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CNN Poll: Senate Race Tied

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, October 31, 2006 at 2:48 PM

Exactly one week before Election Day, a new CNN poll shows the race between Republican Jim Talent and Democrat Claire McCaskill tied.

Of 565 Likely Voters:
Jim Talent - 49%
Claire McCaskill - 49%

(Sampling Error: +/- 4%)

Of the larger pool of 1,004 registered voters, McCaskill led with 51% to Talent's 43%. Click here to download the PDF of the 3-page report from CNN's polls of Missouri, New Jersey, Ohio, Tennessee, and Virginia voters.

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New Anti-McCaskill Ad Racist?

By Antonio D. French

A new television ad attacking Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill features photos of Hispanic men and women carrying Mexican flags with a female voice delivering the following message:

Between 10 and 12 million illegal immigrants reside in America costing taxpayers more than $45 billion a year. How did so many illegal immigrants get here? They walked right in.

Claire McCaskill does not favor restrictive measures to protect our security, like a border fence.

If Claire McCaskill's view prevails, America won't be America anymore.

The ad is paid for by a group called Americans for Honesty on Issues. The group's Web site does not give an address or phone number, nor does it list any of the officers or sponsors. It says only, "Americans for Honesty on Issues is organized to engage in political issue communications in compliance with federal and state laws."

According to Wikipedia, the group is a Houston, Texas based "527" that has spent over one million dollars on television advertisements, critical of Democratic candidates.

"527" groups are tax-exempt organizations that participate in political activities, typically via soft money contributions, which have no legal limit. By federal law, they are not allowed to coordinate their efforts with political campaigns. According to the New York Times, if past trends hold, the total raised and spent by such groups on this election will surpass $300 million, eclipsing the $258 million spent by such groups in the last midterm election, in 2002.

Again according to Wikipedia, Bob J. Perry, a Houston construction firm owner, appears to be the sole funder of AHI. Perry was the major funder of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, who ran a campaign against John Kerry in the 2004 election.

Sue Walden, a Houston business owner, is the president of AHI. Walden was a lobbyist for Enron and is considered a close ally of the former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who was forced to resign from Congress amid ethics scandals. Walden has been a Minor League Pioneer fundraiser for George W. Bush, raising $43,000, and was an adviser to Kenneth L. Lay, the former chief executive of Enron.

We'll try to post the video as soon as we can find a version on the Web.

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Farr Says He's a Democrat Now

By Antonio D. French

After losing his latest campaign for the Republican nomination for Congress, Leslie Farr says he is now a Democrat.

"I came to a point where I had to ask myself if the Republican Party was right for me and obviously that answer was no," wrote Farr in an email to the media and supporters.

"For five years, I served the Republican Party and my reward was a Primary loss to a person that had only been in the Party for three months. There is obviously no loyalty to African-American people from certain people within the Republican Party," said Farr.

Maybe Farr should ask a few black elected Dems about their party's loyalty before he hops on the donkey.

You know, you don't have to register with a party to vote in Missouri, Leslie.

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Bush to Stump for Talent

By Antonio D. French

The Associated Press is reporting that President George W. Bush will be coming to Missouri on Friday to stump for Sen. Jim Talent. Details are still not available, but such a public event would mark a shift from a perceived distancing from the president by the Talent campaign.



More details as they become available...

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Our New "Mini Theater"

By Antonio D. French

We hope you enjoy our new "mini theater" on the left side of the page. Now you can play several of PUB DEF's most recent interviews and exclusive videos from any page on the site.

You can even create "remixes" on the fly by playing two videos at once. To enlarge the video, simply click on the YouTube logo. Enjoy.

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ACORN to Address Fraud Allegations

By Antonio D. French

UPDATE: ACORN representatives tell us today's press conference has been cancelled because of "new information" regarding a possible agreement between the group and the Board of Elections on the recent letters mailed to voters registered by ACORN workers.

Representatives from the embattled Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) will hold a press conference at noon today in front of the St. Louis Board of Elections to address recent allegations made by election officials in St. Louis City, County, and Kansas City.

Check back later for details...

And as we predicted over the weekend, a letter sent last week from the Board of Elections to thousands of people that were registered to vote by ACORN workers has indeed sparked criticism from civil rights groups.

Denise Lieberman, the former legal director for the ACLU of Eastern Missouri and the current voter protection coordinator for the Advancement Project, a DC-based civil rights organization, told KSDK yesterday, "The cards that were subject of this letter were based on a registration that was targeted to the African-American community."

She told Channel 5 reporter Rebecca Wu, "Our concern was the letter was suggestive to voters was that if they failed to place a phone call to the election board and to sign the bottom of that letter, in fact their application would not be processed."

The Board has drafted a second letter, with the help of the Advancement Project, that aims to clear up the confusion. It will be mailed out today.

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On "Collateral Damage" Tonight

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, October 30, 2006 at 2:42 PM

I'll be a guest on "Collateral Damage" tonight discussing the various amendments and propositions on next week's ballot with Dave Drebes of the Arch City Chronicle and hosts D.J. Wilson and Fred Hessel. The show starts at 7:00 and can be heard on KDHX 88.1 FM or online at www.kdhx.org.

