Arizona's own EspressoPundit

      Ruminations of an over-caffeinated political junkie

 

 

 

 

 

Archive Sept 30th through Sept 1st, 2005

 

 

September 30, 2005

 

Don't Call it a Pig

I find it funny that newspapers insist on identifying famous people in news photos.  It goes something like this:

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger (left) confers with AARP representatives at the Senior Women's Education Forum. 

Oh, that's right, the movie star with 22 inch biceps on the left is Arnold, so the 70 year old lady on the right must be someone else. 

Occasionally this policy leads to hilarious results.  This is the exact caption from a picture in the business section of this morning's Republic.

Gov. Janet Napolitano (right) takes a look at one of the colorful javelina statues from the "Javelinas on Parade" program at an event in Sedona.

Yes, the governor is the one on the right.  So the giant ceramic statue that looks like Pumba dominating the foreground on the left side of the picture, that must be the Javelina right?

Thank you for pointing that out. 

 

The Secret life of Accountants

I've admitted to being a middle aged CPA who drives a tan minivan, so you may not agree, but I think this is the coolest music video on the planet.

 

September 29, 2005

Republic Editorial Board Defends Kunasek

Congratulations to the Arizona Republic Editorial Board for shedding some light on the 3,000 word Sienfeld-esque article about nothing that was plastered A1 above the fold on Sunday the 18th. 

Never underestimate the power of office politics.  Like confronting a coworker with chronic halitosis, writers from one department are loathe to point out the inadequacies of the other departments. 

However, in today's editorial "Justice Served," the editorial writers do the unthinkable and point out that one of their reporters is in desperate need of an Altoid.

The editorial starts with a subtle slam on the offending reporter.

Five years ago, Maricopa County's chief medical examiner, Dr. Philip Keen, investigated a death in Virginia.

That's the lede that should have appeared in the original article.  But it would have demonstrated that the article that followed was both out of date and trivial. 

So the reporter sexed it up in the original piece...

Maricopa County's chief medical examiner launched an investigation into an out-of-state death five years ago that helped the relatives of county Supervisor Andrew Kunasek win hundreds of thousands of dollars this year in a civil lawsuit.
 

The original article raised critical questions about the appropriateness of Keen and Kunasek's behavior. 

The editorial goes so far as to point out that those questions have been answered, but the editorial writers leave it to the reader to realize that the answers to those questions were buried in the original story.

One important question raised in The Republic's story - whether Keen, a county employee whose budget is subject to the approval of the Board of Supervisors, was unduly pressured in some way to take on the task - appears answered. Keen, the only person who can fairly answer that question, said he volunteered readily. The medical examiner said he often consults on cases privately, although rarely outside Arizona.

Another issue appears to be whether Kunasek in some way benefited financially from Keen's efforts, although there is no evidence that he has.

Did Dr. Keen use County resources?

Keen appears to have done it on his own time and at private expense.
 

Keeping in mind the fact that a terrible wrong appears to have been righted, questions remain about how Keen's services were arranged for and, particularly, whether county taxpayers have shouldered any unreimbursed costs.

Keep in mind that those are the ONLY questions that "remain."  The question is "remain after what?" The questions about Kunasek pressuring Keen or profiting personally were put to rest in the original article.  The reporter raised them in the beginning of the hit piece and answered them in the end of the hit piece.  The editorial board simply printed both sections and appropriately concluded that questions had been answered.

The real question remains--"why did this article run in the first place." 

Dr. Keen Phone Home

The only "question that remains" has to do with Dr. Keen, not with Andy Kunasek.  We know that Kunasek didn't pressure Keen and that Kunasek didn't benefit financially.  But did Dr. Keen violate county policy by using the lab for non-county business?

Let's look at an example from the article. 

Maricopa County's ethics policy prohibits employees and elected officials from using public equipment, including phones and fax machines, for anything other than official business.

Do you bring a roll of quarters to work so you can call your wife to tell her you will bring home pizza for dinner?

The items presented in the article that imply that Dr. Keen used the lab are as trivial as the personal use of the of his office phone.  And as I mentioned above, the editorial makes it clear that:

Keen appears to have done it on his own time and at private expense.

Unringing a Bell

While it is admirable that the editorial board helped demonstrate the weakness of the original story, the level of dissemination of the former pales when compared to the latter.  The Sunday hit piece was A1 above the fold, 3000 words, crossed two jumps and included a timeline and pictures.  The editorial was, naturally, on the editorial page and appeared on a Thursday.  The Sunday A1 audience must be 15 times the size of the Thursday B6 audience.

Unfortunately, since the Republic is deemed to be credible, other sources rely on its reporting and disseminate it further.

Can the Republic retract this story from the Arizona Daily Sun?

Maricopa supervisor got pathologist help in family suit

Maricopa County Supervisor Andrew Kunasek enlisted the help of the county's chief medical examiner in an out-of-state death that resulted in a civil lawsuit payout to Kunasek's family.

Or how about this one from KPHO

PHOENIX A Maricopa County supervisor enlisted the help of the county medical examiner in a case involving family in Virginia.

But Kunasek and Keen insist they did nothing wrong. Keen says he often consults in his private time. And Kunasek says no laws were violated, and he didn't gain as a result of the work.

Clearly not.   

 It Went Without Saying

The final line of the editorial is a subtle slam on our altoid deficient reporter as well. 

It goes without saying that by Phil Keen's efforts, American justice is being served.

Yes, it went without saying.  It went 3,000 words, two jumps, one timeline, mulitiple photographs and two sections from A1 to A32 above the fold on a Sunday without saying that "by Phil Keen's efforts, American justice is being served."

What was said was hype and innuendo about two fine people.  One man who solved a murder on his own time.  And the family member who took five minutes out of his day and asked a coworker for help five years ago.

While the editorial is far short of the apology that Dr. Keen and Andy Kunasek deserve, it is a bold step by one department of the newspaper to take another part of the newspaper to task for the injustice they have created. 

The title of the editorial is indeed correct--Justice Served. 

 

 

September 28, 2005

People are always asking me...

So Greg, what do you like best about having a blog?

Well, the coolest thing about having a blog is that I have either met, or reestablished relationships with hundreds of really wonderful people over the last year. 

The second coolest thing is that I get to wish my Mom a happy birthday each year. 

Happy birthday Mom.

 

Don't tell Jon Talton...

Entrepreneur Magazine has released its list of the 10 hottest cities and the Phoenix Metro area is number one. 


The Phoenix-Mesa area dominated on the strength of robust growth in new businesses. Its 12,350 startups represented a larger percentage of its total number of companies than any other city. More Phoenix-Mesa small companies also reported robust growth than businesses in any other city.

Tucson was the second-place midsize city (20,000 to 50,000 businesses). But high-ranking hot areas exist in every region and in all sorts of environments. Some Hot Cities feature low costs and rapid population growth. Others offer stable populations with excellent quality of life. Some Hot City economies rely on government and tourism, while others are supported by financial services and manufacturing

 

But there's dark cloud on the Phoenix horizon...

Phoenix's challenges include undertaking its first light-rail project--a multiyear process that may significantly disrupt businesses located in construction zones.

 

Here's a secret...

One of the more attractive features that Phoenix has to offer is a vibrant downtown. 

