Tag Archives: John Carney

Carney’s Coffee Klatches

A recent Delaware State News article, Carney warning: Must solve budget woes, was a bit interesting on two fronts. First was a Rodney Village resident who said:

“(Carney) came down from Mount Olympus. Nobody else did,” Mr. Patz said. “I’ve been here since 1992 and (Ruth Ann) Minner never came down from Mount Olympus, (Tom) Carper never came down, (Jack) Markell never came down. Well, Gov. Carney came down.

“I was impressed by the fact that as a representative of the people he recognized, ‘We have a problem. We need help.’”

Carney going out and listening to the people of Delaware is a good thing, maybe even a great thing. How much he will listen is another story completely.

What scares me are Carney’s visits are is his realization that this budget shortfall is going to be difficult. As El Somnambulo has said, and I am paraphrasing, “What the hell was Carney thinking about in 2016?”.

Gov. Carney said the issue with the budget gets more difficult to solve each year the state puts off addressing the issues.

“The (budget) problem gets harder each year that you don’t fix the structural part of it,” he said. “The best way to address a structural fiscal deficit is to have a strong and growing economy.

“That will mean that your revenues will be coming in at a rate that’s the same pace as your expenses, or greater, and the expenses that you incur as a result of not having a robust economy, people that are unemployed that need services, that need Medicaid, those expenses will go up.”

Jesus Christ, the budget problem gets harder each year?

Wait, it gets better, I mean, worse.

“It’s time to solve Delaware’s budget challenges — we need to stop kicking the can down the road,” Gov. Carney said. “My team will work with Democrats and Republicans in the General Assembly on a long-term budget solution.

Oh, for fuck’s sake.

Here are two things that Carney needs to remember in 2017: you’re the freaking Governor and you’re a Democrat — well, at least it said so on the ballot in November.

Carney to Begin Budget Tour of Delaware

John Carney is about to begin meeting with Delawareans to get our input on the budget. This is a great time to talk to Carney face-to-face. Forget about the tele-conference though. So if you want Carney to raise taxes on Delaware’s richest aka Greenville residents or legalize marijuana, you really should go. Also, sign up here to get Carney’s updates as well as tell him what you think.

7:30 a.m. – January 30 – Timothy’s on the Riverfront, Wilmington, with Representative Stephanie T. Bolden

7:30 a.m. – February 15 – Drip Café, Hockessin, with Senator David Sokola

8:00 a.m. – February 21 – Drip Café, Hockessin, with Senator Greg Lavelle

9:00 a.m. – February 22 – Downtown Dover Partnership, Dover, with Senator Brian Bushweller

February 22 – *TELE-TOWN HALL

9:00 a.m. – March 1 – Nanticoke Senior Center, Seaford, with Representative Daniel Short

8:00 a.m. – April 5 – Café Gelato, Newark, with Representative Paul Baumbach

Carper, Carney, Hall-Long and Purzycki Absent from Women’s March

Update: I’m hearing that John Carney was at the DC Women’s March.

The following Delaware Democratic Party leaders were absent from the Women’s March on Saturday: Tom Carper, John Carney, Bethany Hall-Long, and Mike Purzycki. I’m sure their Delaware Way base are extremely happy.

Senator Carper: Last post on Facebook about Biden’s welcome home ceremony. Two tweets in support of the marches.

Governor Carney: Last post on Facebook about Biden’s welcome home ceremony. Last tweet that disgusting Bonini tweet.

Lt. Governor Bethany Hall-Long: Last post on Facebook about Biden’s welcome home ceremony. Last tweet about Biden’s welcome home ceremony.

Mayor Mike Purzycki: Last post on Facebook about Biden’s welcome home ceremony. Last tweet about Biden’s welcome home ceremony.

That said Senator Chris CoonsRepresentative Lisa Blunt Rochester, and New Castle County Executive Matt Meyers did attend.

If it does turn out that Carper, Carney, Hall-Long and Purzycki did attend, I’ll update this post, but the headline will remain as it would only show that their social media skills are horribly weak.

Carney’s Inaugural Address

On Saturday night, some of you here today braved the freezing rain and came out to the Clear Space Theater in Rehoboth for our first Inaugural event – a Celebration of the Arts.

In addition to a jazz band from Cape Henlopen High School and a traditional dance by members of the Nanticoke tribe, we heard from Polytech High School Senior Hannah Sturgis. Hannah’s a teenage poet, but she has a wise old soul.

