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Election Information
Trumka: "Most Crucial Election in 75 Years"
Obama, in Campaign Mode, Defends Policies and Offers New Proposal for Transportation Spending
The Fix
Florida Primary Today: Make Calls for PDA-endorsed Candidates Bastien and Tudor
Blue Dogs vs Progressives--Tomorrow Is Primary Day In Florida's 12th Congressional District
Current Endorsed Candidate Campaigns
Click on candidate's name to see list of articles.
Bastien, Marleine (Congress, FL-17)Other Races of Interest
Rick Waugh Receives Local PDA Endorsement-Vying for National Endorsement
AZ Senate Race: Parraz and Glassman Mark Front Line of Democratic Culture War
What It Feels Like to Be Smear Attacked Karl Rove-style by My Opponent Fellow Democrat Mary Nichols
Doug Tudor on His Way to Second PDA Endorsement
Washington Chapter Endorses Larry Kalb for Congress
Heckenlively Ready to Go Head to Head Against Ryan's Strengths
RIPDA Endorses David Segal for Congress
PDA Illinois-CD 15 Votes to Endorse David Gill for Congress
A Constitutional Conventional Candidate
Single-Payer Candidate Wins NC Primary
Melanie Shouse Cared for Us All: The Melanie-Care For All Act
Why am I Progressive and Why Should You Support My Campaign for Congress?
Tasini Renews Call To Gillibrand to Give Back Wall Street Money
Marcy Winograd: Jane Harman Profits From Anti-Generics Amendment She Helped Eshoo Pass
PDA MA Endorses Mike Capuano for Senate
ANC-PAC Endorses Marcy Winograd in Race Against Jane Harman
Jane Harman Challenger, Marcy Winograd, Pledges Support For Armenian American Issues
Taking Back Our Constitutional Rights
PDA Chapter Endorses Tom Geoghegan to Replace Emanuel in IL CD5
Geoghegan: Rhymes with Reagan, Thinks Like Wellstone
PDA-Illinois Endorses Jesse Jackson, Jr.
Rep. Jackson Is Our Choice to Be Senator
Barack Obama for President
10/02/02--The Day Obama Took the Lead
The Wall St Crisis, the 2008 Campaign and What To Do About It
Obama Gaining Crucial Ground, Polling Shifts in Some Key States
Solving Our Financial Crisis
VEEPSTAKES: Obama-Biden
Thomas Looks Towards 2010, Returns to Georgia Senate
An Hour or Two of Your Time Could Change the Congress
The America We Love
Clinton Concedes, Endorses Obama
Sen. Kerry Addresses PDA Members' Concerns
Obama, Clinton and What Has Been Achieved
Advantage Obama
USW Endorses Obama
PDA CO Chapter Endorses Joan Fitz-Gerald for Congress
Party Like It's 1932: The Obama Option
Obama Is Right
Mary Pallant Receives Ventura County Chapter Endorsement
Barack the Vote In the Remaining States
Clinton Has What It Takes
Armitage Wins Endorsement of Greater Daytona PDA Chapter
Clinton's Cringe-Worthy Moment
Give Dennis Kucinich His Due
A Personal Note from Dennis Kucinich
John Edwards Suspends Campaign
US Corporate Elite Fear Candidate Edwards
Kucinich: For the Record
Obama Thanks Kucinich for Encouraging His Backers to Make Obama Their Second Choice
Take a look at Joe Biden--There's a lot in him for Progressives
PDA Energy for Kucinich for New Hampshire!
PDA Members for Edwards take aim at Iowa
Ralph Nader supports Edwards' anti-corporate message
Edwards Delivers Speech On Lifting Up America's Middle Class
Kucinich Hits Homerun in Jefferson's Hometown
PDA - The Freedom to Choose
PDA Rocks!
Bill Richardson
Why I'm supporting John Edwards: It's time for a Progressive President with Coat Tails
Why Should PDA Support Dennis Kucinich?
Signs of Desperation?
Edwards: Senator Clinton Must Take a Stand on Peru Trade Deal
Kucinich Will Introduce Privileged Resolution To Force Vote On Impeachment of Vice President Dick Cheney TODAY
Kucinich's Challenge
Will Democrats Follow John Edwards On Trade--And Win Elections?
