'18 Midterms: Dems win House by largest midterm raw vote margin ever

acri1

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Garlin Gilchrist II will get nod as Whitmer's running mate
Kathleen Gray, Detroit Free Press
Published 5:39 p.m. ET Aug. 19, 2018 | Updated 7:30 p.m. ET Aug. 19, 2018

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Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gretchen Whitmer will name Detroit political activist Garlin Gilchrist II as her running mate on Monday morning, the Free Press has learned.

While the Whitmer campaign didn't confirm the choice, sources told the Free Press that Gilchrist, the former director of Innovation & Emerging Technology for the city of Detroit, will join the ticket at a 9:30 a.m. announcement in Lansing.

It will come five days before both the Republican and Democratic parties hold their summer conventions to officially nominate candidates for lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state, state Supreme Court, state Board of Education and the boards governing University of Michigan and Michigan State and Wayne State universities.

The selection of Gilchrist achieves several goals for Whitmer: it gets a Detroiter on the ballot for the Nov. 6 general election and an African American. And on the statewide Democratic ticket, which now includes all white women – Whitmer, U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, attorney general candidate Dana Nessel and secretary of state candidate Jocelyn Benson – Gilchrist also provides some gender diversity.

Gilchrist, 35, also is a nod to the growing movement of often young and liberal progressives in the state. He was a political organizer for MoveOn.org, a group that works to elect progressive candidates and during his 2017 race for Detroit City Clerk, he was endorsed by Our Revolution, the organization that grew out of the 2016 presidential candidacy of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont Independent.

He was on a short list of Democratic candidates that also included state Sen. Vincent Gregory and former state Rep. Rudy Hobbs, both of Southfield, Wayne County Sheriff Benny Napoleon and state Rep.Sheldon Neeley of Flint.

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Gretchen Whitmer, Democratic candidate for governor in November 2018. (Photo: Bill Pugliano, Getty Images)

The nomination comes nearly a week after Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, the Republican candidate for governor, named former state Rep. Lisa Posthumus Lyons, a Republican from Alto and current Kent County clerk, as his running mate. The Republican Party’s summer convention will be Saturday in Lansing.

The contrast between the two candidates for lieutenant governor will be sharp. As a candidate for Detroit City clerk, Gilchrist fought for easier access to voting, more earlier voting and opening new polling places in the city. Lyons, who was chairwoman of the state House Elections and Ethics committee, supported legislation that doubled campaign contribution limits while protecting the anonymity of donors who pay for controversial “issue ads” that have become increasingly influential in Michigan political campaigns. She supported a plan to allow voters to cast absentee ballots without having to provide an excuse, but the legislation stalled in the state Senate.

One of the duties of the lieutenant governor is to preside over the state Senate and Lyons has that legislative experience that Gilchrist lacks.

Gilchrist grew up in Detroit and Farmington and graduated from the University of Michigan with degrees in computer science. He worked as a software engineer at Microsoft and then became a political organizer with MoveOn.org and the social media manager for the campaign of President Barack Obama.

But he returned home to Detroit with his wife, Ellen, and twins — a son and daughter — in 2014 to become the City of Detroit’s director of Innovation & Emerging Technology. He now is the executive director of the Center for Social Media Responsibility at U-M.

In his race for Detroit City clerk in 2017, even as a newcomer, he significantly outraised incumbent Janice Winfrey, with $308,794 mostly from small donations from contributors across the country while Winfrey raised only $29,300. But he ultimately lost the race by 1,482 votes, out of nearly 100,000 ballots cast.

Stu Sandler, who helps run the Better Jobs Stronger Families political action committee that is backing Schuette, said the Whitmer/Gilchrist ticket is "the most liberal ticket ever."

"Whitmer and Gilchrist will support higher taxes, reckless spending, and liberal policies that will move Michigan backwards. Michigan can’t afford Whitmer and Gilchrist,” said Sandler.

But Detroit political consultant Jamaine dikkens said Gilchrist will help bring young people out to vote and help mobilize African-American voters in Detroit.