She recited for us a poem she wrote called “Vision.” It struck a chord with me, and I think it sets the tone I’d like to set here today. I won’t do Hannah’s delivery justice, but I’d like to read a few excerpts now:

When I look up at the sky I see my dreams bouncing by

Like clouds of promise that keep me honest

Where they can go I don’t know but the road I walk might be long

I get vision when I know that life is changing and my goals are rearranging

I have vision because life is not a hopeless dream

Life is what we make it seem

And when we were young we were told to be like the sun and beam

So I keep on with that vision

As I made a list of thank yous for today, I realized that I could stand up here and do nothing but thank the people on this platform and in this audience. And that would be appropriate.

Lt. Governor Hall-Long, thank you for being part of my team, I look forward to our journey together;

President Pro Temp McBride, Speaker Schwartzkopf, Members of the General Assembly;

Governor Markell, Senator and former Governor Carper, Congresswoman Blunt Rochester, and Governor Minner.

Chief Justice Strine, Justice Vaughn, and Justice Seitz.

Thank you for your service to our state and for your presence here today.

Members of the State Police and National Guard, Staff Sergeant Scott and representatives from Dover Air Force Base, thank you for your service to our state and our country.

Dr. Williams, thank you to you and to our host, the City of Dover; Reverend Davis, Rabbi Beals, Monsignor Hopkins, and other members of the clergy, thank you for minding our spirits today and always.

Tracey, Sam, Jimmy, Mom, and all my brothers and sisters, and our whole family. Thank you for being a witness to this event and for being my foundation.

We’ve heard a lot recently about change –

• That our economy is changing. That we’re competing with the rest of the world, and that technology challenges us to keep our sights on human progress;

• That our kids need to be prepared for a future unlike our past, and unlike even our present;

• That our safety and security are challenged in new ways, and require new solutions and working together.

Change is the new normal for our world, our country, and our state.

But we should also remember that some things haven’t changed. And they should never change – the American Dream. The Delaware Way in its most valuable and valued expression.

The American Dream is not about winning the lottery, not about a few people getting lucky. It’s about working hard. The Delaware Way is not about a few powerful people behind closed doors. It’s about working together. Those things are timeless.

Yes, we need to become more agile. More creative. More determined.

Not to keep up. But to shape our own future.

Do we have challenges?

Yes.

Will they be difficult to overcome?

Yes.

Can we meet those challenges by working hard and working together?

You bet.

And that is what we owe to the people of Delaware:

The family in Wilmington that deserves to live in a safe neighborhood, where they can go to work and their children can go to school without the fear of violence.

The workers in Newport and Seaford coping with a new economic reality.

Small business owners and entrepreneurs who have good ideas and need a government that supports their vision and then gets out of the way.

It’s about our collective future, and how we’ll create opportunities for all Delawareans to succeed.

And, as President Obama reminded us so eloquently last week, our collective future is our collective responsibility. It is my privilege, starting today as your governor, to work hard to live up to the trust of leadership in meeting that responsibility.

What does that mean?

It means that over the next four years, you will see me working every day:

In Legislative Hall.

In our schools.

In our prisons.

In board rooms.

In neighborhoods.

With our business leaders, our workers, our farmers;

With Democrats and with Republicans.

We are going to work together, and think in new ways about our future.

We can no longer expect any single industry or company to be responsible for Delaware’s economic stability, let alone our future.

Our administration will work to lead our state through a transition to an innovation economy, where we’re not only the First State when it comes to incorporating a company but also the First State when it comes to growing a company and deepening its roots here in Delaware.

We will work with private investors to retool our industrial sites and put Delawareans to work.

We’ll also rethink our economic development efforts.

We will support small businesses and entrepreneurs and teach our students the skills necessary to succeed in the jobs of the future.

Working hard, working together to bring jobs to our state, and to keep them here — that’s what will get my team and me up in the morning, and what will keep us working into the night.

We will work in partnership with business and labor. We will reach across the aisle. We will reach across state lines and national borders to grow the Delaware economy.

We will also reach into the neighborhoods of our largest city, because I truly believe that our state cannot succeed if Wilmington does not succeed.

Working hard and working together, with our new mayor and new county executive, we must break the poverty to prison pipeline. In the short-term, we will get serious about our crime problem. We’ll target resources to the most crime-ridden neighborhoods. And we will better prepare ex-offenders to come back to the community.

Wilmington residents and the tens of thousands who commute into the city deserve to feel safe and feel proud of where they live and work. Businesses should feel confident investing there. We all have a stake, and a compelling responsibility, to make Wilmington healthy again.

Part of the solution is in our schools. Every Delaware child deserves a world-class education. Many of our schools have made great strides in recent years, and we have a lot to be proud of. But the truth is, we need to do better, especially for poor and minority students.

