Friday, May 28, 2010

Graduation - St. Joseph's Indian School




As a donor to this school, I am very proud of the graduation classes.


Graduating from eighth grade is a milestone for many Lakota (Sioux) young people in South Dakota ... especially since drop out rates on South Dakota's reservations can reach up to 70%.

At St. Joseph's Indian School, Native American youth not only enjoy a safe, stable, culturally rich environment to live and learn, but also they have the opportunity to overcome the adverse odds into which they were born.

Thanks to private donations from friends around the country, Lakota children in need receive the attention and care necessary to reach their dreams!

Use the above link to find out more about the school.

Michael H. Drucker
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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Again, thanks to the great work by The Hankster for this post.

I attended this event last night.


Jackie Salit, President of IndependentVoting.org and NYC Independence Party campaign strategist talks about the latest dysfunction in Albany at the May 25 NYC Independence Party Spring Chair Reception hosted by Cathy Stewart.


NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg speaks in support of nonpartisan elections to NYC Independence Party Spring Chair Reception hosted by chief organizer Cathy Stewart, Manhattan Chair of the New York City Organizations of the Independence Party, May 25, 2010, Wolfgang's Steakhouse, in Tribeca. NYC IP campaign for nonpartisan elections is being headed up by young independents under the banner "NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote". 1 million independent voters are left out of the decisive round of voting in NYC, and 25% of them are under of the age of 30, 25% are people of color.




The New York City Charter Revision Commission will hold a series of public issue forums across the five boroughs throughout May and June 2010. Topics for each forum, which were selected by the Commission at its May 10th public meeting, include: Term Limits, Voter Participation, Government Structure, Public Integrity, and Land Use. At each forum, the Commission will hear expert testimony and will invite public input. Each issue forum is open to the public and will be streamed live via webcast through their website, Wednesday, June 2 – VOTER PARTICIPATION (Nonpartisan Municipal Elections) will take place at Lehman College, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West, Music Building, Faculty Dining Room, Bronx at 6 p.m.

Michael H. Drucker
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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Cuomo Gets Independence Party Nod



Attorney General Andrew Cuomo received the endorsement of the NY State's Independence Party for the race for governor today, right before state Democrats launch their own nominating convention today in Rye Brook, N.Y. Now Cuomo will be on two lines on November's ballot, since he has no major rivals for the Democratic Party's nomination.

There is still no indication who Cuomo will ask to be his lieutenant governor nominee, but some think he may look for someone from upstate or a woman to help balance the ticket's demographics. The Democratic frontrunner is looking for support from both sides of the political aisle, reaching out to conservative and independent voters, and adding three veteran Republicans to his campaign staff.

UPDATE
Attorney General Andrew Cuomo will announce today that he has selected Rochester Mayor Robert Duffy to join him on the ticket as Lieutenant Governor. Duffy is a former police officer who rose to chief of police in Rochester before becoming the city's mayor. He is often compared to Mayor Michael Bloomberg due to his push for mayoral control of the city's school system and the initiation of a 311-like system.
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Sen. Chuck Schumer is received a very early endorsement from the NY State's Independence Party.

Schumer has run on the Independence Party line since his first Senate campaign in 1998. He beat fellow Mark Green for the Independence Party's line (Row C) that year and also defeated Green and Geraldine Ferraro in the Democratic primary. Schumer went on to oust then-GOP incumbent Sen. Alfonse D'Amato in a tight race.

The senator was endorsed by the Indys in his first re-election campaign six years later when he won an historic 70 percent of the vote against then-Republican Assemblyman Howard Mills and Conservative Marilyn O'Grady.

Michael H. Drucker
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Sunday, May 23, 2010

"Why I'm an Independent": Bryan Puertas, NYC Independence Party

Bryan Puertas is an activist with IndependentVoting.org and an executive committee member of the Queens Independence Party of New York. He currently heads up the citywide college campus drive for nonpartisan elections in NYC, which has collected over 2000 signatures from young people in favor of nonpartisan municipal elections in NYC. He and too other youth activists are delivering the letters to Mayor Bloomberg at City Hall asking the mayor to help with getting the NYC Charter Revision Commission to put Nonpartisan Municipal Elections on the November 2010 as a ballot amendment.