UPDATE: Oops, it seems Fred and I got our wires crossed. I'll be on next week. KWMU's Tom Weber joined Drebes tonight.

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"Most Dangerous" Again

By Antonio D. French

COMMENTARY

We observed back in January that the 20% increase in St. Louis' crime rate coincidently matched the proposed pay increase for Police Chief Joe Mokwa. Perhaps now that St. Louis has once again been crowned the most dangerous place to live in America, the Mayor and his fellow police board members will pay more attention to how and where Mokwa assigns St. Louis' finest.

St. Louis is more than just downtown. There are places in our city that have been completely left out of the revitalization occurring just a few miles away. And it is no coincidence at all that these are also the places where most of our young people are dying.

Also back in January, Mayor Francis Slay wrote on his blog, "as most of you know, many neighborhoods in the City are very safe places today. However, as the stats make too clear, a few neighborhoods are not."

Wouldn't it make sense then in the 10 months since those words were written that those "unsafe areas" would have seen a surge of police patrols, a strong and permanent presence of officers to show both residents and criminals that crime would no longer be tolerated?

But ask anyone who lives in the 5th, 6th, 7th, or 8th districts and they will tell you that has not happened.

Maybe it's as they say in national politics: We'd rather fight them over there than over here.

Could it be that the spirit of the Team Four Plan still exists in St. Louis? When faced with limited resources, protect downtown and the southern neighborhoods first?

True or not, when it comes to politics, crime, home-buying, home-building, and property values -- perception is reality. And the numbers don't lie.

What remains to be seen is who will accept responsibility and if the problem of "a few neighborhoods" will be seen as the problem of the entire city -- and indeed the entire region. Because it is.

UPDATE: Police Chief Mokwa was on the news Monday night responding to this "Most Dangerous" label. He said if you asked his officers, they would tell you St. Louis was a safe place to live.

Maybe he's forgotten those public meetings earlier this year on the issue of lifting the civilian residency requirement. Just behind the city's schools and affordable housing, "crime" was one of the most cited reasons Police Department employees gave for wanting to move out of the city.

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Technical Support

By Antonio D. French

We need a little help. A minor, but annoying, bug in our site has been eating away at us for way too long.

We use Macs mostly and if we have to use a PC, we use Firefox to surf the Web. So we rarely get to see the bug ourselves. But last week we were reminded of the less-that-perfect experience of PC owners who use Microsoft's incredibly unsafe Internet Explorer when our site was featured on Fox News.

There we were on TV in all our orange and black glory, but then as the reporter scrolled to the top of our page (gasp) we were shockingly incomplete.

The problem is that in most modern browsers (Safari and Firefox) we look like this. But in IE we look like this. Notice the difference? A piece of our background image doesn't show up, instead revealing a thick chuck of our orange background.

Any of you techies have a clue how we can fix that?

UPDATE: Fixed! Thanks, Ben Smith.

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More Good Reviews for "Mr. Smith"

By Antonio D. French

A review in yesterday's Boston Globe:

Sometimes elections come down to which flavor of hubris leaves less of a bad taste in your mouth: the hubris of political dynasty, where a candidate waltzes in with the pedigree of a last name; or the hubris of ego, where a candidate says hey, I'm trying really hard, that's enough for your money and your vote, right?

The title of Frank Popper's new documentary "Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore?" is a play on the 1939 Frank Capra film "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington." The new movie follows a young buck named Jeff Smith who, in 2004, ran for the House of Representatives to replace the outgoing Richard Gephardt. Smith was 29 at the time, and the film shows him barreling into his campaign despite the skepticism he faces even from his own mother, who thought the whole idea "just seemed like an off-the-wall notion."

Smith seems to be a decent guy -- he cofounded the Confluence Academy, a St. Louis charter school that serves primarily minority students -- even if he never is fazed by his complete lack of previous public service.

He looks and sounds like Al Franken doing his Stuart Smalley bit, and one of his own campaign staffers concedes that Smith is "short, looks like he's 12, and sounds like he's castrated." That makes it all the more entertaining to see Smith go from zero name recognition to serious contender in a primary field that includes Russ Carnahan, the Missouri equivalent of a Kennedy...

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Who's Reaching Black Voters?

By Antonio D. French

St. Louis Congressman Lacy Clay recently suggested Republican Sen. Jim Talent may be doing a better job than his Democratic challenger, Claire McCaskill, of addressing African-American campaign issues.

From a story in Sunday's U.S. News & World Report:

But some Democratic candidates are facing their own base motivation problems, with recent polls showing lower-than-normal black support for Democratic Senate candidates like Missouri's McCaskill, who wasn't cracking 50 percent black support in a poll earlier this month. Other polls show African-Americans more likely than whites to doubt that their votes will be counted because of voting controversies in recent years.

"I hear Talent really trying to address some issues near and dear to the African community," says St. Louis Rep.
William Lacy Clay, a Democrat. "I don't hear the same drumbeat from the McCaskill camp."

