Archive for March, 2010

A Look at GOP U.S. Senate Candidate Endorsements Thus Far

By Elizabeth Crum | 4:04 pm March 26th, 2010

Here’s what I have on endorsements of Republican hopefuls in the race-to-beat-Harry-Reid so far:

(Note:  This is not an exhaustive list for all candidates. I will post updates as I find them or as campaign staffers politely email to inform me of my oversight.)(Ha!)

– Jeri Thompson, wife of former Senator and 2008 presidential candidate Fred Thompson, today endorsed U.S. Senate Candidate Sue Lowden via a column in American Spectator online.

– Lowden also has a fundraiser luncheon on deck (see here: Lowden_Fundraiser_Invite) that features former Thune campaign manager Dick Wadhams and lists supporters including:  Bill and Dale Raggio, Assembly Minority Leader Heidi Gansert, Senator Randolph Townsend, former Congresswoman Barbara Vucanovich, former Governor Bob List and Mayor Bob Cashell, among others.

– Sarah Palin’s dad endorsed Tarkanian earlier this month (on/around March 15).

– Erick Erickson of RedState fame had endorsed Danny Tarkanian on February 28. (Lowden had expressed surprise when told about that endorsement, saying, “Well, I don’t know Erick and have never even talked to him, so I’m a little surprised by that.”)

– Former Michigan GOP chair and RNC chair candidate Saul Anuzis endorsed Lowden in a column cross-posted at both the Spectator and The Corner on National Review Online on February 5.

(Note:  I get daily calls and emails from out of state people asking “who can beat Harry Reid” and “who do you like?”  For the record, the Nevada News Bureau does not endorse candidates, and neither do I.)

2010 Election Season Crucial with Redistricting on the Agenda in the Next Legislative Session

By Sean Whaley | 3:18 pm March 26th, 2010

CARSON CITY – As millions of Americans fill out their census forms over the next several weeks in the nation’s once-a-decade head count, they no doubt will see the process as a minor inconvenience at most.

But the 2010 census count isn’t just about adding up the population in each state. It is also the starting point for what most observers agree is the most political and contentious issue state lawmakers ever face: The redrawing of political boundaries for members of Congress and especially themselves.

The census count triggers the redistricting and reapportionment process every 10 years, which is designed to make political boundaries approximately equal in population in each state. The census can also lead to Congressional seats being relocated to states where populations have increased since the prior count.

In Nevada the process can pit party against party, national party interests versus local interests, north versus south and Assembly versus Senate. Add to the mix the desires of lawmakers who wish to protect their seats and ensure continued re-election, a major statewide budget crisis, a dozen or more freshman lawmakers and 120 days to get job done, and the 2011 Nevada legislative session will likely be both grueling and interesting to watch.

“It’s huge,” said Ryan Erwin, a political consultant who worked on reapportionment in Nevada in the 2001 session on behalf of Assembly and Senate Republicans. “Ultimately what happens will have a huge impact on Nevada politics over the next decade. Redistricting will have a longer term impact on the finances of this state than any two-year budget ever will.”

In one sign of how serious the issue is for the parties, the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, in a memo put out March 15, identified Nevada’s state Senate as one of 10 legislative chambers having tight contests where Democrats need to work to maintain control this election year.

“The DLCC is determined to run the largest Democratic redistricting mobilization in history this year to ensure that our state legislative candidates have the resources needed to win against well-heeled Republican special interests,” the memo says.

The DLCC has established a fund to put $20 million into races that will have the greatest impact on reapportionment, the memo says.

Erwin, who was the executive director of the state Republican Party at the time of the 2001 redistricting, said the issues for lawmakers can be very personal. In the 2001 process, for example, there was a lawmaker who demanded that the hospital she was born in be included in her district, he said.

Others want double-digit voter registration advantages, Erwin said.

“It’s a very personal process,” he said. “You see the selfish side of people with redistricting more than with any other piece of legislation.”

