All posts by Kris Amundson

Great way to track the Tour

If you don’t get enough Tour de France info over at Reason and Revelation, here’s a great site.

Here you can track individual riders on an interactive Google map with information about their speed, altitude, and even their heart rate. As the cyclists move into the Alps, you might want to check it out.

And as a Norwegian, I was certainly glad that Thor Hushvod (you pronounce his name by clearing your throat) won yesterday’s stage.

Redistricting game

Thanks to Waldo, we learn about The Redistricting Game–a new simulation that lets anyone try to find a more collaborative way to draw district lines.

The simulation offers a graphic demonstration of the impact of the redistricting process. Among the experts cited is Pamela Karlan, a professor at the Stanford Law School: “It used to be that the idea was, once every two years voters elected their representatives, and now, instead, it’s every ten years the representatives choose their constituents.”

One hates to say, “I told you so”

But . . . those of us who advocate for making the redistricting process less partisan have talked for years about the problems with creating one-party districts. We predicted that the net effect would be to give undue influence to people on the ends of the bell curve.

Certainly the results of yesterday’s Senate primaries seem to bear that out.

UPDATE: Commenters have pointed out that I need to clarify. I am talking about the two Republican districts in this case. The McEachin-Lambert race had other issues, and the Barker-Galligan primary came in a district that is, believe me, not drawn to be a Democratic district. I’m not saying it can’t happen in Democratic districts, just that in the case of Sen. Lambert (the only one where the general theory would apply), there was a LOT of other stuff going on.

Advice for graduation speakers

This is the month when many of my colleagues will be addressing the Graduating Class of 2007. If they have not already written their speech yet, here’s my advice: don’t spell.

Mostly, graduation speeches are pretty forgettable. (Best line of this graduation season belongs to the Governor: “I have forgotten every word that was spoken at all my graduations, and I was the speaker at one of them.”)

But of the (many) cap and gown events I’ve endured, only two rise to the level of off-the-charts bad. Both were absolutely memorable, but not in the way the speaker would have hoped. And both involved the unfortunate rhetorical decision to organize the speech around the spelling of a word. 

My own graduation (back in the Pleistocene Era) was one. Unfortunately for all of us, the speaker chose to base his speech on the letters in the name of our high school. Sadly, that was Watertown. W-A-T-E-R-T-O-W-N. Yes, NINE key points, including two that began with the letter “W.”

There are not two memorable things in the entire world that begin with “W.”

And of course, he droned on and on. It wasn’t a graduation, it was a hostage release. We finally crawled out of there about dawn.

Sara’s graduation from Princeton was a multi-day affair. (I guess they really wanted those grads to feel they’d gotten their money’s worth.)

One of the many speakers was e Bay’s Meg Whitman. Logical choice: member of the graduating class 25 years earlier who had just given about a gazillion dollars to the college.

And it could have been good. Except she chose to organize her speech around the word Liberty. Which she spelled “L-I-B-E-R-T-R” . . .

Believe me, an audience of Princeton grads is not the forum in which you want to misspell a word like liberty. “I think that second ‘R’ is silent,” the kids said gamely.

So here’s my advice. Have three key points. Four max. But no spelling. Trust me in this.

The Two Bills

Yesterday we saw the announcement that the Two Bills–Leighty and Murray–have announced their departure from the Kaine administration. We are sad to see them go.

Virginia has been so fortunate to have stellar (and we use that word advisedly) public servants like Bill Leighty and Bill Murray. Both could have commanded much higher salaries in the private sector. They stayed because they absolutely believe that government has important work to do.

They were masters of the arcane details of government. They worked about 20 hours a day. Their word was good.  We wish them both the very best.

Kudos

Kudos to Congressman Jim Moran. Yesterday, he got the House of Representatives to acknowledge the reality that if the Department of the Army moves 22,000 jobs to Fort Belvoir without investing significantly in infrastructure (read: roads and Metro), we’ll all be stuck in traffic forever.

This is an issue that hits close to home for us at 7 West. Many of the jobs that will end up in Belvoir (adjacent to the 44th District)  are coming from the 48th Legislative District.  And while over time, we both think this realignment will be a good thing for the economies of both our districts, we want the process to move at a more measured pace. Frankly, we also want the Army to take at least some of the responsibility for moving 9,000 people away from jobs with Metro access and into jobs that can only be reached by car.

