May 17, 2012

Tong/Lin 2016?

William Tong Jeremy Lin

AP/The Huffington Post   Posted: 02/16/2012 4:22 pm

Will having a sports superstar like Jeremy Lin help Asian Americans get more political respect?  U.S. Senate candidate (and AAA-Fund endorsee) William Tong thinks so (via AP/HuffPost):

HARTFORD, Conn. — As a U.S. Senate candidate from Connecticut, William Tong doesn’t have major, state-wide name recognition like his two main rivals for the Democratic nomination. But the son of Chinese immigrants has picked up supporters from across the country as the only Asian-American candidate for Senate this year in the continental U.S.

With only 3.8 percent of Connecticut’s population identified as Asian, it’s unclear how much the degree of celebrity Tong has developed within the Asian-American community will translate into a possible victory.

The 38-year-old state representative and self-proclaimed political underdog hopes his story of growing up in his family’s Chinese restaurant, working nights and weekends washing dishes, cooking and waiting tables before graduating from an Ivy League university and law school, will touch non-Asian voters as well because it is “a universal story” about living the American dream, he said.

“My story resonates with everybody,” Tong said. “Everybody owns a piece of the same story.”

Gautam Dutta, executive director of the Asian American Action Fund, a political action committee that contributed $1,000 to Tong’s campaign, said Tong is a particularly compelling candidate for Asian supporters because he has already been elected in a legislative district that does not have a large Asian population and has successfully connected with non-Asian voters.

Dutta said there is sometimes a perception in the Asian community and within other minority groups that a minority candidate doesn’t have a chance of winning without a large pool of minority voters supporting them at the polling booth.

“He’s reached out to everyone and they believe in him,” Dutta said of Tong.

“It’s not every day that you have a viable Asian candidate running for U.S. Senate,” Dutta added. “He’s definitely in the trail-blazer category.”

****

Tong, who, if elected would be the first Chinese-American to hold a U.S. Senate seat, has not been shy about discussing his ethnicity on the campaign trail. On Thursday, Tong linked his message of being an underdog fighting for the American dream for everyday people to the Asian-American basketball phenomenon Jeremy Lin of the New York Knicks. In a fundraising e-mail to supporters, Tong points out how Lin, also the son of Chinese-American immigrants, was an underdog, with no one willing to give him a shot.

“When somebody finally gave him a chance, he took the NBA by storm. He’s arrived, but he got here with a decade of hard work and confidence against the odds. He’s the underdog who made it. He’s living the American Dream,” Tong wrote. “The dream I’ve lived, the dream Jeremy Lin is living, is the dream we can all live. But we have to fight for it.”

We’re proud of two leaders who have realized the American Dream.

– Gautam Dutta

Pete Hoekstra’s Racist Superbowl Ad

Ed. Note: The AAA-Fund Condemns Racist Superbowl Ad as do I personally, apart from my official capacities here. APIAVote has also condemned along with a long, long list of other such official condemnations I’ve yet to compile.

There’s already a billion posts out there about the outrage so I’m not going to re-type them up when I can save my time and labor and just link to

  1. Super Bowl ‘China’ ad from Pete Hoekstra panned by bloggers, puts him into hot water, cited as racist
  2. I’m not sure the idiots who’d vote for such a guy would have enough education or intelligence to understand that Hoekstra‘s message is bad for Michigan’s economy.
  3. Emabarass the GOP’s usual racism. It works for them so they do it. Black ministers know this all too well. It’s time we learned from them and not have history repeat itself before we smarten up and waken up. I’m not waiting around for Asian-Americans to “get it”: this is racism.
  4. It’s bad political strategy, for those so entrenched inside the political game machine of numbers and strategy/policy that they can only understand it from their insider’s lingo/viewpoint.
  5. Hoekstra Super Bowl ad a slippery slope toward Asian-bashing?. No kidding, conservative idiots at CSR, it is Asian bashing and isn’t the start of it either. Amazing how idiotic headline writers are.
  6. Expose the identity of the dumb and/or racist Asian actress who did that ad using Internet justice so we know what went wrong when she agreed to do that ad.
  7. Know this is far more important and threatening of an issue than the higher placed news ranking of that other “political” Superbowl ad that is getting more press, the Bizarre Republican Freakout Over the Clint Eastwood Superbowl Ad. Probably because it’s less risky for the mass media to cover.