But much of the process is bound by constitutional requirements for fair and reasonable district boundaries, and so only a portion of the process could be called discretionary, Erwin said.

In the 2001 process, which included the creation of a new Congressional 3 District in Southern Nevada, no one was really happy with the final result, which Erwin said is probably a sign that the process was fair.

“First and foremost you have a responsibility to create fair lines,” he said. “Second is to get what you want.”

In the 2011 process, lawmakers will likely have the chance to create a fourth Congressional seat given Nevada’s population growth over the past decade. Another issue on the table will be whether to expand the size of the Legislature, which now stands at 63 members.

Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno, who is running for the Washoe 1 Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Bernice Mathews, D-Reno, due to term limits, said the process is critically important for both parties but the results are not always easy to predict.

“Republicans designed a lot of seats last time, and see what happened in 10 years,” she said. “It’s hard to predict what will happen in 10 years.”

The Senate in 2001 had a 12-9 GOP edge, and Republicans held on to the majority in the upper house until the 2008 election, when Democrats took the majority for the first time since 1991.

In the Assembly, Democrats ruled with 27 members compared to 15 GOP lawmakers. Democrats have held on to the majority ever since.

The importance of the redistricting process can be gauged in a variety of ways. For Leslie, winning her race is important because it is now the only Democratic state Senate seat outside of Clark County.

“From that point of view it could not be more critical to maintain at least one seat and hope to expand Democratic representation in northern Nevada,” she said.

But Leslie said she also favors an effort to create some more competitive seats in the process so that voters have a choice.

“It really serves Democracy better by creating a more even playing field,” she said.

Assemblyman Pete Goicoechea, R-Eureka, said enlarging the Legislature is an issue of particular concern to rural lawmakers, who have seen their districts grow large geographically because of the population growth in Southern Nevada.

Also on the Assembly GOP agenda is taking away the Democrat’s current veto-proof 28-seat advantage by winning as many new seats as possible.

“Otherwise it is pretty tough to play,” he said.

The process will be interesting because so many veteran lawmakers will not be participating due to term limits and other reasons, Goicoechea said.

Only two members of the Assembly, Majority Leader John Oceguera, D-Las Vegas, and Assemblywoman Debbie Smith, D-Sparks, will have gone through the redistricting process, assuming they are both re-elected this year.

“It’s almost a different generation,” Goicoechea said. “There aren’t as many scars. I do feel we will get along.”

Sen. Barbara Cegavske, R-Las Vegas, who was involved in the 2001 redistricting process as a member of the Assembly GOP leadership, said the impending 2011 redistricting is why she and other Republicans are working so hard to regain the majority in the Senate.

“It is so essential that we have control for this redistricting,” she said. “Without it this will be very detrimental, not for two years, but 10.”

The last go-round was grossly unfair to Republicans in the Assembly, Cegavske said.

“We should have sued,” she said. “It was so out of whack and unfair.”

Cegavske, who herself is up for re-election to her Clark 8 seat, has two Democratic challengers who will fight it out in a primary. An Independent American candidate withdrew from the race.

Cegavske said she is taking nothing for granted in her race. She expects to be targeted because the Democrats would like to pick up two seats to get 14 members, a veto-proof majority.

“Redistricting should be about the representation of the people of Nevada,” she said.  “I believe in that. The side deals have to stop. It should all be out in the public and not behind closed doors.”

While Cegavske believes the GOP got a bad deal with the Assembly districts created in 2001, they were finalized without any representation from the Assembly GOP in a final late night meeting.

Then-Assembly Minority Leader Lynn Hettrick, now a deputy chief of staff for Gov. Jim Gibbons, said there was no representation in the final meeting because there was nothing to negotiate.

Hettrick said he worked all session to try to come up with a compromise plan only to be told in the final days that Assembly Democrats had decided to draw the districts on their own. There was nothing to negotiate at any final meeting on redistricting because the bill had already been drafted, he said.

