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Dems can connect with rural voters..so says The Nation

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MissMarple Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-08-04 03:14 PM
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Dems can connect with rural voters..so says The Nation
I finally found you guys. :hi:

I posted this in Editorials, but this seems like a good place as well. What are your thoughts? I think this article makes some good points. It's fairly short. Do you think the author is accurate or over reaching?

http://www.thenation.com/thebeat/index.mhtml?bid=1&pid=2052

"One of the biggest mistakes that Democrats made in the first days of the Bush administration was to support the nomination of Ann Venemen to serve as Secretary of Agriculture. Venemen, with her close ties to agribusiness and the biotech industry, was precisely the wrong choice. An unyielding supporter of free-trade initiatives, and an unquestioning backer of even the most controversial schemes to genetically modify crops, Venemen was a dream-come-true pick for multinational food-processing corporations, chemical companies and big agribusiness interests. But for working farmers and the residents of rural regions and small towns, she was a nightmare selection."

Now George wants this guy, the governor of Nebraska:

Johanns was an aggressive supporter of the 2002 farm bill, which continued the misguided practice of directing substantial portions of U.S. farm-support spending into the treasuries of the largest agribusiness conglomerates and factory-farm operations. "This farm bill continues to tap taxpayers' hard earned money to keep the farm economy limping along while the giant food processors and exporters reap cheap commodities to expand their control of the world's food supply," says George Naylor, president of the National Family Farm Coalition.

* As governor, Johanns initiated what Nebraska farm advocates saw as an attempt to gut I-300, the state's 23-year-old ban on corporations owning farmland or engaging in agricultural activity in the state. Johanns's push for a review of I-300 drew harsh criticism from family-farm advocates last year. "There seems to be no useful purpose in modifying Initiative 300 unless the purpose is to subject Initiative 300 to legal attack," argued Robert Broom, an attorney who successfully defended I-300 from constitutional challenge in federal trials. Under heavy pressure from rural voters, Nebraska legislators declined to give Johanns the authority to establish a task force that many expected to attack I-300.

And a bit about old time populism, Bryan puts me in mind of Garrison Keillor(sp).

"Ah, my friends," Bryan told the Democratic National Convention of 1896, " we say not one word against those who live upon the Atlantic coast, but the hardy pioneers who have braved all the dangers of the wilderness, who have made the desert to blossom as the rose -- the pioneers away out there , who rear their children near to Nature's heart, where they can mingle their voices with the voices of the birds -- out there where they have erected schoolhouses for the education of their young, churches where they praise their Creator, and cemeteries where rest the ashes of their dead -- these people, we say, are as deserving of the consideration of our party as any people in this country. It is for these that we speak."



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ashling Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-08-04 03:23 PM
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1. Thank you!
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illflem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-17-04 06:19 AM
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2. Another must read for us country folk
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2004/0412.sirota.html

How a Montana Democrat bagged the hunting and fishing vote, and won the governor's mansion.

"Brian Schweitzer had an innovative, three-part political strategy, one that perfectly fit the current conditions in Montana, but which Democrats across the country could learn from. First, Schweitzer took advantage of public dissatisfaction with two decades of insular one-party rule in the state capital, casting himself as an outsider and a reformer. Second, he rallied small business, usually a solidly GOP constituency, to his side by opposing the deals Republicans had cut in Washington and Helena to favor large or out-of-state corporations over local entrepreneurs. Third, and most interesting of all, Schweitzer figured out how to win over one of the most important, reliably Republican, and symbolically significant groups of voters: hunters and fishermen."
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benEzra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-06-05 02:06 PM
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3. Good article!
One important aspect, I think, is that not only is Schweitzer pro-hunting, he is pro-gun in the broader sense (i.e., he stands up for the rights of gun-owning nonhunters as well). This allowed him to flank the repubs on the broader gun issue.
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