Our Department of Education will be an agency that offers support to teachers. We will hold schools accountable, yes. But above all, we will partner with teachers and parents in serving the best interests of our students. And we will partner with struggling communities to improve education for our most disadvantaged kids.

The hardest truth may be that we can’t do anything else unless we get our state’s finances under control. We have a revenue problem; but we also have a spending problem. In the coming months, we’ll put forth a plan for addressing our budget crisis not just for one year, but for years to come.

We are at the end of the road on this one. There’s nowhere else to kick the can. Working hard and working together with leaders on both sides of the aisle in the General Assembly, we will begin to address our long-term financial issues without delay.

My cabinet nominees—a group of dedicated, talented people who are ready to serve our state, will be key leaders. They, too, will undertake their work in accordance with our state and our nation’s timeless principles, and our recognition of what the future demands of us.

Four years from now, when it’s time for the people of Delaware to render a judgment on this administration, I want them to say this:

That the economy is stronger because middle and working class Delawareans are better off;

That there are better-paying jobs that Delawareans value and where they feel valued;

That they feel safer in their neighborhoods and in our towns and cities;

That more of their kids are graduating ready for what comes next, with a sense of promise about the future;

That our state’s finances are strong and in order;

That Delaware had a governor who listened. And worked hard. For them.

We all know that it won’t be easy, that there will be tough decisions, that there will be times when we disagree.

But working hard and working together, we will find a path forward, and we will be better than we were before.

To the people of Delaware, thank you for your trust. It is a great privilege; it is a great responsibility. And we will not let you down.

God bless you and God bless the State of Delaware and God bless our great United States of America.

January 18, 2017 Open Thread

Richard Gregg to lead Christina School District (link)

Two weeks, 5 homicides in Wilmington (link)

Slideshow of Gov. Carney’s inauguration (link)

Open land in Northern Delaware, let’s build a development (link)

Watch FoxNews struggle over Obama’s commuting of Chelsea Manning’s sentence (link)

Things John Carney Thought About in 2016

As El Somnambulo said, and I’m paraphrasing here, “John Carney has known for a year he would become governor, why is he just now thinking about how to fix Delaware’s budget shortfall?”

Here are a few that we know of

  • Breath through my nose
  • I wonder how I’d look with a shaved head
  • What part of the cow does bacon come from
  • Going to sleep on Sunday causes Monday
  • 2016 please don’t take Barry Manilow

So what are some of other things John Carney was thinking about in 2016 instead of Delaware’s budget?

January 16, 2017 Open Thread

Eight straight days, eight shootings in Wilmington (link)

Housing Not Handcuffs Community Justice Walk in Dover a success (link)

Carney picks heads of Agriculture and Homeland Security agencies (link)

Another Markell employee gets a plush job (link)

Today is MLK Day (link)

Winter fishing in Delaware.

Waiting for Governor Milquetoast

The headline on DelawareOnline read, “Carney to worried Dems: ‘Keep doing the right thing’ “. This in itself should have raised some red flags. But the article is filled wth some hopeful statements for Carney such as on fixing the not broken economy: “It’s not going to be the next big thing, but the next 50 things.” Or this: “You can’t force an addict to address their addiction, that’s the tricky part about it. But when an addict is ready to get better, we need to be sure they have a place to turn to, and that treatment is readily available.”

I mean I’m With Him.

And then this.

“I know there’s a lot of anxiety, and I understand the anxiety,” Carney said. “But we need to work across the aisle, we need to work together to make for a Delaware that we, whether on the right or left, are happy to live in. Things may be hard, and we might not agree with everything the new administration and Congress do, but if we keep doing the right thing, we’re going to be alright.”

Fuck. There he goes about working across the aisle. Jesus, I’d love him to be a Democrat for a fucking day instead of worrying about Republicans.

I’m Just a Citizen Standing in Front of a Politician

Are you a concerned citizen? Do you rant on Facebook? Would you like to change your representatives’ minds in DC, but you aren’t a bank or big pharma? What to do?

Emily Ellsworth details what not to do and, more importantly, what to do to get the attention of your representatives.

  1. Facebook posts don’t help.
  2. Don’t email.
  3. Don’t send a letter.
  4. Call them at their local office.

Ellsworth writes, “But, the most effective thing is to actually call them on the phone. At their district (state) office. They have to talk to you there. … But, phone calls! That was a thing that shook up our office from time.”