Downtown is filled with beautiful people who work in gleaming offices by day and populate the restaurants, bars and cafes at night.  That coupled with the finest resort hotels and robust well-established  neighborhoods provide an atmosphere that brings people from all over the country in order to work, play, live and create in an eclectic, energetic and thriving central core.  Their combined efforts make Phoenix one of the greatest cities in the nation.

Too bad for the elite central planners among us that Downtown is at Camelback and 24th street. 

But the real tragedy for the intellegentcia is that the man who stood in a vacant Christmas tree lot in 1985 and envisioned the Camelback corridor was...Fife Symington.

 

 

AZ Conservative is Reporting that...

Word has it that former California Congressman Frank Riggs is seriously considering a challenge to State Senator Carolyn Allen, the state’s most liberal Republican (now that Slade Mead has formally changed parties). Riggs’ conservative ideology, fundraising prowess and the grassroots support available to anyone willing to take on Allen would present Allen with something she has never faced before: a real race! With adequate funding to educate voters on Allen’s record, Riggs would be the odds-on favorite to win a nasty Republican primary in Legislative District 8 (Scottsdale, Fountain Hills, Rio Verde).

I would make two points.  One is that no one should discount Carolyn Allen.  I've seen what she can do with a bat. 

Second, I must point out the perverse effect that "Clean" Elections has had on the legislature.  In the old days, Carolyn would have had $100,000 and the challenger would have had $100 that he got from his mom.  Now the money will be equal and the person with the most motivated base will win. 

Ironically, the most motivated base is also, generally, the most extreme base.  It seems to me that clean elections was supposed to give moderates a leg up but it has served to elect Republicans who are much more conservative and the Democrats who are much more liberal. 

You know what that means?  If you line up the Legislature from left to right--Harry Mitchell to Ron Gould--I'm now considered a Moderate. 

Thank God for Keven Willey. 

 

 

As long as they spell the name right. 

Thank you to the Arizona Capitol Times for the great article on political blogs.  I do have one small bone to pick when they talk about:

Mr. Patterson’s “Expresso Pundit” blog

Espresso is spelled with an "s". 

 

September 27, 2005

 

Triple Self Portait

Arizona Capitol Times had an interesting article under the title:

Web A Repository For Political Rumors, Tips
Blog Reveals Judge, Educator As Latest Gubernatorial Possibilities

This past week, a Republican blog operated by former legislator Greg Patterson touted who was at the time a mystery candidate for governor and published the name of another potential candidate, according to a state senator.

So I guess you are now reading an espresso pundit blog entry about an article about an espresso pundit blog entry.

 

Robert Novak on Jeff Flake

Interesting analysis, but I think Bob is a little behind on a key fact.

Hastert believes it is not just the privilege but the duty of a House member to deliver federal projects to his constituents. Many younger conservatives could not disagree more, but most -- like Pence -- are loyal Republicans who are loath to criticize their leaders. An exception on the RSC to such reticence is 42-year-old Rep. Jeff Flake of Arizona, who like Pence ran a conservative think tank before entering Congress.

Self-limited to three terms ending next year, Flake has acted as though there is no tomorrow from his first day in the House in January 2001. He, along with Pence, was one of only 25 Republicans to vote against the drug subsidy in 2003. Flake believes big government is addictive. "The leadership hooks the new members when they come into Congress," Flake told me, "and they stay hooked."

 

Strange Bedfellows

Congressmen don't get much privacy but this article from the Great Falls Tribune sets a new standard by printing the names of Congressmen who sleep in their offices. 

Although no one keeps track of how many lawmakers choose to make their offices their homes away from home, a number of members acknowledge the practice.

Rep. Ben Chandler, D-Ky., keeps a mattress in his closet. J.D. Hayworth, a former sportscaster turned Republican congressman from Arizona, has been sleeping in his office for years.

Rep. Jack Kingston, a Georgia Republican, spent a decade living out of his office before he bought a second home in Alexandria, Va., two years ago.

In 2001, he was left temporarily homeless when the anthrax scares that followed Sept. 11 forced him to evacuate his building. Kingston now keeps an air mattress at the office only for late nights.

Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey slept in the House gym his first year in Congress. He had to move his cot into his office when the then-Democratic House speaker tossed him out.

Other lawmakers opt for similarly interesting living arrangements, balking at the high cost of housing in Washington.

J.D. could cure cancer and become president and he will always be J.D. Hayworth, a former sportscaster turned Republican congressman from Arizona.

 

 

September 26, 2005

 

Everybody Loves Janet...

Wow, the Gov's approval ratings are way up. 

Here's how the website for the local Air America affiliate spins it.

(Phoenix, AZ) -- A new poll indicates Governor Janet Napolitano is enjoying strong approval ratings. According to SurveyUSA, Napolitano's overall approval rating stands at 60-percent among Arizona voters. The poll shows the Democratic governor has strong support from most demographic and political groups, with the exception of conservatives and pro-life advocates. Just under half of Republicans polled approved of the governor's performance. Napolitano will be seeking her second term next year.

Here's the Business Journal's take on it.

Napolitano's approval rating among state voters stands at a healthy 60 percent, according to new poll released by SurveyUSA.

But if you look at the SurveyUsa results.  The sample is clearly not voters--the sample was comprised of adults.

Is that a big deal?  Well, let me ask you this.  Let's say I survey 600 adults and determine that Janet has a 60% approval rating.  What is her support among Catholics?

The obvious answer is that we have no idea what her support is among Catholics.  Catholics will comprise about 40% of a random sample of Arizona adults and there is no indication that their views are evenly distributed across the sample.  In fact it's possible that nearly every Catholic in the sample disapproves of the Governor and if every other respondent approved of her, she would have 70% approval ratings. 

But aren't voters a large enough part of the sample to make the numbers useful?

Well, let's start with a sample of adults.  Once you eliminate the snow birds, illegal aliens--excuse me undocumented workers--and the felons, you will have a population called "Eligible Voters"  Nearly half of eligible voters aren't registered, and only 70% of those registered actually vote.  That works out to about 30% of the sample going to the polls. 

While it is intuitively obvious that a poll of 600 adults provides no useful information about Janet's popularity among Catholics, the poll will be used by journalists, pundits and commentators to demonstrate her strength among voters--something the poll was never intended to do. 

 

 

Meet the new boss, same as the old boss?

A source tells me that a debate is ongoing within the Arizona Republic concerning last Sunday’s hit piece on Andy Kunasek.  It seems that a not insignificant segment of professionals within the paper believes that the piece was like a Seinfeld episode—3,000 words about nothing. 

                                                                                               Robert J. Dickey          John M. Zidich

With Sue Clark Johnson gone, the new  leadership team has a unique opportunity to write an apology to Mr. Kunasek and admit that the article didn’t live up to the Republic’s journalistic standards.  That would be a courageous move and might even serve to delay the Republic’s current slide into irrelevance. 

Not likely. 

 

September 23, 2005

Eye of the Storm

The only thing better than having good coffee with your bad weather is having Ed Philips provide the former and explain the latter. 

