Category Archives: Keeping Watch on Earth News

Council: Let’s get creative so that we don’t have another dirty election in 2020

An email sent to Benicia City Council and staff by Roger Straw (also published in the Benicia Herald and Vallejo Times-Herald)

Massive intrusion of big money in our local election

By Roger Straw, November 12, 2018
Roger Straw, The Benicia Independent

In an online forum, Vice Mayor Steve Young congratulated City Council members-elect Strawbridge and Largaespada, and wrote, “While I was a strong supporter of Kari Birdseye, and joined all the candidates in decrying the over the top PAC spending and the false charges made against her, the voters have spoken….I pledge to work with both of the new Council members on issues of mutual agreement, and to disagree where I must. There are lots of issues to address in the City, and it’s time now to buckle down and get to work.”

Admirable of Steve, and necessary for all Council members going forward.  I’d like to write about one of those issues the Council needs to buckle down and get to work on.

There are lessons to be learned from this contentious election.  Many of Kari Birdseye’s supporters have, like Steve, expressed deep disappointment over the massive spending in our local election by a political action committee (PAC) organized by Valero Services Inc. and a coalition of labor groups.  The PAC spent more than 3 times the combined spending of the four candidates, over $200,000.  That’s about 10 times what each of the 3 major candidates spent.  Many in Benicia are concerned about this as a possible trend, given the “Citizens United” decision of our U.S. Supreme Court which allows corporations and PACS to spend without limit in our elections.

Online expression of these concerns and post-election analyses has been criticized.  One responder wrote, “Losers are right to be disappointed, but me thinks they give too much credit to Valero.”

I’m sure there are multiple factors for the Council race outcome, so I’ll agree that Valero – and labor – doesn’t get ALL of the “credit.”  But I’d prefer to term it “discredit.”  Valero/Labor money from Benicia, Texas, Sacramento and Los Angeles – paying for smears, misinformation, scare tactics and professional and pervasive print, digital, phone and canvassing support for chosen candidates (and AGAINST a singular candidate) – was surely one of the major factors.  And the message they will take away is that they won.  We can expect huge PAC influence again in 2020.

What, if anything, can our community do to prepare?  I’m not at all sure.  Maybe it falls to our newly elected Council – including Strawbridge and Largaespada who were publicly and highly critical of the Valero/Labor PAC’s tactics – to take a new look at our 2008 campaign finance ordinance.

Do Council members ONLY object to the negativity and false charges thrown around by the PAC?  Or do they ALSO object to the massive intrusion of big money into our local elections?  Given the legality of such outside meddling under current U.S law, how can our Council members get creative to prepare for another election in which big business and big labor outspend a candidate by a factor of 10?  How can we get creative on this… before 2020?

Roger Straw
Benicia

Latest Benicia Election Results – no changes, just new numbers

By Roger Straw, November 10, 2018
[This is the most recent UPDATE, Nov. 9, 4:54 pm results.  – R.S.]
COUNTYWIDE VOTER TURNOUT 63.1%
Ballots Cast  142,097
Registered Voters  225,142
PRECINCTS REPORTING 100%
BENICIA RESULTS:
City Council: Strawbridge and Largaespada
School Board: Maselli, Zada and Ferrucci
Measure E Cannabis: YES
Provisional ballots yet to be counted: 193

Solano County Registrar of Voters
Election Results for Benicia

Run Date:11/09/18 4:54 PM (Next update 11/13/18 at End Of Day)

Same information as above, in text, can be copied/pasted:

County of Solano
UNOFFICIAL RESULTS
Statewide General Election November 6, 2018
Run Date:11/09/18 04:54 PM

City of Benicia Member, City Council
Vote for no more than  2    (WITH 8 OF 8 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes         %      
CHRISTINA STRAWBRIDGE  .  .  .  .  7,274   33.2%
LIONEL LARGAESPADA  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   6,556   29.9%
KARI BIRDSEYE .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .               5,758   26.3%
WILLIAM EMES JR. .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .           2,254   10.3%

Benicia Unified School District Member, Governing Board
Vote for no more than  3    (WITH 10 OF 10 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes        %      
MARK MASELLI  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .      8,316   28.6%
SHERI ZADA .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .           7,721   26.5%
DIANE FERRUCCI.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   6,018   20.7%
ADREAN HAYASHI.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  3,591   12.3%
GETHSEMANE MOSS  .  .  .  .  .  .   3,315   11.4%

City of Benicia Measure E – Cannabis tax
Vote for no more than  1    (WITH 8 OF 8 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes      %      
YES  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .     9,873   76.3%
NO.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .        3,068   23.7

America Voted. The Climate Lost.

Repost from The New Republic
[Editor: Benicia wasn’t alone in this last election, suffering from the intrusion of Big Oil’s Big Money.  Oil companies ratcheted up their meddling in local politics all across the land.  This article highlights only a few: oil interests apparently spent $20 million in WA and $40 million in CO defeating key measures (carbon fee & fracking safety rules respectively).  – R.S.]

Fossil fuel companies spent record amounts to oppose pro-climate ballot initiatives, and it paid off.

By EMILY ATKIN, November 7, 2018

The last two years in American politics have spelled trouble for the global climate, thanks largely to the Trump administration. And the next two years probably won’t be much better, given the results of Tuesday’s midterm elections.

Voters failed to pass a historic ballot initiative in Washington state to create the first-ever carbon tax in the United States. They rejected a ballot measure to increase renewable energy in Arizona, and to limit fracking in Colorado. Some of Congress’ most outspoken climate deniers held onto their seats. Several candidates who ran on explicitly pro-climate agendas lost.