Now for something that we specialize in here at the AAA-Fund: action.

  1. Demand an apology. Write a letter to a newspaper, to the creeper himself, to his campaign staff (who’re also to blame but who shall remain nameless), and to those who donate to his campaign who enable him. If you’re loathe to write something from scratch then sigh a petition online. You can’t get lazier than that. Can you?
  2. Run for Congress. Or at least help those who do. As Jay Chen says

    … when people like you and I do not get involved in the political process, then people like Pete Hoekstra do.

  3. Many other like his kind running for Congress include Rep. Ed Royce (CA), Rep. Jim Moran (VA), and many more in a district near you. You need to know what you want to do for a campaign and then go do it. Or !
  4. Defund his campaign. If that means supporting not his Democratic rivals but hos rivals in the Republican primary, Clark Durant and Gary Glenn, then so be it. The racist must never be allowed into political office to represent his constituents. It seems they’re racists too, but rednecks, don’t wonder “why they hate us because you hated them first. Real Christian of you. Anyways, for us educated folks, send your time and money to where it counts. Perhaps a list of non-racist leaders will help?

To dispel some of the usual conspircy theories especially popular with less gave his fee all to charity.

A final word of warning to you lazy folk taking no action, there’s real harm to you and Asian-Americans if we don’t stop such racists. Step. Adocate. Take action.

– Richard Chen

DNC AAPI Leaders on Hoekstra Ad

Editor’s note: Mike Honda is the Honorary Chair of AAA Fund, and Bel Leong-Hong is a long standing board member of AAA Fund. Good to see Democrats and Republicans pulling together in opposition to Hoekstra ad.

Statement from DNC Vice Chair Congressman Mike Honda and DNC AAPI Caucus Chair Bel Leong-Hong on Hoekstra’s Racially-Charged Super Bowl Campaign Ad

- Rep. Mike Honda, DNC Vice Chair, Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) Chair Emeritus:

“Pete Hoekstra’s Super Bowl campaign ad, is a despicable example of Republican race-baiting cloaked in the guise of genuine political debate and, quite simply, is offensive to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Hoekstra stoops to using racial stereotypes and fails to engage honestly and credibly on the issues. The only point of an ad like this is to gin up anti-Asian American sentiment at a time when we need to be united as a nation in order to move all Americans forward.

There’s no room – anytime, anywhere – for this kind of ignorance and intolerance in campaigning or governing. The hard-working families of Michigan deserve real debate and real solutions. Sadly, Pete Hoekstra’s latest ad clearly demonstrates that he lacks the values and vision to move Michigan forward. Hoekstra merely offers the kind of ignorance and intolerance that harms every single family in Michigan and beyond.”

Bel Leong-Hong, DNC AAPI Caucus Chair:

“Ads like these that play on fear and racial stereotypes must never be tolerated. We must focus on the economic issues at hand, because the people of Michigan deserve better. Our nation deserves better representatives in Congress who can stick to the issues and not use harmful, divisive measures for political gain.”

###

AAA-Fund Condemns Racist Superbowl Ad

Asian American Action Fund Calls on Pete Hoekstra to Remove Racially Offensive Ad and  Apologize to Asian American & Pacific Islander Community

No One Should Pander to Xenophobia on the Eve of the 30th Anniversary of Vincent Chin’s Death

WASHINGTON, DC — The Asian American Action Fund today called on Senate candidate and former U.S. Representative Pete Hoekstra to remove an offensive campaign advertisement and apologize to the Asian American community. The insensitive advertisement, aired during Super Bowl XLVI in Michigan, depicts a woman of Asian descent speaking in broken English, wearing a straw hat and riding a bicycle around a rice paddy.