"Greetings. My name is Bryan Puertas. I’m an activist and organizer with the New York City Independence Party. It’s important that independents tell their own stories. Certainly there are already plenty of stories being told about us. You may have heard some of them. Undecideds. Spoilers. Soft Democrats. Soft Republicans. Flip floppers. None of them get it right. Yet if we don’t speak up and tell our own stories, we hear theirs so often that we may even start to believe them. I respectfully submit some new labels. The New Majority. The Deciding Voters. The Nonpartisans. The Youth Vote. Stories are how we share our values and culture, how we have a group conversation as a community. I talk to you every day on the phones, and there are more of you out there than you know. I challenge all of you reading this to not let other people tell you what your independence means, to share your own story here. I’ll go first.

Growing up in Queens and Long Island, I did a lot of reading. There was much I didn’t like about my life and about the world, and stories provided the escapism I needed to stay sane. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure, I devoured everything I could get my hands on. The medium that made the biggest impression on me though, was comic books. Here was something exciting! Characters with incredible power taking matters into their own hands to fight injustice and corruption. This was something to aspire to. While I may have been drawn to the colorful costumes and epic battles, it was the ideas of Might in the service of Right, Great Power coming with Great Responsibility, the never ending battle, that transformed my young brain as much or more than any church sermon or boy scout lesson I sat through.

By the time I hit High School, several things happened to pull me back into the larger world. I joined JROTC, which taught discipline and how to work in a group. The second thing was that in September of my senior year two planes struck the World Trade Center. This was something out of a comic book, happening in real living color. While there might have been no one with a flashy costume to stop it, I did learn later of the extraordinary relief efforts that took place at St. Paul’s chapel adjacent to the site. If you have never been, I highly recommend visiting. It made an impression on me to see how something so good could come out of such heartbreak. I resolved to find some way to serve my country, planning to join the military. As an afterthought, I registered to vote, joining the Independence Party. Politics in my mind was a dirty business. The Democrats and Republicans fought for money, power, and influence, not truth, justice, and the American way. I didn’t think much about it though. I was just one man. I had no power, and so no responsibility.

A year and a half later, things were not looking good. I had lost an ROTC scholarship for medical reasons, had to leave school due to the cost, was depressed, and was slowly atrophying away at minimum wage. How was I going to serve my country now? Out of the blue, (or not, if you believe in providence) I received a call from the Independence Party for a survey on Politics. They patiently listened to my jaded answers, and asked at the end if I’d like to get involved. I said, “Sure. I need a job. Do you have jobs?”.

So began an eye opening time for me. I learned that while my basic assumptions about politics had been correct, reality went so much deeper than that. I learned that the Democrats and Republicans are a political duopoly, an electoral cosa nostra that has inserted itself between the people and the government. They have changed the rules to keep themselves in power, making competition from outsiders all but impossible. They force good people who want a seat at the table to be brokered through them, to pay them tribute and promise them favors. Truly these are villains fit for the Legion of Doom.

While there are villains certainly, there are also those who oppose them, those who take matters into their own hands to fight injustice and corruption. They may not be faster than a locomotive or leap tall buildings, but they have what history has shown to be the greatest power of all. The power to organize people. There is a movement building across the country to reform the rules the parties have written to keep themselves perpetually in power, to break up the duopoly the two “families” have on the political process. And it’s the organizers who are leading it, on the phones, the street corners, the blogosphere. The power of conversation, the power to organize people to work together for their common good, to dream the same dream, that is the greatest superpower, and I’ll take that any day over heat vision.

So that’s my story. While I still read Superman and Spiderman, I read Henry David Thoreau, Martin Luther King Jr., and Jackie Salit now too. I think they’d get along well together. Why am I an independent? Because I’m a comic book geek, and I know who the good guys are."

So what is your independent story?

Michael H. Drucker
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Saturday, May 22, 2010

Andrew Cuomo Announces His Run For Governor of NYS





In his official campaign announcement video for Governor of the State of New York, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo outlines his comprehensive plan for cleaning up New York State. Mr. Cuomo’s report said his plan was aimed at carrying out the most ambitious restructuring of state government since 1919, when Gov. Alfred E. Smith undertook a similarly broad restructuring. The plan would take on what is arguably the most antiquated governing structure in the nation. The attorney general has asked Al Gore to play a role in the effort, and he also hopes to recruit a number of business leaders.

The New York Democratic Nominating Convention starts on March 25, 2010.

The Independence Party Nominating Convention is June 5, 2010 in Albany.

CLICK HERE to view State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo officially announce his campaign for Governor of New York by Manhattan's Tweed Courthouse [20 minutes].

