May 19, 2013

Don’t Buy the Hype

With less than 2 weeks to go until Election Day, media talking heads are saying the presidential race is “very close” or “tied.” From a national poll perspective, such statements are true. But from the electoral college perspective (which of course is the only one that matters), they are blatantly false.

While Romney certainly could pull the upset, despite media reports to the contrary, Obama is a heavy favorite to win re-election. Consider: Electoral Map The electoral map strongly favors Obama. He already has in the bank many more electoral votes than Romney. As far as the battleground states, with the lone exception of North Carolina, Obama has led or been tied in every one since early summer. He currently leads in Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Winning these 7 states give Obama 281 electoral votes, 11 more than he needs to win. In fact, he could afford to lose New Hampshire and either Iowa or Nevada and still win re-election with 271.

Furthermore, Obama is tied in Colorado, Florida and Virginia — losing any one of these 3 states would be fatal for Romney. Even in North Carolina, Obama trails only slightly. If he wins there, it’s a near-2008 blowout.

Romney’s Momentum Stopped

The Romney campaign obviously wants to create a winning self-fulfilling prophecy. Romney clearly won the first debate with Obama, significantly closed the gap and got back in the game. Had Romney lost that debate, the race would have been over. However, Obama won the next 2 debates. The Romney camp keeps babbling about momentum they lost lost long ago. By definition, polls are snapshots of the RECENT PAST, not the PRESENT.

Media Bias

The media has an incentive to say the race is close because it’s exciting. It means higher TV ratings and readership. The media also can be lazy. It’s easier to report on one meaningless national poll than on several state polls where the race will be decided.

Obama’s Ground Game Romney backers claim that they’ve learned from 2008 and have a much better ground game. They probably do — but that’s because the McCain campaign’s ground game stunk.

But even the most optimistic Republicans admit that Obama’s operation is formidable. Most neutral observers think Obama’s ground game is superior than Romney’s, it’s only the degree that’s in question. Iowa, Colorado, Nevada, Ohio and Virginia are frequently cited as the states where Obama has the biggest advantage in this department.

Early Voting

Related to the ground game is the early voting already taking place in many battleground states. Every day in states where polls are open and Obama is leading means that he is winning, because he’s banking votes that Romney will have to make up on Election Day. By all accounts early voting is going very well for Obama, including in the most critical state of Ohio.

Colin Powell

Obama just scored the biggest endorsement of the election season with Colin Powell. Powell, although he endorsed Obama in 2008, would have surprised few had he remained neutral or endorsed fellow Republican Mitt Romney. While there are only a tiny sliver of undecided voters left, and endorsements may not sway that many, you can bet that Romney would have given one of his dancing horses to get Powell’s backing.

Richard Mourdock

Just when Republicans thought Todd “Legitimate Rape” Akin was in the rearview mirror, along came Richard Mourdock to reinforce the perception (or reality) that Republicans are at war with women’s rights. You would think that after Akin, any Republican running for U.S. Senate, particularly in a tight race, would avoid using the four-letter R word. Oops. Romney, who not only endorsed Mourdock but cut a TV commercial for him, half-heartedly distanced himself from Mourdock and refused to ask that the TV spot be pulled. The timing couldn’t be worse for Romney.

Again, it’s not over until it’s over, but anyone discouraged about Obama’s chances shouldn’t be. Barring some huge late October or early November surprise, or serious voter suppression and/or fraud, Obama is on the path to victory. But he still needs your vote, your donations and your volunteering in a swing state.

October 6: Korean Americans for Obama, Philadelphia GOTV & Voter Registration

Editor’s Note: The below is from our friends at Korean Americans for Obama Philadelphia chapter. They share our mission to increase AAPI participation in US politics. Related news from their chapter is that the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court Judge Simpson today issued a preliminary injunction which stops the full implementation of the Voter ID law from taking place during the upcoming election. Voter ID proponents however still work to remove Pennsylvanians’ right to vote. This Republican tactic cannot not silence the will of Pennsylvania’s voters. Note the Pennsylvania Democratic Party for more info.

