Washtenaw County Democratic Party

Making the difference in local, state and national elections.

Recent Activities

Below are selected recent events and activies in which the Washtenaw County Democratic Party has been involved.

Democratic Candidates Forum:
Attorney General and Secretary of State

The Washtenaw County Democratic Party held a candidates forum on Sunday, March 28, 2010, at the Pittsfield Township Administration Building.

Participants:

  • Richard Bernstein, candidate for Attorney General
    (represented by Mark Bernstein)
  • David Leyton, candidate for Attorney General
  • Jocelyn Benson, candidate for Secretary of State
  • Janice Winfrey, candidate for Secretary of State

The Democratic candidates for Attorney General and Secretary of State will be selected at a Michigan Democratic Party Endorsement Convention to be held on April 17th, in Detroit.

Learn more about the Endorsement Convention at the MDP web site.

A convention agenda is available in PDF format.

Democratic Gubernatorial Candidates

The Washtenaw County Democratic Party held a Gubernatorial Candidates' Forum on Saturday, February 27, 2010, at the Pittsfield Township Administration Building.

Participants:

Virg Bernero Dan Kildee Alma Wheeler Smith
  • Virg Bernero, Mayor of Lansing
  • Dan Kildee, former Treasurer, Genesee County
  • Alma Wheeler Smith, State Representative, 54th District

Over 130 Democrats came out to hear from the candidates and pose questions via moderator Stu Dowty. It was a very informative event, and we were very pleased with the high level of participation, the quality of the questions asked, and the enthusiasm with which the participating candidates engaged with our community.

Report and Videos

A report and videos of the forum are posted online at:

Thanks to all participants, and to Bruce Fealk for the videos and postings.

Order a Forum DVD

A DVD of the gubernatorial forum is available for purchase. The DVD is one hour. Copies are $10, plus $2.50 for postage. To order, send $12.50 to:

WCDP, PO Box 3951, Ann Arbor, MI 48106

Update: Forum to be broadcast on CTN

The Gubernatorial Forum will be broadcast on Community Television Network (CTN), cable channel 17 (Comcast) to Ann Arbor subscribers. The initial broadcast will be on Sunday March 21st, at 12 noon. Additional replay times will include:

  • Saturday 3/27 at 7pm
  • Wednesday 3/31 at 8pm
  • Saturday 4/3 at 9am
  • Monday 4/5 at 10am

Thanks to Rod Casey for doing the video and making arrangments with CTN.

WCDP Town Hall:
Michigan's Supreme Court —
Why It Must be Changed

Working for Justice in 2010

A Town Hall discussion about the Michigan Supreme Court was held on Saturday January 23rd, following the WCDP Executive Board Meeting.

A expert panel gave presentations and lead a discussion on the history and current make-up of the Court, the status of employment law and consumer rights before the Court, concerns for voting rights issues before the Court, and the need to replace Justice Young in the 2010 election.

Panelists included:

  • Graham Teall, attorney, prosecutor, and former WCDP Chair.
  • David Blanchard, Washtenaw attorney and employment law specialist.
  • Lynn Shecter, Washtenaw attorney and consumer law specialist.
  • Jocelyn Benson, Wayne State University Law School Professor and candidate for Secretary of State.
  • Mark Bernstein, attorney and expert on the nature and impact of the MSC’s decisions during the past decade.

Watch the Townhall Online

Order a Townhall DVD

A DVD of the forum is available for purchase. The DVD is one hour. Copies are $10, plus $2.50 for postage. To order, send $12.50 to:

WCDP, PO Box 3951, Ann Arbor, MI 48106

Mark Schauer on Health Care Reform,
the Supreme Court, and More
Congressman Mark Schauer - MI 7

Keeping Washtenaw Blue

Congressman Mark Schauer (D-MI7) addressed the Western Washtenaw Democrats at their annual meeting on January 22.

Due to recent events in Massachussetts and at the Supreme Court, the Republican Party is energized and anticipating a flood of new financial support.

We will need to come together to fight for a Democratic agenda and for Democratic candidates at all levels.

Western Washtenaw Democrats

Local party groups are going to be critical as we work to counter the big money and big special interests that will be backing our opponents.

Couldn't attend? Here's what happened.

Our good friend Chris Savage has posted a detailed write-up of Schauer's remarks and Q/A with the group, along with some pictures. Go read it and learn more about where Mark stands.