Use the above link for more information.

Michael H. Drucker
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Sunday, May 16, 2010

Renewed Fight Looms Over Ending Role of Political Parties in Elections



The New York City Charter Revision Commission will hold a series of public issue forums across the five boroughs throughout May and June 2010. Topics for each forum, which were selected by the Commission at its May 10th public meeting, include: Term Limits, Voter Participation, Government Structure, Public Integrity, and Land Use. At each forum, the Commission will hear expert testimony and will invite public input. Each issue forum is open to the public and will be streamed live via webcast through their website, Wednesday, June 2 – VOTER PARTICIPATION (Nonpartisan Municipal Elections) will take place at Lehman College, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West, Music Building, Faculty Dining Room, Bronx at 6 p.m.

Mayor Bloomberg, a registered independent, has said he will push for the idea again this year only if there is sufficient support for it to win at the ballot box, and he has already found some unexpected allies.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, a Democrat who opposed nonpartisan elections in 2003, said in an interview that he had “agreed to revisit the issue” and would convene a meeting of community leaders to discuss the idea in the coming weeks. “It’s a conversation I think we need to have,” Mr. Sharpton said. To a large degree, the 2003 battle centered on Mr. Bloomberg, then a fresh-face mayor, and what many viewed as his crusade to redraw the political landscape. Mr. Sharpton said that with Mr. Bloomberg in his third and presumably final term, the question of nonpartisan elections “is not about him. It becomes a depersonalized fight about principles.”

Citizens Union, a government watchdog that also opposed nonpartisan elections in 2003, said that it, too, would reconsider the measure, especially after the historically low voter turnout for the 2009 citywide election. “We are concerned about the decline in voter participation,” said Dick Dadey, the executive director of the group. “Given our interest in election reform broadly, we want to revisit the issue of nonpartisan elections as a possible solution to that.”

Several Republican leaders have also expressed openness to the idea, or outright support for it, including Councilman Eric A. Ulrich, of Queens, and Jay Savino, the chairman of the Bronx Republican Party.

Supporters, including leaders of the city’s Independence Party, said that party politics had outlived its usefulness in city elections, and now blocked an estimated 800,000 unaffiliated voters from participating in primaries. In many races, especially for City Council, the primaries are a de facto general election, because the winner faces no serious opponent and cruises toward victory in November. In most nonpartisan election systems, all registered voters can cast a ballot for any candidate in the first round (which replaces a traditional party primary), and the top two finishers compete in the second round. (Over three-fourths of the twenty largest cities in the U.S. have non-partisan elections - mhd), including Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, Detroit, and Dallas have adopted some form of it. “It’s not very radical,” said Fred Newman, a leader in the city Independence Party.

Over the last few months, Howard Wolfson, the deputy mayor for government and communications, and Bradley Tusk, Mr. Bloomberg’s former campaign manager, have tried to gauge public support for the issue. Mr. Wolfson said the mayor “supports nonpartisan elections, but has concerns about the feasibility of recommending that the issue be on the ballot this November.” He said the decision about how to proceed was up to the Charter Revision Commission. Mr. Wolfson’s role has put him on the opposite side of the 2003 debate, when he led the Democratic Party’s extensive — and ultimately successful — efforts to defeat nonpartisan elections in New York City.

Use the above link to read, both for and against the issue, in the entire article By MICHAEL BARBARO, The New York Times.

Michael H. Drucker
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Friday, May 14, 2010

The Independent Movement in NYC


The New York City organizations of the Independence Party set out 15 years ago with a simple idea: To create a new and independent reform movement of New Yorkers from all walks of life. Partisan politics holds back positive development in our city. It’s that simple. We are a new kind of minor party that is genuinely independent, built from the bottom up and not tied to the Democratic and Republican parties (which the other minor parties are, big time!).

The Independence Party has over 100,000 members in New York City. Nearly 5,000 of them have joined local county committees in all five boroughs, the governing bodies of the organization. Thousands more sign petitions, volunteer, and play a role in the Independence Party’s many campaigns for political reform.

We support political reforms that bring the one million New York independents into the heart of the political process. Initiatives like nonpartisan municipal elections, seating independents on the Board of Elections, separating party interest from the public interest, and making sure that good policy, rather than partisan politics, guides the running of this city – are the core principles of our independent movement.

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The Executive Committees of the five boroughs meet together as a Citywide Executive Committee to discuss current and future issues. Each meeting is in a different borough.