While acknowledging McCaskill's ties to the black community, St. Louis NAACP Vice President Claude Brown says Talent "has done a tremendous job recruiting African-Americans." But, he adds, "people are really angry. If nothing else gets African-Americans to the polls, it's anger." If that's still not enough, perhaps a call from one of the two parties will do the trick.

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VIDEO: Ballpark Village Announcement

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, October 29, 2006 at 10:54 AM

In a room on the 18th floor of Bank of America Plaza on a rainy Friday afternoon, just hours before the St. Louis Cardinals won the World Championship, the team's owners, their developer, and Mayor Francis Slay held a press conference which was as void of details as the day was of sunshine.

Maybe it was all about timing. Just seven days after saying they were "not there yet", the three sides were all smiles Friday saying they had reached an agreement "in principle" on the nearly $400 million new Ballpark Village plan.

In their own words:

Mayor Francis Slay...



Dave Cordish of The Cordish Group...



Bill DeWitt, Jr., chairman of the Cardinals...



$271.2 million of the $387 million project will be coming from Cordish directly. The remaining $116 million will come from bonds which will be paid back through the following mechanisms from new tax money generated by the project:
  • $56 million from tax increment financing (a TIF) from the City of St. Louis
  • $29 million in tax money from the Missouri Downtown Economic Stimulus Act (MODESA)
  • $26 million from a special tax district created around the development (it'll add 1 percent to the existing sales tax for purchases made within the district and a extra $1 to the price of tickets to attractions within the district)
  • $5 million in public bonds to be bought by the Cardinals and Cordish
All of this must still be approved by several state and local boards, including the St. Louis Board of Aldermen and the three-member Board of Estimate and Apportionment (E&A).

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Election Board Hires Perkins, Asks New Registered Voters For More Info

By Antonio D. French

A story in today's Post-Dispatch recounts much of what has already been reported on this and other websites about allegations of fraud, poor management and collusion by the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN). But reporter Jeremy Kohler's article does add one new piece of information.

"In a twist, [Josephine Perkins, the fired ACORN worker featured in PUB DEF's Oct. 4 exclusive video report] was hired days later as a temporary worker by the city's Republican elections director, Scott Leiendecker, an outspoken ACORN critic," wrote Kohler, putting Perkins' credibility in question and apparently suggesting the Republican-controlled Election Board was rewarding Perkins for publicly alleging that ACORN managers instructed employees to get out the vote for Democrat Claire McCaskill.

The Post did not mention that the job Leiendecker gave Perkins pays just $7.25 an hour (75 cents less than ACORN pays) and lasts only two weeks.

Leiendecker told PUB DEF in a phone interview yesterday that he felt sorry for Perkins, who came to his office last week nearly a month after being fired by an ACORN manager who she and other workers identified as telling them to GOTV for the Democratic candidate. ACORN maintains they fired Perkins for stealing a purse, a charge she vehemently denies.

Leiendecker said he respected her spirit and decades of experience in northside organizing. After also being interviewed by Democratic Director of Elections Mary Wheeler-Jones, Leiendecker said Perkins was offered a temporary job helping the Board prepare for the Nov. 7 election.

In related news, Leiendecker and Jones sent letters last week to hundreds of people that were registered to vote by ACORN workers, asking them to call the Board of Elections to confirm their registration.

This appears to add an additional hurdle to the voter registration process, one that civil rights organizations may soon jump on.

"Due to concerns about a number of the Applications submitted by ACORN, as reported recently in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, we are asking that you contact the Election Board so that we can confirm your voter registration information and complete the registration process," states the letter dated Oct. 24.

Related Videos:

VIDEO: The video that started it all
VIDEO: More ACORN allegations
VIDEO: Pub Def on Fox News

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College Media Convention this Weekend

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, October 27, 2006 at 6:15 PM

The next generation of reporters, bloggers, podcasters, and muckrakers will be in town this weekend as the Associated Collegiate Press holds its National College Media Convention in St. Louis.

Among other things, it will feature student competitions in several different categories. This reporter is proud to have been asked to serve as a judge in the "best podcast" category.

Judging starts at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday at the Adam's Mark Hotel downtown. All of the judges are sure to be blown away by the talent that Generation Y has to offer.

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VIDEO: Sandra Thomas Interview

By Antonio D. French

State Auditor candidate Sandra Thomas sat down with PUB DEF for a few minutes this morning to talk about her campaign and her vision for the office.

Thomas, who is a CPA and currently the auditor for Platte County, said she thinks politics has no place in the auditor's office.

"I think it's really important that we have someone that is going to take the politics out of that office," she said. "Someone who wants to do the job for the taxpayers of finding the waste, fraud and abuse in state government."

She focused on her education (Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in accounting) and her experience in Platte County as qualifications for the office.



Yesterday we published our interview with Thomas' Democratic opponent, Susan Montee. Click here to watch it.

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VIDEO: Michael J. Fox on Limbaugh

By Antonio D. French

Actor Michael J. Fox, whose commercial for U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill has been the subject of much discussion the past few days, discussed with Katie Couric the recent allegations made by radio host Rush Limbaugh and his ongoing battle with Parkinson's disease.