Happy Chuseok! Register to vote for November 6′s elections! Want to register? Want to help others to vote? In Northwestern Philadelphia? Come to voter registration & GOTV both at Calvary Vision Church, 550 East Township Line Rd, Ste 200, Blue Bell, PA on Saturday, October 6th 10-4pm with AAPIs for Obama’s Korean Americans for Obama (KAFO). Contact Mara and Judi for volunteer opportunities.

For overseas Koreans interested voting in the Korean Presidential elections on December 19, register by October 20th (welcome video) by visiting your nearest Korean mission (list here with your passport.

Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman: WILL 9 GOP GOVERNORS ELECTRONICALLY FLIP ROMNEY INTO THE WHITE HOUSE?

Editor’s Note: We repost the below from Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman who have co-authored 5 books on election protection, including the latest WILL THE GOP STEAL AMERICA’S 2012 ELECTION? available at HarveyWasserman.com and FreePress.org.

Fitrakis/Wasserman: WILL 9 GOP GOVERNORS ELECTRONICALLY FLIP ROMNEY INTO THE WHITE HOUSE?

by Bob Fitrakis, Harvey Wasserman

Nine Republican governors have the power to put Mitt Romney in the White House, even if Barack Obama wins the popular vote. With their secretaries of state, they control the electronic vote count in nine key swing states: Florida, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Iowa, Arizona, and New Mexico. Wisconsin elections are under the control of the state’s Government Accountability Board, appointed by the governor.

In tandem with the GOP’s massive nation-wide disenfranchisement campaign, they could—in the dead of election night—flip their states’ electronic votes to Romney and give him a victory in the Electoral College.

Thankfully, resistance has arisen to the disenfranchisement strategy, which seems designed to deny millions of suspected Democrats the right to vote. The intent to demand photo ID for voting could result in some ten million Americans being disenfranchised, according to the Brennan Center at New York University. Other methods are being used to strip voter rolls—as in Ohio, where 1.1 million citizens have been purged from registration lists since 2009. This “New Jim Crow”—personified by groups like True the Vote ( New York Times Article)—could deny the ballot to a substantial percentage of the electorate in key swing states.

This massive disenfranchisement has evoked a strong reaction from voting rights activists, a number of lawsuits, major internet traffic and front page and editorial coverage in the New York Times. But there has been no parallel campaign to guarantee those votes are properly counted once cast. Despite serious problems with electronic tabulations in the presidential elections of both 2000 and 2004, electronic voting machines have spread further throughout the country. In Ohio, former Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell awarded a no-bid state contract to GovTech—a well-connected Republican-owned company which no longer exists—to help count Ohio’s vote. GovTech contracted with two equally partisan Republican companies: Smartech for servers and Triad for IT support (Push and Pray Voting). Electronic voting machines with ties to Republican-connected companies have proliferated throughout Ohio. Federal money from the Help America Vote Act has helped move electronic voting machines into other key swing states in substantial numbers that are not easy to track.

The machines can quickly tabulate a winner. But their dark side is simple: there is no way to monitor or double-check the final tally. These partisan Republican vote counting companies have written contracts to avoid transparency and open records laws.

American courts have consistently ruled that the hardware and software used in e-voting machines is proprietary. For example, California’s Public Records Act (CPRA) contains a Trade Secret Exemption. The courts in California apply a “balancing test” to determine whether the Trade Secret Exemption applies, but the contracts with voting machine vendors are written in such a way that the court usually has no other choice but to side with the vendors and the state and county election officials who inked the contract. High priced attorneys like Daniel McMillan of the Jones Day firm are often hired to “clarify” the law for the court.

In a filing with the Voting Systems Procedures Panel of the California Secretary of State’s office during the 2004 election, McMillan hammered out a “Stipulated Confidentiality Agreement” that states in part that a public records request by a voting activist “contain[s] confidential proprietary or trade secret information” and thus, is not a public record.