Hettrick said he offered to participate if there was a real chance of compromise with Democrats, but never got a call.

“I was asked to come in so it appeared I was agreeing with the plan,” Hettrick said. “There is no way I would have agreed to it.”

“It was a done deal,” he said. “There was no negotiating I was going to be able to do or not do.”

Former Gov. Kenny Guinn, who was involved in the 2001 redistricting process, said he recalls there was a strong interest on the part of Republicans to get as favorable a registration balance in the newly created Congressional 3 seat as possible, and so the Assembly districts ended up more favorable to Democrats as part of the give-and-take of the negotiations.

The new Congressional seat was won by then-state Sen. Jon Porter, R-Henderson, in the 2002 election, a seat he retained until losing in 2008 to former state Sen. Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas.

But the strong Democrat majority in the Assembly had a lot to do with how the districts ended up being redrawn as well, Guinn said.

Another major issue in 2001 was a desire to create some districts that would give minority candidates, including Hispanics, an opportunity to run and win office in the state Legislature, he said.

Guinn said he believes Hispanic representation did improve as a result of the redistricting, although it occurred over time, not immediately. The issue of minority representation will likely come up again in 2011, and it has to be given serious consideration, he said.

Guinn said the 2011 redistricting process will be the most important in Nevada’s history. But he said the governor does not have a lot of power, other than that of persuasion, over the process.

The governor does have the power to veto any redistricting plan passed by the Legislature, however, which would require a two-thirds vote in both houses to override.

Erwin said the Assembly Republicans probably did as good a job as possible given their minority status in the Assembly.

“The reality is the minority party in redistricting rarely has the opportunity to make substantial gains,” he said.

In the 2010 election, a mid-term contest where voters frequently favor the minority party, Republicans have a chance to pick up a state Senate seat and possibly as many as four Assembly seats, he said.

Reducing the Democrat edge in the Senate and taking away a veto-proof majority in the Assembly will have a substantial impact on the redistricting process, Erwin said. Having a Republican in the governor’s office, which appears likely, will also help, he said.

For Democrats, “It will no longer be a home run,” Erwin said.

Community and Labor Groups Call on Nevada Attorney General to Support Health Care Bill

By Elizabeth Crum | 12:20 pm March 26th, 2010

And from the other side of the aisle (see my previous post), we have a media advisory saying that a dozen Nevada community leaders are calling on Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto to reject the idea of a “frivolous health-care lawsuit.”  From their press release:

Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons has demanded that the Attorney General join a lawsuit to block implementation of federal health care reform, a package of important changes that is particularly needed in Nevada, where an estimated 400,000 men, women and children lack health insurance coverage.

And:

“It is unfortunate that Gov. Gibbons has chosen to side with insurance companies rather than the people who elected him,” said Jan Gilbert, Northern Nevada organizer for the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada (PLAN).

Signatories on a letter that will be delivered to the AG’s office later today are:  PLAN, Business Advocating Social Equity, Culinary Workers Union Local 226, Family TIES of Nevada, Food Bank of Northern Nevada, Great Basin Resource Watch, Nevada Advocates for Planned Parenthood Affiliates, Nevada Lawyers for Progressive Policy, Nevada State Education Association, Planned Parenthood Mar Monte, Planned Parenthood of Southern Nevada, and Public Resource Associates.

IAP AG Candidate Joel Hansen to Speak at Searchlight Tea Party, Calls Out Masto on Health Care Lawsuit Delay

By Elizabeth Crum | 12:13 pm March 26th, 2010

Independent American Party (IAP) candidate for Attorney General Joel Hansen will be speaking at the Tea Party rally in Searchlight tomorrow.  We have presumably received a preview of his remarks via today’s IAP press release in which he asks why Nevada’s attorney general has not yet filed suit over the health care bill, as follows:

“Top legal officials from 14 states across the country on Tuesday filed lawsuits challenging an overhaul of the U.S.’ $2.5 trillion healthcare system, minutes after President Barack Obama signed the landmark legislation. Why didn’t Nevada’s Attorney General join? Why is Nevada’s Attorney General Mastos dragging her feet?” asked Joel Hansen, Independent American Candidate for Nevada Attorney General.