“The AAA-Fund is outraged to see former Representative Pete Hoekstra rely on such offensive stereotypes at the expense of Asian Americans,” said Gautam Dutta, executive director of the AAA-Fund. “We are appalled at the cheap shots taken against the Asian American community to score political points particularly as this year marks the 30th anniversary of the tragic death of Vincent Chin. Vincent Chin was murdered in Detroit by workers seeking to blame Japan for the plight of the auto industry. We would expect our current and former representatives to honor that history and not seek to repeat it. We call on candidate Pete Hoekstra to apologize and take down his ad.”

The Hoekstra campaign’s defense of the ad to POLITICO by calling it “satirical” is perhaps even more troubling to AAA-Fund. Dutta said, “If they really wanted to make a point about Chinese competitiveness and their bilingual ability, they should not have relied on an American actor filmed in California speaking in a broken English that is reminiscent of Asian prostitutes saying ‘Me love you long time’ in Hollywood films.”

Asian Americans are one of the fast growing ethnic groups in the United States. Michigan has seen over 100% growth in its Asian American population in the last decade.

The AAA-Fund is a Democratic political action committee whose goal is to increase the voice of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders on every level of local, state and federal government in America. To achieve this goal, we promote the leadership development of Asian Pacific Americans (APAs) as campaign volunteers, campaign contributors, and candidates for political office.

Workers’ rights at Apple factories

There’s been a lot of attention paid recently to the rights of workers at Foxconn factories in China. Foxconn is one of the biggest suppliers and manufacturers of Apple iPhones and iPads. There’s been a This American Life, Mike Daisy did a whole Broadway show about Steve Jobs that includes a trenchent commentary on the working conditions in Shenzhen. Now the mighty New York Times takes a microscope to factory life (and really, workers live inside the factories, which are like small bustling cities.)

Here is the saddest and most poignant description I read:

He had been promoted quickly at Foxconn, and after just a few months was in charge of a team that maintained the machines that polished iPad cases. The sanding area was loud and hazy with aluminum dust. Workers wore masks and earplugs, but no matter how many times they showered, they were recognizable by the slight aluminum sparkle in their hair and at the corners of their eyes.

While the description is almost poetic, the “twinkling dust” can be deadly.

Dust is a known safety hazard. In 2003, an aluminum dust explosion in Indiana destroyed a wheel factory and killed a worker. In 2008, agricultural dust inside a sugar factory in Georgia caused an explosion that killed 14.

So the factory explodes, and Lai, who had moved to Chengdu to be able to afford a wedding to a beautiful nursing student, was lying on the floor of the factory.

Eventually, his family arrived. Over 90 percent of his body had been seared. “My mom ran away from the room at the first sight of him. I cried. Nobody could stand it,” his brother said. When his mother eventually returned, she tried to avoid touching her son, for fear that it would cause pain.

“If I had known,” she said, “I would have grabbed his arm, I would have touched him.”

“He was very tough,” she said. “He held on for two days.”

After Mr. Lai died, Foxconn workers drove to Mr. Lai’s hometown and delivered a box of ashes. The company later wired a check for about $150,000.

That’s not an insignificant amount. Lai made $22/day, or $6864 annually if he’s pulling the 6 day workweeks that are common, and not taking any weeks off. That’s easily a lifetime of money for his family. But it doesn’t change the fact that the process of assembling all the gadgets that we love so very much (not just Apple) is a painful and laborious one done by workers who make less in a week than the cost of said gadget.

This NYTimes story doesn’t even get into the infamous suicides at Foxconn that caused the company to put up a mesh net around its periphery. for that, go watch Mike Daisey’s The Agony and Ecstasy of Steve Jobs or listen to This American Life’s episode on the turmoil within the plants, and why some workers would rather take their lives than continue working on the assembly lines.

A majority of people don’t know where Apple makes its products, nor do they really care, according to a recent poll. So I’m glad the issue is gaining traction and getting attention, because in order for these processes to change, the consumers are the ones who have to be aware and be willing to hold Apple accountable, the way that activists held Nike and Gap accountable. Apple recently released a list of their suppliers, but they still aren’t letting activists into their plants to examine the conditions. I’m not saying we shouldn’t own cell phones and tablets, just that we should be mindful of where they come from.

