I am Robin Smith, Queen of Irony

In a statement released today cheering the financial contribution (also referred to as a “downpayment”) to the Tennessee Republican Party by GOPAC, the national Republican organization “dedicated exclusively to electing Republicans to state and local offices,” and earmarked to help boot newly elected Speaker of the House Kent Williams (R, The Fightin’ 4th!) out of office in two years, Chairperson Robin Smith said:

“It is an honor to stand with great folks and organizations committed to more than political position and power…We have already begun to recruit and support candidates committed first to principles that serve this great state. We express sincerest thanks to GOPAC and others who are investing in our efforts.”

Seriously, what part of “dedicated exclusively to electing Republicans to state and local offices” does she think isn’t committed to political position and power?

(H/T: Post Politics & that Kleinheider)

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Joan Nixon, coordinator of the Davidson County Election Commission, just confirmed to me that the English Only Committee missed the Financial Disclosure deadline, which was 5:00 PM today.

UPDATE: On the other hand, the group opposing English Only, Nashville For All of Us, has released their numbers in all their glory – they’ve raised $286,000 so far and have about $120,000 on hand. Their donor list includes some heavy hitters:

HCA ($50,000)
Steve Turner from Market Street Investments, the company leading the redevelopment of The Gulch ($50,000)
Caterpillar Financial ($25,000)
Rogers Group Investments President Ben Rechter ($25,000)
Ingram Industries ($25,000)
Law firm Bass Barry & Sims ($10,000)
Vanderbilt University ($10,000)
Gaylord Entertainment ($10,000)
Cal Turner Jr. ($10,000)
Venture capitalist Andrew Byrd with Andrew Byrd LLC ($10,000)
Healthways Chairman Tom Cigarran ($10,000)
Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis ($10,000)
Bill Freeman of Freeman Webb Real Estate ($10,000)

Again, not releasing their numbers makes the English Only committee look like they have something to hide. Like, perhaps, that they have no local support or coalition backing them and that the money supporting what they say is a referendum that will benefit Nashville is really coming from an out of town group.

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Follow the English Only Money

Word on the street is that the officially registered committee behind Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only referendum will purposefully miss today’s 5:00 P.M. financial disclosure filing deadline.

According to Election Commission coordinator, Joan Nixon, if they miss today’s deadline, she will send out a registered Assessment letter tomorrow. When she receives the green receipt card back from the post office, the $25.00 per day fine for missing the deadline will kick in. So, let’s say the Assessment letter goes out to the English Only folk on Friday and, best case scenario, they get it on Monday. Then the Post Office sends the receipt back and, again best cast scenario, Ms. Nixon receives it on Wednesday. If Crafton’s folks then file on Friday, the day after the election, then they’ve amassed a whopping $50.00 fine. Oh yeah, that’s going to hurt.

So let’s add this to what has happened so far in the English Only kerfuffle.

1) Nashville For All of Us, the coalition against the English Only referendum has almost every civic, spiritual, and community leader and organization in Nashville as official members, while Councilman Crafton’s coalition consists of a handful of conservative talk show hosts, Lou Dobbs, the friendly friends over at Fox and Friends, and the advocacy group Pro English, an out-of-state group that is tied to Dr. John Tanton, who has founded other anti-immigrant organizations that have been designated as “hate groups” by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

2) The members of the Nashville for All of Us Coalition have made themselves available for dozens of local speaking engagements dedicated to the civil discussion of the pros and cons of the English Only referendum. Councilman Crafton has made himself available to national news outlets Fox and Friends and Lou Dobbs but recently pulled out of what was to be a locally-televised debate against one time mayoral candidate, David Briley, and moderated by well-respected Nashville elder statesman, John Seigenthaler. The debate will go on, by the way, tomorrow night at 7:00 PM on WNPT Channel 8, with Mr. Seigenthaler, Mr. Briley, and Mr. Empty Chair Representing Councilman ‘Fraidy Pants.

3) Today is the filing deadline for the referendum organizations. According to a statement made to The City Paper, Nashville for All of Us, will meet today’s disclosure deadline. Councilman Crafton’s group, of which he says, he is “merely the spokesman” and “not responsible for issues like disclosing campaign contributions and expenditures,” has responded to questions by the City Paper as to whether or not they will file like this:

Jon Crisp, former chairman of the Davidson County Republican Party and fellow leader of the English Only movement, failed to return multiple phone calls for this story.

