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Political Buzz – 2011

WON THAT ONE; NOW BACK TO WORK

Democrat Jonathan Rothschild, candidate for mayor of Tucson, was ensconced in his law office downtown first thing this morning, even after a celebration of his victory in Tuesday night's virtually uncontested primary election.

Rothschild's car was in its usual spot in the parking lot of Mesch, Clark & Rothschild before 7 a.m. It's not uncommon to see him at work that early. But the morning after the primary election seemed a bit of a surprise.

Rothschild will face Republican Rick Grinnell in the general election in November. Grinnell won his spot on the ballot the hard way, by collecting more than 5,700 write-in votes. He needed 1,060 to make the ballot.

Rothschild has said he already is stepping away from his position as the law firm's business manager to focus on his campaign and that he will resign the firm altogether if elected.

Jonathan Rothschild Rick Grinnell Tucson election Tucson mayoral race,

YAWN! IT'S ELECTION DAY IN TUCSON

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We can blame government, or we can blame the candidates.

In either instance, it would be like motorists blaming the automakers or the auto dealers for providing Hummers and other gas-guzzling road beasts.

We're the customers. When we insist on economical vehicles, we get them.

As customers of government, we can get what we want. But we must insist. And that means making ourselves heard first and foremost at the ballot box.

We're the customers -- customers of government.

If we think about it that way, rather than thinking of ourselves as citizens or voters, we might begin creating a new mindset that allows us to re-engage in the democratic system.

If a merchant does poorly by us -- sells us inferior goods or provides lousy service or maybe even charges us too much or gives the wrong change -- we complain. We let the cashier or a customer service representative or even the manager or the owner know.

We do it even with the monopoly businesses that we are customers of -- the electric and gas utilities, the cable TV company. We complain when service is bad, and we get results more often than not.

Those consumer actions push change in the businesses. Dry cleaners knock a button off your best suit? Make a complaint; they'll fix it and improve the service. Store clerk not thank you after taking your hard-earned money (a pet peeve of mine, by the way)? Point it out to the clerk and the manager. You'll get an apology and a thanks.

If it experiences enough complaints, a business will change.

What about government? We want change, we insist on change, we rant and rave for change. What we don't do is vote for change. What we do is we don't vote; we walk away.

That's not working, is it?

We should behave like customers of government, asking to get what we pay for and complaining if we don't. Just walking away isn't working for us.

If you're eligible, vote today. If you're not, get eligible for the general election coming in November.

Yes, the choices this time out are pretty meager. That's the customers' fault for not insisting on better.

Start insisting; we customers of government have to start somewhere.

Tucson Tucson primary election election,

NEW CANDIDATE IN CD8 RACE

Anthony Prowell is the new entry into Congressional District 8 race.

He filed paperwork to run as a Democrat, which would pit him against U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords if she decides to run for her seat again.

But Prowell said the party has given him the cold shoulder, and he may change to run as a Green, instead.

He's an elementary special education teacher who says people want Congress to create jobs and protect Social Security and Medicare.

CD8 US House,

GOV. BREWER COMING TO TUCSON; WHAT SHOULD WE ASK HER?

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Gov. Jan Brewer has made publicized visits to Tucson a rarity this year.

Granted, it's not her turf. She was outdueled in Pima County voting last year by the non-effervescent Terry Goddard in a predictable, yet closer than expected outcome for the Democratic leaning area. Goddard had 50.1 percent of the votes to Brewer's 47.1 percent.

Still, Tucson is part of Arizona -- those dreamers in the Baja Arizona movement notwithstanding -- and it would be nice to see our governor a bit more often.

Now, the lure of hundreds of officials from Arizona's cities and towns has captured her attention. Brewer has accepted an invitation to speak Thursday at the League of Arizona Cities and Towns annual conference at Tucson's J.W. Marriott resort at Starr Pass.

My colleague Christopher Conover will be there to cover her speech for Arizona Illustrated, and the governor will sit down with me and a video crew for an interview afterward, also for Arizona Illustrated.

We have a healthy list of questions for Brewer, but we can always use more. Submit your questions in the Comments section below, then watch Arizona Illustrated at 6:30 p.m. Friday on PBS-HD-6 for the interview. We will plan to ask some of your questions as well as our own.

Baja Arizona Arizona Brewer Pima County,

INTERVIEW SHEDS MORE LIGHT ON FACTORS IN ANTENORI CONGRESSIONAL DECISION

Since announcing his Congressional exploratory committee last week, State Sen. Frank Antenori has said he won't be seeking the seat if U.S. Rep. Giffords decides to run again.

In comments today in one of "The Hill" newspaper's blogs, he gives a more detailed explanation about how redistricting could shape his decision.

"The Hill" quotes Antenori: "If the maps are drawn and I end up in a district that has a four- or five-point Democratic registration advantage I'm not going to run. ... But if I'm in a district with Ms. Giffords and it's an eight- or nine-point Republican registration advantage that will be a hard decision."

Antenori US House,

EXPENSIVE RACES FOR CONGRESS

A new report from the Federal Elections Commission shows that Congressional candidates raised $285.2 million dollars in the first six months of 2011. According to the FEC some Arizona candidates are some of the top fundraisers in the nation.

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords is 32nd in House when it comes to fundraising by incumbents. According to the FEC she raised $683, 964 between January 1 and June 30, 2011. Neither Giffords nor her staff has announced whether or not the Congresswoman will seek reelection in 2012.

In his race for the Senate, Congressman Jeff Flake has a number of top spots when it comes to fundraising. He is ranked 26th among Senate candidates when it comes to receipts. He brought in $ 1,863,591 during the first half of the year. Flake is number 24 when it comes to cash on hand with $2,002,620 in the bank. And he is 19th when it comes to expenses. The Flake campaign spent $488, 822 during the first six months of 2011.

To get a closer look at the campaign expenses of Giffords and Flake you can check out AZPM’s analysis of the numbers.

Other Arizona candidates making the list include Ann Kirkpatrick who is number 36 when it comes to fundraising by Congressional challengers. She brought in $243, 391 during the first half of 2011.

Kirk Adams is 39th amongst Congressional challengers when it comes to fundraising. He brought in $230,525 since declaring his candidacy.

Flake US House US Senate campaign finance,

About Political Buzz

News, commentary, analysis from the AZPM political team: Christopher Conover, Andrea Kelly, Michael Chihak.