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Phone Banks are an important process to keep in touch with the base.

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The New York City Independence Party Organizations marching in the African American Day Parade.

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We hold annual meetings in New York for the nations independents to come together and discuss our issues. There are training sessions on how to deal with your local legislation, ballot access, and opening the political process.

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We hold monthly Politics for the People classes were independents get together to discuss issues, and listen to guest speakers.

Use these links to find out more about New York City Independence Party Organizations and Independent Voting (CUIP).

Michael H. Drucker
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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Open Primaries and Non Partisan Elections

Our highly partisan political process must be opened up -- to voices, new ideas and new coalitions. No issue has more popularity or potency among independent voters than open primaries. Open primaries allow all voters, regardless of their party affiliation, the right to participate in each round of voting.

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The NYC Charter Revision Commission could permanently alter the structure of New York City government announced Monday which specific areas it might propose changing.

The city's Charter Revision Commission is ramping up its work, and is moving ahead with plans to hold a series of expert forums beginning later this month. These will pave the way for voters to decide as early as this fall on lasting changes to the structure of city government – and the way power is doled out.

The forums will focus on term limits, possibly eliminating political primaries, the land use process, and the structure of city government, which would include the role of the City Council, borough presidents, and the public advocate.

There's been some debate about whether the commission should put any proposed changes before voters this fall in a referendum. Some have argued that the commission should slow down and devote more time to proposing changes to the City Charter, which is essentially the city's constitution.

City University Chancellor Matthew Goldstein, who is chairman of the charter commission, made the case today for putting charter questions on the ballot this November.

“I've always said that I thought this year was a much better opportunity because there will be more active participation because we are going to have statewide elections,” he said. “That if I wanted to bring something or we wanted to bring something it made a lot of sense not to miss that opportunity.”

Supporters of doing away with party primaries are also gearing up for a fight. In 2003, city voters rejected a proposal for non-partisan elections, but one advocate says the issue stands a better chance now.

New York City local news channel NY1 turned to Harry Kresky, one of the nation's leading election attorneys, for commentary on nonpartisan elections when the Charter Revision Commission announced nonpartisan elections would be an area of focus for the next set of public hearings. The Commission was presented with strong and persuasive testimony from a diverse range of indies in the first round. "Americans across the country are very concerned about the hyperpartisanship in Washington and Albany and New York City. We don't think it's the same climate at all," said Harry Kresky of the New York City Independence Party.

The forums come on the heels of a series of public hearings the commission held in all five boroughs to solicit input from New Yorkers about their ideas for amending the City Charter. New Yorkers will have the opportunity to weigh in during these expert panels as well.

Use these links to find out more about Open Primaries and Non Partisan Elections.

Michael H. Drucker
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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Bullies 'R' Us

This Op-Ed is by a good friend.

Bully for the Massachusetts Legislature and Governor Deval Patrick, who in the wake of two high-profile teen suicides have now "outlawed" bullying in schools and in cyberspace. While it remains to be seen what impact the bill will actually have, it is clear that unless we change our adult-created culture of bullying, passing a law to deal with bullying is kind of like shooting spitballs at a charging rhino; the impact will be negligible, similar to that in the 41 states that enacted bullying legislation before Massachusetts.

Bullying, like child abuse, is not an issue that can be legislated away. It is woven into the fabric of our culture, and right now we're just tugging on a few loose threads. This is not meant to be a judgment, but rather an observation from a bully who grew up in a family where verbal, emotional, and physical bullying were passed down from generation to generation like an inheritance. You see, in my opinion, bullies bully because they themselves have been victims or witnesses of bullying, which is to be expected given its pandemic nature.

Use the above link to read the entire Op-Ed by Keith E. McHenry, the Executive Director of Plays for Living, Inc. (PFL), an award-winning nonprofit organization that uses live theater and facilitated conversation as tools for producing social change.

Michael H. Drucker
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Saturday, May 1, 2010

Does America need another party?

Here is some commentary about independents and minor parties:

MARTIN FROST - Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee from 1995 to 1998; representative from Texas from 1979 to 2005.

"A third party in the United States might appeal to some, but it could have a dramatic and unwelcome effect on how we elect presidents if it weren't accompanied by electoral college reform.

Under our current system, if no presidential candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes, the election is thrown into the U.S. House of Representatives, with each state having one vote.

