Monday, November 13, 2006

Light blogging month

I will be serving on a DC grand jury this month, which will keep me away from some of the usual daily exposure to the political and podcasting world. I'm hoping to use some of the downtime to pull out some tips from the podcast expo, as promised, however!

Speaking of audio content... I was interviewed for Air America's State of Belief recently... feel free to listen here (mp3). I have a few other interviews floating about that I will eventually post someplace on the blog or elsewhere on the site. Never fear... I'll keep you posted.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Still a few more House seats open

Reminds me of this blast from the past, circa 2000.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Virginia recount reality check

Good morning to all bleary-eyed election return watchers! Looks like I was wrong about where the drama would unfold... I should have guessed Richmond. With Montana looking more and more like a Dem pickup, control of the Senate hinges on the Webb-Allen race.

Here's the scoop on the looming VA recount. First rule... stop listening to the people with the styled hair on tv. They're nice people, but they don't know a thing about the recount rules. Anything below 1% difference (abour 22,000 votes or so) and the loser may request a recount. Anything below .5% difference, and the loser can request a recount and the Commonwealth pays the bill. The recounts don't happen until after the vote is certified, which is 10 days after the election.

Of course by then it won't matter.

Huh? Wuh? Yeah... it won't matter. In Virginia, recounts are pretty much just running the numbers again, not a second look at the ballots. We learned that in the 2005 Attorney General race. So, where's the real battle? Today... during the final canvass. Whoever is up at the end of that is probably the next Senator from Virginia. Now, that won't stop some crafty lawyers from making the arguments that the ballots should be looked at again, but if last year is any indication, I don't expect that kind of argument to hold any water.

UPDATE... here's a great post from Ned Foley at Ohio State that summarizes the Montana law. Seems to me the procedure favors Tester at this point over Burns given his margins as reported by the Montana Secretary of State.

Friday, November 03, 2006

This town's apparently big enough for two Tim Mooney's

I kept having people mention how great I was on NPR on Wednesday. Problem was... I wasn't on NPR yesterday. Tim Mooney, however, was on NPR.

Confused? So were dozens of people I know throughout the country who swore they heard me in an interview regarding education funding. Mystery solved... Tim Mooney is a spokesperson for a group called First Class Education here in DC.

Have a good weekend everyone... and Tim? Ever consider going by Timothy? Just wondering...