John Edwards: Sick of Bush's Rank Hypocrisy
Why is John Edwards leading in Iowa?
"To Build One America, End the Game"
Saving the Middle Class: A Real-Not Rhetorical-Plan
'Winners Never Quit and Quitters Never Win'
John Edwards and "You"
As if our lives depend on it…
Why Progressives Should Support John Edwards for President
Edwards is the only progressive candidate who can win the presidency
Introducing Dennis Kucinich
Edwards will give Kucinich a fight for the progressive vote
Dennis Kucinich represents the Heart & Soul of PDA
What Makes Laura Bonham Run: PDA Staff Member Runs for Utah State Legislature
Clint Curtis is changing the tide in Florida
PDA Welcomes Sen. Feingold to Maryland
Rep. Conyers Endorses PDA National Board Member John Bonifaz for Massachusetts Secretary of State
John Bonifaz for Secretary of State (MA)

No Senate seat should ever be filled by gubernatorial appointment.
To do so gives one man or woman the authority to place a stamp on the affairs of the nation that ought only be affixed by the voters.
Unfortunately, most states allow for the appointment of senators--sometimes until a special election, sometimes for the remainder of a term.
Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold has proposed a constitutional amendment that require that all senators be elected, just as all House members must face the voters before taking their seats. And after the messy--and at times, it appears corrupted--processes that saw replacements for Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and Ken Salazar chosen by gubernatorial appointment, legislators in a number of states around the country have began efforts to assure that their senators are elected.
Unfortunately, West Virginia has not updated its laws to respect the democratic process.
Thus, though the state outlines a procedure for a special election, the West Virginia Secretary of State interpreted the law as saying that Governor Joe Manchin should appoint a replacement for the late Senator Robert Byrd to serve until November of 2012. Manchin is a potential replacement for Byrd but he says he won't appoint himself, which is good news.
There has been some outcry and Manchin and leaders of the legislature are reportedly weighing proposals to rewrite state law in order to hold a special election this fall. A special legislative session that is already scheduled to begin July 19 could do the job, and Derek Scarbro, the executive director of the West Virginia Democratic Party, says he is finding strong support for the idea from both Democrats and Republicans for calling a special election. "A lot of other groups have come out in favor of it now, too," Scarbro tells The Hill.
The West Virginia Republican Partyhas endorsed the change and Troy Berman, its executive director, says, "Just about everybody appears to be getting on board with a legislative remedy at this point."
Make no mistake, the "legislative remedy" is the right fix. It is also the possible fix. There is more than enough time between now and November to open a filing period, schedule party primaries and hold a general election in conjunction with the regular November election. In fact, Hawaii's filing deadline for its September 18 party primaries is not until July 20. And West Virginia's filing deadline for independent and third-party candidates is not until July 30.
So this can be done, relatively easily.
It is simply a matter of will--democratic will.
The question now is whether Manchin has it.
To be sure, the governor will be under pressure from D.C. Democrats who want the seat to be filled by appointment, so that they will have one more vote for their weak financial services reform proposal.
There will also be some D.C. Dems who fear that this could be a tough election cycle and will counsel Manchin to keep the seat out of the voters' hands until 2012, when things might calm down for the Dems.
The governor should dismiss the political calculations on all sides and do the right thing.
Democracy is not supposed to serve the agenda of partisans on either side. It is supposed to serve the interest of voters, who should be represented in Washington by elected, not appointed, members of Congress. The Constitution requires that every House seat be filled by election and the same standard should apply to the Senate, which is, if anything, more powerful than the House when it comes to defining federal policy.
And West Virginia is especially in need of a serious Senate contest.
The state has not had an open Senate seat in 26 years--since Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller outspent his Republican foe 10-1 to win the first of his five terms.
The last time a senator got beat in an open election was in 1958, when Republican Senator W. Chapman Revercomb, a progressive Republican who was a stalwart champion of civil rights, was defeated by a segregationist Democrat named Robert Byrd.
Revercomb (who had been elected in a special election two years earlier) was the better candidate in 1958, although Byrd became a fine senator.
Ultimately, however, small "d" democrats should worry less about who is elected than about the fact of an election.
West Virginia can have one this November. And it should.