Should a third party win any significant share of the electoral vote by carrying a few states, elections would routinely be decided in the House. You could have a very undemocratic result, with one candidate winning the most popular votes and another candidate winning the election in the House because of the number of state delegations his or her party controls. This result can occur in the electoral college in a two-candidate race, but it rarely does.

Also, even if the same candidate placed first in the popular vote and then won the vote in the House, his or her election could be seen as less than legitimate because of the general disgust the country has for Congress.

Our current system provides for an orderly transfer of power. A third party could make us look institutionally unstable and lead to all kinds of backroom deals in Congress that may not serve the national interest."

NEWT GINGRICH - Republican speaker of the House from 1995 to 1999.

"One of the great strengths of the American system has been its two-party structure. For virtually America's entire history two parties have been the centers of organized political effort. The collapse of the Whig Party and its replacement by the Republican Party has been the only significant change in a two-party structure that has existed since the election of 1828.

There are two powerful virtues to this structure. First, it forces both parties to accommodate a broad range of interests internally and makes internal compromise unavoidable. This leads to a conflict and values management process with much greater adaptability than the multi-party models in which each party is a center of rigid beliefs.

Second, it focuses responsibility. When Republicans failed to manage things effectively, they were held responsible. Democrats are now being held responsible. Multiparty systems blur responsibility and focus on politician-to-politician negotiating rather than politician-to-citizen accountability. That is not a path America should follow."

JOHN ANDERSON - Republican representative from Illinois from 1961 to 1981; member of the board of FairVote.

"It's no secret that I believe Americans deserve elections with more than two choices. I offered an independent candidacy for president in 1980 because my priorities were different from those of my opponents. Millions agreed and were more likely to vote and think about issues involving the environment, taxation and foreign policy that otherwise would have been ignored.

Third parties and independents, in fact, regularly contest our elections despite voting rules that deny their reality. They help us hold the major parties accountable and sometimes win, as was true of my friend Lowell Weicker, a former governor of Connecticut, and as may happen this year in Florida and Rhode Island.

I fervently hope that we join most of the civilized world in adopting proportional representation to open our legislatures to new voices. But broader consensus can be achieved more quickly for a simple rule change that would accommodate more choice: the "instant runoff" alternative voting system used in Australia and a growing number of American cities. Australians had an average of seven candidates in their last House races, yet every winner earned an electoral majority, and no candidate was criticized as a "spoiler." It's time to enrich our politics by embracing voter choice in America."

DAN SCHNUR - Director of the University of Southern California's Unruh Institute of Politics; communications director for John McCain's 2000 presidential campaign.

"There's no such thing as a raging moderate. Periodically, the aggrieved centrists in one or the other of the two major parties make noise about the need for a new, centrist political entity that will free the country from the grip of liberal and conservative extremists. There's a legitimate argument to be made that the hyperpartisanship that increasingly dominates the nation's political conversation is preventing much of the cooperation that's needed to address our most critical policy challenges. But it's unlikely that a third party is the magical solution to those problems, and identifying and cultivating the necessary emotional firepower to make that party into reality is even less likely.

For those donors and activists who do think a third party is necessary, the next six months present the best opportunity they've had in many, many years. If angry centrists from across the country converged on Florida to elect its governor to the U.S. Senate, that would be precisely the type of jump-start that a new national party would need. And a movement that included Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R), Sens. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) and Arlen Specter (D-Pa.), and other besieged middle-of-the-road political figures could conceivably remake the American political landscape. But when moderates get angry, by definition, they are no longer moderate. So don't hold your breath waiting for that third party to happen anytime soon."

MARK PENN - Chief executive of Burson-Marsteller; adviser to Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign; pollster and adviser to Bill Clinton from 1995 through 2000.

"So starbucks has 155 combinations of coffee but America and Great Britain only have two parties? The election in Britain could be a game changer if the Liberal Democrats get nearly 30 percent of the vote. For the first time the major parties agreed to debates, and the results so far have been stunningly favorable for the outsider party.

In the United States, we have the structural issue that there are many Democrats who are socially liberal and economically more conservative than the leadership. And the Republicans have many members who believe in the economic philosophy of the party but reject the religious right. Both groups are not entirely comfortable with their party and have see-sawed in their voting.

On top of this, we have a record number of independents in the country, along with new, open media and Supreme Court rulings that make it easier and easier for non-party interests to participate in politics. This is why it is critically important for Democrats to welcome the vital center.