Also that year, McMillan showed up in Georgia on behalf of the infamous Diebold Election Systems company and invoked the Peach State’s Trade Secret Exemption to the open record law. McMillan wrote: “If information constitutes a trade secret under the Georgia Trade Secrets Act, the government agency in custody of the information has a duty to protect the information” from public scrutiny. McMillan goes on to argue that there’s also a Computer Software Exclusion that, “To the extent that any request is made for Diebold’s computer program or software, such a request would not be a valid request for a public record.” Diebold’s attorney cited the concern that “…it makes it easier to sabotage and hack the system and circumvent security features” if there’s transparency. That same year in Ohio, Diebold’s secret pollbook system “accidentally” glitched 10,000 voters in the Cleveland area from the registration rolls. During the 2004 election in Toledo, thousands of voters lost their votes on Diebold optiscan machines that were improperly calibrated or had the wrong markers. How the the calibration and markers work are trade secrets.

So, even the election boards that buy them cannot access their tabulation codes. The bulk of the major e-voting machine companies are owned by Republicans or by corporations whose roots are difficult to trace. WHILE WE STILL HAVE TIME by Sheila Parks of the Center for Hand Counted Ballots ( Article)warns that we enter the 2012 election with no reliable means of guaranteeing that the electronic vote count will be accurate.

In fact, whether they intend to do it or not, the Republican governors of the nine key swing states above have the power to flip the election without significant public recourse. Except for exit polls there is no established way to check how the official electronic vote count might square with the actual intent of the electorate. And there is no legal method by which an electronic vote count can be effectively challenged.

There is unfortunate precedent. In the heat of election night 2000, in Volusia County, Florida, 16,000 electronic votes for Al Gore mysteriously disappeared, and 4,000 were erroneously awarded to George W. Bush, causing a incorrect shift of 20,000 votes. This was later corrected. But the temporary shift gave John Ellis at Fox TV News (Ellis is George W. Bush’s first cousin)an opening to declare that the GOP had won the presidency. NBC, CBS, and ABC followed Fox’s lead and declared Bush the winner based on a computer error. That “glitch,” more than anything else, allowed the Republicans to frame Gore as a “sore loser.”

In Ohio 2004, at 12:20 election night, the initial vote tabulation showed John Kerry handily defeating Bush by more than 4%. This 200,000-plus margin appeared to guarantee Kerry’s ascent to the presidency. But mysteriously, the Ohio vote count suddenly shifted to Smartech in Chattanooga, Tennessee. With private Republican-connected contractors processing the vote, Bush jumped ahead with a 2% lead, eventually winning with an official margin of more than 118,000 votes. Such a shift of more than 6%, involving more than 300,000 votes, is a virtual statistical impossibility, as documented in our WILL THE GOP STEAL AMERICA’S 2012 ELECTION (www.freepress.org).

That night, Ohio’s vote count was being compiled in the basement of the old Pioneer Bank building in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The building also housed the servers for the Republican National Committee and thus the e-mail of Bush advisor Karl Rove. Secretary of State Blackwell was co-chair of the Ohio Committee to Re-Elect Bush and Cheney. He met earlier that day in Columbus with George W. Bush and Karl Rove. That night, he sent the state’s chief IT worker home early. The official Ohio vote count tabulation system was designed by IT specialist Michael Connell, whose computer company New Media was long associated with the Bush family. In 2008 Connell died in a mysterious single-engine plane crash after being subpoenaed to testify in the federal King-Lincoln-Bronzeville voter rights lawsuit (by way of disclosure: Bob is an attorney and Harvey a plaintiff in this lawsuit). FreePress.org covered the vote shift in depth. The King-Lincoln suit eventually resulted in a federal injunction ordering Ohio’s 88 counties to turn over their ballots and election records.