New Officers Elected
to WCDP Executive Board

The Washtenaw County Democratic Party’s Executive Committee elected four new officers to the organization’s Executive Board at its meeting on November 15, 2009. The Executive Committee’s selections filled an existing vacancy in one office and also choose individuals to serve in two newly-created Vice-Chair positions. For one position two Co-Vice-Chairs were selected.

The new Vice-Chairs and their positions are:

  • Douglas McClure – Vice-Chair for Communications
  • Douglas Kelley -- Vice Chair for Membership
  • Roderick Casey and Mashif White – Co Vice-Chairs for Programs

The election of these officers fills all positions on the WCDP Executive Board, which now has fourteen members. The complete listing of the WCDP Executive Board is updated and online.

WCDP Annual Dinner 2009
WCDP Annual Dinnner 2009

Dinner Theme: A Celebration of
America's Struggle for the Right to Vote

Many thanks to Chris and Anne Savage for providing the following valuable record of an outstanding event. Originally posted at Eclectablog, Daily Kos, and the Huffington Post

Please note that (also thanks to Chris and Anne!) audio and a transcript of Representative Lewis' complete remarks are available online.

All of Anne's photos from the event can be found at this Flickr page. Check them out - you just might be in one!

Dinner in Review

All photos except the first one by Anne Savage. Visit her web site, Flickr Page, and blog.

On October 3, 2009, the Washtenaw County Democratic Party held its annual dinner. Three U.S. Congressmen were in attendance. The first was freshman Representative Mark Schauer, a young, vibrant and optimistic Congressman. The second was Representative John Dingell, the longest-serving member in Congress today and a man who has introduced a single-payer health care bill every year for 52 years. The third was a pioneer in the Civil Rights Movement, a man jailed over 40 times, beaten and bloodied for his views and actions, Representative John Lewis from Georgia. He attended President Obama's inauguration as the only living speaker from the rally at the March on Washington.

These three men, from dramatically different backgrounds and perspectives, all spoke with one voice in saying that health care reform in this country is the civil rights struggle of our time.


From L to R: County Dem. Party Chair Stu Dowty, Rep. Mark Schauer,
Rep. John Dingell, Rep. John Lewis

First to speak was Rep. Mark Schauer. He had a little something to say about Joe "the Heckler" Wilson appearing in Michigan with his Republican opponent Tim Walberg:

We were asked to comment and, of course, I had nothing to say. But some of my people did and one of the things they said was you are the company you keep. And, so, Tim Walberg has Joe Wilson and I have John Dingell and John Lewis.

And then he spoke of his two colleagues. And he put today's struggle to pass health care reform in the context of the American Civil Rights Movement that John Lewis was such an integral part of. He spoke, along with Dr. Martin Luther King, at the March on Washington at age 23, the youngest speaker that day. Lewis also took part in the famous Freedom Rides and was beaten and bloodied crossing a bridge in Selma marching for the right to vote. From his Wikipedia entry:

Lewis was instrumental in organizing student sit-ins, bus boycotts and non-violent protests in the fight for voter and racial equality. He endured brutal beatings by angry mobs and suffered a fractured skull at the hands of Alabama State police as he led a march of 600 people in Selma, Ala. in 1965

Here's what Rep. Schauer had to say about his two colleagues:

In an era when genuine American heroes are harder and harder to come by, it's an honor for me to serve with Congressman Lewis in the House and a real treat to have him here in Michigan tonight. Thank you, John, for being here. Thank you for everything you've done to make this country a better place and for your passion and integrity and for keeping Dr. King's dream alive...As you know, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, "Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle." Well, America and Michigan voted for change last year but now we have a better sense of what Dr. King meant when he said change comes through continuous struggle. The struggle now, of course, is over health care reform, something John Dingell knows a little bit about. One of the criticisms I often hear around my district about this effort is "what's the rush?"

Well, John Dingell has been introducing a bill to provide health insurance to every single American since 1957, before I was born. Before I was born and I'm getting gray hair! So it's been too long. So when people ask, "what's the rush?", I say we can't afford to wait. It's been a long struggle, decades in the making, but when health insurance reform - WHEN health insurance reform passes this year in the US Congress, the name on the bill will be of the man I'm proud to serve with and proud to introduce, your Congressman John Dingell.

And then the esteemed John Dingell spoke. He introduced Rep. Lewis and in the process, he tied Lewis' history fighting for civil rights in this country to the battle ahead over health care reform.

