What are we looking for in a Candidate?
Monday, August 11, 2008 at 04:58PM While reading Chaz's column found here, he made an interesting statement that jumped out at me:
Whether it’s the Obama / McCain contest, the Governor’s race or the races for Congress--the best organized, hardest working teams will win.
I don't disagree with the statement Chaz made here in the least but instead I find it hit me like a cold hard slap in the face. We often don't support the candidate who is the best or even who's views most agree with our own, instead as Chaz correctly pointed out here we support for the one who simply campaigns the best.
Maybe that's the problem with our political system, instead of looking at voting records and actual actions we instead get sucked in by colorful speeches and sound bytes.
For instance here's a short quiz I found on the net with two unknown candidates...
Candidate 1: Middle-aged. Went to college and got a degree. Served in the National Guard for six years. Became a sergeant. While in the National Guard, earned a law degree. Became an investigator for a consumer-protection division. Was elected to a federal office. Was re-elected to a federal office. Was elected to a federal statewide office. Was re-elected to a federal state-wide office. Served in the executive branch for four years.
Candidate 2: Middle-aged. Studied overseas. Attended two different colleges in the U.S. before getting a degree. Went on to get a law degree. Worked community affairs in his adopted home city. Was elected to local office. Served in local politics for just over six years. Got elected to a federal state-wide office. Has one real year of experience in that job.
Which of these two choices would you pick for a federal level position? Not a single person I've asked has picked candidate 2 as their choice yet when you put a face to the number they jump up and down for him. Candidate 2 is Barack Obama. Candidate 1 is Dan Quale who many consider a political joke.Anyone who's objective at all will agree Obama has no real experience yet because he gives speeches that leave people feeling all warm inside he's now one of the two top picks for the highest office in the country. People lose objectivity when they see someone they like on a personal level. Obama comes off as a great guy, a lot of reason to like him. But saying he's a swell guy isn't reason to put him in charge of our country.
Then of course we continue to see time and time again, candidates with views that are unpopular do everything and anything to prevent the discussion of those views or to hide those views. Why do you think Democrats want to ban the pledge? They know openly arguing in favor for income or sales taxes will lose elections so they seek to stop debate. They seek to take it off the table so people wont know one way or the other who supports what. They want to win by keeping you uninformed and voting strictly for the person who campaigns the best.
Folks it's time to stop voting based on media clips, slick campaign slogans and start looking past the campaigns at who IS the best, not who campaigns the best.
Election 

Reader Comments (5)
Even researching voting records on the NH House/Senate website located at www.gencourt.state.nh.us/ie/default.html, it can still be confusing considering that NH does not vote on a bill itself but on the committee recommendation of the bill, which can either be an Ought to Pass (OTP) or Inexpediant to Legislate (ITL). I can't tell you how many times a constituent called to complain about a way I voted on a bill only to find out I voted YES to kill (ITL) a bill, not yes to pass the bill (or the other way around).
Also, unless the candidate has a website, and most lower tier do not, the voter has no way of knowing where the candidate stands on the issues important to them.
So it comes down to name recognition, word of mouth, reading letters to the editor, or ads in local papers.
But that still may not fill the bill as ads are expensive and some voting districts, as in my case, include 25 towns.
Of course, you can google a persons name and hope for the best with that.
But it still comes down to the candidate getting out and meeting people one on one.
Not an easy task for candidates still holding a job, but it can be done.
So, I'll be seeing folks around the state by doing sign waves, visiting transfer stations and attending events.
In the meantime, voters can log onto my website, www.pammanney.com to find out where I stand on the issues regarding County Government.
Pam Manney is running for County Commissioner, Hillsborough County, District 3.
There are groups who already do all the research for you. Groups like the NHLA who research voting records of NH public officials and rate candidate based on their supporting individual freedom and choice over big government. Or the National tax payers union that rates federal candidates based on fiscal responsibility.
In today's day and age there is no excuse for someone to try to claim for instance that Obama would be more fiscally responsible them McCain... the NTU's review of their voting records proves it isn't the case.
This would especially be true for groups whose sole consern is one specific issue.
So voters need to do a little background research on the special interest group before taking the particular rating to heart.
Richard Barnes has done well to try to refocus a discussion of the lead question. In his desire to shift the focus away from Chaz Proulz' emphasis on "the best organized, hardest working teams...", however, he too quickly moves on, bypassing factors important to campaign teams .
What about money -- the best financed teams? 2008 is well on the way to being a billion dollar plus plus political year, with hundreds of millions of dollars already raised and spent on the presidential race. Meanwhile, all NH major party candidates below the presidential level are aiming to join the million dollar club -- to fulfill the media's self-interested, self-fulfilling prophecy that no candidate can be considered "viable" if he or she can't raise at least a million bucks. Politics is now driven by an incestuous mix of big money and big media that drive a financial arms race of campaign finance. This is a race that we all lose unless we're political pro's, media owners or career pol's.