But 56 of Ohio’s 88 counties violated the injunction and destroyed their election records. Thus no complete recount of Ohio 2004 has ever been done. More than 90,000 “spoiled” ballots, like those in Toledo, went entirely uncounted, and have since been destroyed. No way was ever found to verify the 2004 electronic vote count. There are no definitive safeguards in place today. In 2008, swarms of election protection volunteers filled the polling stations in Ohio and other swing states. They guaranteed the right to vote for many thousands of Americans who might otherwise have been denied it.

They had no means of guaranteeing the accuracy of the electronic vote count. But Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan all had Democratic governors at the time. Florida’s governor was the moderate Republican Charlie Crist, not likely to steal an election for a party he would soon leave.

At the time, we advocated banning money from electoral politics, abolishing the Electoral College, universal automatic voter registration for all US citizens, universal hand-counted paper ballots and a four-day weekend for voting, with polls worked and ballots counted by the nation’s students.

But as Sheila Parks puts it in her new book, which is subtitled The Perils Of Electronic Voting Machines And Democracy’s Solution: Publicly Observed, Secure Hand-Counted Paper Ballots (HCPB) Elections : “In 2010, ultra-right-wing Republican governors were elected in Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Maine, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin. In several of these states, these governors were not part of a long line of Republican governors. In fact, in some of these states, these governors interrupted a long line of Democratic governors.”

So this year Rick Scott is governor in Florida, Tom Corbett in Pennsylvania, John Kasich in Ohio, Rick Snyder in Michigan, Scott Walker in Wisconsin and Jan Brewer is in Arizona. All are seen as hard-right Republicans unlikely to agonize over flipping a Barack Obama majority into a victory for Mitt Romney.

That doesn’t mean they would actually do such a thing. But the stark reality is that if they choose to, they can, and there would be no iron-clad way to prove they did.

Another stark reality: hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent to win this election by multi-billionaires Sheldon Adelson, Charles and David Koch, the Chamber of Commerce and other corporate interests. For them, spending a few extra million to flip a key state’s electoral votes would make perfect sense.

While Obama seems to be moving up in the polls, the huge reservoir of dollars raised to elect Mitt Romney will soon flood this campaign. We might anticipate well-funded media reports of a “surge” for Romney in the last two weeks of the election. Polls could well show a “close race”—for Congress as well as the presidency—in the early hours of election day. And then those electronic voting machines could be just as easily flipped on election night 2012 as they were in Ohio 2004.

Would this batch of swing state Republicans do that for Romney.
We don’t know.
COULD they do it?
Absolutely.
Would you be able to find definitive, legally admissible proof that they did it?
No.
Would the courts overturn such a tainted victory?
Not likely.
What could ultimately be done about it?
In the short term: ….nothing.

In the long-term, only a bottom-up remaking of how we cast and count ballots ballots can guarantee this nation anything resembling a true democracy. It is, to put it mildly, a reality worth fighting for.

We’re in the News!

Tammy Duckworth, then-assistant secretary of the US Department of Veterans Affairs arrives at the World War II Memorial in Washington for a ceremony honoring World War II veterans who fought in the Pacific on March 11, 2010. A former helicopter pilot and the first female double amputee in the Iraq War, she ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the US House of Representatives in 2006 and is running again in Illinois’s 8th congressional district in 2012.

Cliff Owen/AP/File

Why are a record number of Asian American candidates running in 2012?  Today a leading media outlet looked into this intriguing development (via Christian Science Monitor):

Washington

A record number of Asian-American candidates are running for the US House and Senate this fall, and they have a message: It’s time for a seat at the table that reflects their numbers in American society.

Just 5.8 percent of the US population is Asian, but only 12 out of 535 members of Congress, or 2 percent, claim Asian heritage, two in the Senate and 10 in the House. Now the numbers may be starting to catch up. Including Pacific Islanders, 30 Asian-American candidates launched congressional bids this cycle, compared with 10 in 2010 and eight in 2008, according to the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies in Washington.