But if party primaries are driven farther to the left and the right by partisans, we are going to see more independent candidates at all levels. It's part of the natural change in politics, and I think all eyes will be on Britain to see the final result."

KEITH APPELL - Republican strategist, former national spokesman for Steve Forbes' presidential campaign and senior vice president of CRC Public Relations.

"The rise of the Tea Party movement is a healthy manifestation of our democracy. Much media attention has been paid in recent days to Florida Gov. Charlie Crist's decision to go independent. But Crist's switch is less about third parties than about his inability to win a Republican primary while his state suffers from record unemployment even after he embraced President Obama and his stimulus package.

On the broader issue, the Tea Party movement has driven much of the political discussion in recent months and has motivated many thousands who weren't previously politically active and brought them together with veterans, retirees and small-business people who legitimately see the growth of government and deepening debt as red flags.

Additionally, it has been fascinating to watch the media's evolving definition of the Tea Partyers from ignorant Obama opponents to "AstroTurf" (as though these people weren't real grass roots) to angry mob to being motivated by racial distrust. The movement stems from Washington's elitist disconnect from common constituents: enacting consequential legislation without reading it (stimulus); enacting far-reaching legislation over public opposition (health care); and an overall instinct for lecturing instead of listening.

Like Crist, congressional Democrats now own this agenda. Like Crist, they face unfavorable economic conditions. Democrats may suffer the consequences Crist is likely to face in November."

Joe Raedle/Getty Images
"Gov. Charlie Crist announced on Thursday that he would run as an independent for the United States Senate. There is currently no reason to think that the 2010 election will produce anything different. The dominance of the Democrats and Republicans stems in part from the mechanics of the electoral process.

Ballot access poses a big hurdle: it can be difficult and costly for other kinds of candidates to get on the general election ballot. Then they find it tough to get campaign money. The major parties have well-established fundraising networks, including contributors seeking to curry favor with incumbent politicians. Those on the outside have nothing comparable.

They also have to contend with the “spoiler” image. Voters worry that, by supporting a minor candidate, they could be helping a major-party candidate that they dislike."

In 2000, Ralph Nader drew votes from Al Gore, thus tipping Florida to George W. Bush — a result that most Nader voters probably did not intend. Six years later, a Republican senator from Montana got “Nadered” by a Libertarian, and his loss enabled the Democrats to take control of the Senate.

Of the few victorious off-brand candidates, most have not been true independents at all, but Republicans or Democrats carrying on a factional struggle. In 1970, New York State elected James L. Buckley as a Conservative. He won because many Republicans saw him as a more faithful representative of their party than incumbent Charles Goodell. Once in the Senate, he caucused with the G.O.P.

Governor Crist is hardly avatar of independence. He was very happy to receive the endorsement of the National Republican Senatorial Committee and was looking forward to the support of the party establishment. He bolted only because rank-and-file primary voters were about to reject him with a thump.

His decision to run as an independent is not the tip of the iceberg. It is a lonely chunk of ice with very little beneath."

Susan Sullivan Lagon - is a senior fellow at the Government Affairs Institute at Georgetown University and has taught American politics and constitutional law at Georgetown.

"More voters may be rejecting party labels lately, but the candidates they have to choose from won’t be.

Even the much-hyped Tea Party movement has been more influential in endorsing major party candidates than in offering up its own. Despite voters’ clear hostility toward both major parties this year, independent candidacies for federal office still face long odds simply because the electoral structure is designed for and by Democrats and Republicans.

Charlie Crist was the Republican heir apparent to the Senate seat vacated by Mel Martinez and his lead was seen as insurmountable as recently as a few months ago. His moderate views have often put him at odds with his party but his decision to run as an independent is a simple political calculation in light of polls showing that he could well lose the August 24 primary to the more conservative Marco Rubio.

It was a move reminiscent of Arlen Specter’s poll-driven “conversion experience.” Opportunism? Maybe. But the tip of an independent iceberg? Hardly.

True, the two major parties are becoming even more polarized, as primary challenges to respected incumbents like Sen. Bob Bennett, Republican of Utah and Sen. Blanche Lincoln, Democrat of Arkansas, attest. But that doesn’t mean we’re gearing up for a flurry of independent candidates.

Ballot access laws in all 50 states automatically list the Democratic and Republican candidates, while others have to jump through hoops (e.g., paying a fee, petitions with verified signatures, etc.) just to be listed on the ballot. Even the much-hyped Tea Party movement has so far been more influential in endorsing major party candidates than in offering up its own.