                    

QUESTION & ANSWER with Meteorologist Ed Phillips

Saturday, September 24 3:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Weather & Coffee

3607 East Bell Road SW corner of State Route 51 and Bell Road

Watch Hurricane Rita coverage on big screen TVs while Valley radio and TV weather guru Ed Phillips answers your questions.  Enjoy fresh coffee, espresso, teas, smoothies and baked goods.

I'm sure that if you mention espresso pundit, Ed will be happy to give you two espressos for twice the price of a single espresso.  Just tell him I sent you. 

 

In the spirit of bipartisanship

Speaking of entrepreneurial Senators, I went to Cheuvront's for lunch last week and had an awesome grilled salmon salad.  I don't know what it is about that place, but the ambiance was really hip, the presentation was excellent and the waiters were really good looking. 

 

 

September 22, 2005

Ok boys and girls, let's review

This is a good use of buses....

 

 

This would be a bad use of buses.

An abundance of Spin overcomes an absence of preparation.

The governor of Louisiana was "blistering mad." It was the third night after Hurricane Katrina drowned New Orleans, and Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco needed buses to rescue thousands of people from the fetid Superdome and convention center. But only a fraction of the 500 vehicles promised by federal authorities had arrived.

Ms. Blanco burst into the state's emergency center in Baton Rouge. "Does anybody in this building know anything about buses?" she recalled crying out.

They were an obvious linchpin for evacuating a city where nearly 100,000 people had no cars. Yet the federal, state and local officials who had failed to round up buses in advance were now in a frantic hunt. It would be two more days before they found enough to empty the shelters.

Yep, it must be the President's fault. 

 

September 21, 2005

All your base are belong to us...

Most of the messages that I receive from the Republican Party are tucked into the copy of Catcher in the Rye that Karl Rove sends me every Friday.  But occasionally I get an email from Matt Salmon that contains the official party calendar.  Last week while I was holding it up to the mirror, I noticed this meeting announcement. 

Wednesday, September 14, 2005, The Coconino County GOP will meet at 6:30 p.m. at McCoy Motors Conference Center (361 North Switzer Canyon) in Flagstaff. Special guest speaker Ann Kirkpatrick, District 2 Representative, will discuss the legislative session and take questions.

The little voice in my head said "What's Representative Ann Kirkpatrick doing at a GOP event?  She's a Democrat."  Now, I don't mean that in the facetious sense like "what's Deb Gullet doing in a Republican primary, she's a Democrat."  That's just a snarky way of saying that she's a Republican in Name Only (RINO).  But Ann Kirkpatrick is a real Democrat, the card carrying kind. 

I looked her up on the Goldwater Institute's Legislative Report Card and I noticed that she got a "D"  Then I figured out that the "D" was under "Party Registration."  Her grade was an "F."  Her running mate, Albert Tom at least got an F+.  So Rep Kirkpatrick is the more liberal of the two District 2 Democrats. 

If I had attended the meeting, I wonder if I would have seen Rep. Kirkpatrick carrying  copy of Leaves of Grass with a note from Howard Dean tucked inside. 

 

More reaction to the Kunasek hit piece

I've had a lot of feedback about the Kunasek hit piece in the Republic.  The extent of the outpouring of support for the family has surprised me. They really are a great family.  I think people are the most upset that the Republic wrote an obviously contrived story in the midst of a personal tragedy. 

Here's great example of the response I've received.  It's an advance copy of a letter to the Republic from John and Lisa Keegan. 

Editor:

Your Sunday front page story about Supervisor Andy Kunasek could well have been headlined “Supervisor Continues Family Legacy of Commitment to Service and Justice”. Instead, you encourage your readers to view a complicated series of actions through your suggested lens of impropriety. 

The Kunasek family suffered a tragic loss of a father whose death under suspicious circumstances was attributed to suicide. They engage the services of our renowned county pathologist who regularly consults on these issues, and who chooses to charge them only for expenses. His work history suggests that he, too, is motivated by a desire to seek justice. Together, the family and the pathologist seem to have secured an initial measure of justice for the apparent murder of their father. 

To us, that has all the hallmarks of noble actions in service of the truth. And is entirely consistent with what we and the rest of the community have grown to expect from the Kunasek family. 

To take those initial facts and conspicuously arrange them in the shape of scandal defames their family and degrades the Arizona Republic.  

Sincerely,

John and Lisa Keegan

Peoria, Arizona

 

 

 

Protecting the Monopoly

PHOENIX – Calling a plan to omit thousands of private and religious school students from an educational disaster relief plan "blatant and outrageous discrimination," Alliance for School Choice president and general counsel Clint Bolick urged Congress to pass President George W. Bush's educational relief plan, which includes funding for displaced children regardless of whether they choose private or public schools.

 
"The hurricane's devastation did not differentiate between private and public schools," Bolick said.  "When someone is drowning, it is utterly irrelevant whether the person throwing the life-line is wearing a clerical collar."
 
Bush Administration officials estimate that 372,000 children in Louisiana and Mississippi were displaced by the hurricane.  Among Louisiana parishes most devastated by the storm, 32 percent were already attending private schools.  Public and private schools are actively participating in the relief effort.  While Bush's plan includes funding for both, Kennedy's would exclude private schools and students from the relief effort.
 
"We should be less concerned about where children are educated and more concerned about whether they will be educated," Bolick said.  "It is shameful that Sen. Kennedy is willing to sacrifice thousands of needy schoolchildren to do the bidding of his special interest friends.

 

September 20, 2005

Speaking Rumored candidates for Governor...

Senator Karen Johnson has heard and interesting rumor and is passing it on. 

Dear Greg:

Thanks for including me on your e-mail list to receive the espresso pundit!  I always find it interesting.  Just thought you would enjoy hearing about another name being bantered around for Governor – our own Maricopa County School Superintendent, Sandra Dowling.  Now that would be a race!  If I remember Sandra correctly, she is a bulldog and would give Janet quit a time of it – with all of Sandra’s credentials in Education, she might take the stage – front and center – from the Governor.  Just a thought.

Karen

 

An EP Reader dings the Republic for Hitting Kunasek.

Really enjoy espresso pundit…  Got the Republic/Kunasek thing right on.

This latest Republic foray is reminiscent of the infamous Sunday, Feb. 6, 2000 Republic front-page hit piece that attempted to link McCain to the Bianchi murder and actress Connie Stevens during the 2000 presidential race.  I thought this kind of journalistic crap ended down there when Publisher John Oppedahl and Managing Editor Julia Wallace were shown the door.

Name Withheld

The author is right.  The McCain piece was an astonishing blunder and is clearly the low point for the Republic.  Here's a story about it in American Journalism Review.

The Republic decided to publish an account of its investigation, which revealed no evidence of a McCain/Stevens affair and no tie between McCain and the Bianchi murder. In an editor's note that ran the same day, Executive Editor Pam Johnson wrote that the "compelling local tale" of the search for Bianchi's killer justified publication.

That's right.  The Republic found no evidence of an affair between Connie Stevens and John McCain and no tie between McCain and a murder, but ran it anyway because it was a "compelling local tale."

Maybe that's the difference between blogs and "actual journalism."

 

 

Patterson's elbows are always on the table

Here's my good friend Jay Heiler on the Kunasek hit piece.  He wrote this piece for Plugged In on AzCentral.  There's a thinly-vailed reference to me in the beginning and he's right--using the Republic's website to slam them incessantly is bad form.  But I don't use a butter knife either and the pinky off the tea cup thing escapes me as well. 