The Base Realignment process is always difficult, because change is difficult. But sticking states and localities with all the enormous costs of this particular job move is both unfair and unrealistic.
Really,  just one trip down Route One will help you understand just how ghastly things will be if we don’t get some help down here. So thanks to the House for passing this important amendment.

21-51

I’ll be speaking to the Northern Virginia Democratic Business Council tomorrow morning at 7:30 (yikes!). Sen. Mark Herring and I will be talking about the efforts of the House and Senate Caucuses to increase the number of Democrats in the General Assembly.

In preparing for the speech, I am impressed by both the quality and the quantity of our Democratic candidates this year. In 2005, House Democrats had the best freshman class that anyone could remember–and it looks like our 2007 class could surpass that group.

Clearly, Democrats are energized. The Post reports this morning that “Gov. Timothy M. Kaine and House and Senate Democrats are far outpacing Republicans in the hunt for campaign cash.”

That’s great news. But it had better not get anyone feeling too confident at this point in the election cycle. My message tomorrow will be basically an echo the wonderful scene in Bull Durham.

The young phenom, “Nuke” LaLoosh, is in the middle of pitching a great game. But in the dugout, his mentor, “Crash” Davis, brings him back to earth. His fastball was up, his curveball was hanging. “Can’t you just let me enjoy the moment?” Nuke wonders. “The moment’s over,” Crash says.

So enjoy being ahead in the money race today. Then get back to work.

Top 10 reasons for elected officials to blog

Not long ago, I asked you for your thoughts on why elected officials should blog, and what they should do on their blogs. Great responses–they made up a big part of what I said.

In my presentation last week, I strongly urged elected officials to become part of the “read-write” web. Here’s why:

10. 60 million voters get some or all of their campaign news from the Internet. Unless your last name is Gates, you probably can’t afford to communicate with them any other way.

To put this in perspective, I won my first race by 339 votes.

9. This may be the last time in your life that you can be called “cutting edge.”

Even a person with my limited tech skills can blog.

8. Even your kids and their friends might occasionally read your blog. Look, a blog post isn’t the same as a Mother’s Day card, but you take what you can get.

Also, blogging is a great way to reach out to younger voters.

7. There are people who really care about why you introduced that bill on the state fruit. Okay, there are 11 of them. But they will read your blog.

6. On the Internet, no one will know if you laugh at your own jokes.

5. Blogs help constituents see you as a real person. Of course, for some elected officials, that might not be such a good idea.

I never knew there were so many other Tar Heel fans in Virginia!

4. Indiana state senator Lewis Wallace wrote Ben Hur. So don’t tell me you don’t have time for a two-paragraph post.

Yeah, blogging takes time. But it’s worth it.

3. A lot of your readers are smarter than you. Which you will find out when you misspell the name of the Secretary of Agriculture.

Readers of blogs are smart people. Electeds could get way better at their jobs if they listened to them.

2. If Matt Drudge can do it, how hard can it be?

Bob and I, the Bloggers on Walkers, are Exhibit A in this regard.

And the number one reason elected officials should blog —

1. Like The Washington Post is going to call you every day.

Most of us got into public service because we care about issues. But with 140 members of the General Assembly, we are not necessarily first on the reporters’ call sheets. Blogging gives us a way into policy debates.

Enough

It was a cold December morning when I drove to Good Shepherd Catholic Church for the funeral of Major Joseph Trane McCloud, who had been killed in Al Albar province. I knew he had left behind a lovely family, including three small children. I knew it was going to be a difficult funeral.

What I didn’t know was that there would be protesters. But standing across the street from the church were members of the Westboro Baptist Church. This self-appointed group has chosen to spread their message of hate at the funerals of American service men and women.

It was an outrageous intrusion on a family and a community’s heartbreak. Now we learn that they plan also to attend the funerals of the Virginia Tech victims.

As Joseph Welch once asked another hate monger, “Have you no shame?”

There are times when words won’t do

There really are no words to describe the sadness all Virginians feel about today’s shootings at Virginia Tech. I have received word (from Del. Jim Shuler) that the Commonwealth’s resources, including State Police, have been mobilized. They are offering all the help possible to a community that is devastated.

Meanwhile, join me in holding the entire Virginia Tech community in your thoughts and prayers.

UPDATE: The Governor’s office has just advised us that Gov. Kaine, who was on his way to India for a trade mission, is returning home immediately.