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Ballpark Village Event Today

By Antonio D. French

The same day that the home team may win their first World Series in more than twenty years, the mayor, the owners of the Cardinals, and representatives of developer Cordish Company will hold an event this afternoon to formally announce plans to move forward with the new Ballpark Village.

The meeting will be at the Bank of America Plaza, 800 Market Street, in Suite 1750 at 1:00 p.m.

Check back later for video...

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"Anti-Cloning" Rally this Weekend

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, October 26, 2006 at 1:54 PM

Several Christian and conservative leaders will meet in St. Louis this weekend to hold a rally against Amendement 2, the Stem Cell ballot initiative.

Archbishop Raymond L. Burke, Alan Keyes, Rick Scarborough, and Star Parker will be among the featured speakers at Saturday's "Christians Against Human Cloning" rally at St. Alphonsus "Rock" Church, 1118 N. Grand Blvd., in the center of St. Louis City.

Several pastors and church leaders from the area are expected to attend and will be asked to urge their flocks to vote against the controversial amendment.

Supporters of the bill point to language in the proposal which states "No person may clone or attempt to clone a human being." But opponents say the full text of the amendment places a very narrow definition on what "cloning" actually is, thus leaving open the possibility for cloning as most know it.

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PUB DEF on Fox News

By Antonio D. French

Cable news network Fox News has picked up on the controversy surrounding ACORN's GOTV and voter registration campaigns. Reporter Jeff Goldblatt is in Kansas City today reporting on ACORN's troubles there.

His story, to run during the 6:00 hour at 5:30, will feature PUB DEF's video report on allegations made by several St. Louis ACORN workers about being trained to campaign for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill while registering voters on behalf of Proposition B, the proposal to raise the state's minimum wage.

UPDATE: Here's the Fox News report, which also features St. Louis City's Republican Elections Director, Scott Leiendecker...

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A Letter to The American

By Antonio D. French

From today's St. Louis American:

"Reed’s running for aldermanic president opens up his 6th Ward seat. It was rumored that Reed was ready to hand the job to lobbyist and perennially defeated candidate Patrick Cacchione (who, so long as we’re keeping track of apples and oranges, is a white male). Then here comes Kacie Starr Triplett...

"...if you want the political support of folks old enough to be your father or grandfather, next time talk to them about your candidacy before you quit your day job.

Triplett also may not have a pitch-perfect ear for friends, as she is close friends with an avowedly independent local journalist [Antonio French] who seems to have at least one leg in the Republican Party, if attracting exclusive ads from the Jim Talent campaign are any indication."


St. Louis American editors,

What the hell is wrong with you folks over there?

Have you completely forgotten how to build young people up, so now all you can do is take anonymous shots at us every week? Me, Kacie, Jamilah, Talib, Rodney, Yaphett...

What is you guys' problem over there?

At least be man enough to sign the rubbish you write. I have about as much respect for your editorial board as I do an anonymous blog commenter that jabs politicos on their rumored sexual orientations or the number of "baby mamas" they're supposed to have.

In the absence of any kind of real reporting (have you broken a single story this year?) you've turned a once-great newspaper into a gossip rag, something people pick up just to see which local African-American you spit at this week.

And to editor Chris King in particular ("who, so long as we're keeping track of apples and oranges, is a white male"), how do you feel so comfortable tearing down black people, telling us how we are supposed to think politically, when you hide your own race from your readers? I see everyone else's picture in the your paper but yours.

I don't know what you guys think you're doing over there, but it is not journalism. If it were, you might have mentioned in your latest shot at me for allowing Jim Talent to advertise on my website that he has spent much more money advertising in your paper during this campaign.

The American used to be the tool with which blacks on the bottom of the economic and social ladders told their stories to the world up top. Now it's the tool elites use to tell poor and working-class blacks what to think and who to vote for.

And it's a shame. We sure could use a newspaper we trusted in these times.

Antonio D. French
Pub Def Weekly
www.pubdef.net

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VIDEO: Susan Montee Interview

By Antonio D. French

A few weeks ago, Susan Montee, the Democratic candidate for State Auditor, sat down with PUB DEF to talk about her "exciting" race to succeed Claire McCaskill.

Montee, who is a CPA and currently the auditor for Buchanan County, said the office of State Auditor is important because it serves as a watchdog for state government.

She said if Republican Gov. Matt Blunt gets an auditor of his same party we will see is a lot of "happy news coming out over the next two years from the Auditor's office telling us about how great the Blunt administration's policies have been."



Tomorrow we are scheduled to interview the Republican candidate for State Auditor, Sandra Thomas, who is also a CPA and currently auditor for Platte County.

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SLPS Student to Throw 1st Pitch

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, October 25, 2006 at 5:48 PM

Two St. Louis Public School students will take center stage at the next two World Series games as the St. Louis Cardinals take on the Detroit Tigers.

Anthanisha McMiller, a 5th grader at Gateway Elementary will throw out the first pitch at tonight’s tomorrow night's game at Busch stadium, and Donald Buckner, a junior at Gateway High School will throw out the first pitch at Thursday night's Game 5.