Governor Crist can mount a viable campaign as an independent for the same reason Senator Lieberman could. He’s a known commodity with a solid base of supporters who are stunned that their candidate could be treated so shabbily by their respective party establishments.

Just as Senator Lieberman saw many of his colleagues campaign against him when the more liberal Ned Lamont won the Democratic primary, Governor Crist has already been disinherited by the Republican establishment. Even George LeMieux, who was appointed to the Senate by Governor Crist after Mel Martinez resigned last year, won’t support him now. Should Charlie Crist win the election, with which party would he caucus?"

Marjorie Randon Hershey - is a professor of political science and director of the Leadership, Ethics, and Social Action program at Indiana University. She is the author of “Party Politics in America,” now in its 14th edition.

"We prize it as a cultural value, but independence — both among voters and among candidates — is the exception, not the rule. It’s true that about 40 percent of respondents tell poll-takers that they are politically “independent,” and this has been the case for a long time.

Pure independents tend to be less knowledgeable about the candidates, less interested in politics and a lot less likely to vote. Yet just one follow-up question usually reveals that the great majority of these self-professed independents actually lean toward either the Democrats or the Republicans, and these “independent leaners” behave in as partisan a manner in their attitudes and voting behavior as do most party identifiers.

Note that independent voters can still be very important in American elections, even though there aren’t many of them. Most Democratic and Republican identifiers will vote for the candidate of their party, and the proportions of Democrats and Republicans in the American public are relatively balanced; there are more Democratic identifiers than Republicans, but the Republicans are more likely to come out to vote in elections.

As a result, those who are not party-identified, if they swing toward one candidate rather than dividing evenly, may well decide the outcome of a race. That is not always a happy thought; survey research has told us for decades that, contrary to the idealized image of the thoughtful nonpartisan, those who classify themselves as pure independents are less knowledgeable about government and the candidates of the specific election, less interested in politics, and therefore a lot less likely to turn out at the polls than are party identifiers.

Independent candidates are rare as well, and for good reason. It takes a lot more effort and resources to run as an independent, because state legislatures make the rules governing access to the ballot, almost all state legislators are Democrats or Republicans, and in almost every state they make it harder for independents (and especially for minor party candidates) to qualify for the ballot.

And because most voters are partisans, there’s less of a natural constituency for an independent candidate. So we find, as we did with both Ross Perot and Ralph Nader, that support for independent and minor party candidates tends to shrink by Election Day.

Further, I suspect that the experience we’ll have with independent candidacies this year will not encourage candidates’ independence in the long-term.

Both parties have moved farther toward the ideological extremes in recent decades — the Republicans toward the right, the Democrats toward the left. Given that voter turnout in primaries is usually low and dominated by strong partisans, who tend to be more ideologically extreme, it’s standard for candidates to appeal more to their party’s extreme wing in primaries.

But this year we’ve seen some upheavals in the Republican ranks in favor of far-right candidates. Sometimes (as in the case of Crist in Florida), the more moderate Republican has become an independent after being pushed out by the right wing. In other cases (as in the New York 23rd House district last year), it’s been the right-winger who has run as an independent or third-party candidate after the more moderate Republican has been nominated.

In both cases, this divides the Republican vote and gives the Democrat more of a chance to compete. That’s not a situation that will benefit the Republicans in the long run. Ideological purity wins races only when voters value it. In a system where most citizens want both lower taxes and more government services, the value of ideological purity is fairly limited."

Julian E. Zelizer - is a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. He is the author of “Arsenal of Democracy: The Politics of National Security From World War II to the War on Terrorism.”

"Charlie Crist’s decision to run as an independent shows a deep frustration that exists among many moderate Republicans. The problem for moderates is that, over the past three decades, both parties have gradually moved farther toward the extremes of the political spectrum.

Historically, the major parties respond to discontents by adjusting their agenda or scaring off the threat. The trend has been especially powerful within the G.O.P. where conservative activists have dominated party decision-making and liberal Northeastern Republican voters have vanished.

The rise of the Tea Party movement has further fueled this “conservativication” of the Republican Party. Without anywhere to go, some members of the party, like Governor Crist, will bolt from their political home when they find it impossible to accept the policy demands made by conservative leaders.

There have been other moments when frustration with a major party spurred movements toward third parties, as happened in the early 20th century when former President Theodore Roosevelt ran as the Progressive Party candidate in 1912 against the conservative policies of Republican President William Howard Taft.