Here's Jay's take on Kunasek in the Republic

I have not used this space to be critical of The Republic, having considered it bad manners to do so in a forum which the newspaper generously provides. But I'm moved to make an exception by The Republic's A-1, banner-headlined, Sunday morning "expose" on Andy Kunasek, which goes down as one of the great nose-pickers of all time.

It went on and on and on and on, rather like this sentence, only much worse, really, with column after endless column of copy, tedious as hell, double-trucked across a two-page jump, and no story anywhere to be found - except the one the reporter neglected to write about.

That story is a good one - very good. It's about an alleged brutal murder in rural Virginia which local officials there ruled a suicide, now perhaps straightened out by the determination of the victim's Arizona loved ones and Maricopa County's gifted and respected medical examiner.

That story is full of intrigue and tragedy, a tale of greed and deceit and a violent killing by the alleged perpetrators and grim perseverance toward justice by an accomplished and well-known Arizona family who would not give up.

Instead of reporting that story, The Republic served up a contrived public corruption angle aimed at Andy Kunasek. Maricopa County Supervisor Kunasek apparently committed the egregious crime/blunder/ethical lapse of putting the Maricopa County medical examiner in touch with the victim's son - his sister's husband - to gain the ME's professional insights into the evidence that suggested murder rather than suicide back in Virginia.

Imagine that. Why, who has heard of such degeneracy, such scandal? How can our community withstand this grotesque stain on its collective integrity? Dear God, will we ever be the same?

The story would serve well in a journalism course as an example of a formulaic, prototypical smear by a newspaper. That is, it would serve well if such studies were made in journalism schools, which they are not. Perhaps this story is sufficiently bad to inspire pedagogical movement in that direction.


 

Matt's Mystery Machine...

Sooner or later Matt Salmon is going to have to call all the recipients of the "great mentioner's" attention into a room and sort out what the Republican Party is going to do if it is in any way serious about trying to unseat Governor Napolitano. Because the way its going we're still going to have mystery candidates popping up 14 months from now and no one will have the courtesy to tell them that the election is already over! Please!

name withheld

 

The State of the AZ GOP

I find the whole scene about the GOP trying to find a candidate for guv very interesting - actually quite funny. There's Bennett - but nobody south of Rock Springs Cafe knows who he is. There's Pearce from Meza who has the same Mormon problems Matt Salmon had. Besides there a number of Pearces at the state capital and no one knows which one is being spoken about when their names comes up. On top of that Pearce has said so many things on TV, radio and in emails that he would make the ultimate whopper of a candidate in terms of quotes that the Dems would have a heyday with him. There is a doc in Washington who is talked about but nobody west of the Mississippi knows him and a lawyer in Nogales who might run but nobody north of Rio Rico knows her. The problem with both is they have Hispanic surnames and the Prop 200 proponents in the party have to  swallow  hard every time they say their names and try to explain how they can fight Mexican immigration (see Pullen's last excursus on who really was the target of Prop 200) and get us to vote for a person with a Mexican-sounding name. Jan Brewer is running hard for something (at least with her face on every page of her website) and has tangled with the guv but seems to lack the confidence of the male side of the party. All of the current GOP reps in Washington are having too much fun moving up the ladder in their posts and having seen the defeat of their friend, Matt, are not about to take on the guv. Besides they are working hard to see if they can make points with all who matter so they can run for McCain's spot when he either runs for the prez seriously or retires. Those are my observations for Monday afternoon.

By the way I did enjoy your attempt at humor. thanks.

Ron Friesen
(Oh, yes, I am a registered member of the Republican party).

 

 

September 19, 2005

Mystery Candidate Revealed

It's been five days since Espresso Pundit broke the story that there was another candidate for Gov.  The mainstream media has caught up and now the name can be revealed. 

Some top Republicans at the state Capitol and in Washington are seriously talking up Arizona Court of Appeals judge Jan Smith Florez as a possible challenger to the Democratic governor.

 

Who's Hooting Now

Last week I had some fun with Jeff Flake because in one venue he said that his suggestion to cut other programs in order to pay for Katrina relief was met with "stone cold silence,"  however, in another venue, he said he was hooted down. 

But who's hooting now.

President Bush, confronting a brewing rebellion within conservative ranks, promised Friday to help Congress cut spending in other areas to try to offset the cost of Hurricane Katrina reconstruction.

 

 

County Supervisor Andy Kunasek Showers in the Nude      Claims practice is "common"

What's up with the 3,000-word, A1-above-the-fold, Sunday lead hit piece against Andy Kunasek?

This article follows the classic hit piece style.  Here's an example of how it works. 

"Recently released documents reveal that City Council member Smith showers in the nude.

Mr. Smith denies any wrong doing  “Well, I can assure you that since the advent of indoor plumbing, showering has become common place and my understanding is that showering while naked is clearly legal and is generally considered acceptable.”  

But not to everyone agrees. “Showering while nude raises all sorts of thorny ethical and legal issues”, says William Bumble-prof, assistant Sociology Instructor at the Mellon Institute in Pahrump, Nevada. “While it may technically legal and commonplace, Councilmen have a responsibility to the public that goes beyond the letter of the law and common practice.”  Dr. Bumble-prof adds, “They clearly need to set a higher standard.” 

But Mr. Smith may have a bigger problem than showering in the nude.  ARS 40-252 of the statewide plumbing code indicates that the importation of high flow shower fixtures is a class 6 felony and if Mr. Smith were convicted of importing such a fixture, he would have to forfeit his office.   

Attorney General spokesman Gordon Funke declined to comment on any possible criminal proceedings against Councilman Smith. However, Mr. Funke added  “The AG’s office has complete jurisdiction over water flow violations and I can assure you that we take the statewide plumbing code very seriously.” 

At this point the reporter can site “possible investigation by the AG.”  Or he can use the fact that Mr. Funke added the piece about “juristiction” to say that “sources signaled that the investigation is ongoing.”   

Or in Robbie Sherwood’s case, the denial by the AG is enough to justify a story saying “Councilman smith, who is under investigation by the Attorney General, had eggs for breakfast.” 

That would be followed by a Political Insider story that says.  “You would think that a politician who is under investigation by the AG’s office for possible plumbing code violations would keep a low profile, but Councilman Smith showed up at a city meeting today while sporting squeaky clean—although somewhat thinning--hair."   

Jon Talton would then chime in with a story about what a backwater Phoenix has become because East Valley hacks like Avondale Councilman Smith—who is under investigation by the AG for alleged plumbing code violations—don’t support downtown."

Here's the bottom line of the Kunasek case

Kunasek met with Dr. Keen one time and discussed the case.  That's the end of Kunasek's involvement. 

The Dr. said he wasn't pressured in that meeting and agreed to take the case--as he often does in cases that are intriguing.   The Doctor then proved that it was murder and not suicide and he did so on his own time.  Any use of county equipment was incidental and common practice.

The only person in the article who thinks that something inappropriate may have occurred is...the reporter.

 

Here's why the  Kunasek Piece a great example of the hit piece style.

