Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Seventh District Candidates' Forum

(originally posted on RantsOfRob.Com)

Tonight, in Daytona Beach, the three Democratic candidates for Congress in Florida's Seventh District spoke to a handful of Progressive Democrats. Well, two of them did.

Stephen Bacon entered the venue seemingly confused by the existence of other candidates for the nomination and it went downhill from there. Before the candidates were scheduled to speak, he was trying to speak over the PDA organizer who was running the meeting. He was asked to yield the floor and advised that he would have a chance to address the meeting along with the other candidates. Instead of ceding the point, he chose to argue. When the organizer's father confronted him for his rudeness, he chose to leave. "Bacon fried himself tonight," said Lisa Walker, Beaven's campaign manager.

First to speak was Heather Beaven, the Palm Coast education activist. She spoke for five minutes, covering her biography and making the case that her bio gave her a better grasp of the issues than the out-of-touch Washington crowd. She fielded questions about single-payer health care (she's for it) and tax policy (she has no litmus test for tax reform, but she's pro-unfunded-mandate reform and concerned that PAYGO could be abused by conservatives) She was coherent and concise.

Next to speak was Faye Armitage, the 2008 nominee for the Seventh District seat. Her message was more fragmented, blending a laundry list of policies with a half-formed argument that her background as an economist presented an alternative to the out-of-touch Washington crowd. (See a pattern?) Still, this was a clear improvement over her performances in the 2008 cycle, and her more Progressive issue positions were a better fit for the room than the somewhat more centrist Mrs. Beaven.

The room was well to the left of the majority of Primary voters, however, and the evening did nothing to reverse my impression that Beaven is the more likely choice to beat John Mica in 2010. She is Progressive enough to be a part of the Progressive Caucus on the hill, even if she doesn't march in lockstep with Kucinich Democrats like me.