Both students were chosen by the Herbert Hoover Boys & Girls Club of America for the positive leadership both in the classroom and at Herbert Hoover. "This is a great honor and we are very proud of Anthanisha and Donald for their hard work and commitment to the Boys & Girls Club," said Superintendent Diana Bourisaw.

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"Pony Up": Groups Call on Safe Dems to Put their Money Where their Mouths Are

By Antonio D. French

Two liberal websites are asking their readers to demand their Democratic members of Congress who are all but assured re-election to give some of their campaign money to Democrats in close contests.

MoveOn.org and MyDD.com have identified several dozen "safe" Democrats, including St. Louis Congressman Russ Carnahan, and given their readers specific instructions on how to pressure them to help their fellow Democrats in more competitive races.

One such Democrat in need is U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill who is in a very close contest with incumbent Republican Sen. Jim Talent. Back in August, PUB DEF's camera caught Carnahan using some strong language in telling a group of Dems that Talent needed to be defeated.



"There's a long list of reasons to fire his ass!," he said standing on a chair while rallying the crowd to support McCaskill.

It appears some Dems are still waiting for Carnahan to put his money where his mouth is.

We are expecting a response from Carnahan's campaign shortly. Check back soon.

UPDATE: Representatives of Congressman Carnahan say he has given nearly a quarter million dollars to fellow Democrats through the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) and direct contributions since taking office in January 2005.

The campaign sent over the following numbers:

Contributed to DCCC= $100,000
Raised for DCCC= $52,000
Contributions to DCCC targeted races= $12,600
Pending Contributions to DCCC targeted races= $15,500
Raised for other Democratic members of Missouri delegation= $65,000
Grand Total = $245,100

It's not clear from the information provided when those contributions were made or whether MoveOn.org's target number for Carnahan of $60,831 (roughly 30% of his war chest as of 9/30) was met during this campaign cycle.

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VIDEO: Mayor Slay on Prop P

By Antonio D. French

On Nov. 7, St. Louis City voters will be asked to raise their sales tax by 1/8 percent to pay for the construction and maintenance of two new state-of-the-art recreation centers -- one in north St. Louis and one in south St. Louis -- and to provide a dedicated revenue source for maintaining and upgrading the City's existing recreation facilities.

In an interview yesterday, Mayor Francis Slay said the new tax is estimated to generate about $4.37 million annually. Should Proposition P pass, the City would almost immediately issue bonds to pay for building the new rec-plexes (which cost about $19 million each) and upgrading its existing rec centers (about $9.5 million). Expanding the number and scope of recreation programs offered by the City will cost about $700,000 per year, according to Slay.



The southside rec-plex is going to be built in Carondolet Park. The northside location has not been finalized, but O'Fallon Park is the frontrunner after receiving the endorsement of the Aldermanic Black Caucus. Should the tax increase pass, Slay said to look for doors to open on the two facilities in two to three years.

If Prop P fails next Tuesday, Slay said it will have been another "lost opportunity" for the City of St. Louis.

"This is what it's going to take," said Slay. "It's going to take something like this to really do something that makes a difference as far as recreation in the City."

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French on NPR [Updated]

By Antonio D. French

I was a guest yesterday on NPR's "Open Source with Christopher Lydon" discussing the Missouri Senate race, the Stem Cell initiative, and other topics related to the Nov. 7 election.

The other guests were Prof. George Connor, Missouri State University; author Jonathan Frazen ("The Corrections" and "The Discomfort Zone: A Personal History"); and conservative Kansas City blogger Dee Vantuyl of The Chatterbox Chronicles.

At the end of the show, they played a short pre-recorded interview with our friend Steve Patterson of UrbanReviewSTL.com.

Click here to download the 60-minute show.

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Fox/McCaskill Stem Cell Ad Response

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, October 24, 2006 at 5:54 PM

Opponents of Amendment 2 have put together a quick response to U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill's powerful television ad featuring actor Michael J. Fox in support of the Stem Cell Initiative.

The Anti-Stem Cell ad features a handful of celebrities including former Rams quarterback Kurt Warner, Cardinals pitcher Jeff Suppan, and actors Patricia Heaton ("Everybody Loves Raymond") and Jim Caviezel ("The Passion of the Christ").



The ad was paid for by the Life Communications Fund. It appears to have been put together quickly, at times seemingly shot with a consumer camcorder. It is not clear if it is being considered for television at this time or if another version will be shot.

UPDATE: According to the Drudge Report, this ad will air tomorrow during Game 4 of the World Series.

UPDATE 2: This video from a Chicago TV station and this story in USA Today outlines some of the controversy stemming (no pun intended) from Michael J. Fox's ad and comments made in response by conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh.

Related Stories:

New Ad Hits Talent on Stem Cell

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New GOP Ad: "McCaskill Needs Help"

By Antonio D. French

READ IT HERE FIRST

The National Republican Senatorial Committee has started a new Internet ad this week again hitting Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill on her personal finances.

Estimating McCaskill's net worth at between $13 million and $30 million, the GOP sites sources claiming she and her husband, entrepreneur Joseph Shepard, have gone to great lengths to pay little to no federal taxes.

"Claire McCaskill needs help," says a female voice in the commercial. "She's misplaced some of her income."