(Note:  The IAP press release incorrectly spells the Attorney General’s last name “Mastos” instead of “Masto.” I will be spelling it correctly from here forward, even when quoting the release.)

Hansen praised Governor Gibbons for directing Masto to file suit against “Obamacare” which he said is “an unconstitutional obamanation.”

(Note:  One assumes “obamanation” is an intentional misspelling of “abomination”…)

Also from the release:

“The federal government was not given the power under the Constitution to tell people that they must buy health insurance. Obamacare also violates the Tenth Amendment, in that health care is not a power delegated to Congress and thus must remain with the States or with the people. This law destroys America’s economic and personal freedoms as no other federal law has ever done before. It must be stopped, and as Attorney General, I will lead Nevada’s legal fight against this wholesale destruction of our cherished liberties,” vowed Hansen.

You can read the whole press release here and read more about Hansen here.

Court Date Set for IAP Challenge of Tea Party of Nevada Candidate Scott Ashjian

By Elizabeth Crum | 10:33 am March 26th, 2010

The Independent American Party (IAP) says the hearing in the challenge of “Tea Party of Nevada” candidate Scott Ashjian has been set for Wednesday, April 14, 2010 at 9:30 am in the First District Court, Dept. 1 with Judge Russell.

(How fitting: the hearing is the day before Tax Day, which is sort of like the reverse official national holiday of the Tea Party movement.)

Joel Hansen will be serving as the attorney in the challenge brought by IAP U.S. Senate candidate Tim Fasano, who originally brought the challenge pro se.

Will post a copy of that lawsuit here shortly for your convenience, Dear Readers.

Update (3:o6 PM): Here is the filed/stamped copy of the lawsuit that was filed on Monday:  IAP_v_TeaParty_Suit

Update: Land Owner of Searchlight Tea Party Site Clears Up Permit and Parking Concerns

By Elizabeth Crum | 9:01 am March 26th, 2010

This will be the first of multiple updates and stories about the Searchlight Tea Party rally and related events tomorrow.

Yesterday it was reported that there might be some problems with permits (for grading and tortoises) and parking for the rally site down in Searchlight.  Here is an update from TD Barnes, the man whose company has donated the land for the rally:

On the grading permit, the inspector called me to apologize and offered any support we might need from him personally. I do have to call someone here in the Las Vegas department. (The inspector was from Laughlin). I don’t think there is a problem there.

As to the Desert Tortoise, our section of land is exempt from the Desert Tortoise rule.  We have never seen one and somewhere along the line, someone challenged -whomever- to this effect and they officially exempted the land. (I know of other instances where this has been done when land was not populated by the critter.)

On the parking, someone mentioned to the media that a small area had been set aside for the event – meaning the stage area – and it was reported that was all the parking there was for the entire event. But we have all of the front area and up over the hill set aside, so there is a lot of parking. (I think much of the front is reserved for RVs and handicap spots with the rest parking over the hill.)

I don’t think anyone has a clue as to the number planning to attend. There is no doubt that parking might be hectic. The organizers have a number of volunteer policemen lined up to direct traffic on the property. Ingress and egress are definitely going to be challenging since there is only the one road. I expect the organizers to have detailed traffic control to manage the coming and going.

I would also like to express my appreciation for Diane Kendall and all her volunteers at Searchlight for their Herculean efforts and behind the scenes coordination to prepare for this event. Diane is in the real estate business in Searchlight and I’m sure set concern for her business aside to step up to the plate for this historic event.