In the process, the piece quotes AAA-Fund endorsee Manan Trivedi:

This political activism also reflects increased professional success in fields like medicine and academia, says Manan Trivedi, an Indian-American and a Democrat, running for the first time in Pennsylvania’s 6th district.

“It makes sense that the next step is to get involved in policy and politics,” Mr. Trivedi said, in a phone interview. “That’s where the rubber meets the road.”

Towards the end, the piece quotes this blogger:

Many of the districts Asian-Americans are vying to represent do not have Asian-American majorities, a trend some note as another sign of progress.

“A lot of people think if there aren’t enough people who look like you, you can’t get elected – that’s nonsense. You can win the people’s trust anywhere,” says Gautam Dutta, executive director of the Asian American Action Fund, which backs Asian-American Democrats running for Congress.

Finally, the piece quotes AAA-Fund endorsee Tammy Duckworth, Honorary Board President Rep. Mike Honda, and Honorary Board member Judy Chu:

Two-term Rep. Judy Chu (D) of California, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) and the first Chinese-American woman elected to Congress, says that Asian-Americans have historically faced difficulty in running because political networks for Asian-Americans are still developing.  Moreover, the relatively small number of Asian-Americans in elected office had in the past made it harder for newcomers to compete, she says.

“Right now we are developing that infrastructure,” says Ms. Chu, pointing to the caucus’s recently launched CAPAC Leadership PAC. “It’s a different world today.”

Six-term Rep. Michael Honda (D) of California has long spearheaded efforts to boost the electoral prospects of Asian-American candidates. In addition to mobilizing Asian-Americans to vote, he’s acting as an Asian-American surrogate in key congressional races and for the Obama campaign.

For Mr. Honda, the motivation is partly personal. As a toddler, he and his parents were sent to a Japanese internment camp during World War II, an experience he says highlighted for him the importance of having Asian-American representation in Congress.

“It took about 60 years for us to get an apology from our own government,” he says. Now, “we have to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

When Asian-Americans run for Congress, voters “start to look past our perceived foreignness and look at us as participating Americans who can contribute to this country,” he adds.

Challenger Duckworth, the Democrat challenging Rep. Joe Walsh (R) of Illinois, says that Asian-Americans from Midwestern areas like hers represent constituencies that have traditionally been shut out.

“Places like here have never had Asian-Americans elected to office, not even to state office, or even an alderman,” Duckworth says. “There’s a good chunk of the population that’s not getting all of its concerns represented.”

Some outstanding Asian American candidates have stepped up to the challenge of running for office.  Now let’s all do our part to help them make history in November.

– Gautam Dutta

Annise Parker Enters Colbert Nation

Houston’s Madam Mayor Annise D. “The Batman” Parker was the guest on last night’s Colbert Report.

Madame Mayor Annise D. Parker with Sir Dr. Stephen T. Colbert

In introducing Parker, Colbert joked

I assume she’s here in New York to pick up Jeremy Lin.

She, however, passed through Colbert Nation on her way to the U.S. Conference of Mayors in nearby Philadelphia. I take that to mean The Colbert Report had its choice of mayors and Parker came out on top.

What does Houston have going for it?

We’re a foodie town, we’re an arts town, we’re a sports town, a theater town, anything you want in a big city you have in Houston, plus we have a good quality of life, we’re affordable and we have jobs.

Yep. An arts town and a theater town. She neglected to mention one of the best restaurants in the country is a nice walk from her house.

Colbert also mocked Houston when noting Parker would be his guest:

I’ll ask her how she broke it to her parents that she wanted to live in Houston

While people enjoy or at least make the best of living in Houston for the above things, they live in Houston for the jobs.

Oil and gas — still the biggest. But we have America’s largest foreign tonnage port, we have Johnson Space Center with NASA and aerospace, and we’re a big manufacturing center

That’s right. Johnson Space Center is still going strong.