So here are our politicians local phone numbers:

Senator Tom Carper
Wilmington: (302) 573-6291
Dover: (302) 674-3308
Georgetown: (302) 856-7690

Senator Chris Coons
Wilmington: (302) 573-6345
Dover: (302)736-5601

Representative John Carney 
Wilmington: (302) 691-7333
Georgetown: (302) 854-0667

When we get Lisa Blunt Rochester’s contact information, we will share that.

 

Trump-backer Colin Bonini is going to need a long shower after this campaign

Colin Bonini Donald Trump Rob Tornoe cartoon

It’s hard to imagine the real Colin Bonini as the “Trump Mini-Me” he’s playing on the stump, which is why I drew him in my cartoon trying furiously trying to wash away the stench left by supporting the race-baiting candidate. But if he is just cynically playing to the most racist base of his supporters here in Delaware, he’s doing a convincing job.

Read the full column at Newsworks.org…

The All-Purpose Question Thread for Presumptive Governor John Carney

It has occurred to me that we don’t really know where John Carney stands on the major issues facing Delaware.  So, let’s put together a list for him. You know, to give him enough time to begin thinking about these things.  Please add your own questions to the list:

1. Do you support repeal of the death penalty?  With or without exceptions?

2. Do you support the legalization of marijuana?

3. What is your plan for addressing the education mess that the so-called grownups have created and exacerbated?

4. Do you support single-payer if it can be made feasible for Delaware?

5. Will you follow through on your House vote and prohibit Syrian refugees from resettling in Delaware?

6. What level of minimum wage increase will you support as governor?

OK, kids, I don’t plan to hog them all. Please add to the list. We, your Benevolent Overlords here at DL, will do everything in our power to seek responses from the putative Governor-In-Waiting. Also, if you actually have proof of positions that Carney has taken on any question, please provide it to us. Yes, being on both sides of the same issue counts as proof–of something.

The Most Important Delaware Race of 2016…

…will be the primary for US Congress between State Rep. Bryon Short and State Senator Bryan Townsend.

It is a battle of the present (and, one hopes, the past) of the Democratic Party vs. a more progressive future.

Make no mistake: Bryon Short is the chosen heir to the mantle of middle-of-the-road mediocrity personified by Tom Carper and John Carney. He, or more likely Ed Freel and his ilk, have chosen ex-Carper staffer Mat Marshall to run his campaign. Carper’s ‘Brain’, Ed Freel, is calling the shots from his UD bunker.  Short, of course, served in Carper’s congressional office, and has made no bones about his friendship with Carper and Carney.  You may also recall that Bryon Short bottled up a minimum wage increase in his House committee until the bill was essentially emasculated.  Although strong on social issues, Short’s principal legislative focus has been on cutting yet more ‘red tape’ that, according to the Chamber and its allies, hobble businesses in Delaware. In fact, Short essentially had a committee created just for him with this run in mind: The (get this) House Economic Development/ Banking/Insurance/Commerce Committee, aka The Business Lapdog Committee.

BTW, some people in the Party have suggested that Carney’s delayed announcement was designed to give Short a head start while the congressional race was officially frozen. As in forcing Townsend to wait until Carney made up his mind on which office to seek while Short, with Carper and Carney’s clandestine blessing, plowed straight ahead.

The good news is that Bryan Townsend was not buying Carn(e)y’s third delay.  First, John was waiting for Beau, then, he delayed due to a death in the family, and now he’s delayed his announcement yet again due to a hip operation.  Bryan Townsend has reportedly snagged Delaware’s best political operative to run his campaign. Erik Raser-Schramm has agreed to be Townsend’s campaign manager, and there is a strong rumor out there that he will soon be joined by another top Democratic operative. In only three years, Townsend has amassed one of the best progressive voting records in Dover, and has successfully sponsored (as in ‘passed and signed into law’) some real substantive legislation. While both he and Short are equally strong on social issues, Townsend has been a much more forceful advocate for economic equality and progressive education reform than the go-along-to-get-along Short.

This is why the same party insiders who campaigned en masse for the ethically-bankrupt Tony DeLuca against Townsend are working hard behind the scenes for Short.  In order to control the Party and its corporate donors, they need to control the elected officials.  Short is perfect for their Corporate Carper/Coons/Carney vision for the Party.  Townsend, OTOH, appeals to the rank-and-file, the traditional Democratic constituencies who have been cast adrift by the putative Democratic leaders. He’s also really smart, so he should appeal to people who like their officials to be more intelligent than the average bear.

It’s gonna be an epic battle.  The choice is clear: More Carper-Carney DINOism, or the best chance for progressive change that we’ve had in, like, forever.