 

First we have the outrageous sounding claim

Maricopa County's chief medical examiner launched an investigation into an out-of-state death five years ago that helped the relatives of county Supervisor Andrew Kunasek win hundreds of thousands of dollars this year in a civil lawsuit.

But 3,000 words later--across two jumps, on page A 32 in a different section of the paper--we learn that this practice is common.

In his deposition in the Wiley case, Keen estimated that he consults in about 10 cases a year and performs as many as 15 private autopsies. He said he primarily makes himself available in criminal cases because of a lack of board-certified forensic pathologists.

But the AG has something to say about it...Kind of.

"This case may raise conflict-of-interest questions," said Steve Wilson, spokesman for the Arizona Attorney General's Office, which investigates allegations of conflicts.

"We could have jurisdiction in this case and do not want to say anything that could be seen as prejudicial."

Yes, we could have jurisdiction if Supervisor Kunasek stole a car, and we certainly have jurisdictions if he stops beating his wife,  so we wouldn't want to comment. 

Then there is a really scary  list of work that Dr. Keen did while in the lab--things that might have involved county resources.  But that is immediately followed by Denise McNally, executive director of the National Association of Medical Examiners, who says

"it is common for medical examiners to consult in private cases. Most medical examiners use the facilities where they work, but she said there are often rules concerning reimbursement that require medical examiners to pay for the use of labs and equipment in private cases. She said some jurisdictions don't allow them to take private cases and others have no rules at all.

So Dr. Keen is doing something that is common.  What does that have to do with Andy Kunasek?

And How About Pressure?

Maybe Kunasek pressured Dr. Keen into working on the case.  Kunasek doesn't think so.

Kunasek disputes any suggestion that he used his position improperly. He said that his initial request could not have been construed as pressuring the Medical Examiner's Office to conduct an examination.

That's a typical response.  But in this case, the Doctor concurs. 

Keen said last week that he wanted to get involved in the Wiley case because it presented a complex challenge. That is one of the reasons he said he decided right away not to charge the family for his services.

So Kunasek claims he didn't pressure Dr. Keen but more importantly, we find out at the bottom of the article that Dr. Keen didn't feel any pressure.  The only person who thinks there might have been pressure is the reporter. 

That mean that there was no wrong doing in the only portion of the story that involves Kunasek.  So we have 3,000 words about Dr. Keen in a story that is supposedly about Kunasek. 

The reporter makes a big deal about the fact that the County is backlogged.  But does that matter?  The article concedes that Dr. Keen works overtime and that he was working on his own time.  On his days off, he is free to watch the Simpsons or play scrabble.  Instead he chooses to spend his time solving murders pro bono.  Does the fact that the county has a backlog mean that Dr. Keen has to work 24 hours a day until there are no more cases to solve?  Is that how your job works?  There is a 4 year backlog on civil cases in federal court.  Do judges ever play golf?  Do they ever solve murders on their day off?

 

 

 

September 15, 2005

 

 
This was in my in basket

Greg:

An announcement may soon to be made regarding a formidable challenger in the governor's race.  This entrant is likely to put a new spin on the GOP primary, which thus far lacks a compelling candidate.

 
A former elected official with roots in Phoenix, now living in southern AZ, she is being encouraged to run by various party leaders and regular citizens alike.
 
A lawyer and former educator, she has first-hand knowledge of both border issues and education. She is winding down the duties involved with her current position and is anticipated to announce her plans within the coming weeks.
 
Married to a retired teacher, she is pro-family and bilingual.
This is someone to watch for as the election cycle moves into full swing.

Name Withheld.

Hmm, sounds interesting. 

 

September 14, 2005

A broken clock is right twice a day, but a broken yard stick is always too short.

Last week I pointed out that the poverty statistics neglect to account for immigration.  That is, the fact that the percentage of people in poverty is constant, is not as much an indication of a chronic underclass, but an indication that folks are moving out of poverty at about the same rate as immigrants are coming in to replace them. 

It turns out that poverty statistics have also neglected to keep track of, well...poverty.

The is from the New York Times.

 

The profound flaws in our officially calculated poverty rate are revealed by its very intimation that the poverty situation in America was "better" in 1974 than it is today. Those of us of a certain age remember the year 1974 - in all its recession-plagued, "stagflation"-burdened glory. But even the most basic facts bearing on poverty alleviation confute the proposition that material circumstances in America are harsher for the vulnerable today than three decades ago. Per capita income adjusted for inflation is over 60 percent higher today than in 1974. The unemployment rate is lower, and the percentage of adults with paying jobs is distinctly higher. Thirty years ago, the proportion of adults without a high school diploma was more than twice as high as today (39 percent versus 16 percent). And antipoverty spending is vastly higher today than in 1974, even after inflation adjustments.

The soundings from the poverty rate are further belied by information on actual living standards for low-income Americans. In 1972-73, for example, just 42 percent of the bottom fifth of American households owned a car; in 2003, almost three-quarters of "poverty households" had one. By 2001, only 6 percent of "poverty households" lived in "crowded" homes (more than one person per room) - down from 26 percent in 1970. By 2003, the fraction of poverty households with central air-conditioning (45 percent) was much higher than the 1980 level for the non-poor (29 percent).

The poverty rate is out of step with all these other readings about deprivation in modern America because it was designed to measure the wrong thing. The poverty rate has always been derived from reported household income. (Exigency played a role here: at the start of the war on poverty 40 years ago, those income numbers were already available from the Census Bureau.) But a better gauge of a household's material deprivation is not what it earns, but what it spends. When we look at spending patterns, we immediately see a huge discrepancy between reported incomes and reported expenditures for low-income Americans.

In the Labor Department's latest Consumer Expenditure Survey (2003), the average reported income for the bottom fifth of households was $8,201, while reported outlays came to $18,492 - well over twice that amount. Over the past generation, that discrepancy widened significantly: back in the early 1970's, the poorest fifth's reported spending exceeded income by 40 percent.

Unfortunately, economists and statisticians have yet to come up with a clear explanation for this gap (which is not explained by in-kind payments like food stamps or other assistance). The divergence may be in part a measurement problem: partly a matter of income under-reporting, partly a consequence of increasing income variability in our more "globalized" economy. But whatever its cause, it does drive home the unreliability of using reported household income as a benchmark for poverty.

For now, however, we should recognize that America has already achieved far more success in the war against want than our sorry poverty rate can admit - and that we need much better guidance systems for the anti-poverty battles still ahead than this one, arguably the single worst measure in our government's statistical arsenal.

 

 

September 13, 2005

 

Senator Carolyn Allen--Cricket Champion

No matter how much caffeine I have ingested, I am never tempted to take on Senator Carolyn Allen, because, well, frankly she scares me. 

However Senator Allen recently commented on the characteristics she likes about Governor Napolitano.

I like it that she is firm. She is likeable. I like the fact that she seems to be able to handle the adversity that comes her way. She knows how to swing a bat and throw the ball back into other people’s court. I admire that in anybody.

What the heck sport is that?  I've decided it must be a sophisticated cricket reference.  I couldn't find the exact rule to which Ms. Allen refers.  But this is close. 

If the ball hits the batsman on the pads on the way to the stumps, the batsman is out leg before wicket.

I know one thing.  The last time anyone saw Senator Allen with a bat, the lobbyists parted like the Red Sea.