When Colbert asked how it’s possible that Parker is the first openly gay mayor of a major American city — insulting Portland, Oregon and ignoring that Houston is one of the largest cities in the world to accomplish such a feat. Parker wisely noted Houston elected her six times before electing her mayor and explained

Houston is very tolerant of a lot of things; they want to know what you can do, not who you are or where you’re from.

Admittedly, I was disappointed Parker failed to mention Houston is the most diverse big city in America.

Watch the full interview:

Only time will tell what the Colbert Bump will mean for Mayor Parker.

- Justin Gillenwater

Asian American Action Fund Endorses Dr. Manan Trivedi for Congress

WASHINGTON, DC — The Asian American Action Fund has endorsed Dr. Manan Trivedi for United States Congress. Trivedi is running against Republican incumbent Jim Gerlach for Pennsylvania’s 6th District Seat.

“From his time on the battlefield to his time in the emergency room, Dr. Manan Trivedi has proven himself as a true hero with a heart for helping his fellow Americans,” said Gautam Dutta, AAAF Executive Director. “The AAAF is proud to endorse Dr. Trivedi for Congress.”

A son of immigrants from India, Dr. Trivedi was born and raised in Pennsylvania. After attending medical school, he joined the Navy and commanded a medical unit in Iraq. For his service. Lt. Commander Trivedi earned the Combat Action Ribbon, the Navy Commendation Medal and his unit was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation.

After serving in Iraq, Dr. Trivedi received a Master’s degree in health policy. He served as a health policy advisor to the Navy Surgeon General and was an assistant professor of medicine at the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences. He is currently a primary care physician at Reading Hospital and Medical Center.

“My father taught me that in America, if you worked hard and played by the rules, you wouldn’t be judged by your family name or the color of your skin, but by your merits,” said Manan Trivedi. “And this is precisely why I am honored to receive the endorsement of the AAA Fund. They have been a leading voice for emboldening Asian Pacific Americans in their pursuit of opportunity and the American Dream.”

To support the Trivedi for Congress campaign, please visit: http://www.trivediforcongress.com/

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 address the chronic under-representation of Asian Americans and Pacific Americans (AAPIs) as campaign volunteers, campaign contributors, and candidates for political office.

###

You Heard It Here First

Manan Trivedi for Congress

AAA-Fund endorses Pennsylvania Congressional candidate Dr. Manan Trivedi. More details to follow.

Manan Trivedi for Congress

– Gautam Dutta

Upcoming Event 11/17: Care About the Future of Asian American Politics?

AAA Fund – Philadelphia

Care about the Future of Asian American Politics?

 Join us for our inaugural membership Mix N Mingle on Thursday, November 17th, 2011.

Yakitori Boy

211 North 11th Street

Philadelphia, PA

6-7:30pm

 $25 annual membership fee; $10 students

 

RSVP by Tuesday, Nov. 15th to Judi Rhee Alloway judi@imagineleadershipllc.com or Brad Baldia baldiab@yahoo.com

Speaker:  Will Sylianteng, candidate for PA State House 151st

William Sylianteng lives in Montgomery Township (Montgomery County), Pennsylvania, with his wife and their two-year old daughter.  Will has a B.A. in Political Science from California State University, Northridge and a law degree from Temple University.

Will is currently in the process of organizing his campaign for the Pennsylvania State House (151st District).  If elected, Will will become the only Asian American member serving in the PA State House and the first Asian American Democrat elected to the General Assembly.

AAAF Newsletter 5/18/11

##############################
Asian American Action Fund
Online Newsletter
Volume 11, Number 7, May 18, 2011
For more, visit www.aaa-fund.org
Send comments to info@aaa-fund.org.
Subscribe and unsubscribe info below.
******************************
1. AAA-Fund Endorsee Andy Toy Falls Short in Philly
2. Learning How to Work With the Media  on May 19
3. Bamboo Ceilings, Standardized Asian Americans
4. Greater DC APA Worker Rights Hearing May 21
5. Supporting the AAA-Fund
******************************
1. AAA-Fund Endorse Andy Toy Falls Short in Philly
(Contact: Caroline Fan at carolinekfan@gmail.com)

AAA-Fund-endorsee Andy Toy fell short in his bid to
become the first Asian American on the Philadelphia City
Council.  The primary was held on May 17th for
five seats.  While the seats were held by incumbents,
each had weaknesses and controversies, which is why
Mr. Toy received enough endorsements and support
from a broad coalition of supporters to be considered
the top non-incumbent and a serious threat to win
a City Council seat.

