Tuesday, June 23, 2020

It's Pretty Easy To Tell The Difference Between A Progressive And A Corporate Democrat-- NJ-08

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New Jersey's primary is July 7, two weeks from today. I wish it I could say it looks better for the progressives taking on the corrupt machine candidates up and down the state. But it doesn't. Too many candidates thinking a campaign is basically grabbing Bernie's platform and lounging around Twitter and Facebook. No one's ever won a race that way-- ever. The New Jersey candidate I feel best about-- and the only one Blue America endorsed-- is Hector Oseguera who's up against corrupt, conservative, former Republican Albio Sires, a hawkish backbencher who never did a thing for his district. Oseguera and his team are fighting a real race and I feel confident that if he can muster enough money to get his compare and contrast message out to the voters, he'll win.

Goal ThermometerHis district, NJ-08 includes most of Hudson County, parts of Essex and Union counties and the cities of Hoboken, Elizabeth, Weehauken, West New York, half of Newark and parts of Jersey City, Kearny, Harrison, Belleville and Bayonne. The district is 55% Hispanic, 44% foreign-born and strongly enough Democratic that the primary is, in effect, the whole ballgame. You can help Oseguera win his seat by clicking on the Blue America 2020 congressional thermometer on the right.

The other day, Sires, who has an "D" score from ProgressivePunch was bullshitting Jonathan Salant at NJ.com and out popped a real whopper: "I’m probably more progressive than the guy I’m running against." Not on this planet and not by any possible definition of the word "progressive."

I asked Oseguera what the hell Sires is even talking about and who he thinks he's fooling. I mean his voting record is pretty standard Dem compared to when he used to be a Republican but a progressive? Not a chance. "You might say my opponent is more progressive, all you need to do is ignore his record and all our policy positions. Unlike my opponent, I am not a Johnny come lately to this movement. I have a lifetime of progressive activism under my belt, from my days at law school volunteering for Elizabeth Warren, to the Millions March NYC protesting the killings of Trayvon Martin and Eric Garner, to, most recently, volunteering for AOC and running on an unapologetically progressive platform. Locally, I was part of the movement that succeeded in getting Hudson County to rescind its 287(g) agreements with ICE. These are contracts that my opponent and his allies support because running inhumane concentration camps is apparently very profitable for the County government."



Oseguera told me that he's "fighting to get big money out of politics, fighting for racial justice, and championing the Green New Deal and Medicare for All. My opponent is an advocate for none of those. Quite the contrary, my opponent takes tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from luxury real-estate developers and Exxonmobil, has never seen a foreign intervention he didn't like, and pals around with war criminals like Elliot Abrams. He is not a co-sponsor of Pramila Jayapal's Medicare for All Bill, which I support, and refuses to even say the words "Green New Deal," until leadership gives him permission. My opponent has no platform to speak of, and has never associated himself with the progressive movement; that is until he realized he was horribly out of step with the people of this district. He is seen as a 'strong Democrat' by some, because for well over a decade he was the only game in town. I guess compared to absolutely nothing, he might call himself a progressive; but compared to a true progressive fighter like me, my opponent is revealed as the bland, Republican-lite, neoliberal he really is."



In terms of confirmed cases, Hudson County was the worst hit in New Jersey-- 19,316 total and even yesterday the most new cases and the most new deaths. Essex County is the 4th worst hit county (18,582) in the state and Union the 6th worst hit (16,340 cases). Could Sires have fought harder for the people in his district? Anything would have been fighting harder since he did virtually nothing. Being better than Trump is too low a bar for as deeply blue as NJ-08. People there have the right to expect a proactive champion for working families. That would be Hector Oseguera, not Albio Sires.


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Thursday, May 14, 2020

Candidate Endorsement Alert In New Jersey: Hector Oseguera

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New Jersey's 8th congressional district-- most of Hudson County, parts of Essex and Union counties and includes Hoboken, Elizabeth, Weehauken, West New York, half of Newark and parts of Jersey City, Kearny, Harrison, Belleville and Bayonne. The district is 55% Hispanic, 44% foreign-born and strongly Democratic. The PVI is D+27. Republicans don't even try. Hillary beat Trump 75-21% and in 2018, the Democratic incumbent, Albio Sires took 78% of the vote. Sires had no primary.

Goal ThermometerThis year he does. On Monday, in a post comparing the two political party establishments, I asserted that all but one of the New Jersey incumbents suck but, unfortunately, the challengers I had spoken to weren't likely to win-- while noting I hadn't yet spoken with Sires' opponent, Hector Oseguera and that he may be the exception. Since then, I have and... he is. What a great candidate! And with a perfect platform for his hard-pressed district (and America)! We asked him write a guest post about an issue New Jersey voters he talks to are concerned about enough to make them switch their allegiance from the party machine candidate to an actual reformer. Hector chose corruption, tragically fitting in his state, particularly in machine-controlled Hudson and Essex counties. Please consider contributing to his campaign by clicking on the Blue America congressional thermometer on the right and giving what you can.


Corruption In Congress Needs To Be Fought-- Hard
by Hector Oseguera


It's become a national joke that the political establishment in New Jersey is corrupt, but there's nothing funny about corruption. Political corruption robs opportunity and resources from the communities that need them most. This working class community desperately needs funding for schools, roads, hospitals, public transit, all manner of social services that our government should be providing. Yet resources for those basic services always seem to be lacking.

If you ask yourself why, look no further than my opponent, whose district director, Richard Turner, is also simultaneously: the mayor of Weehawken, North Hudson Fire and Rescue Chairman, and a "consultant" for the town of West New York, where my opponent was once mayor. Richard Turner pulls in four public service paychecks. Those are four jobs, four opportunities, that should be available to qualified candidates, but instead become casualties of North Jersey political patronage. My opponent takes money from Exxon Mobil, and so it's no surprise that he does not support a Green New Deal; he takes money from the insurance companies, and so it's clear why he isn't a proponent for Medicare-For-All; he receives contributions from the luxury real-estate developers, so we know why he doesn't have a strong stance on affordable housing. On issue after issue, the reason why the people of my district are denied the representation they deserve boils down to the corrosive effects of corruption on our political system.




My experience as an anti-money laundering attorney puts me in a unique position to root out the corruption that has nested in North Jersey. I've investigated international scandals such as the Panama Papers in Panama, the Russian Laundromat in Estonia, and Operation Cash Wash in Brazil; each time diving deep into the financial networks of shady shell corporations and illicit schemes that involve bribery, money laundering, and corruption. I've proposed the most ambitious anti-corruption platform of the 2020 election cycle, and have the tools necessary to realize those proposals. I've spent my career combating corruption in our financial system, and am now ready to do the same for our government.

The reception from the community has been tremendous, and we find ourselves in a one-in-a-million chance of truly knocking out this corrupt political establishment. Given that the progressive slate drew Column A, the premier ballot position, we're not asking voters to do anything other than what they've done for generations, "Vote Column A All the Way!" While for years this slogan has been the calling card of the establishment, the coveted spot on the ballot that virtually guarantees electoral victory, this year voters looking for change will, for the first time ever, know that a vote for "Column A" is a vote for integrity, transparency, and progressive values.





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