"He brings a lot of what Democratic Party party needs — somebody with a lot of energy, somebody who is thoughtful and who thinks through issues. And he proved himself to run a good campaign," dikkens said.

In addition to officially nominating Gilchrist at the Democratic convention this weekend in East Lansing, delegates will make official what they voted on during an endorsement convention in April: Nessel for attorney general; Benson for secretary of state and Supreme Court candidates Megan Kathleen Cavanagh and Samuel Bagenstos. Delegates also will vote on the candidates for state Board of Education and the three university governing boards.

In all honestly, he's not a bad pick. :ehh:
 

tru_m.a.c

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By all practical measures, Dimond matches up well with traditional Democrats. He’s from the labor/trade class of workers that, until the 1990s, had been one of the party’s central constituencies. He’d been a union organizer since 2103. And on the fiscal side, he’s willing to consider an income tax to close the gap between state revenue and spending.

Strategically though, opting out of the primary gave Dimond a guaranteed spot on the general election ballot. There he’ll face only one Democrat instead of the three running for the party’s nomination. He can still appeal to centrist Democrats and independents. And it’s likely he’ll pick most of the registered Republicans who couldn’t vote for him in the primary.

It’s a very different story for Ortiz. The former Ketchikan school teacher was a registered Republican in a district which had been solidly Republican for years. He left them for the upstart Republican Moderate Party, became a Democrat for a short time, and finally walked away from them all.

In other words, Ortiz’s first loyalty was to principles rather than party. So in 2014 it made sense for him to run as an independent. That year he squeaked past the Republican candidate with just over 50 percent of the vote. In 2016, his reelection margin was 10 percent.

Unlike the last two elections though, this year the Democrats have a contender.

Ghert Abbott is a 32-year old political newcomer who entered the race just before the filing deadline. Until he declared his candidacy, there wasn’t any reason for Ortiz to run in the primary. A disadvantage he had to consider though was the possibility he’d alienate some of the less hardcore Republicans who helped elect him four years ago.

Like Abbott, former U.S. Sen. Mark Begich jumped in the race for governor on the last day. That changed Walker’s reelection strategy. A month earlier he had filed to run in the Democratic primary. Now he’s out.

Everyone knows Walker’s story. Philosophically he’s a Republican. He dropped his party affiliation when he and Democratic Party nominee Byron Mallot formed the non-partisan unity ticket late during the 2014 campaign. That Hail-Mary pass put him in the Governor’s mansion.

What makes Walker independent isn’t a label though. It’s his ability to govern without being tethered to the dictates of either party.

One can argue, as Kim Metcalfe did in her Empire piece 10 days ago, that Walker should have faced Begich in the primary. But on the other hand, Begich might not have run at all had he known Walker would change his mind. Because a three-way race is a much bigger hurdle for him too.

Begich had two distinct advantages running against Walker in the Democratic primary. First, the thousand of registered Republicans who supported Walker four years ago wouldn’t be eligible to vote. And he could expect the party bosses to favor him the same way the national party sided with Hillary Clinton when independent Sen. Bernie Sanders challenged her during the presidential primaries two years ago.
 

tru_m.a.c

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:hhh::snoop: @FAH1223 you see this shyt? Delaney is claiming that MoCo is a red district?

Backstory: I had to do some rounds down at the House back in May (I think) because I was trying to secure some "yays" on a few house bills. I was like fukk it. Let me talk to Jamie Raskin. He's district 8. We're separated by a few miles. Let me see what he's about. Chopped it up with him for a solid 10mn b. Not on some stand in the hallway shyt either. Invited me and my frat bro into his office and we had an actual sit down conversation.

However Delaney is my actual rep. I caught the mean swerve from his assistants. The whole "he's not in", "take this card and you can speak with so and so" swindle. I'm his constituent. I should be able to talk to the guy who "represents" me. If not him, one of the MANY people sitting in the office not doing shyt. I kid you not, I got no more than 5 steps into his doorway.

Right then and there I knew I'd never vote for Delaney again in my life.

Be mindful of how you treat your constituents brehs.
 
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