add to their coverage of the convention.

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Primary Day in Connecticut

Tuesday is Primary day in Connecticut. According to Newsday there are nineteen state legislative primaries scheduled for Tuesday. In addition, there is a Congressional primary on Tuesday in the Fourth district.

I’m not sure exactly which primaries Newsday is including in the count, because slowly, one primary after another is getting canceled. A few weeks ago, I wrote about Matthew Brennan withdrawing from the State Senate primary in the Eighth Senate district.

Today, Mike Brown wrote about the Stratford Primary being cancelled. Even with these primaries cancelled, the number of primaries this year is greater than normal, which is usually less than a dozen. Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz attributes this to Connecticut's new public campaign financing system. It is also worth noting that the number of uncontested races is down to sixty from seventy-one in the last cycle. That is still way to high, but is a step in the right direction.

I’ve been following some of the different upcoming primaries, and have these thoughts. Marilyn Moore who is running for State Senate to serve Bridgeport, Trumbull and Monroe is the primary candidate that I’m most excited about. She is running for the seat that had been Bill Finch’s and fell into Republican hands when Finch became Mayor of Bridgeport.

I spent some time today canvassing and phonebanking for Marilyn. I posted a few pictures from my cellphone from the day. The house next to campaign headquarters was sole in foreclosure last December.



Foreclosure Sale in Bridgeport CT, originally uploaded by Aldon.


Marilyn Moore for State Senate
, originally uploaded by Aldon.

During my canvassing, I met many great people and had many great discussions. Here is my Utter as I ended my canvassing:

Heading back to campaign headquarters, I snapped a quick picture of a Lee Whitnum sign in the median of the street I was driving down. It is the only Lee Whitnum sign that I’ve seen.

It was a fun day out campaigning.

When I got home, I also found these posts about the upcoming primaries, Deb Heinrich and Marilyn Moore.

So, if you live in a district where there is a primary, please get out and vote. If you live in some other district, think about finding some time to stop by and help campaigns get the vote out. Finally, think about whether you should run next time around.

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