http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/1/3/102038/8280On 12/3/04, Larry Sabato hosted a centrist panel discussion at U of VA featuring Donna Brazile, Jim Jordan (Kerry 2003 campaign manager and ACT), Steve Jarding (Mark Warner's campaign manager and John Edwards' New American Optimists PAC), Harrison Hickman (Democratic pollster, Edwards 2004 primary campaign) and Rep. Brad Carson of OK.
The most informative answers came from Steve Jarding, this was the first time I've heard him speak. In particular, his closing response brought the house, er hotel room, down. It was a comment on the suggestion that maybe Democrats should rhetorically withdraw and let the Republicans pursue their agenda into excess. Text and video of Jarding's 2 minute answer follow the break.
Steve Jarding < Harvard Bio >
I don't think it ever is good to give your voice - give up your voice - or give it away or to silence it.
I would actually use these as opportunities, I'd do almost the opposite. I'd say - you know, I don't like these guys much, I think they're phonies, I think they're hypocrites, I think they're charlatans in many ways, and we as a party need to find a voice.
That voice needs to say - and I believe this in politics - that you hit somebody at their strength - and if their strength is, "We're going to nominate judges that are family values", then by God, we're going to define family values, cause those guys don't have a corner on that market.
Family values is a Democratic issue. When people sit around the table at night and they lost their job, they don't have health insurance, they got a sick kid, they're sitting there fighting, maybe they're hitting the bottle, maybe they're hitting each other, but it ain't a happy family.
And at the end of that dinner, they're not sitting there going, you know, "Our life sucks, but at least, what really pisses us off is two guys getting married in Massachussetts". That does not happen, it does not happen, you know it and the American public knows it. That's not what splits families. We ought to hammer 'em on that.
We ought to hammer 'em on judges that - on any of their appointments - if they're not fiscal conservatives, we need to talk about it.
We need to talk about defence as a party. George Bush didn't support raising the death benefit from 6 to 12 thousand dollars in the 2004 defence budget. He cut some pay grades. He cut military construction 20 percent. Look at the VA budget for 2005.
This is not a friend of defence. This is not a fiscal conservative. And these guys are not family values.
And we need to get our voice back and when they present an opportunity, when they throw a judge - claims it's going to be a family value judge - then let's have that debate, because that's on our turf, baby, not theirs.
We need to get the voice and just hammer the hell out of them, that would be my recommendation.
Play Video (RealVideo, 1:57, 3Mb download)
The text does not do justice to Jarding's delivery. The video is worth the download, if only to see the moderator, audience and Jim Jordan reactions to Jarding's impassioned statement.