Home | Virginia
Politics
| National
Politics
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Poll
How Enthused Are You About Tim Kaine for Senate?
Wildly Enthused, I LOVE Tim Kaine!
Strongly Enthused, I like Kaine a lot, Allen sux
Moderately enthused: Kaine's fine, Allen sux
Not enthused about Kaine, but Allen sux
Not at all enthused about this race
I'm voting for George Allen

Results

Weather

Search




Advanced Search


Blog Roll
Virginia Blogs
All Politics is Local
Augusta Free Press
Bacon's Rebellion
Coarse Cracked Corn
Crew of 42
DemRulz
Dixie Pig
Equality Loudoun
The Fix (WaPo)
Greater Greater Washington
The Green Miles
Leaving My Marc
Leesburg Tomorrow
Loudoun Progress
Moonhowlings
New Dominion Project
Not Larry Sabato
Off K Street
Old Dominion Blogs
Ox Road South Blog
Renaissance Ruminations
Richmonder
Richmond Sunlight
RTD VA Politics blog
Roanoke Times blog
Shad Plank
SlantBlog
Too Conservative
True Adventures of the Doorbell Queen
VB Dems
Virginia Education Report
WaPo - Virginia Politics Blog
Waldo Jaquith
Waldo's VA Political Blogroll

Progressive Legal Directory www.criminallawyervirginia.net
www.virginia-duilawyers.com
www.virginia-personalinjurylawyer.com
www.recklessdrivinglawyer.net
www.helpdisabilitylawyer.com
www.criminallawdc.com
www.duilawsdc.com

ADT Home Security in Virginia

A Tale of Two Senators

by: kindler

Tue Sep 27, 2011 at 09:27:59 AM EDT


At the recent Mason District (Fairfax County) Crab Feast, I observed, among the usual parade of politicians, two who stood out from the crowd.

Jim Webb and Tim Kaine demonstrated a level of class, earthiness and sincerity that we ought to expect from everyone we elect to public office. While Webb will be missed, his impending departure makes all the more critical that we replace him with someone real, like Kaine -- and not a dime store cowboy.

Webb spoke of his experiences on September 11th, when he happened to be in the Pentagon speaking with Corporal Jim Jones. Jones was called away by the news of a plane hitting the World Trade Center -- and Webb was driving away on Route 110 when he heard and felt the thud of the plane hitting the Pentagon.

The experiences of that day, and the irresponsible reaction of the Bush administration -- particularly the egregious, destructive War in Iraq -- led Webb to leave the Republican party, seek office as a Democrat, and become our Senator in '06.  And Webb has used his office not for grandstanding or stuffed-shirt nonsense but to pursue serious, meaningful causes like the new GI Bill, reducing our massive prison population, and decreasing income inequality.  

kindler :: A Tale of Two Senators
Have I agreed with every stand Webb has taken or not taken?  No -- on clean energy, for example, he's been consistently AWOL.  

But I have never doubted that Jim Webb means what he says and acts with conviction. He carries himself with a kind of military honor and even after 5 years in office, does not act like a politician, to the point that the hosts of the Crab Feast had to coax him to come on stage with all the other "electeds".

Webb noted with fondness how Tim Kaine helped him get elected and that he would go anywhere Kaine asks him to return the favor -- to help him succeed Webb in office.

At this point, Kaine took the stage and said that he hadn't thought of it as "succeeding"
Webb, but that it would be an honor to do so.  And it came across sincerely, like most of what these two gentlemen say, as their genuine affection for one another was palpable.

I talked with Kaine before he spoke, and was struck, as I have been in the past, by his atypical humility.  "Hi, I'm Tim" is how he introduces himself, with the comfortable familiarity of your long lost cousin at the family reunion.

When Kaine spoke, he wove together all the themes of the Democratic platform, from preserving Social Security to protecting the environment, into a unified theme of responsibility for one another.  The message was in perfect harmony with its messenger, squaring with his background as a former Catholic missionary and civil rights lawyer. He comes across as inspired by the Jesus of the Sermon on the Mount, as opposed to the harsh Crusader Christianity that so many on the right try to force upon us. Kaine understands what humility is and why it's such an essential quality for our leaders to have.

In public office, Kaine has sometimes fallen short, not pushing as hard as needed to get things done. But he is in politics for all the right reasons, and you can usually count on him taking the side of compassion and justice.  

While pundits often focus on all the cosmic factors affecting who gets elected, they sometimes slight the importance of politicians simply being likable, good guys.  There's something to be said for electing real people, not phonies.  In 2012, Virginians will have a choice to have one genuine human being succeed another in the Senate -- or else to go back to the right-wing robot we worked so hard, and successfully, to evict last time.  

Tags: , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

"Responsibility for one another" (4.00 / 1)
was, you write, Tim Kaine's theme... as it should be for every Democratic candidate who can say it with conviction and mean it. What a glorious contrast to the nasty, cold-hearted Republican theme of "personal responsibility" which ends up actually meaning: "I've got mine, you feckless loser, don't bother me with your whimpering." Republicans sanctify greed and short-term corporate profits, while confusing personal freedom with corporate freedom to romp unregulated and unaccountable across the world (which actually belongs to us all, not just to them).

For those grassroots Democrats who have hungered for leaders who can definitively state Democratic principles, instead of slavishly robo-talking within Republican frames, here is a theme: "responsibility for one another," like "we're all in this together," and "the social contract." Elizabeth Warren is doing a good job expressing this theme in Massachusetts, and now we have Tim Kaine doing it in Virginia. Thank God.    


Advertising

Donate to Blue Virginia

About
The purpose of Blue Virginia is to cover Virginia politics from a progressive and Democratic perspective. This is a group blog and a community blog. We invite everyone to comment here, but please be aware that profanity, personal attacks, bigotry, insults, rudeness, frequent unsupported or off-point statements, and "trolling" (NOTE: that includes outright lies, whether about climate science, or what other people said, or whatever) are not permitted and, if continued, will lead to banning. For more on trolling, see the Daily Kos FAQs. Also note that diaries may be deleted if they do not contain at least 2 solid paragraphs of original text; if not, please use the comments section of a relevant diary. For more on writing diaries, click here. Thanks, and enjoy!

P.S. You can contact us at lowell@raisingkaine.com and you can subscribe to Lowell's Twitter feed here. If you'd like to subscribe to Miles Grant's Twitter feed, click here. For Teacherken, click here. For Kindler, click here.

P.P.S. To see the Blue Virginia archive, please click here. To see the Raising Kaine archive, please click here. To see the Blue Commonwealth archive, please click here.



RSS Feed

Subscribe to Blue Virginia - Front Page


Powered by: SoapBlox