It my privilege to try to do the impossible: to tell you what a giant we have with us tonight and what an honor we have to have him here and how proud we can be that he has come back here to be with us to support us in what we are doing to try to see to it that we have the Democratic Party we need to win the next election at every level. And for that we say to you, John, we are grateful. He's going to give you a message tonight that is going to be of enormous value. That's because it's going to speak of the human spirit. He's going to speak of words that were important to me when I was a boy and my dad was in the Congress. He's going to talk about social justice. This is beyond the other meanings. It means that everybody is going to be confident that he or she will be able to be treated decently as they should in a great nation -- in the greatest nation in the world. And to know that they're going to receive the kind of consideration that goes with a citizenship in a body of that kind.

We owe this man tremendously for what it is that he has done already. but he is a shining light of leadership now in the time before us And he is going to be one of those who is going to carry this country across a difficult time. The fights that are going on over health care are some of the nastiest and most ungracious and indecent that I have ever seen. They're full of deceit and dishonesty and dishonor. We need to handle issues of this kind in a greater and more suitable way, one more fitting to the greatest nation in the world.
And he'll speak clearly to us about that.

He's going to carry us from where we are now, proud of what we've done about the human rights of our people. Proud of what we've done to make this a better country for ourselves, for our kids and, indeed, for ALL of our people regardless of our race, creed or color. But he's going to talk to us about what I have so many terms heard him talk about. and that is about how we now go forward to do the rest of the things that we must do to see to it that the strengths of this country are grown the way the should by seeing to it that we all have an appreciation that our stake in this country is meaningful and real. And that it does give social justice to all of our people. And how this is good. Not just for those few that have, but rather for all who should have. We are proud, indeed, that John Lewis is with us.

And then, finally, Representative Lewis spoke. He spoke for over 20 minutes. You can listen to the speech here and view a full transcript HERE.

Here are some excerpts.

Health care as a civil right, not a privilege:

John has already said, he made it plain, that we're in for a difficult fight on the issue of health care before us. Every session of the Congress this man, your Congressperson, has been introducing health legislation, following in the footsteps of his father. He believes, as I believe, that health care is a right and it's not a privilege but a right. And that the quantity and the quality of a person's health care should not be decided by the size of their personal wallet, that person's bank account or the zip code that that person lives in. We're going to pass health care and when we pass it, as Mark stated, John Dingell's name will be all over that bill. It will be a living tribute to him.

On his Republican colleagues:

When I was a young child, I wanted to be a minister. I wanted to preach the Gospel. So, from time to time, with the help of my brothers and sisters and my first cousins, I would get all of our chickens together from the chicken yard like you're gathered here in this room. My brothers and sisters and first cousins would line the outside around the chicken yard. Along with the chickens, my brothers and sisters and first cousins would become part of the congregation, of the audience and I would start preaching.

But when I looked back some of the chickens would bow their heads, some of the chickens would shake their heads, but they never quite said "amen"!

[laughter]

But I'm convinced that some of those chickens that I preached to in the 40s and the 50s tended to listen to me much better than some of my Republican colleagues listen to us in the Congress today or they listened to me better, I would think, better than Joe Wilson.

[applause]

I think some of those chickens were probably a little more productive. At least they produced eggs!

On the fight ahead over health care reform:

I asked my mother, I asked father, my grandparents, my great grandparents, "Why segregation? Why racial discrimination?" And they would say, "That's the way it is. Don't get in the way, don't get in trouble!"

But I was inspired to get in the way, to get in trouble. And it was good trouble and it was necessary trouble. And it's time for the Democratic Party all across America to get in trouble again and help Barack Obama pass health care! We must do it. We MUST do it!

[applause]

Our party, OUR party, we control the House, we control the Senate, we have the White House. The American people elected us to do something.

Now, in the 60s, we didn't have a website. We didn't have a iPod. We didn't have a cellular telephone. We didn't have a fax machine. But we used what we had to bring about a non-violent revolution, a revolution of values, a revolution of ideas. And it's time for us again as a people to mobilize, to organize, and turn people out to vote like we did in '08 and we must do it in 2010. You must send John Dingell back. You must send Mark Schauer back. We must maintain our majority.

You know, a lot of this is not about just defeating health care. Part of it is pure politics. They want to give the Democrats a defeat. They want to give President Barack Obama a defeat. And that must not happen on our watch.

