Tag Archive for 'lisa-chesser'

The Shoulders of Vidalia City Government

Are you feed up with politicians? Tired of crooks and arrogant idiots running your town, your city, your state. Well, breathe deep and enjoy the fresh air in this interview with a new participant in the political process: Lisa Chesser, elected last fall to her first term of service on the Vidalia City Council.

Six months into her term, Lisa understands and appreciates the burdens and pressures that local elected officials have to deal with in serving their constituents. The issues which face Lisa, Vidalia and all the other cities and town of this country have at least one thing in common. They cannot be solved with easy fixes where everyone gets what they want. Lisa appreciates the difficulty of making the right decision, recognizing that someone will disagree.

But if you will listen to this interview, you will hear a true public servant, who without malice or arrogance in her heart wants to do the right thing in all things and who is not afraid to stand up and be heard. Government officials, particularly at the local level, generally don’t like to have to deal with the problems of ordinary citizens. They have their preconceived notions of how things are going to be and do not care to spend the time to hear or consider other viewpoints.

Lisa is the exception. She is what we need more of. She is intelligent, honest, full of common sense and compassion, a breath of fresh air. Lisa is the only woman currently on the council and I believe (could be wrong) the first woman ever elected to the Vidalia City Council. She believes in open, friendly government. Her integrity is unimpeachable. She understands the benefits of listening to all sides of complex issues before making a decision. She understands that citizens appreciate it when they feel that their views will be heard and fairly considered. Keep up the good work Lisa!

I am sure Lisa is embarassed by these comments. I don’t care. She is proof that involved citizens who are willing to sacrifice some of their time and contribute to local government can make a difference.

Maybe, someday she will be the first woman mayor of Vidalia.

 
 Lisa Chesser, Member, Vidalia City Council [28:24m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (116)

Erick Discusses Huckabee and The Republican Field!

I woke up to Mike Huckabee this morning. He is all over the place. Polls have him ahead in Iowa, and behind in New Hampshire. He was being accused of letting rapists out of prison to murder innocent people. I thought that was another Mike (Dukakis)! Apparently, some of his boost in the polls is the result of the recent “CNN/YouTube Debate” in which Huckabee correctly answered the most important political question of this campaign: “Do you believe this book?”

So, I called Erick Erickson to find out what the heck is going on with Republicans! The interesting thing is that Erick interpreted the question as being a challenge by a non-believer asking if the candidates were dumb enough to believe the Bible. Curiously, I had exactly the opposite impression: a believer challenging the candidates to state, without qualification, that they believed every word of the Bible. The difference in interpretation is fascinating to me. I wonder who heard it right.

But it really doesn’t matter. The question was one of those that is meaningless in the political arena. I wouldn’t believe a politician that gave the “religiously correct” answer. It was a set-up question, and the issue Erick and I discuss is how did we get to the point that such questions pass for political debate? I get the impression from Erick that a lot of the campaigns were not particularly happy with a lot of the questions. In fact, Erick indicates he is trying to organize another debate with the Republican candidates since the CNN/YouTube debate was such a farce.

Erick thinks CNN picked the wrong questions, wondering why questions were asked on religion, abortion and immigration. According to Erick, these are not the issues that Republicans want to know about. I am glad to hear that, but if this is true, it means two things: (1) some people, maybe a lot of them, don’t know what Republicans want, because I think these are issues a lot of Republicans here in Georgia are interested in, and (2) the evangelical branch of the Republican party is not nearly as influential as it was in previous campaigns.

The point of this discussion was simply that what is passed off as “debates” in this election cycle is pretty much nothing more than entertainment. It seems to me that a lot of the questions that get presented by these “people” moderators, are intentionally selected to make the candidates squirm and hopefully give the sound bite of the night.

Did Huckebee’s answer about religion spur his rise in the polls? Erick points out that Huckabee has a 10 member campaign staff (that’s nationwide, by the way) and in Iowa, Huckabee has spent only about $300,000, compared with Romney’s $7 million. He thinks Huckabee’s popularity is due to the fact that people are tired of insiders. That’s the reason Obama is doing well against Hillary. People want a change.

Erick sees Fred Thompson and John McCain as the only two Republican candidates who have a chance of bridging the diverse interests of the Republican Party, rather than dividing it. Rudy isn’t liked by the social conservatives, Romney isn’t trusted by the evangelicals and Huckabee is running into problems with the fiscal conservatives. Erick doesn’t think Ron Paul has a chance. So, if by the end of Super Tuesday, the nomination is not locked in, McCain or Thompson may be the go to guys for party unity. Interesting, very interesting.

Erick thinks Huckabee’s current rise will be short-lived and he sees it as Rudy-Romney contest. He also thinks people are beginning to realize that were it not for 9-11, Rudy would be just another big-city mayor.

Erick refers to Huckabee as the “passive voice.” I am not entirely sure I understand the meaning, but he gave several examples where Huckabee would make a statement about some problem (CEO compensation, for example), and yet, when asked what he would do about the issue, he seems to back off and say he didn’t mean to imply that government needed to do anything about it.