The ad claims McCaskill owns a $3 million airplane registered in Delaware, a state with no sales or personal property taxes. "She's misplaced some of her income in 150 limited partnerships," says the voiceover.

McCaskill has defended her husband's decision not to release his current tax returns to the media, saying they have released more than enough information on their personal finances and that her husband's "complicated" tax returns would just be used to further distract from the important issues of the campaign.

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Malcolm raising "Moolah" for McCaskill

By Antonio D. French

With just two weeks left before Election Day, the McCaskill campaign will be looking to raise some last-minute moolah at the Moolah tonight.

Ellen R. Malcolm, the founder and president of EMILY's List, a political action committee that supports pro-choice female candidates, will be the special guest at a fundraiser for U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill tonight at the Moolah Theatre and Lounge, 3821 Lindell Blvd, from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m.

Other guests scheduled to stop by include former Senator Jean Carnahan, former Congressman Richard Gephardt, and St. Louis County Executuve Charlie Dooley.

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Search for Sex Offenders Online

By Antonio D. French

Tired of passing the time watching videos on YouTube of idiots doing idiotic things? Well the State of Missouri has a new way for you to pass time at work -- look up how many registered sex offenders live in your neighborhood!

Look up offenders by first or last name, Zip Code (44 in our Zip Code, none on our block), city or county (1,005 in St. Louis City, 1030 in St. Louis County, and 323 in St. Charles). See mugshots, a list of their offenses, scars and tattoos -- even info on any cars they own.

Click here to visit the Highway Patrol's updated Sex Offender Information Page.

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Free Passes to "Catch a Fire"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, October 23, 2006 at 9:21 AM

The first 20 people to email us at editor@pubdef.net will get a pass for two to a special screening of the film "Catch a Fire" Wednesday at the Esquire.

Director Phillip Noyce ("Patriot Games", "Clear and Present Danger", "The Quiet American") has made a powerful and moving film that uses the inspirational story of resistance in 1980s' South Africa to make the point that is so relevent in today's America: One man's terrorist is often another man's freedom fighter. And sometimes tactics used to fight terrorism actually creates more "terrorists".



The film features Oscar-worthy performances by Tim Robbins ("Mystic River") and Derek Luke ("Antwone Fisher"). Here are two PSAs featuring the actors talking about some of the issues in the movie.





www.amnestyinternational.org

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French on NPR

By Antonio D. French

I'll be a guest tomorrow on NPR's "Open Source with Christopher Lydon" discussing the Missouri Senate race, the Stem Cell initiative, and other topics related to the Nov. 7 election.

The show airs live at 6:00 p.m. in many places including New York City, San Francisco, Boston, and Austin, TX -- but not in St. Louis. You can listen online via one of these streams or wait until Wednesday for the link to the podcast.

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VIDEO: C-SPAN Prank Calls

By Antonio D. French

WARNING: This video contains language which some may find objectionable.

The following video is making its way around the Web. It is basically a compilation of prank calls to various C-SPAN call-in shows -- many of them from fans of shock jock Howard Stern.

In one segment, St. Louis activist and former Congressional candidate Eric Vickers gets a call from a woman in Baltimore who just couldn't contain her physical attraction to him. Pretty funny stuff.

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Ad Hits Talent as "Rubber Stamp"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, October 22, 2006 at 11:21 PM

Folks watching Game 2 of the World Series tonight might have seen this new ad from U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill attacking incumbent Sen. Jim Talent for his record of voting with Pres. George W. Bush.



The 30-second ad highlights Talent's record of voting 94% of the time in support of the President's agenda, according to Congressional Quarterly.

Earlier this month, during their "Meet the Press" debate, host Tim Russert asked Talent, "Why shouldn’t voters in Missouri say 'Jim Talent is a rubber stamp for George W. Bush. If I disagree with George W. Bush, goodbye, Talent'?"

"Why don't they ever say in those surveys that the president agreed with me a certain percentage of the time?," joked Talent. "I mean, I’ve been in public life a lot longer when he has. When I went into Congress, I think he was still running the Texas Rangers."

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More on "Mr. Smith"

By Antonio D. French

From Salem, Oregon's Statesman Journal newspaper:

"It's a vivid, well-told film that builds tension even as we guess the likely outcome. "Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore?" makes us care about an outsider and want to tap into the kind of political passion and idealism that most people don't think exists anymore..."



"...In one of many tense episodes, Smith battles to salvage the endorsement of an African-American newspaper [The St. Louis American] that realizes that its advantage is to go with the likely winner, not the best candidate."

"Popper's documentary does its work with style and dedication, following Smith and his supporters on the campaign trail, contrasting the views of pundits and journalists with the inside working of the campaign."

Click here to read the full review (scroll down to the middle of the page).

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Landmark's 1st Auction a Success

By Antonio D. French

Organizers called tonight's first annual Landmark's Association auction a success.

The auction, which was at the Coronado on Lindell Blvd., featured items ranging from vacation getaways to a scooter that gives more than a 100 miles per gallon to a set of 10 historic postcards featuring current and former St. Louis landmarks (that one was scooped up by yours truly).