And:

From what I hear about those attending, a majority are not Tea Party people. It’s true that the Tea Party organized the event, but the attendees are mostly independent people expressing their dissatisfaction with our government overall and should be labeled as simply “the People”.

Sounds to me like they are as ready as they can be.  I’ll be speaking with Diane Kendall later today, I hope, so I’ll post updates at that time (if there are any).

Tea Party of Nevada Senate Candidate Scott Ashjian Says He Attended Las Vegas Tea Party Last Spring

By Elizabeth Crum | 8:19 pm March 25th, 2010

As Flashed by Ralston right after his show tonight:

Despite assertions by local and national Tea Partiers that he was never at any events, Tea Party of Nevada U.S. Senate candidate Scott Ashjian said tonight on “Face to Face” that he has evidence he attended Tea Party events. He said on April 15 of last year, he attended a rally at Sunset Park and sent pictures to the Los Anegles Times. He said he took the Tea Party name because he was inspired by the rallies across the country. He is going to the Showdown in Searchlight and has agreed to let CNN shadow him. Ashjian also accused, without evidence, the Gibbons Administration of a political hit by taking his contractor’s license this week.

“The Tea Party leader in Nevada is me,” said Ashjian to Ralston a few minutes into the interview.

He said he was inspired to engage in politics by his attendance at the Tea Party rally in Las Vegas last April 15, and re: the unfair/untrue comments about him, Ashjian said, “I think they should be cautious about the things that they say.”

Re: the IAP legal challenge, “I think it’s hypocritical.”

Re: his credibility, business problems, loss of contractor’s license this week and his $200K IRS lien, he said the IRS thing will be straightened out and…yeah, he did…that the contractor’s board sanctions must be political because the contractor’s board is appointed by Gibbons and stacked with Republicans.

(Except that the contractor’s board complaint existed long before Ashjian ever decided to run for office.  See details on that in the first post I ever wrote about him.)

Also from the show tonight:

Mark Williams of the Tea Party Express responded to Ralston’s intro of him as a “Tea Party leader” by asking, “How can you be the leader of an idea…?”  And made various comments about how no one has ever seen/heard of Ashjian before recent weeks.  And floated the idea that Ashjian is in the race for gain and might be writing a book (or maybe should be) in order to pay off all his debts.

And Tim Fasano, an Independent American Party (IAP) candidate, took questions about the Tea Party, Ashjian and why the IAP is a third party trying to use legal technicalities against another third party.  And answered questions about…questionable items on his website and blog.

Earlier this week Janine Hansen of the IAP was on Ralston’s show as well.  She said Ashjian is trying to “usurp” the Tea Party name and that the IAP’s legal objection is that his declaration of candidacy was filed before he had registered as a member of his party (which is backwards according to NRS).

Eric Odom, of the Patriot Caucus and American Liberty Alliance, appeared on Face to Face on Tuesday and said about Ashjian, “I think he’s disingenuous, dishonest and it’s very clear…even in the statement you read earlier, he said “they,” so he sees the whole Tea Party movement and all of us activists as some other entity that he is not a part of, and I think that represents the problem here.”

Not a lot of friends to be found for Ashjian, it seems.

Tarkanian Admits He Was Wrong About “S” Word in Robo Calls, Lowden Answers Controversial TARP Question

By Elizabeth Crum | 5:49 pm March 25th, 2010

The Hill picked up on a point of conflict that emerged from the Tarkanian v. Lowden debate on KXNT yesterday morning and which I reported on here.  Here’s the short Hill piece followed by a comment or three from me:

Nevada businessman Danny Tarkanian’s Senate campaign admits its candidate was wrong when he denied using the word “socialism” in a robocall against his Republican opponent.

In a joint appearance with former state GOP Chairwoman Sue Lowden on KXNT-AM radio, Tarkanian was challenged by the host on his campaign tactics. Tarkanian claimed he never used the word “socialism” in the robocall. But a recording of the call contradicts Tarkanian.