–Caroline

Youth arrests for violent crime reach lowest level in 20 years

This post was originally published at Reclaiming Futures Every Day
Good news from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP). In their recently released Juvenile Arrests 2009 bulletin (the latest year data is available), OJJDP analysts found that in 2009, youth arrests for violent crime reached the lowest level in 20 years.

From the news release:

According to the 2009 data, U.S. law enforcement agencies made an estimated 1.9 million arrests of persons younger than 18 years old, nine percent fewer than in 2008. Between 2008 and 2009, there were declines in nearly every offense category. The number of juvenile arrests for Violent Crime Index offenses–murder, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault–decreased ten percent from 2008, reaching its lowest level since the early 1990s.

How the rightwing gets progressive money to tear down teachers

Former AAA Fund blogger Lee Fang has a great investigative article up in the Nation (“How Online Learning Companies Bought America’s Schools) on how the Gates Foundation is giving conservative think tank American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) nearly half a million – $400,000 – to sponsor education reform bills at the state level. ALEC is not a friendly organization – it doesn’t promote the health and welfare of underserved communities, or anything that you might associate with the good that the Gates Foundation does. It is the main policy organizing arm of the right wing that pushes the most heinous anti-immigrant (SB 1070 clones), anti-civil rights (they push all the restrictive voter bills), anti-worker, anti-health care reform bills at the state level, and they try to do it across all the states. Basically, if a large corporation like Blue Cross Blue Shield has a bill they want to promote, they give money to ALEC to help them get state legislators to sponsor and move their bills along. 85% of their funding comes from corporations.

I can say this from first hand experience – I spent more than a year fighting anti-immigrant, anti-worker policies across the states that ALEC was pushing. And now everyone knows the terrible impact that they can have, from Arizona to Alabama.</rant>

Going back to Gates funding an anti-teacher agenda. Crooks and Liars has additional analysis:

Education for profit is lucrative and alluring, especially to people with large sums of money parked and waiting for investment in big-profit items. So when Bill Gates claims to stand for education reform in this country, I place him squarely in the category of those who stand to profit from privatized education.

Teachers are up against a wide range and nexus of for-profit education corporations, companies that make money by performing measurements of No Child Left Behind (SchoolNet is one), venture capital firms (led by KleinerPerkins), hedge funds and finance types, elected officials, and foundations (Gates, Eli Broad, Dell, etc.) which are seeking to push anti-union and anti-teacher proposals. These groups hire high-priced lobbyists to promote their agenda:

Levesque noted that reform efforts had failed because the opposition had time to organize. Next year, Levesque advised, reformers should “spread” the unions thin “by playing offense” with decoy legislation. Levesque said she planned to sponsor a series of statewide reforms, like allowing taxpayer dollars to go to religious schools by overturning the so-called Blaine Amendment, “even if it doesn’t pass…to keep them busy on that front.” She also advised paycheck protection, a unionbusting scheme, as well as a state-provided insurance program to encourage teachers to leave the union and a transparency law to force teachers unions to show additional information to the public. Needling the labor unions with all these bills, Levesque said, allows certain charter bills to fly “under the radar.”

Public sector workers have been under attack this cycle, and there’s no doubt that teachers don’t have the clout to combat these bills on their own. 

Lobbyists like Levesque have made 2011 the year of virtual education reform, at last achieving sweeping legislative success by combining the financial firepower of their corporate clients with the seeming legitimacy of privatization-minded school-reform think tanks and foundations. Thanks to this synergistic pairing, policies designed to boost the bottom lines of education-technology companies are cast as mere attempts to improve education through technological enhancements, prompting little public debate or opposition. In addition to Florida, twelve states have expanded virtual school programs or online course requirements this year. This legislative juggernaut has coincided with a gold rush of investors clamoring to get a piece of the K-12 education market. It’s big business, and getting bigger: One study estimated that revenues from the K-12 online learning industry will grow by 43 percent between 2010 and 2015, with revenues reaching $24.4 billion.

Needless to say, I don’t think online education is the main solution to our education crisis. And I’m definitely opposed to companies profiting from replacing real live teachers with video teachers. That’s not a substitute teacher, that’s a virtual teacher, as in virtually no education.

Thirteen other states have enacted laws to expand or initiate so-called school choice programs this year.

