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Kirk fund-raiser to feature Clinton - Texas Senate Race Democrat Candidate (New York Fundraiser)
The Dallas Morning News ^ | July 10, 2002 | By GROMER JEFFERS JR. / The Dallas Morning News

Posted on 07/10/2002 6:29:05 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP

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To: SwatTeam; All
Thanks for the link!


John Cornyn:
Texas Senate Candidate!
John says: How could
someone NOT vote for me?

21 posted on 07/10/2002 9:16:47 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: mwl1
Does anyone there have any confidence that Cornyn can pull this out?

If Cornyn can't beat Kirk, Sharp will also win.

22 posted on 07/10/2002 9:18:00 AM PDT by HoustonCurmudgeon
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To: MeeknMing; Flyer; dix; Eaker; humblegunner; bobbyd; Xenalyte; PetroniDE; BurFred
TEXAS pimg for Ming!
23 posted on 07/10/2002 9:21:41 AM PDT by HoustonCurmudgeon
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To: MeeknMing
The DMN ran what appeared to me to be a campaign ad for Kirk on their "Sunday Reader" (opinion) section cover page Sunday the 7th.

The article was titled something like "Not your father's political candidate" or some such. There was an artist's (how much does a newspaper artist make per hour?) rendering of Ron Kirk's smiling face. Rays of light were shooting out rom behind his head. The picture covered the majority of the page both above and below the fold.

For a moment I was taken by the image's attempt to deify or exalt the image of a man, but then I'm a conservative, so probably just being reactionary.

If any other Texans saw that, give me your take. I'm definitely writing in about it.

I'm also curious what their thoughts about this and "campaign finance reform". What would have been their reaction if GOPAC wanted to run a piece like this PAID in their paper "60 days before the election" or whatever.
24 posted on 07/10/2002 9:23:00 AM PDT by sayfer bullets
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To: MeeknMing
GACK!!!
25 posted on 07/10/2002 10:10:29 AM PDT by christine
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To: Ditter
Scared to come to Texas, is he? Good!

Little Dick and Short Boy have also been warned by the state Dems not to come to Texas (couldn't even go to the state convention).

Best news I'd heard in awhile. You know things are going well when their "leadership" knows that their presence would only cause the candidates to lose votes.

26 posted on 07/10/2002 10:21:25 AM PDT by weegee
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To: Dog Gone; sayfer bullets
They merely want a token black and a token hispanic on the statewide ticket so that they can increase voter turnout for their real goal, the Lt. Gov position.

...For a moment I was taken by the image's attempt to deify or exalt the image of a man, but then I'm a conservative, so probably just being reactionary.

Kirk has always been considered the "saving grace" of the DemoRats' trinity ethnic 2002 ticket.

They tried to strike the right balance and sought to get Kirk the nomination to draw out the party faithful in all demographics (everyone needs their own horse in to win).

Meanwhile we believe in the best man for the job.

27 posted on 07/10/2002 10:34:47 AM PDT by weegee
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To: HoustonCurmudgeon
Thanks! Bump back atcha!
28 posted on 07/10/2002 11:10:20 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: sayfer bullets
I didn't see that article, but just searched the DMN archives and found it:


Ron Kirk: Not your father's politician

Democratic nominee shuns firebrand approach of old

07/07/2002

By GROMER JEFFERS JR. / The Dallas Morning News

LAS VEGAS – As the bodacious sounds of slot machines and other games of chance blared in the background, Ron Kirk tried to make his way to the lavish buffet at the Mandalay Bay Casino and Resort.

But his newfound fan club, a collection of black elected officials at a national conference, wouldn't let him go. They constantly shook his hand and pulled him to the side for small talk and encouragement in his bid for the Senate against Republican rival John Cornyn.

Like gamblers looking for a sure thing, these Democrats embraced Mr. Kirk for running on a pro-business, bipartisanship record – a campaign far removed from the firebrand tactics of black politicians whose careers were rooted in the civil rights movement.

"He's got a different approach. But sometimes it takes a different approach to break through," said Donald Afflick, a New York labor leader and member of the Democratic National Committee's Black Caucus, which invited Mr. Kirk to the group's summer retreat last week in Las Vegas.

*
GUILLERMO MUNRO / DMN
By his own account, Mr. Kirk says he's a different kind of black Democrat.