Lampley [Lewis Lampley, listed as the group’s treasurer] said he had no comment on the “rumor” that Nashville English First intended not to file.

Crafton acknowledged Nashville English First had been supported by the advocacy group Pro English. The group was founded by Dr. John Tanton…

As unofficial Nashville for All of Us spokesman, Mike Kopp, says in the article, Crafton’s English Only group “would be showing a lack of transparency if it missed today’s disclosure deadline” and “Specifically, does this mean they have ties to a group and they’re afraid to disclose those ties? And will those relationships have any bearing on how this plays out?”

The group behind English Only has no Nashville-based business or community organizational support, are afraid to present their case in an impartial forum on local TV, and might be weaseling out of disclosing their funding sources to the citizens of our community. Are these really the actions of a group that says that what they are trying to pass is in the best interest of the city of Nashville?

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Let’s face it, Tennessee Republicans, you got the political shaft. You had the 106th session of the General Assembly in your proverbial back pocket and then *poof* all your plans went up in a puff of back room shenanigans smoke.

Now you’re playing the victim – lamenting on how you’ve been betrayed by a RINO. And we’re not surprised because it’s what you guys do. I call it Trickle Down Victimization and conservatives in power do it better than anyone or anything else (especially governing). From President George Bush to the whatever conservative local talk radio host you listen to, you’re all about blaming others and presenting every issue in Us vs. Them terms. In other words, yours is the “Party of personal responsibility,” my patootie.

So no one should be surprised that after her Party got the political shellacking of her career, the messages sent by TN GOP Chair person Robin Smith, victim, who needs to be in total control and does not like to lose, went from the magnanimous post-election

“I think the Republican Party now is at a point in its life in maturity where we’re going to have to have regional messages…The party should not compromise its core ‘DNA’ of small government and lower taxes…but ought to allow for some deviation where politically necessary. We can’t just hang our hat on one social message”

to this week’s hostile

“Action will begin immediately to address the actions of Rep. Kent Williams…His commitment today was not to Republican Principles, but to the blind and shameless pursuit of personal power. He cast his vote for a Pro-Tax, Pro-Gay, Pro-Abortion, Anti-Gun Liberal Democrat to preside in leadership against all 49 of his Republican colleagues.”

We also shouldn’t be surprised by Rep. Kelsey’s call for Speaker Williams to resign while positioning the people of Carter County as victims. Or Rep. Campfield’s call for him to stay out of his angry and deceived face.

Because as the rest of the country moves on to a less divisive brand of politics and policy-making, you, my good Tennessee Republicans, still have that divide and conquer attitude of 1994. While we’ve gone to a place where governing, public policy, and compromise have become a priority, you’re still with the take no prisoners, win at all costs, my way or the highway mentality.

While some of your rank and file have come to terms with their anger (victim: Rep. Hawk’s sleeping patterns), even today, after you have had a few days to stew and simmer, you remain hostile and bitter. Maybe it will take a few more days until you are ready to capitalize on what is a rare opportunity and take Scott Dismuke’s advice to release the following statement:

While we are dissapointed [sic] with the results of today’s leadership elections, we are still committed to working to create opportunities for all Tennesseans at this critical time in our state.

We will work with Speaker Williams to make sure that all Tennesseans are proud of their elected officials, but more importantly, tackle the very tough issues facing our state.

At a time when Tennesseans are struggling to pay their electric bills, pay their mortgage, keep their jobs and put food on the table, we firmly believe that it is time to put people before politics.

There will be a time and place for the events of today to be dealt with, but right now, it is time to put politics to the side and start working together to ensure our government effectively works for all Tennesseans.

In other words, get over yourselves, check your egos at the Capitol door, and reconsider kicking Rep. Williams our of the your Republican club. Because if you don’t, you’ll force him further into the Democratic Party camp and the tenuous hold you have on the majority will slowly and painfully (for you) dissipate.

Be careful what you do in the name of revenge and while you’re still stinging from what has to be one of the more stunning political coups in Tennessee history.

Deep breaths, my friends. Deep breaths.

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In Their Words: Against/Against

The coalition that makes up NashvilleForAllofUs.org is impressive and we’ve been fortunate enough to have some of its members on the show to talk to us about the importance of voting Against/Against (early voting until Saturday at noon at the Howard School, election day on Thursday from 7 am to 7 pm at your usual polling place.)