Meanwhile, ALEC has continued to slip laws written by education-tech lobbyists onto the books. In Tennessee, Republican State Representative Harry Brooks didn’t even bother changing the name of ALEC’s Virtual Public Schools Act before introducing it as his own legislation. Asked by the Knoxville News Sentinel’s Tom Humphrey where he got the idea for the bill, Brooks readily admitted that a K12 Inc. lobbyist helped him draft it. Governor Bill Haslam signed Brooks’s bill into law in May. The statute allows parents to apply nearly every dollar the state typically spends per pupil, almost $6,000 in most areas, to virtual charter schools, as long as they are authorized by the state.

It’s worse than charter schools – it’s video schools. The onslaught is coming, be forewarned and arm yourself with knowledge.

– Caroline

Asian Americans Rising

Ed. Note:  This op-ed was first published by New America Media.

Mayor Ed Lee and the Rise of Asian American Political Power

Mayor Ed Lee and the Rise of Asian American Political Power

New America Media, Commentary, Gautam Dutta, Posted: Nov 30, 2011

A few weeks ago, Ed Lee became the first Asian American to be elected mayor of San Francisco. His victory, and that of Oakland Mayor Jean Quan in January, caps a remarkable eight years in which Asian American political power in the Bay Area has grown from being barely a blip on the radar to the equivalent of a major seismic event.

Certainly this success story is grounded in the Asian American community doing the hard work of registering voters, mobilizing supporters, raising money and cultivating strong candidates. The Asian American community has paid its dues.

But its success has also arrived hand in glove with the use of ranked choice voting (RCV), which allows voters to rank their top three favorite candidates in order of preference. The Asian American community benefited from ranked choice ballots, which helped prevent vote splitting among voters and candidates, and by building successful coalitions among voters across the city.

Consider that before San Francisco’s first RCV elections in 2004, it had six citywide offices and eleven members of the Board of Supervisors, all elected with the old two-round runoff system that resulted in candidates winning during traditionally low-turnout December elections. Lee, in contrast, won decisively with a higher voter turnout than in any mayoral election in the 22 largest U.S. cities.

Additionally, under the previous system, a total of only three Asian Americans were elected to those 17 offices, including only one to the Board of Supervisors. Two Asian American incumbents — Mabel Teng and Michael Yaki — lost close December runoffs in 2000 after leading comfortably in the first round in November. Not coincidentally, voter turnout plummeted by 40 percent in that December runoff, with the victors garnering fewer votes than Yaki and Teng had in November.

That was all too common in December runoff elections: not only did overall voter turnout shrink, it plummeted among minorities and young people. The December electorate was overwhelmingly white, older and more conservative than San Francisco as a whole. In addition, with multiple Asian American candidates competing for a single vote, the result was often that they would bump each other off.

Since RCV came into the picture, Asian Americans have had stunning electoral success. After Ranked Choice Voting was introduced, Asian American representation more than doubled, from 3 out of 17 seats to 7 out of 17 seats for citywide offices and Board of Supervisors. Alongside Mayor Lee is Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting and Public Defender Jeff Adachi, as well as four Asian Americans on the Board of Supervisors, including Board President David Chiu.  Four more supervisors are also from minority communities, for a total of eight out of 11 on the Board of Supervisors, or 73 percent, the highest among any major U.S. city.

RCV has played a major role in this shift toward greater minority representation by moving elections to November, when voter turnout among minority communities is at its peak, and by preventing minority candidates from splitting the vote.

This last point became clear with Mayor Lee’s victory. With five of the sixteen candidates of Asian descent, concern arose about the possibility of splitting the vote. Yet with voters turning out in record numbers, some 73 percent filled in all three slots on the ballot, while another 11 percent filled in at least two.

In a runoff count, six of the seven top candidates were eliminated, with second and third choice votes going to the remaining contenders, including Lee and second-place finisher John Avalos. In post-election simulations, however, not only did Lee defeat Avalos handily when matched one-on-one, he defeated every other candidate by lopsided margins when matched against them. Neighborhood results from around the city showed that he ran well everywhere, even beating Avalos in his own district.

Asian American voters had clearly thrown their weight behind Lee, whether as a first or second choice candidate.