Two of the night's more political items were snatched up by two of the event's organizers.

Carolyn Toft, Landmark's director, was the highest bidder at $250 on a "behind the scenes" tour of the State Capitol by State Rep. Tom Villa (D-108). And for $150, auction organizer Marcia Behrendt was the winner of a lunch for four with former Mayor Vince Schoemehl in Grand Center.

So what is Marcia going to talk to Vince about over lunch? "I haven't had time to even think about it," she said.

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French on BlackPolicy.org

By Antonio D. French

I was a guest yesterday on "Ascent Perspectives", the podcast of the Center for African American Policy at the University of Denver.

Click here to listen to the interview. And go to BlackPolicy.org to learn more about the CAAP and view a map of current statewide and federal races with African-American candidates.

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Wanna Learn "How to Impeach Bush"?

By Antonio D. French

Two Rivers Greens, the St. Louis branch of the Progressive Party of Missouri, will be hosting "How to Impeach a President", a 90-minute presentation on Oct. 26 at the Carpenter's Branch Library.

The event will feature a video presentation by the Center for Constitutional Rights, followed by discussion led by David Sladky, Progressive candidate for Congress, and Lydia Lewis, Progressive candidate for U.S. Senate.

The Carpenter's Branch Library is located at 3309 S. Grand. The meeting is from 7:00-8:30 p.m.

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New Ad Hits Talent on Stem Cell

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, October 20, 2006 at 5:28 PM

A new ad featuring actor Michael J. Fox will soon be hitting televisions across the state. The ad, paid for by U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill, again links the upcoming Stem Cell initiative to the heated campaign for U.S. Senate.

"Unfortunately Sen. Jim Talent opposes expanding Stem Cell research," says Fox, who suffers from Parkinson's disease. "Sen. Talent even wanted to criminalize the science that gives us a chance for hope."



In February, Talent withdrew his support for a bill he co-sponsored to ban all forms of human cloning (including embryonic therapeutic cloning techniques that are seen as crucial to stem cell research), angering many of his pro-life supporters.

Talent has said he personally opposes the current embryonic stem cell ballot initiative, instead favoring research involving adult stem cells.

UPDATE: This video from a Chicago TV station and this story in USA Today outlines some of the controversy stemming (no pun intended) from Michael J. Fox's ad and comments made in response by conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh.

Related Story:

Fox/McCaskill Stem Cell Ad Response

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Go Margie and Tom!

By Antonio D. French

St. Louis expatriate Margie Newman, a former KETC producer and cheerleader for City living, and KWMU 90.7 FM's Tom Weber will be among the thousands of people running Sunday in the Chicago Marathon.

This is the third marathon for Weber, a Chicago native. He completed both the St. Louis and the Honolulu Marathons back in 2005. He estimates he'll finish the grueling 26.2-mile run in about five and a half hours (If it was us, try 5 and a half days!).

Newman's been chronicling her intense training on her blog, www.MargieNewman.blogspot.com. "I'm definitely excited," she wrote today. "I'm also a little overwhelmed at the concept, but at the same time it's quite simple. I'll go out there and do exactly what I've trained to do for the last six months."

Good luck to both of these athletes. Represent the Lou with pride!

UPDATE: Congratulations, Margie and Tom! They finished! From Margie's blog:

I had a GREAT time on what has got to be the longest moving party anywhere. (That's 26.2 miles, folks.)

I finished in 5:51 (Less than 5:30 if you net out the lengthy-due-to-lines bathroom breaks taken cumulatively by my group).

It was colder than cold, but we dealt. There was no Wall. I was ready to dig deep in the post-20-mile stretch, which is legendarily tough.

Amazingly, the last five miles were actually my strongest and fastest.

I never want to see another drop of Gatorade or PowerGel.

Thanks to Alan Brunettin for this photo of the two at the finish line.

UPDATE 2: Thank goodness our St. Louis runners didn't finish the race the way the actual winner did. Check out this video...

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Jeff Smith in Harper's Magazine

By Antonio D. French

As many of our readers know, Jeff Smith, the soon-to-be state senator from St. Louis' 4th District, was the subject of a documentary film that has continued to grow in national popularity.

Most recently, Smith and the film were featured in Jabari Asim's column in the Washington Post. And now they are the subject of a 6-question interview with Smith in Harper's Magazine.

Click here to read the interview.

The film, "Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore?", is playing in select theaters across the country now and will be broadcast on the PBS series "Independent Lens" on February 27, 2007.

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VIDEO: Ashcroft on "The Daily Show"

By Antonio D. French

Former Missouri Governor, U.S. Senator, and U.S Attorney Gen. John Ashcroft recently appeared on "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart". Here's the video.



At the end of the interview, when the former Attorney General and Stewart, a New Yorker, make a friendly wager on the Cardinals/Mets series, Ashcroft says if the Mets win, "We'll let you move to St. Louis and you'll think you moved to heaven!"

Jon Stewart in St. Louis? We might be willing to give up the pennant for that.

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Zogby: Still Too Close to Call

By Antonio D. French

According to the most recent poll by Zogby International, Republican Sen. Jim Talent has regained some ground on his Democratic challenger, State Auditor Claire McCaskill.

