Maybe Oxendine was hunting for water

January 26, 2010 by Ken Edelstein · Leave a Comment
Filed under: POLITICS 
The John Oxendine shooting accident had nothing to do with this man.

The John Oxendine shooting accident had nothing to do with this man.

Aha! Now I’ve figured it out. That “not a Dick Cheney” hunting accident involving John Oxendine, his sons and some guy straight out of an episode of Petticoat Junction wasn’t an accident after all.

It was a reconnaissance mission on behalf of the thirsty people of Georgia.

Think about it: Yesterday, Oxendine announced that, if elected governor, he’ll take up with the U.S. Supreme Court a Georgia request that Tennessee let us pipe water from the Tennessee River to metro Atlanta.

Could it be mere coincidence that someone in Oxendine’s hunting party peppered a northwest Georgia man with buckshot just one week earlier?

Hear me out: The incident occurred on Walker County property owned by a man whom the current insurance commissioner  is supposed to be regulating Read more

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Oxendine channels William Tecumseh Sherman

September 23, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 2 Comments
Filed under: POLITICS, SMART GROWTH 
Georgia Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine

Georgia Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine

Gubernatorial candidate John Oxendine appears to have attended the William Tecumseh Sherman school of urban renewal, and the Sarah Palin school of governance.

First, let’s talk about Palin’s teachings: Rally your supporters, not by advocating an idea that actually solves a problem, but by pushing one that upsets the people your supporters don’t like (the people your supporters don’t like will never vote for you anyway). The loonier the idea the better, because really crazy ideas are likely to upset the people you’re trying to upset even more. And the more you upset those people, the happier your fans will be.

Tah-dah! You’re a social warrior! And a social warrior just might win the Republican primary.

But Oxendine’s taken in even more compelling lessons from Gen. Sherman Read more

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Poythress hits Republican “secession candidates”

May 20, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 5 Comments
Filed under: ARTS & EVENTS 
GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE DAVID POYTHRESS: See his anti-secession video after the jump.

GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE DAVID POYTHRESS: See his anti-secession video after the jump.

Democrat David Poythress may be an underdog in the 2010 governor’s race, but he put a video on YouTube today that does a pretty good job of showing how silly — perhaps even vulnerable — Republicans are sounding as they leap all over each other to appeal to the far right.

The subject: Noises the GOP candidates have been making about seceding from the good ol’ U.S. of A.

Poythress, who flaunts the fact that he’s a retired Army Reserve general, expresses his “outrage” in the video that four of six Republicans in the governor’s race are “embracing secession.”  Photos of candidates Ray McBerry, Eric Johnson, John Oxendine and Karen Handel appear on the screen.

Poythress’ claim is only a bit of a stretch. He falsely states that the candidates said they’d “support secession from the United States of America.”

On the other hand, McBerry, whose photographer should appear next to the entry for “fruitcake” in the latest edition of Webster’s, has indeed announced that he’s running as a “States’ Rights”candidate. He also has less of a chance of winning the Republican nomination as Cynthia McKinney would were she running for the Democratic nomination.

OK, so Johnson, Oxendine and Handel — three of the GOP field’s four frontrunners — stopped short of declaring war on Fort Sumter. But they’ve been only a tad less direct than McBerry. Read more

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Will campaign donor scandal help Oxendine?

May 18, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 3 Comments
Filed under: POLITICS 
One of the photos of Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine that, not surprisingly is plastered all over the Insurance Department's website.

A BIT GEEKY, EH? One of the flattering photos of Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine that are plastered all over the state Department of Insurance website.

Georgia Republicans may be riding higher right now than Republicans are elsewhere. But that doesn’t mean the state party isn’t suffering from the same dysfunction that’s led the national GOP to nosedive.

It’s just that Georgia’s voters seem content to allow Republicans to get away with partisan excesses, fuzzy math and their inability to govern effectively — so long as they manage to sound more conservative and paranoid than the next guy.

Which brings us to the AJC’s revelations about John Oxendine’s campaign finance mess (is “scandal” too harsh a word?). The longtime insurance commissioner, now a leading 2010 Republican candidate for governor, has a reputation for raising big money from executives at the companies he regulates.

Last Sunday, AJC reporter Cameron McWhirter broke the story of 10 loosely connected political action committees — tied to a Rome, Ga., insurance baron — that funneled $120,000 last year to Oxendine’s 2010 gubernatorial campaign. The donations appear to be illegal.

In the article, Oxendine pooh-poohed the revelations. And, taking the tact that a lot of Southern politicians have used when caught doing something wrong, his campaign sent out a hilarious e-mail blaming the article on “the left-wing, anti-conservative, anti-American bias of the AJC”:

What they have really done is confirm to conservatives which Republican candidate they are afraid of — which Republican candidate they do not want to win. This is a time honored tradition at the AJC. Attack and smear any real conservative who might actually win. Attack, attack, attack. Talk about anything but the issues.

At Team Oxendine, we wear this hit piece as a badge of honor. Georgia Republicans know perfectly well a candidate is not a serious front-runner until they have been attacked and smeared by the AJC. That day has come and the AJC has sent a message loud and clear — John Oxendine is a conservative the liberals cannot tolerate. We are proud to know the “fair and balanced” crowd at the AJC is not for John Oxendine.

(Kudos to Travis Fain’s Lucid Idiocy blog for publishing the full memo.)

That Monday, the campaign still was calling the article a “hit piece.” But, faced with an ethics investigation, it did announce it would give the money back.