So, if you’re still not sure of the importance and still need reasons to vote Against/Against, we offer you the “Against Liberadio(!) Interview Series.” Wait. We offer you the “Liberadio(!) Against Interviews Series.” Darnit. Here’s the “Liberadio(!) Presents: The Against/Against Interview Series.”

Each interview focuses on the effect the passing of the referendum will have on our guests’ area of expertise.

The Law
Interview with Nashville attorney Gregg Ramos and Assistant District Attorney Sarah Davis – One defender. One prosecutor. How can they both agree that Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only amendment is not a good idea for Nashville? [37.9 MB 23:37 download MP3]

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Governance
Interview with Councilwoman at large Megan Barry. Councilwoman Barry sheds some light on how Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only amendment would negatively affect the governing of the city of Nashville. It’s not pretty. [38.3 MB 23:52 download MP3]

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Business
Interview with Tom Negri. Tom is the Managing Director of Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel, on the board of the Chamber of Commerce, and a founding member of Nashville’s Coalition For Education About Immigration. He knows real immigration reform and what’s good for business and Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only referendum is neither. [40.2 MB 25:04 download MP3]

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Act Now Bonus Interview
Interview with Rev. Jim Lawson – Rev. Lawson, civil rights icon, Distinguished Professor at Vanderbilt, and a most thoughtful human being, weighs in on the need to continue to teach the principles of nonviolence; the similarities and differences between the civil rights struggles of various communities (women, African-Americans, gays, etc.); and Nashville’s English Only referendum. [35 MB 21:52 download MP3]

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Preview: Immigrants and Immigration
On Monday, January 19, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, we will welcome Stephen Fotopulos, Executive Director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition to talk about the very real effect the passing of the English Only referendum will have on Nashville’s immigrants and refugees.

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Senator Creepy (R-TN)

During a piece on Hillary Clinton’s confirmation hearings, John Stewart zeros in on the creepiness that is Senator “Choo Choo” Corker. (It’s way at the end so in the meantime enjoy the skewering he gives “President” Kerry and “President” (H.) Clinton).

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Even though the WNPT website states that English Only referendum sponsor Eric Crafton “remains scheduled to appear” in a televised debate against David Briley, and moderated by John Seigenthaler, the Nashville Scene is reporting that Mr. Crafton has decided to pull out.

Councilman Mike Jameson (The Fightin’ 6th!) explains why he believes Councilman Crafton ran screaming from the opportunity with this money quote:

When you sit down in front of a well-informed moderator and a capable opponent that are clearly going to discuss the minutiae of your argument, it’s only natural for your blood pressure to spike. I mean, why does meat fear the meatgrinder?

Fear of a well-informed opponent and well-respected moderator aside, Councilman Crafton’s removal of himself from this public forum proves that his reasons for pushing this referendum have less to do with the well-being of the city than his own publicity-seeking and overtly ambitious personal agenda. He’ll appear on Fox and Friends and Lou Dobbs, which broadcast to a national audience, but a debate on a television station whose signal broadcasts to the greater Nashville area is a no go.

UPDATE: NPT’s Joe Pagetta tells us that their blog now indicates that Councilman Crafton will not be on the show but is still welcome if he changes his mind. Also, the show has been scaled back to a half hour. Thanks, Joe!

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WSMV-TV is running a survey on it’s website that asks, “Are you in favor of the English Only initiative, which would make English the official language of Davidson County?”

Before you click on the link, try and guess which answer is winning, Yes or No. If you guessed “No,” you would be really, really wrong. As of about 2:15 pm on Wednesday afternoon, 4904 people have said they are for the English Only initiative and 1420 have said they are against it. 78% to 22%. Shocking, isn’t it? Especially since everyone you know to is against it, right? Right? Wrong.

You won’t hear a call from us to click on over to WSMV’s website and vote in their survey. Could care less. We need you where it counts and what we are asking you to do will take more effort.

First, have you voted yet? If not, get yourself to the polls. The last days of early voting at the Howard School are today, tomorrow, and Friday from 8 am to 5:30 pm, and on Satuday, from 9:00 am to 12 noon. Has your husband, wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, mother, father, sister, brother, aunt, uncle, cousin, niece, nephew, best friend, best friend’s friend, yadda yadda yadda, voted yet? If not, then get them to the polls. We’re playing a numbers game here, voters, and we have to have more people vote Against/Against then For/For or we lose. Wait, let me rephrase that, or the city of Nashville loses.