“There was no ‘socialism’ word in there – you’re wrong on that,” Tarkanian said Wednesday. “I guarantee you.”

A recording of the robocall, though, makes clear that Tarkanian tied Lowden to the Wall Street bailout and then described the bailouts as “socialism.”

“With respect, I must disagree with my Republican opponent Sue Lowden when she and the establishment defended the Wall Street bailout,” Tarkanian said, adding later, of the bailout: “That’s not freedom. Let’s call it what it is: socialism.”

Tarkanian spokesman James Fisfis notes that Tarkanian had been accused by the host of calling Lowden a “socialist.” At no point during the robocall, though, does he directly use the word to describe her.

“Danny was wrong that the word ‘socialism’ wasn’t in there,” Fisfis said. “He was asked if he had called her a socialist, and he didn’t.”

Two things:

First, if Tarkanian had stated yesterday that he had never called Lowden a socialist, he would have won the point both then and in any follow-up stories today.  Instead, he overstated and claimed (guaranteed!) the word “socialism” was not used in his robo call — a claim that was subsequently proven false — so today the narrative was that Tarkanian had to admit he was wrong.  This is a classic example of how a candidate can flub an opportunity to both correct his opponent and score political points.  Had Tarkanian remembered what he had said on his own robo call and stated it accurately, he could have accomplished both.

Second, this issue of how Lowden would or would not have voted on that initial TARP bill in 2008 — the whole basis for Tarkanian’s use of the “socialism” word — really has not been put to bed in my mind since it first came up.  Team Tark has been saying (and re-saying, every chance they get) that Lowden admitted she would have voted for the Wall Street bailout.  Here is the Lowden line to which they keep pointing (which she gave in answer to a question about the TARP vote by the Nevada Appeal):

“I would like to say I would have voted ‘no’, but I can’t do that.”

Team Tark contends that sentence means Lowden would have voted “yes.”  But my own estimation was and has been that you cannot intuit a clear “yes” or “no” from it.  By any reasonable standard of textbook logic, the statement “I cannot say I would not have” does not have the same meaning as the statement “I would have.”  The fairest thing one could glean from Lowden’s statement — without making assumptions, intuiting or having any other context with which to work — is that she didn’t know, or would or could not say, how she would have voted.  And I think this is so even when the remark is taken in full context:

“It’s easy to say, no, I wouldn’t have voted for it. But people were panicked, we were facing collapse – that’s what they were saying. It’s easy to say from a distance I would have voted no, but I can’t do that.”

Yesterday on KXNT, Lowden said that conversation with the Appeal reporter was an “intellectual” discussion about the difficulty and complexity of the economic situation in 2008 and included her feelings of sympathy for Republicans who had to make a call on the TARP bill in the midst of nationwide financial panic.  A couple of weeks ago, Lowden had told me in an interview that her statements to the Appeal were not intended to be evasive but were instead “a thoughtful response to a difficult question.”  I asked her then how she thought she might have voted, and she said, “Probably against it, but again, I want to emphasize my understanding for those who made a different choice.”

This afternoon, I called Lowden’s office and asked for a “yes” or “no” once-and-for-all answer on the TARP vote issue. Spokesman Robert Uithoven spoke to Lowden and then provided this comment:

“Sue would not have voted for the TARP or any of the other bailout bills in Congress…period.”

If you, Dear Reader (and Team Tark), believed Lowden’s “I can’t say” meant “yes,” you will no doubt feel justified in claiming Lowden has changed her position.  If, on the other hand, you thought “I can’t say” meant “I can’t say,” Lowden has now Said — and you may make of that what you will.

Tea Party Express Releases Ad Denouncing Candidate Jon Scott Ashjian, Says “Get Lost”

By Elizabeth Crum | 11:11 am March 25th, 2010

The promised ad is up on YouTube.  Calls “Tea Party of Nevada” Ashjian a “fraud” and asks voters to reject his candidacy.