Unfortunately, not everyone is welcoming this advance toward fair representation. The Chamber of Commerce and San Francisco Chronicle want to return San Francisco to the old days of December runoffs, when elections were decided amid low minority turnout and Big Money interests could use independent expenditures to pound their opponents into submission. The Chamber and Chronicle have joined with the two most conservative members of the Board of Supervisors – both white males – in introducing a bill to repeal ranked choice voting.

The opponents claim that RCV is confusing for minority voters, but if that is the case then how is it that minority communities have had such stunning electoral success using RCV? Indeed, an Asian Law Caucus exit survey in 2006 found not only did a large majority of Asian-Americans prefer RCV to December runoffs, but particularly high numbers of Asian American voters used all three of their rankings.

Certainly there are ways to improve San Francisco’s elections, including through better voter education, devising a simpler ballot and allowing voters to have more than three RCV rankings. However, two facts are now beyond question. The first is that Ranked Choice Voting has been good for San Francisco. And the second — repealing RCV would be a disaster for minority communities.

Let’s hope San Francisco remains on the right side of history.

Gautam Dutta, an election and business lawyer, is Executive Director of the Asian American Action Fund.

Herman Cain biased against non-Christian doctors

Herman Cain has some real problems with foreign doctors, and doctors with funny last names.

He did have a slight worry at one point during the chemotherapy process when he discovered that one of the surgeon’s name was “Dr. Abdallah.”

“I said to his physician assistant, I said, ‘That sounds foreign — not that I had anything against foreign doctors — but it sounded too foreign,” Cain tells the audience. “She said, ‘He’s from Lebanon.’ Oh, Lebanon! My mind immediately started thinking, wait a minute, maybe his religious persuasion is different than mine! She could see the look on my face and she said, ‘Don’t worry, Mr. Cain, he’s a Christian from Lebanon.’”

“Hallelujah!” Cain says. “Thank God!”

The crowd laughs uneasily.

N Magazine writer Dan Amira writes, “We’re almost shell-shocked by how unbelievably bigoted that story is. Apparently, in addition to being terrorist sympathizers who want to replace the Constitution with Sharia, Muslim-Americans are supposed to be pro-cancer now, too.”

That whole anecdote is just so loaded. Allow me to unpack and vent here:

1) What constitutes too foreign, and how do you know when your name has crossed the line? Is it determined by radius – like Dr. Tavarez has a foreign name but that name sounds like it comes from somewhere close to the equator in Southern Hemisphere. But Dr. Abdallah – that name sounds like it comes from somewhere further than the International DateLine, that’s too much?!?

2) Foreign born doctors (and let’s remember not all doctors with funny names are foreign-born. Plenty of them grew up and were born here.)  Cain’s bias isn’t just unfortunate, it’s also wrong. Too bad for him, the face of medicine is changing and foreign born doctors make up a increasing percentage of the doctor population, and more importantly, studies show that they are just as competent as US-trained doctors, and more competent than US born doctors who went to international medical schools.

3) This whole distrust of medical professionals who have a different religion than him is odd to me. I’ve never questioned if my doctor is Jewish, Buddhist, Atheist, fundamentalist or anything. I don’t believe it factors into how doctors practice modern medicine today, and my friends who are doctors don’t judge patients by their beliefs.

To close, Cain’s bias against “foreign” doctors is about as understandable as his rationale for running for president.

-Caroline

Suzanne Lee Needs Your Help

Suzanne Lee

This Halloween, we need your help in helping Boston get a lasting treat:  helping Suzanne Lee become Boston’s first Asian American woman to serve in City Hall.

Because the election’s only a week away (Nov. 8), any help you can give will help in her in this final stretch.  If you live in the Boston area, please volunteer with her campaign to knock on doors and call voters.

If you live outside Boston, please donate whatever you can (no amount is too small) to her campaign.  A contribution of $10, $20, $50, or $100 will help her pay for the advertising and mailers she needs to send out to win.

With your help, Suzanne will make history next Tuesday.  Thank you again for supporting AAA-Fund’s mission:  to empower our community by electing outstanding leaders across the nation.

– Gautam Dutta