Second, send out a mass email about voting in this important election to your personal email lists. All the information you need to create one to urge the people you know to vote Against/Against – from quick facts about the English Only referendum to who’s part of the large and growing locally-based Against/Against coalition – can be found at Nashvilleforallofus.org. Here’s is an example:

Bad for business.
• Nashville boasts 76 companies with some level of foreign investment. Those companies employ 7,660 Nashvillians and generated more than $19.6 billion in sales last year. At a time when Nashville is enjoying tremendous success recruiting international companies, the English-only effort sends a negative and inaccurate message to the world. Tom Oreck, CEO of Oreck Corporation, said, “I can tell you that if this had been the law when we were considering Nashville, Oreck might not have chosen this city.” (Tom is also featured in the Against/Against TV ad)
Bad for Nashville’s tourism industry.
• Tourism is important to Nashville, and international visitors comprise one of the fastest growing tourist segments. Last year, Nashville hosted more than 300,000 visitors from foreign countries, who averaged three days in Nashville and spent more than $150/day. As a result, those visitors contributed more than $135 million to Nashville’s economy.
A tremendous waste of taxpayer dollars.
• Its own language states that it will not apply to services that could affect public health or safety, or that are required by federal or state law. That means there are only a handful of services now being provided that would be halted. We are spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in an effort to eliminate services that don’t exist so we can save approximately $495.00 per year.
Unnecessary.
• English is already the “official and legal language” of Tennessee, and Nashville. Our city does not need to change its own constitution for that to be true. Immigrants know better than anyone the importance of learning English. They also know that the faster they learn English, the faster they can assimilate into the society. If the concern is that immigrants are not learning English quickly enough, we should create more opportunities for them to learn.
Inconsistent with our values as a city.
• Nashville is a city of faith. For many people, of various faiths, the attempt to make English the only language in Nashville rings false. The Hebrew Bible, the New Testament and the Qur’an, all offer text supporting a more tolerant view of those who may not speak our language. “English-only,” not “English-first.”
The Sponsor of the referendum, Councilman Eric Crafton, does not have the best interest of Nashville in mind.
• Rather, it is his own self-interest and agenda that motivate him. While the coalition against the referendum is made up of Nashville’s business, community and spiritual leaders, Crafton’s “coalition” consists of one out of state company, Pro English, with deep pockets and ties to organizations designated as “hate groups” by the Southern Poverty Law Center. And if he did have the best interest of Nashville in mind, then why would Mr Crafton insist to the New York Times that “We’ll make English the official language here” and then “go city to city, show them how we’ve done it here, and let the dominos fall.”

Third, please volunteer some phone banking and or canvassing time to get the word out about this very important issue. Nashville For All of Us has an official headquarters located at 1814 Church Street, Nashville. Phone banking will be done at the HQ from Monday to Saturday from 10am – 8pm and on Sunday from 1pm – 6pm. You can also go there to schedule a canvassing shift. President-elect Obama is calling for Martin Luther King, Jr. day (Monday, January 19) to be a day of service. Make defeating the English Only referendum your much-needed service.

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This is what you’ll be reading in the Tennessean on January 23 if you don’t get out and vote Against/Against referendums #1 and #2. Seriously, what are you waiting for? And if you have already voted, why haven’t you made your friends and family vote?

You may think this referendum won’t pass but without the your vote – and the vote of everyone you know – it WILL. And then Nashville will have to spend four years and hundreds of thousands of dollars more to fend off challenges to something that is, at its core, unconstitutional.

Early voting continues this week, from 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M., at the Howard School. The last day to early vote is this Saturday, January 17, from 9:00 A.M. to 12:00 P.M..

Election Day is next Thursday, January 22, and if you wait until then you can vote in your normal polling place between 7:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M.. But don’t wait. Do it now.

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Tennessee’s own Rashomon

There are always more than two sides to every story.

WSMV’s Cara Kumari is reporting that newly elected Speaker of the House Rep. Kent Williams (R, the Fightin’ 4th!) says he approached the Democrats about becoming speaker, “simply because he wanted to be speaker.”

The Scene’s Jeff Woods writes that House Democratic leader Gary Odom (D, the Fightin’ 55th!) traveled to Elizabethton to see Williams and “Out of the blue, Odom asked Williams how he’d like to be the speaker of the House.”

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