Showing posts with label Joe Morelle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Morelle. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

The Man Who Never Was

Last night I dreamed a deadly dream
Beyond the Isle of Skye;
I saw a dead man win a fight --
And I thought that man was I.


So begins the film adaptation of the World War II thriller The Man Who Never Was, by Ewen Montagu, the true story of  "Operation Mincemeat," whereby British Intelligence tricked the enemy into weakening Sicily's defenses before the 1943 Allied invasion, using a dead man with faked documents.


Monroe County Democratic Chairman Joe Morelle might well be musing metaphorically these days along the lines of this verse as he stages his Technicolor, Cinemascope production of The Candidate Who Never Was. This is either (a) an intricate plot to ensure Republican defeat in November, on a level of arcane complexity far loftier even than Operation Mincemeat; or (b) a signature failing for a party chairman who we thought, up to now, to be at the top of his game.

You just don't do this. You just plain don't.

If all else fails, you get one of your current office holders, who's not up for re-election this year and who can reasonably carry your party's message, to be your candidate. Often in these circumstances it can be someone whom nobody in your party, including the candidate, thinks of necessarily as a rising star, but whose dutiful performance in carrying the party's banner in difficult conditions will then get a nice appointment, or other opportunity, in the forseeable future. With a Democratic governor in office, surely some suitable reward would have been possible.

Even the Republicans, in 1990, could come up with Pierre Rinfret to run against Cuomo. Admittedly, having no candidate at all would have been better than Rinfret, but the point is that a major party can always find somebody. And when Republicans in New York City ran no candidate against Mayor Koch, it was because the party's leaders, activists and rank-and-file all liked Koch and wished he were their candidate. At the next election they cross-endorsed him. None of the leaders or activists in the Monroe County Democratic Party bear that kind of good will toward Maggie Brooks.

Punting the principal countywide office demoralizes your base. This will hurt, not help, Democratic candidates in town and county legislative races.

Having a principal spokesperson for your message, even a spokesperson who's not expected to win, puts a political party a quantum leap ahead of a situation where you're relying on a dozen or so town supervisor candidates or county legislature candidates. First, because the press won't focus on what a dozen candidates for lesser office are saying, as compared to one person at the top going for the brass ring.

Second, because those local contests are races of a different nature. A countywide race is mass-marketing. It employs broadcast media to deliver a unified message. The local races are completely different. They rely principally on door-to-door campaigning. This way your message gets out only to a limited number of people, relative to a countywide race. And there's no unified message. It's whatever the issues are in that town, or whatever the local candidate thinks will appeal. It's the retail counter, as compared to the TV ad for the whole store.

The ramifications of the Democratic Party's failure to field a candidate for County Executive are being documented amply by interested and concerned Democrats in comments to postings on the subject at blogs such as Rochester Turning.

To their insights we would add this:

As we contemplate the A-list of potential Democratic candidates for Monroe County Executive, there really are only two names. One of them is . . . Joe Morelle. Our very own Little Joe. And if he thought he'd make a good State Comptroller, wouldn't he make a great County Executive? And if he's his party's Chairman, and no one else steps up to the plate -- shouldn't Little Joe have been the Democratic Candidate for County Executive? If only in the captain-going-down-with-the-ship tradition?

Does anyone think Joe Morelle couldn't have done at least as well against Maggie Brooks as Bill Johnson did four years ago? Or that there could have been a more effective advocate than Morelle for his party's message?

Last night I dreamed ...

Dead -- or otherwise nonexistent -- men and women may win fights in "deadly dreams." But not in real life.

Joe Morelle may have launched, for his own party, an Operation Mincemeat in more ways than one.

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Monday, May 21, 2007

"I've Got Your State Audit RIGHT HERE!"

On Thursday the Democrat and Chronicle editorialized that Democratic Chairman Joe Morelle's "Proposal to disband the Water Authority is premature."

It occurs to us that if Morelle had intended this as a serious policy initiative, he'd have done his homework to show, for example, how abolishing the Monroe County Water Authority might affect the price of water paid by Monroe County consumers. Since the county's water rates are "among the lowest in the Northeast," according to the Democrat and Chronicle, maybe this was too tall an order for Little Joe, at least from his perspective out on the Albany Ponderosa.

So we'll have to take the proposal as undoubtedly it was intended, as a political shrapnel bomb meant to sow confusion, disorder and to deflect attention from the gnawing embarrassment that County Democrats don't have a candidate for County Executive. Hence its release mere hours before the Republican convention to renominate Maggie Brooks.

But that's not the interesting part.

What captured our interest was the rhetorical question the D&C chose to headline the editorial: "Where's the State Audit?" When, it pondered, will we ever see the second State Comptroller's report of its audit of the Water Authority's practices before 2004? The editorial tells us it "was completed months ago but withheld."

Now, here on the Street we like the D&C's editorial page a lot more than its news operation. Yet we wonder: can these people be as obtuse as their question suggests?

They really don't know when the Comptroller will release the second report?

We do. We know exactly when.

It will be released the weekend of November 3 - 4.

See, Election Day is November 6. Releasing it just before the election will allow Monroe County Democrats to carp about the Water Authority (even though it was the Republicans who cleaned it up) without giving Republicans time to respond before the election.

That's the least Comptroller -- and former Democratic Assemblyman -- Tom DiNapoli can do for his old Assembly comrade-in-arms Joe Morelle.

And if that's too difficult for you to figure out, look at the bright side: you have a future writing editorials for our Newspaper of Record.

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Then Again, Maybe it's Not Koon

The idea of a David Koon campaign for Monroe County Executive may be fading into oblivion.

Mustard Street's sources tell us that in recent weeks the putative candidate was rebuffed twice, first by Democratic Chairman Joe Morelle when Koon asked for money for a campaign; then by Mayor Bob Duffy when Koon asked for funds to do a poll.

The smart money knows the score.

Word is that the name on the ballot for the Democrats might even be a junior County Legislator. But right now, anything could happen. Anything, that is, besides beating Maggie Brooks in November.

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