"George Bush got elected by saying he was a different kind of Republican," said Mr. Kirk, not at all hesitant to invoke the name of his state's favorite GOP son in his race against Mr. Cornyn, the attorney general.

"There's been a generational shift in politics," he said. "If you're still doing things the same way you were doing them 30 years ago, then you're out of touch."

It's a change from the historical efforts by black political legends such as the late New York Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., the late Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Unlike those campaign trailblazers, Mr. Kirk, 48, doesn't talk much about racial equality, the civil rights struggle or any facet of the black liberation movement.

That's to be expected, analysts say, because minorities seeking higher office today know that they must not only tap the potential of black and Hispanics voters but also appeal to whites who turn out in greater numbers in general elections.

"The glass ceiling is breaking for black candidates, and a new generation of black politicians are beginning to emerge," said David Bositis, a senior analyst for the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a Washington group that researches minority issues. "Ron Kirk represents that new breed."

In 1989, David Dinkins campaigned in his successful race to become the first black mayor of New York by energizing a black electorate determined to push change after recent racial strife. In 1995, Mr. Kirk combined the backing of business leaders and overwhelming support from minorities to become Dallas' first black mayor.

Where Harold Washington hit the streets to register 100,000 mostly black voters in his 1983 race to become the first black mayor of Chicago, Mr. Kirk attended coffees and teas in white homes in the Park Cities and North Dallas as he geared up for this year's Senate contest to replace retiring Sen. Phil Gramm.

Not everyone is happy with Mr. Kirk's style.

Roy Williams, the Dallas activist who is running for Senate on the Green Party ticket, said Mr. Kirk is a "master of deception."

"People are being led to believe that he can relate to all of the oppression that black people in this country have felt," said Mr. Williams, who is black. "It's not true. It's self-serving, and Kirk is taking advantage of our need for a hero and our need to have some kind of a victory."

Mr. Cornyn, while not commenting on the politics of race, said the former mayor's need to appease many groups makes him as shifty as a speckled trout. "My opponent's campaign is a mile wide and an inch deep," Mr. Cornyn said.

His spokesman, Dave Beckwith, said Mr. Kirk flip-flops on the issues or refuses to take a stand. "He thinks that if he hides how he's going to vote on every issue people are going to somehow think that he's bipartisan," he said.

Mr. Kirk dismisses the criticism and says he is focusing on the concerns of all Texans, including preserving Social Security and developing a prescription drug program for seniors. He's in line with much of the Democratic Party's platform, including supporting abortion rights and opposing the use of public money on private schools.

Broadening appeal

Mr. Bositis said Mr. Kirk is wise to craft his message so it appeals to most Texans, adding that it's necessary in a Republican-leaning state that President Bush calls home.

"If you want to run for the top offices, you'll find that most voters will be white," Mr. Bositis said. "So that means you can't afford to speak to just a black audience. You have to develop a broad base of appeal."

Jerry Polinard, chairman of the political science department at the University of Texas-Pan American, agreed. "Texas is a conservative state, and no traditional liberal is going to win statewide office," he said.

Mr. Polinard said the campaign style being utilized by Mr. Kirk is not new.

"Henry Cisneros had the same model when he became mayor of San Antonio. George Bush used it when he first ran for governor to reach out to Hispanics. They both were able to cross over."

Mr. Kirk grew up in segregated Austin, the son of the first black postal worker in Austin and a schoolteacher who was a civil rights organizer and remains a respected Austin political figure.

Mr. Kirk said his exposure to the civil rights movement helped lay his political foundation. "I still have the core values of inclusion and political participation," he said.

After serving as an assistant attorney and lobbyist for the city of Dallas, he was appointed by Gov. Ann Richards in 1994 as the first black secretary of state.

Soon afterward, business and civic leaders in Dallas tapped Mr. Kirk to make a run for mayor. In office, he was credited with winning voter approval of pro-business projects such as the American Airlines Center arena and the Trinity River project.

Critics such as Mr. Williams say he ignored the concerns of the city's largely black and Hispanic neighborhoods. And according to various studies, the city is in short supply of affordable housing.

"These are things that could have been addressed during his years as mayor," Mr. Williams said. "But because of his allegiance to the business community and others, they were ignored."

Mr. Kirk rejected that, saying that during his tenure, the city secured millions of dollars in economic development and infrastructure improvements in southern Dallas.