Governor Gibbons Says if Attorney General Masto Will Not File Lawsuit Challenging Health Care Bill, He Will Seek Outside Counsel and Move Forward Without Her

By Elizabeth Crum | 11:00 am March 25th, 2010

Pursuant to Nevada law NRS 228.170(1), Governor Gibbons yesterday directed Attorney General Catherine Cortez-Masto to take legal action against the federal government’s new healthcare legislation.

On a conference call with Nevada political bloggers this morning, Governor Gibbons said he plans to give Masto until Monday to conduct a legal review of the House health care bill and make a decision about filing a lawsuit against the federal government for what he called “the unconstitutional aspects” of the bill.

If Masto does not think she has an “iron clad case,” the standard the governor said Masto told him she would apply in her decision making process, Gibbons said he will seek outside counsel and move forward with legal action on behalf of the state.  Gibbons said he has spoken with a number of Nevada attorneys who are willing to do the work pro bono due to their belief that a suit has merit and serves the public interest.

“This legislation is unprecedented and unconstitutional in that it penalizes people and businesses for not purchasing a product, and it is inequitable in that it favors the residents of some states over others because of exemptions and special deals that were cut to buy the votes of certain members of Congress,” said Gibbons. “There is no doubt in my mind that the state of Nevada and other states around the country have legal grounds in this matter.”

Masto is not so sure.  In a letter to Gibbons yesterday she stated, “The attorney general is the state’s chief legal officer. Like you I have a responsibility to represent the state’s interests. As such, I must be satisfied in my own professional judgment that the case has merit and should be filed. I also have the responsibility to decide when litigation is conducted.”

If Gibbons sticks to his word, she has until Monday to make that decision.

Update 1 (5:59 PM): Here’s the letter the governor sent to the AG about this matter today:  2010-03-25_AG_Letter

Update 2 (30 seconds later): Here’s what CityLife editor and Slash Politics blogger Steve Sebelius has to say about it.  Calls Gibbons “Captain Deadline” (ha!)

John Ensign: It’s His Birthday, and He’ll Cry if He Wants To

By Elizabeth Crum | 6:22 am March 25th, 2010

You would cry, too, if it happened to you.

Yes, it’s Senator John Ensign’s (52nd) birthday today.  And yes, our junior senator is crying us a river.  In the form of complaining that he is a victim of “gotcha” journalism.

Yes, really.

When asked whether he’s been subpoenaed in the grand jury probe into his after-affair attempts at damage control  – some of which may have been slightly illegal – he rebuked the press for its coverage of the scandal (per Politico):

“Seeking of the truth should be not only part of the Justice Department and part of our judicial system, but also should be … a goal of reporters today,” Ensign said. “Unfortunately, too much of our press is … (1) biased or (2) just about ‘gotcha.’”

And:

“It’s just, I have a responsibility to do my job and, as part of this republic that we have, the fourth estate does too, and they’re both important roles,” he told POLITICO. “Unfortunately, some in my part don’t give it a good name. But some in your part don’t give it a good name, [and] it’s all of us trying to do our best. That’s all I’m trying to say.”

And also:

“Whether it’s Republican or Democrat, it’s about nailing somebody,” Ensign said. “So sometimes people look at something, and whether or not it’s true, they want to try to nail them on it.”

Ah, the melodramatic machinations of a once a rising star in the GOP galaxy.  There are few things more painful to watch than a graceless fall from grace.

I borrow from an email sent out this morning by the DSCC and and offer Ensign this birthday gift and a token of sympathy.  Behold, the world’s smallest violin:

Organizers to Henderson Tea Party Event Attendees: No Signs Allowed – ?!

By Elizabeth Crum | 8:45 pm March 24th, 2010

Um…  Since when do Tea Party rallies have a “no signs allowed” rule?  Where’s the fun in that…?