Even though we can all think of races lost by rich candidates, the evidence shows that the likelihood of winning rises with the level of campaign financing. So, the self-styled "activist" who won her Congressional seat with a "low budget" campaign in 2006, Carol Shea-Porter, has joined the Washington club and played the same go-along/get along, party-animal, party-politics game as her predescessor -- voting the party line with her party's leadership 98-99% of the time. Surprise! -- Her campaign's bank account registered nearly $600,000 at last count, with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee ready to pitch in a lot more money to make sure she retains her seat. She also has the gall to describe herself as "middle class" while being paid $165,000 per year plus additional rich perq's and bene's received by Members of Congress.
OK, Richard, let's accept your challenge: "We don't often support the candidate who is the best or even who's views most agree with our own..."(and so we need to) "start looking past the campaigns, at who IS the best..."
The problem, Richard, is that you don't provide any basis (criteria or characteristics) to help folks judge "the best." One way I try to do this is to pose a lead question at the start of my campaign brochure: "Who do YOU need to represent YOU in a NEW CONGRESS? ---
• An organization man or an entrepreneur
• A money raiser or a people raiser?
• A politician who reacts to polls & media, or a legislator who listens, thinks and deliberates?
• A political party-crat or an independent man?
• A go-along, get-along, YES-man, or a Rep. who asks tough questions?
• Someone who plays politics in the present tense or a Congressman who legislates for the long-term, a better future?
• A Representative who joins the DC Congressional Club to empower himself, or someone to empower YOU?
The answers depend how a voter feels, on two levels, about:
(1) The temper of the times we live in, and the state of our nation: Is it a time of change, uncertainty, danger and threat -- of tough times, with many more folks hurting, on the edge and having to make tough trade-offs between fuel, food, medicine and rent or mortgage?
(2) Congress as an institution: Is the House of Representatives the people's House or part of the best Congress money can buy? What are taxpayers' dollars buying in the way of performance, problem-solving, etc.? Is Congress an adaptive, innovative, responsive institution, or backward and resistant to change?
On (2): Note that criteria should differ between the executive and legislative branches. The sad thing about the Presidential primary season is not only that it has sucked up obscene amounts of money, time and attention but that it has reinforced an assumption that undermines our democratic republic -- that all we need is to pick a white (or black) knight who would ride triumphantly on a white horse into the White House to save our butts. The fact that most of what government does has to pass muster in the Congress has been conveniently ignored.
Polls, news and analyses all confirm what in our guts we know is true, what people are saying district-wide. Congress is not doing the public's business well at all. It is a hidebound institution dominated by political dinosaurs and two major incentives: go-along/get-along and spend, spend, spend. Neither major party is well-regarded. Neither provides answers to the major questions of our time nor solutions to the big problems we need to face as a nation, together. Congress is full of party animals playing party games that don't serve any of us well. Most voters are looking for someone who recognizes, as has not been recognized since 1994, that Congress is seriously in need of reform -- real change in the way things are done, not the big promise but small change of political advertising. Talk is cheap.
Thus, on Nov. 4th, we may see a reversal of past patterns. Rather than a vote for an independent candidate viewed as a wasted vote, a vote for a party nominee of either major party would truly be a wasted vote if one wants to see real change -- change that puts people front and center and minimizes the influence of big-money. A vote for either the Democratic or Republican candidate is a vote for politics and government as usual -- SS/DY [same sh--, different year]. So, on the 4th of November, many more voters may recall the 4th of July and decide to DECLARE their INDEPENDENCE!
These paragraphs provide a new perspective on Barnes' challenging question. The new perspective moves us away from the narrow, horse-race framing of political campaigns by the media. It distinguishes what the country needs from what political consumer-voters may want. The country needs candidates whose personalities and experience:
• Best match the challenges of our time: of increasingly rapid change, rising inequality, globalization, growing uncertainty, a reduced middle class and the American dream under threat.
• Demonstrate how to fill the talent gaps in Congress, including: the lack of an ability to deal with economic issues, lack of international experience and inability to involve constituents in seeking solutions to the problems that affect them, rather than treating them as client-recipients of political advertising or sources of donations.
• Show how to overcome Congressional disabilities, including short-term-itis, "dialing for dollars" over listening and service to people, ad-hocism, reactionary actions in response to media coverage of events, failing to read bills or attend to the Constitutionality of bills before voting on them, and hiding from the public rather than providing full accountability, information and transparency of Congressional actions to taxpayers.
Will voters "want" these qualities? We'll see. Good politics is an act of faith and love -- of faith in the judgment and common sense of the great American majority, and love of American people, individuals all. Such good politics is a prerequisite of a better government. Only people can take back their government from the incestuous mix of big money and big media that have so corrupted it. And that is why Pam's rejoinder is so important, showing that the winning formula for some of us is very simple: POLITICS = PEOPLE.
PETER BEARSE, Ph.D., Independent Candidate for Congress, NH CD 1.