He also referred to Huckabee as a slick preacher. As for the pardon of the rapist in Arkansas, Erick points out that Huckabee, as Governor, did not have the power to pardon the felon, that was done by the Pardons and Parole Board. The issue is the extent to which Huckabee pushed the Board to take action and pardon the guy. He points out that there was apparently a lot of sympathy generated for the rapist because before he was convicted he was forcibly abducted and castrated by a vigilante group.

As for the Democrats, Erick still thinks Hillary will be the nominee. I am not so sure.

One last point about the new National Intelligence Estimate on Iran that indicates Iran gave up its nuclear program several years ago. Last year it reported the opposite: Iran was increasing its efforts to develop nuclear weapons. So what is going on? As Erick points out, neither he, nor anyone else trusts the intelligence community any more. That’s a sad state of affairs, but more troubling is the idea that we went to war in Iraq as a result, at least in part, of flawed intelligence and a few weeks ago, it looked like we were going to war with Iran, again based on flawed intelligence. This is not the way to run a country!

Erick thinks heads will roll, but probably not publically I just wish the President would respond in a manner that indicates he consistently reads the newspapers, even if it is the comic page.

At the end of the interview, I spend a few minutes talking with Lisa Chesser, who won election to the Vidalia City Council on Tuesday. CONGRATULATIONS Lisa!!

 
 Erick Erickson, Republican Strategist [27:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (158)

Candidates for Ward 4, Vidalia City Council

The general election on November 6th resulted in a run-off for Ward 4, Vidalia City Council, between Lisa Chesser and Daren McClellan. I thought I ought to update their pre-election interviews and find out what the two top candidates are doing to assure victory next Tuesday, December 4th.

The general election resulted in Lisa receiving 235 votes to 190 votes for Daren. Assuming each candidate holds their own, the real question is how the folks who cast 129 votes for two candidates who did not make the run-off will vote the second time around. Actually, the real question may be how many people will go to the polls to vote in a run-off election. The victor will definitely be the candidate that gets the most voters back to the polls. Sad, but true.

Vidalia is just like most other towns, I guess. It putters along, as if on auto-pilot (at least, that is the way it seems to most citizens) and every year or so it has a scandal or a controversy or something that gets everyone’s attention. In the meantime, everyone that has to deal with City Hall thinks things need changing and everyone that doesn’t have to deal with City Hall could care less.

The most telling thing I can say about the City of Vidalia government is the fact that, as far as I can tell, City Council has not had a vote that was not unanimous in years. I had occasion to review the Council minutes last year and went back 4 or 5 years and was amazed at the consistently unanimous votes. (I may have missed one, but someone will have to prove me wrong.) Now, you may think that good. I don’t. All this means is that either we don’t need a City Council or we don’t need some of them who just do what another tells them to do.

If you listen to Daren’s interview, at the end he explains why this is the way it is in Vidalia. His explanation is interesting. Essentially, he says that at the end of the council meetings, they go into closed session and work out their differences. I am not sure how Daren knows this, but I do know that if this is the way City Council makes decisions, they are violating the law. We have an Open Meetings law in Georgia and while some subjects must be discussed behind closed doors (land purchases, personnel), the purpose of closing the doors is not to allow discussion of general business.

But, I must admit, for years, the rumor has been that City Council gets their stuff done before the meeting is convened and the meeting is just a formality.

This unanimity obsession results in something Lisa mentions in her interview: the fact that people who do go before City Council generally don’t feel that anyone is listening to them. They don’t feel welcome, just tolerated, and when their 5 minutes are up, ignored. What part does unanimity play in this? Simple! If you have to convince all of them, then you can never convince one to take up your cause because it is more important to be unanimous.

Maybe this is just sour grapes on my part, since I don’t think City Council has ever listened to me the few times I went there. I admit it, they generally piss me off! But what do I know, I’m just a lawyer.

Will this election bring about change? For the better? Only time will tell!

 
 Candidates, Ward 4, Vidalia City Council [24:48m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (156)

All Politics is LocaL, So…Here are Interviews with 3 Candidates for Vidalia City Council

The race is on, locally, for election to the Vidalia City Council from Ward 4. There are 4 persons seeking the post, but only three are being interviewed: Lisa Chesser, Don Davis and Craig Stuckless. The fourth candidate, Daren McClellan, declined my invitation.

Lisa worked for me as a paralegal for 16 years or so and retired to raise her family. She has two children, Abbie and Doug; three if you include her husband, Hal. (That is a joke, Hal!) Hal is the President of Vidalia Federal Savings and Loan and is also a member of the Vidalia Board of Education.

Don is retired from Plant Hatch (the Georgia Power nuclear facility in Baxley) in 2004. I had never met Don before the interview so I can’t say a lot, other than what is in the interview. Don has been married to a local Vidalia girl, Gwen McMichaels, for 37 years. After retirement he started tutoring math and algebra at Sylvan and working with at-risk teenagers in the alternative school system.

Craig is employed with our local hospital, Meadows Regional Medical Center. I have known Craig for years. We used to go to the same church. Craig is from Canada and had the good fortune to fall in love with a Vidalia girl, Kelly Brantley. Craig was in the Canadian Air Force when they married, and when he put in enough time to retire, he did, moved to Georgia and has since become a U. S. Citizen.

Listen and Vote!

 
 Candidates for Vidalia City Council [36:17m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (256)