I suppose it’s pretty basic to observe that Oxendine is trying to use the story to engage the Republican base in his victimhood, and that he’s hoping to tap into the anti-media paranoia that’s such a strong motivator for Southern conservatives. That would be nothing new, of course. In the early 20th century, governors Tom Watson and Eugene Talmadge ran against the “liberal” Atlanta newspapers  to become the most powerful Georgia politicians of their day. South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond and Alabama’s George Wallace rode similar routes to national prominence in losing presidential campaigns. Read more

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Governor’s race taking shape

April 30, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · Leave a Comment
Filed under: POLITICS 

From Tom Baxter and GONSO:

Maybe it says something about how next year’s governor’s race is shaping up that the early jostling has involved two back surgeries.

The more widely publicized of these was performed, reportedly with good results, this week on Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle. He had been viewed as a top contender in the race for the Republican nomination until he announced at a tearful press conference earlier this month that a back problem had convinced him to abandon the governor’s race and run for his current job.

There was so much skepticism about the real reason for Cagle’s departure that he showed his X-rays and MRIs to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Jim Galloway as proof he genuinely is in too much pain to take on such a big race. No doubt pain did have a great deal to do with Cagle’s surprise decision, but the timing – a week after the end of the session, long enough to get on the phone and test the climate for political fundraising – suggests money might have had a little to do with it also.

Since Cagle’s departure, the Republican dominos have fallen in a striking pattern. Three potential contenders from the Atlanta metro area – U.S. Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, Cobb County Commission Chairman Sam Olens, and state House Speaker Pro Tem Mark Burkhalter – have decided they’re not getting in the governor’s race.

Again, there must be a lot of reasons why they all opted not to get in this race. But a casual glance at the business pages suggests one overriding factor: any campaign that might have counted on Atlanta development money is finding out there’s a lot less of it available in this election cycle. (Not to mention that there are four Republicans already dialing for dollars: Secretary of State Karen Handel, Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine, state Rep. Austin Scott of Tifton and states rights advocate Ray McBerry.)

Meanwhile, two candidates from outside metro Atlanta who weren’t on the radar for this race have jumped in it. Senate President Eric Johnson of Savannah switched from the lieutenant governor’s race, thus avoiding the returning Cagle and upping the ante on his own ambitions. U.S. Rep. Nathan Deal, who wasn’t even on the short list of Republican congressmen interested in the race, has also been letting colleagues know he intends to announce soon.

Both add some intriguing dimensions to the race. Johnson has the potential to benefit from the GOP’s growth in eastern Georgia, and he’s already put together an organization. As an up-and-coming legislator and during his first couple of years in Congress, Deal enjoyed a best-and-brightest image in the Democratic Party that reminded some of Roy Barnes. Since his party switch in 1995, Deal has swung more to the right on issues like immigration, and he never really assumed the leadership position in his adopted party which some had envisioned for him as a Democrat. But it will be interesting to see what cross-party appeal he might have next year.

Speaking of Barnes, the other back surgery was the one performed on him back before Christmas of last year. He told a former staffer the week after that operation that he was about 50-50 on getting in the race. If he was 50-50 after going through something like that, Barnes might seem likely to make his fourth bid for governor. But sources who’ve talked with him in recently haven’t seen any signs that he’s committed.

Until he makes his intentions known, which should be some time in May, the Democratic field consists of three people with whom the former governor has important connections: David Poythress, whom Barnes appointed state adjutant general, Attorney General Thurbert Baker, with whom Barnes carefully coordinated his 1998 and 2002 races, and House Minority Leader Dubose Porter, who was a floor leader for Barnes when he was governor. Whether Barnes is in this race or not, he’s going to have a lot to do with how it’s run.

Tom Baxter is editor of the Southern Political Report and senior vice president of its parent company, InsiderAdvantage, a media and polling firm. He was the chief political correspondent at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution for 20 years. [full bio]

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Barnes may decide soon

April 13, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 1 Comment
Filed under: POLITICS 

Roy Barnes will determine within a month whether to take a stab at returning to the Governor’s Mansion in 2010, the founder of a group formed to encourage Barnes to run told members today.

“I have confirmation that Governor Barnes knows about our group and is going to make his decision in the next 3-4 weeks,” Michael Kozol of the Facebook group “Roy Barnes for Governor (Georgia 2010)” said in a message to members.

After Barnes’ 2002 upset at the hands Sonny Perdue, the Cobb County attorney swore off politics. In recent months, however, he’s been making speeches to small groups around the state, criticizing the Republican-led state government for its failure to address transportation and education problems — two issues Barnes had attempted to address during his one term as governor.

A March 29 AJC article that reported Barnes was thinking about running prompted the formation of two Facebook groups aimed at recruiting him — Kozol’s, which already has 588 members, and “Run ROY Run (Roy Barnes for Governor),” which has 349 members.

Three well-known Democrats already are running. State Attorney General Thurbert Baker and state House Minority Leader DuBose Porter dropped their hats in the ring earlier this month, joining longtime politician David Poythress, who’s been running since last year. But Barnes’ name recognition, his charisma and the chance that his victory would give Democrats a sense of sweet vindication would make him a heavy favorite to win the nomination.

An Insider Advantage poll last month indicated he’d be a formidable opponent to any of the three most well-known Republicans who plan to run in 2010. Polls this early in the race usually have more to do with name recognition than anything else. For what it’s worth though, the former governor was neck-and-neck with Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle (35-39), ahead of Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine (38-33) and ahead of Secretary of State Karen Handel (34-29).

Perdue is barred by the Georgia Constitution from running for a third term.

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