[applause]

This is not a struggle that only lasts for one election or one term of a president. Our struggle is the struggle of a lifetime if that is what it takes to build a more perfect Union.

When I spoke at the March on Washington on August 28th, 1963 at the age of 23, I was the youngest speaker. I spoke number six. Dr. King spoke number ten. I remember saying in that speech, "You tell us to wait. You tell us to be patient. We cannot wait, we cannot be patient. We want our freedom and we want it NOW!" That's what we must say about health care: NOW is the time. We must pass health care now.

If it were up to John Dingell and John Dingell alone, we would have had single-payer.
Right, John? But we've got to come together with our friends, all of our friends, and our friends in the Senate, and send this president the strongest possible health care reform bill.

We can do it. Not just for ourselves. But for our children and their children, a generation yet a-born. If we fail to pass it, in my estimation, the American people and history will not be kind to us.

A right, not a privilege. A struggle as important and epic as the fight for civil rights in this country.

Three representatives, one voice:
health care is a civil right.

Again, many thanks to Chris and Anne Savage for providing such a valuable record of an outstanding event. Originally posted at Eclectablog, Daily Kos, and the Huffington Post

All of Anne's photos from the event can be found at this Flickr page. Check them out - you just might be in one!

Congressman Dingell Describes
"A Day in the Beltway"
Congressman John Dingell - MI 15

Congressman John Dingell has served in Congress longer than other federal lawmaker in history.

On Sunday May 31st, at a meeting of the WCDP County Committee, he described what a typical day in Washington is like for a member of Congress. His perspective from over fifty years in Congress gave his audience a unique opportunity to learn about the practical side of serving in a legislative body.

It became apparent, from first glance at a sample daily schedule for the Congressman that his "typical day" often stretched to twelve hours. It involved constant movement from one event to another, such as: Committee and Sub-Committee hearings (where, as a senior member, he can be called upon to present an "opening statement" for the hearing), meetings with constituent groups and business and labor organizations, staff briefings, receptions, and travel to the White House for special presentations.

His activities called for expertise and work in such important and diverse areas as: climate control, energy and environmental issues, the economy and the auto industry, consumer protection including imports and product and food safety, health care and health care reform legislation, and national parks and related projects in Michigan. Smart growth and planning for community college programs that meet future economic and job needs were addressed with community leaders.

Other, more specific issues also demanded attention, including solving passport issues for constituents and dealing with a mold problem at the Detroit Metro Airport.

Congressman Dingell also described the differences already felt in Washington due to the new Democratic Obama administration.

See more photos at our Flickr Photostream

Washtenaw County is fortunate to have as one of its Congressional Representatives the "Dean of the House", who not only is the longest serving member of Congress but also is a superb lawmaker and a skillful advocate for his constituents.

All American Lobby Day

END BULLYING AGAINST YOUTH IN MICHIGAN!
WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2009
LANSING

This event supports legislation – SB 0159 – which protects all Michigan youth from bullying at school. Significantly, the bill provides legal protections against bullying which: "(iv) is based on a pupil's actual or perceived religion, race, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, disability, height, weight, gender identity, socioeconomics status, or any other distinguishing characteristic or is based on association with another person who has or is perceived to have any of these characteristics."

This LOBBY DAY was endorsed by the WCDP Executive Committee at its meeting on April 18, 2009. Other sponsoring and endorsing organizations include:

  • Michigan Democratic Party
  • LGBT & Allies Caucus
  • Michigan Equality and Project Light
  • National Human Rights Campaign
  • Michigan NOW
  • Michigan Democratic MEA Caucus
  • Michigan Democratic Youth Caucus
  • Michigan Indo American Democratic Caucus
  • Order of St. John the Beloved (Cathlic Order)
  • and PFLAG National

Join others at: Teamsters Hall, Local 580, at 5800 Executive Drive, Lansing, Michigan, at 9am on May 13th.

For information contact Phil Volk at: philvolk2004@yahoo.com, or call 734-474-5290.

Inauguration Party Photo Memories

An Inauguration Party sponsored by the Washtenaw County Democratic Party and coordinated by the Community Action Network was held at the Bryant Community Center in Ann Arbor on January 20th. A video of President Obama's swearing in ceremony was shown and there were games, prizes, and commemorative T-shirts for children. Sheriff Jerry Clayton was a special guest.

We hope you enjoy the following photos of the spirited event.


For information on this event, contact WDCP Chair Stu Dowty at: sndowty@yahoo.com.