For more information on the AAA-Fund’s endorsement,
please contact Caroline Fan at carolinekfan@gmail.com.

MORE:  http://www.electandytoy.com/
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/122120258.html

******************************
2. Learning How to Work With the Media on May 19

AAAF Board Member Irene Lin and her colleagues at the
Congressional APA Staff Association (CAPASA) are
sponsoring a professional development panel on Thursday,
May 19 from 11am to noon in Room HC-8 on the House side of
the Capitol building.  It is called “The 24 Hour News Cycle
and Congress: Learning How to Work With the Media”

Panelists will cover how and why to work in press,
the basics of press 101, including what “off the record”
really means, how to make your Member look good in the media
and how to do damage control when the headlines aren’t
flattering your Member. Whether you are interested in
exploring a career in communications, or a legislative
staffer looking to become more media savvy, the panelists
will offer their best advice on how Congress and the
press can best co-exist.

The panel will be strictly off the record.

Panelists featured: Kurt Bardella (Daily Caller),
Nadeam Elshami (Rep. Nancy Pelosi), Manu Raju (Politico),
Daniel Son (Rep. Sean Duffy), Amada Terkel (HuffingtonPost),
and Susie Xu (John King CNN).

For any questions, please contact Irene Lin at
Irene.Lin@mail.house.gov.  To RSVP, please email:
capasa@capasa-dc.org.

MORE:  http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7300

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3. Bamboo Ceilings, Standardized Asian Americans

Over at NYMag, Wesley Yang has written “Paper Tigers,”
which has touched off quite a nerve. He looks at the
duality of being over-achieving and Asian American,
with a focus on the less tread paths. Yang is a good
writer, but I don’t think he really covers any new
territory here. His argument is that Asians do have
a hard time overcoming a cultural reluctance to lead.
And if you go by the photos alone, the only people he
features are men. (What happened to women hold up
half the sky?)

MORE: http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7213
http://tinyurl.com/5tastba

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4. Greater DC APA Worker Rights Hearing May 21

Given the Republican assault on organized labor in
Wisconsin and elsewhere, it is important to reaffirm
our commitment to APA unions and their members.

AAAF is cosponsoring the May 21st Greater D.C. APA
Worker Rights Hearing convened by the Asian Pacific
American Labor Alliance (APALA).  As part of a national
campaign, the Greater DC area hearing will convene
policymakers, scholars, and workers to address working
conditions and the right to organize for APA workers.
The hearing also will present information from
APALA’s important report on APA workers,
“Breaking Ground, Breaking Silence.”  It is well worth
attending for all APA progressives.

RSVP for the event here: http://tinyurl.com/69opg6g

READ Report:  http://tinyurl.com/3nlqn8u

******************************
5. Supporting the AAA-Fund

As the 2011 campaign cycle starts in earnest, the AAA-Fund
board, staff and interns would like to thank each of you for
your help and support over the past ten years.  We could not
have done all we accomplished for our endorsed candidates
without your help.

To help us keep up the momentum as we start the 2011 and 2012
campaign cycles, please consider donating to us.
Thanks again!