 

 

Stone Cold Silent Hooting...

House Republicans met behind closed doors to discuss the budgetary response to Katrina, so we have to rely on the participant's reports of what happened.  I mentioned yesterday that The Claremont Institute reported the meeting this way...

Arizona congressman Jeff Flake said that at a recent closed-door meeting of House Republicans, he had tried to argue for paying for the relief with offsetting cuts in other federal programs, but was hooted down.

But the San Jose Mercury News reported it this way:

In closed-door meetings, fiscal conservatives have begged their colleagues not to put the cost of disaster relief on the government credit card for future generations to carry.

Among those who have protested in these private sessions is Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., a fiscal conservative who said his colleagues greeted his suggestion that disaster relief be offset by other cuts with "stone cold silence." He added, "You would have thought I was a Martian."

Maybe they were sitting in silence, but hooting him down on the inside. 

Obviously Jeff is exaggerating, because the caucus clearly couldn't have thought of him as a Martian. 

 

They could have confused him with Indiana Jones.

        

 

Or Waldo...Where's Jeff?

 

 

 

But a Martian?  Well maybe...

    

 

 

 

September 12, 2005

The Claremont Institute has some insight on closed-door Katrina debates...

Arizona congressman Jeff Flake said that at a recent closed-door meeting of House Republicans, he had tried to argue for paying for the relief with offsetting cuts in other federal programs, but was hooted down.

 

 

Ed Foster on Political Labels

Frequent espresso pundit readers will know that Ed Foster worked at the Republic for many years and has a unique perspective on the life of a reporter.  He is still a professional writer and he often offers commentary when I'm hard on a reporter.  I always appreciate his input.  He wrote this letter in response to last Friday's post  The difference between blogs and "actual journalism..."

Greg

You raise interesting questions about political labels. Indeed, I think the labels that reporters use often reflect their own beliefs, and the beliefs of the sources who influence them. That shouldn’t be taken as a criticism; reporters are human, and all humans are influenced to some degree by their beliefs. 

When I was stationed at the Capitol, I often used the term right-wing in my stories. None of the conservative Republicans I knew ever questioned that, including you. Had they done so, I would have stopped using it. Writers sometimes run into a situation where they are using a word too often. That destroys the rhythm of the copy. So you need more than one way of saying things. I viewed right-wing as a synonym for political conservative. I did not consider it a pejorative.

At the time, Republicans were at one another’s throats over who was really conservative. So maybe they saw the term right-wing as an affirmation of their true conservatism. 

I never used the term left-wing. Even very liberal Democrats did not see themselves that way. They would certainly have responded negatively to such usage. I didn’t want to offend people gratuitously.

Reporters are always looking for labels that sum up prominent politicians. I was probably as guilty of that as anyone else. It’s a dangerous game, because people aren’t that simple. Here’s a great example: When John Greene announced, the Republic story described him as a moderate. Why? He opposes outlawing gay marriage and abortion. When he was Senate president, Greene told me that he believed strongly in the Jeffersonian adage that the best government is that which governs least. The reporter who wrote that Republic story apparently saw those positions as litmus tests. But Greene probably would argue that he is a consistent conservative. He doesn’t want to expand government controls into people’s personal lives.  I agree; I never saw anything lefty about Greene.

Finally, where in the world did you find the Tameri Guide for Writers? I’ve been a writer and editor for 40 years; I never heard of it. All newspapers of which I am aware use the AP Style Guide.

 

Here's my response

Ed

I don't remember you using the term right wing.  Maybe I've become sensitive in my old age--that's why I'm obsessed with the thermostat and fiber.  I don't see the need to label  the parties at all.  If a group of Christian law students wants to meet on campus and a group of lawyers defends that right, why do we need to say the students are conservative Christians and the lawyers are right wing?

 
I agree that the AP style book is preferable, but it's not available online without a subscription.  I found the Tameri guide while looking for the AP book.  It's a fun read, so I included the links
 
Thanks for the comments. 

and his reply...

Labeling sometimes helps people understand the political currents around an issue. Perhaps the Christian law students describe themselves as conservative. Or, maybe their positions are such that they approve of that characterization. I doubt that the reporter would have characterized the students and the law firm the way she did without their approval. If she did, she may have been under pressure from editors to do so. 

Every reporter learns early that offending people gratuitously is a losing proposition. There were a few people, mostly Democrats, who clearly disliked me. I am a Republican, which is very unusual in the press corps. I tended to see things through a conservative prism. But I still needed those Democrats as sources. I tried to be fair to them, although they probably did not always see it that way. Fairness includes characterizing people the way they see themselves, within reason. 

I don’t know the Tribune reporter, Emily Gersema. Nor do I know anything about her. But, I wouldn’t assume she is using ideological terms gratuitously. If she is, she will learn that that is a great way to alienate sources.  

 

Arizona's own Warren Meyer has thoughts on price "gouging."

Congress has over the last 30 or so years generated numerous energy "plans" and has spent billions of dollars to figure out ways to promote conservation and increased supply.  All of these plans have been expensive failures.  But now, post Katrina, in less than 48 hours, with no one in charge, the market has achieved what Congress could never do.  The least valuable auto-miles will be eliminated, without years of study by Congress to figure out which miles are the least valuable.  The most economic new sources of gasoline will be tapped, without debating in Washington what those sources are.  All bottom-up, with no one ruling the process, by the voluntary self-interested efforts of hundreds of millions of Americans reacting to a simple price signal.

 

September 9, 2005

The difference between blogs and "actual journalism..."

Sometimes the labels reporters apply to groups tell you more about the reporter than the group.  Check out this Emily Gersema story in the Tribune.

A conservative Christian group of law school students at Arizona State University made a deal with ASU on Friday that allows them to organize as a university-supported student group, ending a legal fight that began last fall.

How about this label--or lack of label--by the same reporter?

Five years since it appeared on campus, the gay fraternity at Arizona State University has become the first national, collegiate-based organization of its kind in the country.

If the Christian group is inherently conservative, is is possible that the gay fraternity could be...you know, liberal?  (Not that there's anything wrong with that.) 

I can live with the fact that the Christian group is "conservative" and the gay group simply "gay."  But Ms. Gersema really shows her true colors by describing the group that defended the "conservative" Christians in court

It got support for its case from the Scottsdale based, right-wing group Alliance Defense Fund, whose stated aim is to defend religious freedom.

Right-wing group?  Since when did that term become an acceptable description in a mainstream newspaper?  It sounds more like the Daily Kos or MoveOn.org to me. 

Does Ms. Gersema describe the ACLU as a "left-wing" group?  And is the Alliance Defense Fund a "right-wing" group because it's "stated aim is to defend religious freedom?"

I don't know which style book the Tribune uses, but I prefer the Tameri Guide for Writers.  Here's what they say about using "right-wing" in a journalistic setting.

right-wing - avoid using as a political adjective. As with left-wing, lacks clarity.

The style book is also cautious to point out that some seemingly acceptable  words have developed negative connotations and are considered by some to be offensive.

bureaucrat - Now considered an insult by most American English dictionaries.

So if professional journalists should avoid using "bureaucrat" because it's considered pejorative, do you think it might be a good idea to avoid using "right-wing" to describe a group whose  "stated aim is to defend religious freedom?"