"All you have to do is visit some of the office parks and see the ground being broken on the University of North Texas campus to judge what has been accomplished," he said.

Others say Mr. Kirk's legacy to black Dallas residents can be seen in other ways.

"He's perhaps the biggest role model in the history of Dallas politics," council member James Fantroy said. "Because of Ron Kirk, my teenage son feels like he can be anything he wants to be."

Modern approach

For the 2002 campaign, Mr. Kirk was recruited by Democrats to join an effort to recapture top statewide posts from the Republicans. Kelly Fero, a Democratic strategist leading the party's coordinated campaign, said party leaders took note of Mr. Kirk's modern political approach.

"We felt that most of the interesting public policy in Texas was being conducted by Ron Kirk and other Texas mayors," Mr. Fero said.

National Democrats are beginning to join Mr. Kirk's fight. He has been on a nationwide fund-raising tour that the Cornyn campaign has derided as a showcase for liberals.

But participants at the Democratic Party meeting in Las Vegas said it shows Mr. Kirk has mass appeal and star power.

"People want someone who represents a cross-section of all the issues," said Clark County Nevada Commissioner Yvonne Atkinson Gates, who is chairwoman of the DNC's Black Caucus. "He can represent the business person and the working person. When you have that kind of global candidate, you have to be excited."

Paul Brathwaite, policy director for the Congressional Black Caucus, said that "times have changed, and young African-Americans around the country agree with what Ron Kirk represents. He's a lawyer who studies the economic policies related to issues. That means he figures out who gets to divide the resources."

Mr. Afflick, the labor leader, said Mr. Kirk, based on his life experiences, understood the concerns of his black support base. "If you don't know how to go home," he said, "you're in trouble."

Another caucus member, Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Florida, said oppression still confronts minorities in the political arena. She represents a Jacksonville-area district where she said many blacks believe they were victims of voting irregularities in the 2000 presidential election that Mr. Bush won.

Ms. Brown said she is excited about Mr. Kirk's candidacy, especially its historical significance. He would be only the third black person elected to the Senate since Reconstruction.

"It's a disgrace that a free country like ours is void of African-American leadership in the Senate," she said, vowing to raise money in Florida for Mr. Kirk's campaign.

Mr. Kirk said he's unmoved by thoughts of becoming Texas' first black senator.

"I have a race to win," he said. "Making history is secondary and something that I'll think about when it's all over."

E-mail gjeffers@dallasnews.com


Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/sundayreader/stories/070702dnsunkirk.5e884.html

29 posted on 07/10/2002 11:22:59 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: sayfer bullets
For a moment I was taken by the image's attempt to deify or exalt the image of a man, but then I'm a conservative, so probably just being reactionary.

I saw the same piece of garbage on Sunday, and it was garbage. The Dallas Morning News has been the unofficial marketing arm of the Ron Kirk campaign, not to mention the remaining two legs of the 'Dream Team' triad that includes Tony Sanchez and John Sharp.

I agree that Perry and Cornyn are saving their resources until after Labor Day. Nobody really wants to talk politics in TX until September...its too damn hot in August to worry about politics!

FWIW, Hispanics have never been friendly towards Ron Kirk, and there's too much baggage from his tenure as mayor, such as an $80 million deficit at the end of his term. His hand-picked successor was soundly beaten by Kirk's most vociferous rival on the City Council.

I'm also waiting for state-wide reportage on Mrs. Kirk, and how she made over $500,000 sitting on the board of one of the companies owned by Hicks, Muse. Yes, that would be Mr. Tom Hicks, owner of the Rangers and Stars. The Stars increased in value by over $100 million when the new arena was built. The referendum was spearheaded, of course, by the mayor of Dallas, Ron Kirk.

Kirk is a sleazeball, and a lawyer, to boot.

30 posted on 07/10/2002 11:27:01 AM PDT by Night Hides Not
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To: MeeknMing
I think I'll zip this link to Hannity or someone and see if the example of CFR hypocrisy is newsworthy to them...

hope so.
31 posted on 07/10/2002 11:40:36 AM PDT by sayfer bullets
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Comment #32 Removed by Moderator

To: Yehuda
Jimmy's Downtown in Manhattan is not listed by Zagat's or Yahoo.
33 posted on 07/11/2002 6:58:35 PM PDT by NativeNewYorker
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To: NativeNewYorker
A little info on Jimmy here(Restaurant owner)

"But although he surrounds himself with cops and politicians, Rodriguez's image isn't quite squeaky clean.