And what is the deal with saying it’s because of “security reasons concerning Ann Coulter”?  Are they afraid someone’s going to try to beat her to death with a “Taxed Enough Already” sign?

(And is this related to her recent trouble and canceled event in Ottawa?)

Found out what little I know about it (so far) from the Angle campaign today:

Important Update

Please, No Signs at the Henderson Pavilion Event

Friends of Sharron Angle,

After sending out our last email, “Good Guys Make Their Own Signs,” we were informed by the organizers of the Henderson Pavilion “Take Back Our State” Event, this coming Saturday, that signs would not be allowed. The organizers are taking this step for security reasons concerning Ann Coulter, the keynote speaker, and her safety.

We ask you that you please respect the organizers policies on this matter.

However, they didn’t say anything about Stickers! So take a marker to a lapel sticker and write – “I’m for Angle!”

We will see you there,

Friends of Sharron Angle Campaign

Team Tark Out With TV Ads

By Elizabeth Crum | 8:27 pm March 24th, 2010

You can see them here.

T.D. Barnes: The Man Behind the Land in Searchlight

By Elizabeth Crum | 5:58 pm March 24th, 2010

T.D. Barnes is the president and one of the owners of Startel, Inc., the company that owns the 160 acres where Saturday’s big “Showdown in Searchlight” Tea Party rally is going to occur.

Barnes said he was approached by the Tea Party Express for the use of his land, but that he doesn’t know enough about the Tea Party movement to determine if it satisfies his political concerns.

“I have not attended any rallies, nor am I active in grassroots,” he said.  “I do, however, support anything that will expose and curtail the agenda of the current administration.”

Barnes did say the Tea Party movement appears to be “shining light on what the House, Senate, and Obama administration are doing to circumvent the wishes and needs of the voters.”

“Our citizens need jobs, not more government control, give-away programs and debt that future generators will have to pay,” he said.  “In my opinion, fault lies with both parties and with a society turned passive and willing to accept a free ride.”

Barnes plans to attend the rally and said people are welcome to come down and camp on the land the night before if they wish.  He said Tea Party Express coordinators have arranged for the provision of porta potties and trash receptacles on the land.

Barnes’ company, Startel, has a landscape rock operation operated by Vista Landscape Center of Henderson and which produces much of the crushed rock used to replace lawns and conserve water in southern Nevada. In addition to their rock operation, Startel is seeking to start up a solar renewable energy operation.

Barnes is also the Director of the Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame and President of Roadrunners Internationale which consists of ex-CIA, Air Force and other military support personnel who built and flew the CIA U-2 and A-12 spyplanes at Groom Lake (Area-51) in the 1960s.  (FYI:  The A-12 preceded the SR-71, but remained classified until recent years.) Two years ago the CIA declassified the identity of Barnes and the others who worked on the A-12 Oxcart project.

Barnes and his wife, Doris, last week celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary.  Following is a photo taken of the two at the A-12 dedication:

And here’s a photo of the Searchlight site (taken in 2003 when Startel was providing material to the state for the widening of I-95):

Harry Reid’s Democrat Challenger to Speak at Searchlight Tea Party Showdown

By Elizabeth Crum | 5:14 pm March 24th, 2010

Well, this is an interesting development in the Searchlight Showdown saga:

Ed Hamilton, who bills himself as a conservative Democrat running against Harry Reid in the US Senate primary, is slated to speak at the candidates’ forum at the Tea Party rally in Searchlight this Saturday.

(So confirms Tea Party activist Debbie Landis who is organizing that part of event.)

Hamilton says he is the voters’ “early opportunity” to unseat Reid:  “why wait until the November general election when Nevada voters could RETIRE REID starting with early voting in May”…?

What to make of this Wonderland in which Tea Party of Nevada candidate Jon Scott Ashjian is banned from the podium, but a registered Democrat is not…?

Curiouser and curiouser!