Although there are a few moments when these bursts of independent campaigns turn into something larger, such as the formation of the Republican Party in the 1850s, generally these efforts fizzle.

Historically, one of the major parties responds to the sources of discontent by adjusting their agenda or they exercise their muscle by scaring off the threat. Democrats, for instance, were able to win over many of the progressive Republicans under F.D.R. in the 1930s. Republicans were able to get Sen. John McCain to shed his maverick tendencies after 2000. The fact is that the major parties have the organizational and financial muscle that makes independent challenges difficult to sustain.

More realistic than a new era of independent politicians is the possibility that some Republican leaders attempt to respond to Governor Crist’s decision by creating more space within their party for the homeless center. Otherwise, Republicans will have to confront the very real possibility that conservative Democrats will welcome that vote themselves."

Norman J. Ornstein - is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

"Senator Joe Lieberman plowed the road that Gov. Charlie Crist is now following — a high profile officeholder popular with the middle of the electorate but unable to win over his party’s base, turning instead to an independent candidacy that requires only a third of the voters to hold (or win) a major office.

In the long term, if the two major parties cater increasingly to the fringe elements in their own bases, a revolt will be more attractive. There are differences, of course; Senator Lieberman was denied renomination by Connecticut Democrats to a Senate seat he had long held, while Governor Crist was on a path of defeat for nomination to an open Senate seat he craves. But the similarities are more powerful.

Both are well-connected, well-known and well-financed. Senator Lieberman saw a clear path between a very liberal Democratic nominee and a conservative Republican; with Florida Republicans on a course to nominate a candidate from the right edge of the spectrum, and Democrats ready to nominate a liberal, the middle is also wide open for Governor Crist to compete. In both cases, the election system left time for the candidates to switch to Independent status and be on the ballot in the fall.

Is this the harbinger of a major trend to come? There are other signs of hope for Indies, including Bernie Sanders in Vermont and a history of Independent governors in Maine. But a major trend is doubtful. It is true that the electorate is showing more signs of voters drifting away from firm identification with the two major parties — but most of the drift is not to pure independent status, but to a continued affinity for one party or the other (what we in the trade call “leaners.”)

It takes an unusual combination of circumstances for a candidate to have the name, money and broad appeal to gain enough traction to win statewide or other key offices against well-financed and entrenched candidates from the two major parties. There will undoubtedly be more independent candidacies, but in the near term most will not be coming from the middle but from the edges, like Tea Party insurgents from the right or the new left-wing North Carolina First Party, which was started by the service employees union.

The longer term may be a different story. If the two major parties cater increasingly to the fringe elements within their own bases, as the Republicans are doing with enthusiasm now, the opportunity for a genuine revolt of the middle, with a lot more candidates like Charlie Crist, will be much more apparent and attractive."

David C. King - is a lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School, where he is also faculty chair of Harvard’s Executive Program for Newly Elected Members of the U.S. Congress.

"Florida Governor Charlie Crist is a strong politician with a stable base of Republican party moderates in Florida. But while independent and third party candidates occasionally win, the party system is tilted against them.

If the Democrats offer up a pragmatic centrist, the Senate seat will be theirs for the taking. Indeed, there has only been one electorally successful third party, the Republican Party, which challenged the Whig Party’s northern base in 1856 and wiped the Whigs out after the 1860 elections.

There’s a certain logic to two-party dominance, even though third parties have been incubators for good ideas. No matter how many candidates there are in a race, whoever gets the most votes wins. So there’s a strong incentive to form majority-winning coalitions before elections. Notice that this doesn’t happen in “proportional representation” systems, where majority coalitions form after elections.

With the Republican exception in 1860, every significant third party movement in U.S. has been absorbed by the two parties within three electoral cycles.

What of Governor Crist? The Florida Republican party is so deeply divided that the governor has an opening to win — as long as independent-minded Democrats vote for him. That will be a tall order.

Think of this race as similar to the presidential election in 1912 when a much-loved moderate Republican, Teddy Roosevelt, ran as under the Progressive Party banner against his more conservative Republican nemesis, William Taft. The winner? Woodrow Wilson, with just 42 percent of the vote.

If the Democratic party runs too far to the left in this campaign, it will open up space for Governor Crist to win as an independent. But if the Democrats offer up a pragmatic centrist, the Senate seat will be theirs for the taking."

What do you think?

Michael H. Drucker
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