 

Speaking of Tameri...

If you want to feel insecure, try writing down your thoughts, posting them on a website without the aid of an editor and letting 500 really smart political junkies and the ever impressive Alice Lara read them.

I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night and say to myself "my gosh, I think I wrote "awhile" when I meant "a while."  If you can't relate to this problem and you need a dose of humility, check out these examples from the Tameri guide. 

above - Words do not appear above other words on paper. Words and statements precede each other.

alive and well - Avoid unless the person was previously not well or, worse, was not alive.

allusion / elusion / illusion - Allusion is a suggestion without a specific reference to a concept or thing. Elusion is to avoid or escape. Illusion is deception.

aught - Do not use. Aught is an antiquated pronoun, not a synonym for ought.

awful - Now overused with the misuse is approaching accepted use, awful properly means awe-inspiring yet dangerous, not merely dreadful.

The tornado was an awful sight.

These are actually pretty fun.  Click here for more examples. 

 

 

September 8, 2005

So Who's getting Punk'd Now?

By now, you have seen the black 4 X 4 signs that ask if "Arizona's Children are getting punk'd."  I noticed them in mid June, but the last time I watched MTV it played Dire Straits videos and Michael Jackson was black, so needless to say I didn't know what getting "punk'd" meant, but it sounded bad. 

When you follow the link and find out about azpunk'd, you learn that:

We are teachers, parents, religious and business leaders -- most importantly we are all Arizonans.

Actually, after a little digging, you will learn that we are Nadine Basha.

Well, the signs have been up since mid June and I question the wisdom of leaving them up this long.  But, I also question the legality.  The 500 4 X 4 signs that are littering our roadways are not advocating on behalf of a candidate or initiative.  They are advertising for an issue-oriented website. 

The website directs you to a quiz to assess your knowledge of what a hopeless backwater Arizona has become.

Dick Mahoney challenged the time limits in the city of Phoenix's sign ordinance and the city admitted that they couldn't legally prohibit political signs from going up early.  Since then, they've been gun shy about enforcing their ordinances.   But why is it legal to put up signs to advertise your website?

I noticed that the signs in my neighborhood have a City of Scottsdale sign permit affixed to them--it looks to me like a political sign permit.  Did the punk meisters claim to the city sign guru that the signs were political?

Espresso Pundit is an issue-oriented website.  Maybe I could put up a couple hundred signs that say:

Experience the Buzz

espressopundit.com

Get it?   Buzz, caffeine--political chatter?  Hah, I slay me. 

Then maybe I could start each day with a quiz...yeah, that's the ticket.

Do you read Jon Talton's column? 

Do you believe in a planned economy?

Do you consider stadiums economic development?

Have you or anyone you know been injured or killed by reporter?

Are you tired of seeing silly signs on the road all summer?

Have we been Punk'd?

 

September 7, 2005

The Progress Paradox

Brookings institute researcher Gregg Easterbrook's book the Progress Paradox is one of the books that has influenced me most.  Easterbrook is no conservative, in fact, he can't really even be described as a moderate.  But his book is a straightforward look at the astonishing increase in the American standard of living over the last 50 years and his theories on why no one--especially the media--seems to have noticed.  He posits that the media have provided a steady drumbeat that things are getting worse.  Here's a great example from yesterday's Star.

For the fourth straight year, poverty in America was on the increase in 2004, underscoring that even a wealthy country like ours can produce a chronic underclass...

...More important is that America is creating more poor people even as the nation's economy is gathering strength

Creating poor people?  No, The American economy is importing poor people.  Easterbrook points out that a steady stream of immigrants hide the fact that standard of living is rising.  The Star will never bother reporting that it's not the SAME 14% of the population in poverty.  They just assume that a constant 14% poverty rate means that 14% of our population has become a permanent under class.

 

Janet Napolitano--School Choice Champion

The Alliance for School Choice has an intesting observation about the National Governors Association report on education that was co-chaired by Governor Napolitano. 

PHOENIX – The National Governors Association and Center for School Change issued a best practices guide for governors recommending states expand the range of educational choices available for families by embracing charter schools, virtual schools and tuition assistance for private schools.

“Increasingly, policy leaders are concluding that providing quality education options can raise student achievement and improve existing schools,” states the report released this month. “Given the slow pace of achievement and graduation rate improvements, many policy makers have concluded that assisting public schools and assessing the results are not enough. These policymakers have begun giving families and students greater choices in education options.”

These recommendations, which, according to the report's authors, should be considered as part of a coherent and comprehensive public education system, include offering tuition assistance for choice participation. The report states, “By providing state tax or financial assistance for students to attend private or parochial K-12 schools…. more students can access these options.”

The report states that greater school choice can help meet the goals of:
• higher graduation rates,
• meet No Child Left Behind Act requirements to offer choice options,
• encourage innovation and improvement across the education system,
• satisfy parental demands for options, and
• reduce segregation by race and income.

"School choice is moving into the mainstream of American politics, as reflected by growing bipartisan support. Serious policymakers recognize that a conversation that doesn't include school choice is not a conversation about meaningful education reform," declared Clint Bolick, president and general counsel of the Alliance for School Choice, the Phoenix-based organization that leads the national effort to support school choice programs to expand opportunities for disadvantaged schoolchildren.

The report is part of a project to assist governors in refining and strengthening education choice law and policies. The governors involved in this project are: Janet Napolitano (Ariz.), Tim Pawlenty (Minn.), Haley Barbour (Miss.), Bill Richardson (N.M.), Mark Sanford (S.C.) and Jon Huntsman (Utah). Five of the six governors have advocated or signed bills providing private school choice options.

 

September 6, 2005 

Whopper of the Week

The West Valley Independent interviewed Minuteman founder Chris Simcox and generated this interesting exchange. 

Mr. Simcox called for Gov. Janet Napolitano's ouster in next year's election because "she refused to back Proposition 200," which requires proof of residency to receive certain governmental benefits. He endorsed Republican candidate Don Goldwater's bid to challenge the Democratic governor and is helping Mr. Goldwater develop his border policy.

Here's the response from the Governor's office. 

"The governor has vigorously enforced Proposition 200 in every way she has been asked to as the law requires," said Jeanine L'Ecuyer, governor's spokeswoman. "He has the right to say whatever he wants."

 

Vigorously enforced Proposition 200?  Really Jeanine?

How about when she vetoed SB 1186 which incorporated into statute Prop 200 requirements for proof of citizenship when registering to vote?

Or how about when she... 

...Vetoed SB 1306 Which would have allowed police officers to enforce immigration laws.

...Vetoed SB 1511 which would have banned state agencies and law enforcement from accepting consular ID Cards.

....Vetoed HB 2709 which would have built a prison in Mexico to house undocumented immigrant criminals.

...Vetoed SB 1118 which would have prevented people from casting a provisional ballot if they could not produce ID. 

...Vetoed HB 2030 which would have banned undocumented immigrants from adult courses and government-sponsored benefits and prevented them from paying reduced in-state tuition.

 

Mike Sunnucks responds. 

Last week I wrote that Mike had Crossed the line of Decency by criticizing Ken Bennett for his ties to the oil industry while neglecting to mention that Bennett's family owned oil business burned the previous day.  Here's Mike's response.