Growing up in the Bronx, he got into his share of trouble -- a lot of which he terms being in the wrong place at the wrong time -- and even spent a week in jail.

Mariscos del Caribe, the seafood restaurant he opened with his father before striking out on his own with the Bronx Café, was investigated for drug dealing.

And the Bronx Café has had its problems -- gunshots on the sidewalk, alleged drug dealers inside -- enough to have sparked a temporary ban of the place by Major League Baseball in 1995.

More trouble followed that same year, when Rodriguez hosted a reception for Fidel Castro and furious demonstrators lined the blocks around the Café."

Rest of article here: http://www.newyorkmag.com/page.cfm?ge_id=5764

Sounds like the perfect place for the criminals to have their fund-raiser.

34 posted on 07/11/2002 7:33:29 PM PDT by katnip
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Comment #35 Removed by Moderator

To: Yehuda

are we still supposed to be boycotting google?

Uh oh, I must have missed that one.

I use google too much to boycott it!

Don't let anyone know you told me.... :-}

36 posted on 07/11/2002 8:20:26 PM PDT by katnip
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Comment #37 Removed by Moderator

To: Yehuda; NativeNewYorker; katnip
Thanks for the links to that restaurant.

Jimmy's Downtown
So 57th Street isn't exactly lower Manhattan, but it's downtown if you're Jimmy Rodriguez, the nightlife impresario who brought the A-list to the Bronx. Now he's luring his blend of celebrities, politicians, and athletes to the sleepy neighborhood near the U.N. Could Kofi Annan be next at the bar?

BY JAY CHESHES


Jimmy Rodriguez strides through the front door of his Harlem restaurant, Jimmy's Uptown, a duplex with an onyx bar, soft golden light, and an R&B soundtrack. Men in crisp suits and women with ziggurats of teased hair grab at his hand, begging for attention. "Hey Jimmy, how are you, my brother?" "Hey Jimmy, I really need to talk to you." Rodriguez brushes them off in a polite rasp. He glances at his watch, fiddles with his cell phone. "She's late," he says, impatiently waiting for his girlfriend to arrive. "She'll just have to eat on the way."

The maître d' brings him a vodka tonic. His chef comes out of the kitchen with a tower of grilled shrimp and avocado salad. "Can I get one of these in a container to go?" Rodriguez asks. Al Sharpton is standing at the bar; a line of cars is clogging the street outside. "We gotta get moving," Rodriguez says.

The 23-year-old he's been dating for the past seven months has just pulled up and is waiting in the driver's seat of his pearl-white Cadillac SUV. "She's one year younger than me," he says, with a mischievous grin. "Well, so what if I can't count?"

Jimmy Rodriguez is 39 years old. He is six feet three inches tall and an imposing 230 pounds. He hooked up with Carrie (he refuses to divulge her last name, perhaps in deference to his wife, from whom he has been separated for almost a decade but never divorced) after running into her one night at the China Club. "I had met her like five different times," he says. "She says that each time I'd see her I'd reintroduce myself." The China Club is a favorite haunt of the athletes who cram Jimmy's Bronx Café, the Knicks and Yankees and ballplayers from out of town who -- along with local pols and Manhattan celebrities -- helped turn it into that borough's most high-profile nightspot. In the early days, the papers anointed him the Latin Toots Shor. The label is outdated -- Toots, after all, had only one place. Rodriguez is building an empire.

"I don't want to be a multi-millionaire," he says. "I'd be happy if at the end of twenty years I've built maybe 50 places, am building another five every year, and have got like a million dollars in the bank." For a high-school dropout who started off selling seafood from an ice-filled trash can under the Bronx River Parkway, his confidence is boundless. He's preparing for the opening this month -- with a party thrown by Governor Pataki to celebrate Women's History Month -- of his third space, a sleek SoHo-style bar and restaurant on 57th Street that he's coyly dubbed Jimmy's Downtown. "Where is downtown anyway?" he asks. "When you live in the Bronx, this is downtown."

"I think it's great that Jimmy's opening in midtown," says his friend Norma Kamali later that evening in the VIP balcony at the Apollo. "Jimmy's like a magnet. He draws people to himself. He's just responding to demand." Rodriguez and Kamali have been friends ever since event planner Robert Isabell first dragged her up to the Bronx Café, an enormous complex on Fordham Road, in the early nineties. During baseball season, the three of them sit together in the best seats at Yankee Stadium.

