Here's Hobb's reasoning for the name choice:
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20100209/NEWS01/702099891“We really didn’t know what to call ourselves. As moderates, we constantly get run over by the far right and the far left and we end up being roadkill,” said Sen. Steve Hobbs, D-Lake Stevens, one of the founders.
Looks to me that they're claiming the victim card while raking in the conservative funds. And then they vote with the conservatives on some critical issues. Looks to me like the real roadkill are the citizens who are being ignored and run over by these Democrats allying themselves with conservative funding, interests and policies.
http://blog.seattlepi.com/government/The fight echoes a similar but more divisive fight within the national Democratic Party between "pragmatic" centrists (including President Obama and Blue Dog Democrats) and progressives.
The centrist Democratic faction in Washington State is eager to hold onto Democratic electoral majorities and so is willing to work with business interests such as the BIAW to delay progressive legislation. The centrists are also more sympathetic to anti-tax preferences of many suburban and rural voters.
They work under the assumption that to get re-elected they need to appeal to the broad middle and to avoid alienating campaign contributors. They fear a populist revolt, which would benefit a less "pragmatic" strategy.
The BIAW has been a major funder of Republican and conservative issues here in Washington. Looks like Hobbs and his Roadkill crew are now accting on their behalf, too.
http://www.iam751.org/artwork/10-WSLC-LegRep.pdfFor the fourth straight year, the
Washington State Labor Council supported
the Howeowners Bill of Rights,
Sen. Adam Kline’s (D-Seattle) SB 6701,
allowing consumers to recover repair
costs in court if their homes are damaged
by negligent construction.
And for the fourth straight year, the
Building Industry
Association
of Washington
prevented a vote
on the bill. It
previously passed the Senate only to be
quashed by House Democratic leaders.
This year, Sen. Steve Hobbs (D-Lake
Stevens), who previously voted for the
bill, flip-flopped and decided to oppose
it in this election year. Unfortunately,
with no Republicans willing to buck
their BIAW benefactors, Hobbs was the
key to the 25 votes needed for passage,
so it was never brought to the floor.