Greg

Thanks for mentioning my piece on your blog. I’m also open to criticism. As far as Bennett goes, I still think he is the frontrunner to take on Napolitano in the current crop of candidates. Some folks disagree with that but unless someone else gets in I think Bennett is the leading candidate versus Greene and Goldwater.
You hit me for saying he is mulling a run but that is a true statement.
As far as adding the info about the fire, I certainly could have added in but the story was about GOP ties to the oil industry.


I hope you post this on your site and welcome your feedback.

And my response...

Yes, Mike I will post it.  I appreciate your professional response to my criticism.  I actually believe that "mulling a run" is the appropriate term.  I have been critical in the past of you calling him the "frontrunner" even though he hasn't announced.

My complaint about this article is that it looks like you are piling on and that you have left out a critical piece of information.  The Republic used the word "destroyed" when describing the business.

On a more subtle note, the article would have looked more balanced if the theme had been the political use of high gas prices.  You mentioned that Republicans are being blamed for their ties to oil companies and you let Trent Franks mention environmental polices, but it was part of a defensive posture.  My personal view is that the lack of exploration and reduction in refinery capacity that are outgrowths of modern environmental policies--backed by Democrats--are a greater cause of high gas prices than any policies put forth by Exxon.  In fact, I frankly don't even understand the link.  How does the fact that Trent Franks used to head an oil exploration company have anything to do with high gas prices?  I'm not being snide.  I really don't understand the nexus. 

Since this is the Business Journal, I would hope that the paper would at least acknowledge the more traditional business view that producers are not the enemy and that association with the producers is not a sin. 

As an aside.  I would like to point out that I've generally been impressed with Mike's coverage.  And I have several friends who have dealt with him professionally and believe that he's the best political reporter in town.

 

Here's a Letter on The Big Easy

So just where does the buck stop these days? Despite the lame protestations of some of our so-called national "leaders" to the contrary, the disaster in the Gulf was wholly foreseeable. See this link to the radical liberal publication Popular Mechanics, and note the publication date, at:

http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1282151.html

So, now comes the unfortunate game of guessing which Bush administration official won't be fired and will be rewarded for failing the country this time. I sense another Medal of Freedom in the works...

Stephen Ahearn
Disgusted private citizen
 

And another...

A lot of folks lately seem to be getting their jollies at laying blame to Bush for the catastrophe in New Orleans.  Frankly, I find it disturbing that people (Sydney Blumenthal among many, many others) think that now is the appropriate time to score political points.  Their will be plenty of time for politics once everyone is safe.

It seems one of the main talking points is that the White House slashed funding to the Army Corps of Engineers for their plans to strengthen the levee system due to the war in Iraq.  In hindsight, this does seem to be a dreadful decision.  However I’ve found in talking to many people that their issue isn’t that he cut the funding, but instead that the money went to the war in Iraq!  I wonder how upset these same people would have been (if at all) if the money had instead been used for education, or some other “worthwhile” cause, instead of an unpopular war.

Also, consider this:  If the President had not cut the funds for the levees, but instead cut fifty million dollars from the Iraq budget, I’d wager that these same people would still be attacking the president over all of the unarmored humvees that he callously wouldn’t pay for.

Dave R.

Mesa

More on McCain "growing in office"

Greg,

Interestingly enough Sen. McCain came out last week in support of the Protect Marriage Arizona amendment.  This appears to protect his right flank.  It is an interesting maneuver, however, because he also appears to be protecting himself on the left by opposing a constitutional amendment at the federal level.  He has to know full well that he can support traditional marriage all he wants at the state level, but that without a constitutional amendment at the federal level at least a handful of states will legalize gay marriage.  This will then force other states to recognize these marriages under the "full faith and credit" clause of the Constitution.

He shrewdly can appeal to conservative Republicans at home while not turning off liberals all over the country . . . just another indication of his growing in office . . .

name withheld


 

September 2, 2005 

Crossing the line of Decency

There is a fine line between tough journalism and crass hit pieces, and the Business Journal crossed that line Thursday with this bizarre piece of yellow journalism.

Record high gas prices could hurt Republicans in key Arizona races

Democrats hope to gain an edge on the issue in key tilts because of Republican ties to big oil companies and the energy industry.

Never mind that this “news” story is simply a reheated package from other sources such as these articles in the LA times, the Seattle Times and NPR.

The Business Journal reporter developed a local angle by finding two Arizona Republicans who come from the oil and gas industry—Trent Franks and Ken Bennett.  

Bennett owns a Prescott oil distribution business, and before being elected to Congress in 2002, Franks was the chief executive of an energy exploration firm. 

Bennett owns a Prescott oil distribution business?  Could Mike Sunnucks have possibly missed this….

Actually, if you read the text closely it seems clear that at the time the story was written, Mike Sunnucks knew that Ken Bennett’s oil business had burned to the ground.  Yet incredibly, he chose to omit that little fact when he wrote the story…why let sympathy get in the way of the big-bad Republican theme? 

How do we know that Sunnucks knew about the fire?  Well the obvious answer is that it was on B1 of Thursday morning’s Republic.  But maybe Sunnucks filed the story early, went fishing and a Romanian intern posted the story.  It's possible...but I think not.

In fact, if you read the story closely, we KNOW that Sunnucks knew about the fire but neglected to mention it.  Check out the change in the way he labels Bennett.   

Here’s how he described Bennett on August 8th

GOP state Senate President Ken Bennett is the current frontrunner to take on Napolitano next year. 

And here’s the  August 22nd description

State Senate President Ken Bennett -- the Republican front-runner to take on Gov. Janet Napolitano in next year's governor's race -- is skeptical of the Democrat's recent moves related to illegal immigration and border security.

But now, Sunnucks changes his tune 

Senate President Ken Bennett (who is mulling a run for governor) comes directly from the oil industry.

Mulling a run for Governor?  On the 8th and the 22nd he was the "frontrunner" and now he’s “mulling a run”  Golly, maybe there was some sort of intervening event that changed the description from “frontrunner” to “mulling a run”  Hmm, maybe it’s because he watched his family-run oil business burn to the ground. 

But mentioning that little fact would disrupt the narrative wouldn’t it?  How can we talk about Ken Bennett and his evil connections to Big Oil if we have to digress and mention his personal tragedy?  Since the tragedy weakens the evil Republican/Big Oil motif, maybe we should just leave it out and hope the readers won’t notice.

Maybe that's what they teach in J school these days. 

 

 

 

 

September 1, 2005

 

Our prayers go out to Ken Bennett and his Family.

 

Prescott Courier has more coverage of the fire.

Fire consumed the Bennett Oil building at the corner of Sheldon Street and Arizona Avenue in downtown Prescott Wednesday morning. A black smoke plume was visible throughout the Tri-City area as fire engulfed the rear portion of the building, several vehicles and forced the evacuation of many nearby businesses and residents. The major fire was called contained at 10:45 a.m. with units from Prescott Fire, Prescott Police, Central Yavapai, Chino Valley Fire, Yavapai College Police, Yavapai Sheriff, and Arizona Department of Public Safety all responding to the fire.
 

 

 

 

 

 


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