The new place (all Jimmy's, with no investors, he claims) is set to be as visually dramatic as his Harlem outpost; Ilan Waisbrod, the designer behind BondSt and Eugene, plans to put suede on one wall, big red roses on another, and a giant red pillar in the center of the dining room. Rodriguez says he nixed a proposal to put flat-screen TVs on the ceiling in the men's room. "When a big game is on, nobody would ever leave the bathroom," he says with a grin. Despite the new restaurant's somewhat sleepy location -- on a residential block on the far eastern end of 57th Street -- Rodriguez is showing plenty of his signature confidence. "How many places do you go where you find Latinos, African-Americans, Caucasians, people from all over breaking bread, listening to jazz and R&B and old school and a little salsa and a little merengue and a little cha-cha-cha?" Of course some of the "people from all over" are drawn by the prospect of seeing one of Jimmy's boldface friends in a front-room banquette: Spike Lee, Venus Williams. Even Ian Schrager, the nightlife arbiter of a different decade, has checked out the scene. "Schrager came up to the Bronx a couple of times," says Rodriguez. "He told me, 'You've done what I did in my time without the drugs.' "

But although he surrounds himself with cops and politicians, Rodriguez's image isn't quite squeaky clean. Growing up in the Bronx, he got into his share of trouble -- a lot of which he terms being in the wrong place at the wrong time -- and even spent a week in jail. Mariscos del Caribe, the seafood restaurant he opened with his father before striking out on his own with the Bronx Café, was investigated for drug dealing. And the Bronx Café has had its problems -- gunshots on the sidewalk, alleged drug dealers inside -- enough to have sparked a temporary ban of the place by Major League Baseball in 1995. More trouble followed that same year, when Rodriguez hosted a reception for Fidel Castro and furious demonstrators lined the blocks around the Café.

Still, Rodriguez's brushes with controversy have only added to his mystique; he's at once charming and slightly sinister, Frank Sinatra with cappuccino skin. When Rodriguez swings over to the parking garage across 57th Street to grab his white Jaguar convertible, the owner throws up his hands and insists, "For you, Jimmy, no charge." Late one Thursday night, Rodriguez and Carrie pass a glamorous mob gathered on the sidewalk outside the Mercer Hotel. "Hey, it's the Post fashion party," says Carrie. "Did you get an invite?" "I don't need one," says Rodriguez. A few minutes later, he's shaking hands and chatting with the burly men guarding the door.

With Rodriguez, even the smallest favors aren't easily forgotten. "Jimmy's heavy on the issue of loyalty," says Congressman José Serrano. "No matter how successful he is, he never forgets that he comes from the streets."

Late afternoon, the day before the Bronx Café will celebrate its ninth anniversary, Rodriguez is in Katz's Deli on Houston Street, wearing a dark-blue Versace suit and eating a hot pastrami sandwich. "I have so much going on, I have to be focused, to be a little bit smarter for the next couple of months," he says. "I can't be going to bed at five in the morning anymore." He wipes the mustard from the side of his mouth and waves across the room, acknowledging a stout black guy in a World Series Yankees jacket -- "one of the guys who rakes the field in the fifth inning." Rodriguez pauses. "I can't wait for the new place to open," he says. "I'm going to target everyone and everywhere. It's close to the U.N. -- why can't I have a couple of heads of state there once a month? Why not? It's nice enough. I can make it happen."

38 posted on 07/12/2002 2:46:29 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: NativeNewYorker
best of the week
Jimmy's Downtown
Eagerly awaited and delayed for months, Jimmy Rodriguez's sleek SoHo-style sequel to Jimmy's Uptown and Jimmy's Bronx Café finally makes its debut. Start an office pool: How soon will Derek Jeter be spotted here by "Page Six"?
Jimmy's Downtown
400 East 57th Street
212-486-6400
39 posted on 07/12/2002 2:55:24 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: katnip; Yehuda; MeeknMing
Shows how out of touch I am, now that going out (with kids) means pizza or Chinese.

Looks like a perfect spot for the Clintons.

40 posted on 07/12/2002 7:46:28 AM PDT by NativeNewYorker
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