Democrats did not quite get the blue wave they wanted, but it was even worse for environmentalists. There was no green wave whatsoever. That’s partially because of record political spending by the fossil fuel industry to oppose pro-climate initiatives, but also because of the Democratic Party’s failure as a whole to draw much attention to the issue.

The midterm elections were always going to be consequential for climate change. The world’s governments only have about twelve years to implement policies that can limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. That’s the point at which catastrophic impacts begin, according to a recent report from an international consortium of scientists.

The U.S., as the largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases, is essential to achieving that target. But for the last two years, the U.S. government has been ignoring the need to reduce emissions—and in many cases, actively working against it. Along with withdrawing from the Paris climate agreement, President Donald Trump has been attempting to repeal and weaken existing climate regulation, with the support of the Republican-controlled Congress.

The midterms gave voters two opportunities to change America’s course on climate change. They could have elected a Congress that would no longer support Trump’s anti-climate agenda. And they could have approved strong statewide climate policies to counter the federal government’s inaction.

Voters took the first opportunity, but only slightly. Democrats won the House of Representatives, making it near-impossible for Trump to pass any anti-climate legislation.

But voters didn’t elect many candidates who ran on pro-climate agendas. Environmentalists had hoped that Florida, being on the front lines of climate change, would make history in that regard. But Democratic Senator Bill Nelson, a climate champion, was unseated by Governor Rick Scott, a Republican accused of banning the word climate from state government websites. And Democratic gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum, who pledged to act swiftly on climate, lost to a Republican who has dismissed the problem.

Voters rejected almost every opportunity to enact strong state-level climate policies.The biggest failure by far was in Washington. Initiative 1631 would have made the state the first in the country to charge polluters for their emissions. The proceeds from the carbon fee could have provided Washington with “as much as $1 billion annually by 2023 to fund government programs related to climate change,” Fortune reported, and “potentially kickstart a national movement to staunch greenhouse gases.” The measure lost by 12 percentage points.

The renewable energy ballot initiative in Arizona also presented a big opportunity to reduce emissions. Proposition 127 would have required electric companies in Arizona to get half of their power from renewable sources like solar and wind by 2030. (In a rare win for the environment on Tuesday, Nevada voters passed their own version of that initiative.) Proposition 112, Colorado’s ballot initiative to keep oil and gas drilling operations away from where people live, was far more about protecting public health than it was about limiting climate change. But the effect would have been to limit further fossil fuel extraction in the state.

The oil and gas industry spent quite a lot of money opposing all of these pro-climate ballot initiatives. The campaign against Washington’s carbon fee “raised $20 million, 99 percent of which has come from oil and gas,” according to Vox. The carbon fee was thus one of the most expensive ballot initiative fights in Washington state history. The renewable energy fight in Arizona was also the most expensive in state history because of oil industry spending. The same was true for Colorado’s anti-fracking measure, as the oil and gas industry clearly spent nearly $40 million opposing it.

While Tuesday’s results show the impact of massive political spending by the fossil fuel lobby, they also shine a light on Democrats’ failure to mobilize voters on the issue. The Democratic Party has failed to treat climate change with much, if any urgency this election season. According to The New York Times, the “vast majority” of the party’s candidates did not mention the problem “in digital or TV ads, in their campaign literature or on social media.” And the party’s leaders in Congress have given little indication that they intend to prioritize climate change in the future. Is it any wonder voters weren’t excited about solving the problem, either?


Correction: A previous version of this story stated that Nevada voters rejected Question 6, a ballot initiative on renewable energy. The measure won. 

Emily Atkin is a staff writer at The New Republic.

Benicia election results – Nov. 8 UPDATE

By Roger Straw, November 8, 2018
[Editor – this is NOT the latest update.  For that, see Latest Benicia Election Results – no changes, just new numbers.  – R.S.]

Latest numbers – Nov. 7, End of Day

Unchanged:
City Council: Strawbridge and Largaespada
School Board: Maselli, Zada and Ferrucci
Measure E Cannabis: YES

Solano County Registrar of Voters
Election Results

Run Date:11/07/18 04:54 PM (Next update 11/8/2018 at EOD)
Estimated Provisional Ballots: Benicia 223

Same information as above, in text, can be copied/pasted:

City of Benicia Member, City Council
Vote for no more than  2    (WITH 8 OF 8 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes      %      Election Day   Vote by Mail     Provisional
CHRISTINA STRAWBRIDGE . . . . . . 6,602    33.36   2,195   4,407   0
LIONEL LARGAESPADA . . . . . . . 5,891   29.77   1,933   3,958   0
KARI BIRDSEYE . . . . . . . . . 5,178   26.17   1,749   3,429   0
WILLIAM EMES JR. . . . . . . . . 2,043   10.32   717   1,326   0
WRITE-IN. . . . . . . . . . . 75   .38   33   42   0

Benicia Unified School District Member, Governing Board
Vote for no more than  3    (WITH 10 OF 10 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes      %      Election Day   Vote by Mail     Provisional
MARK MASELLI . . . . . . . . . 7,519   28.63    2,507    5,012    0
SHERI ZADA . . . . . . . . . . 6,938    26.42   2,375   4,563     0
DIANE FERRUCCI. . . . . . . . . 5,443     20.73     1,678      3,765     0
ADREAN HAYASHI. . . . . . . . . 3,261   12.42   1,058   2,203   0
GETHSEMANE MOSS . . . . . . . . 2,959   11.27   1,082   1,877   0
WRITE-IN. . . . . . . . . . . 140   .53   45   95   0

City of Benicia Measure E – Cannabis tax
Vote for no more than  1    (WITH 8 OF 8 PRECINCTS COUNTED)
Total Votes      %      Election Day   Vote by Mail     Provisional
YES . . . . . . . . . . . . 8,902    76.30   2,892   6,010   0
NO. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,765   23.70   1,132   1,633   0