Donate here:  http://tinyurl.com/8tx2fq

##############################
Join AAA-Fund on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=22207954031

To subscribe to the AAA-Fund Newsletter,
send an email to info@aaa-fund.org
and type “subscribe” in the message line
To stop receiving the AAA-Fund Newsletter,
send an email to info@aaa-fund.org
and type “remove” in the message line.
AAA-Fund, 707 H Street, NW, #200, Wash., DC 20001
##############################

AAAF Newsletter 5/4/11

##############################
Asian American Action Fund
Online Newsletter
Volume 11, Number 6, May 4, 2011
For more, visit www.aaa-fund.org
Send comments to info@aaa-fund.org.
Subscribe and unsubscribe info below.
******************************
1. AAA-Fund Endorses Andy Toy for Philly Council
2. Death of Osama bin Laden
3. AAPIs in Government
4. Three Cups of Tea
5. Supporting the AAA-Fund
******************************
1. AAA-Fund Endorses Andy Toy for Philly Council
(Contact: Caroline Fan at carolinekfan@gmail.com)

The AAA-Fund has voted to endorse Andy Toy for an
At-Large Democratic seat on the Philadelphia City
Council.  The primary is being held on May 17th for
five seats.  While the seats are held by incumbents,
each has weaknesses and controversies, which is why
Mr. Toy has received enough endorsements and support
from a broad coalition of supporters to be considered
the top non-incumbent and a serious threat to win
a City Council seat.

“Andy is a proven candidate who appeals to a broad
cross-section of the city,” said Gautam Dutta,
AAA-Fund Executive Director.  “We look forward to
helping him become the first Asian American on the
Philadelphia City Council.”

Andy Toy is an economic development specialist who
has worked at community development corporations and
has a background in helping entrepreneurs grow
businesses and jobs. He currently works with small
businesses at the Enterprise Center, and has worked
at the Local Initiatives Support Coalition.  Prior to
that, he worked for fourteen years in city government.

He serves on the Zoning Commission, and on the boards
of the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corporation,
United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Merchants Fund,
and Delaware Valley Grantmakers

The breadth of Andy Toy’s popularity is seen in his
list of endorsees, which includes Philadelphia District
Attorney Seth Williams, three State Representatives,
the Fraternal Order of Police, the Philadelphia Chamber
of Commerce, the Greater Philadelphia Association of
Realtors, the National Organization for Women, and a
broad array of teacher, union, and grassroots groups.

To make a contribution to the Andy Toy campaign or
to volunteer to make calls or help to get out the
vote before the May 17th election, please visit
http://www.electandytoy.com/

For more information on the AAA-Fund’s endorsement,
please contact Caroline Fan at carolinekfan@gmail.com.

MORE:  http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7192

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2. Death of Osama bin Laden

Statements by the President, CAPAC Chair Rep. Judy Chu,
and others on the death of Osama bin Laden:

http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7165
http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7180
http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7178
http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7173

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3. Contributions of AAPIs in the Federal Government

Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month
provides us with an opportunity to reflect on the many
contributions Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
(AAPI) have made to our great nation.  These include
our three AAPI Cabinet members:

* Secretary of Energy and Nobel Prize winner Steve Chu

* Former Commerce Secretary (and Ambassador to
China-nominate) Gary Locke

* Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki

MORE:  http://tinyurl.com/4xojfhb

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4. Three Cups of Tea

It’s a shame when a cup of tea must be taken with a grain
of salt.

A couple weeks back, the news show 60 Minutes charged that
Greg Mortenson, an international educator, philanthrophist
and author of the bestselling Three Cups of Tea, had lied
in his books and not properly accounted for how his charity’s
funds were used.

Mortenson should immediately respond to his critics, rectify
his mistakes, and set the record straight.

That being said, we hope that Mortenson can continue his noble
work.  The world needs more leaders with Mortenson’s steadfast
commitment to equality and tolerance.

MORE:  http://www.aaa-fund.com/?p=7157

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5. Supporting the AAA-Fund

As the 2011 campaign cycle starts in earnest, the AAA-Fund
board, staff and interns would like to thank each of you for
your help and support over the past ten years.  We could not
have done all we accomplished for our endorsed candidates
without your help.

To help us keep up the momentum as we start the 2011 and 2012
campaign cycles, please consider donating to us.
Thanks again!

Donate here:  http://tinyurl.com/8tx2fq

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