In the latest poll, conducted Oct. 10 through 16 and released yesterday, 50% of likely Missouri voters support Talent. While 47% support McCaskill. That puts the race back within the poll's margin of error (3.1%).

Zogby's Sept. 5 poll showed Talent with 48% and McCaskill at 43%. On Sept. 25, Talent fell one point to 47% and McCaskill jumped to 45%. Libertarian Frank Gilmour has stayed around 2-3%. While Progressive Lydia Lewis hasn't even registered on the survey.

Related Stories:

POLL: McCaskill 51%, Talent 42%
Margin of Error

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Bond's World Series Wager

By Antonio D. French

Senators Kit Bond (R-MO) and Carl Levin (D-MI) have added to the number of friendly wagers surrounding the Cardinals' post-season success.

Bond is betting Levin's favorite Detroit Tigers will go fall to the St. Louis Cardinals in their seven-game World Series match-up.

"For some, the Cardinals’ victory was the season’s biggest October surprise," joked Bond. "Missouri might make 2006 the year of the come-back, on the field and off."

At stake for Bond and Levin will be dinners for their respective Washington, D.C. staffs. Bond said that when the Cardinals prevail over the Tigers, his staff will be treated to a dinner of Michigan-made Kowalski Sausages and Black Star Farms wine.

If the Cardinals should fall to the Tigers, Senator Levin's staff will be treated to a dinner of Super Smokers St. Louis Style BBQ and Budweiser.

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Go Cards!

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, October 19, 2006 at 11:59 PM



The stress of a Game 7 has taken its toll on Tina the PUB DEF mascot.

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Reed Makes It Official

By Antonio D. French

Alderman Lewis Reed, who told PUB DEF earlier today that he wouldn't be announcing tonight, apparently changed his mind. At a meeting of the 6th Ward Democrats this evening, Reed said he is indeed running for President of the Board of Aldermen.

The ward organization quickly suspended their rules and voted to endorse their alderman and make a $2,000 contribution to his campaign.

Committeeman Patrick Cacchione and former Congressional aide Kacie Starr Triplett also announced their candidacies to replace Reed as alderman. We are told that the ward organization will wait to endorse in this race until possibly after the New Year.



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Immigration and St. Louis

By Antonio D. French

What's it like being an immigrant in St. Louis? That's the subject of an upcoming forum at Washington University.

"The Immigrant Experience: Case Study St. Louis" will be hosted by Washington University's International and Area Studies Program and the Sigma Iota Rho International Studies honorary society on Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 7:30 p.m.

Panelists include Dr. Sunita Parikh of Washington University; Joan Suarez, JD, of the Immigrant Rights Action Task Force; and Dr. Alvaro Briones, a recent immigrant from Nicaragua.

The event will be in the Umrath Lounge, located adjacent to the Mallinckrodt Student Center and Edison Theatre on the campus of Washington University in St. Louis.

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Suburban Snub for Triplett

By Antonio D. French

The Suburban Journals recently published a story about the race currently taking shape to decide who will replace Lewis Reed as alderman of the 6th Ward. The same story, written by reporter Jim Merkel, was published in the Southside Journal and the Northside Journal and on their respective websites.

The Southside online version of the story is accompanied by an over-sized headshot of Committeeman and likely aldermanic candidate Patrick Cacchione, but no photo of Kacie Starr Triplett -- to date, the only candidate to have actually announced.

And on the Northside version, there's no photo at all. Hmmmmm.

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Green and Reed Raise Some Dough

By Antonio D. French

Pols were busy last night, bouncing between fundraisers for Comptroller Darlene Green and Alderman (and yet unannounced candidate for Aldermanic President) Lewis Reed.

Fatigue and a too long neglected personal life wouldn't allow PUB DEF to photograph the events, but the following details were pieced together from sources in attendance.

Reed's fundraiser was hosted by the Gate District neighborhood organization at the home of its president, Mr. Steve Zeiger. And while Reed made no formal announcement of his future plans, it was clearly understood by all what endeavor the night's donations would be going to.

State Rep. Robin Wright Jones made that very clear when she introduced Reed to the crowd as "the next President of the Board."

Others spotted in the crowd included Aldermen Donna Baringer (16th Ward), Freeman Bosley, Sr. (3rd Ward), Dionne Flowers (2nd Ward), Jennifer Florida (15th Ward), Stephen Gregali (14th Ward), and Mike McMillan (19th Ward). Even former Ald. Kenny Jones came out to support his old colleague.

Committeeman Patrick Cacchione and former Congressional Aide Kacie Starr Triplett, both candidates looking to be the next alderman from the 6th Ward, were also in attendance.

Not too far away, in Forest Park, Comptroller Green was raising some cash of her own.

Spotted in the park's Norman K. Probstein Golf Center were former Mayor Freeman Bosley, Jr., Aldermen Mike McMillan (busy man) and Frank Williamson (26th Ward), soon-to-be State Rep. Jamilah Nasheed (60th District), and Marlene Davis, the frontrunner to be the next alderman from the 19th Ward.

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VIDEO: Veteran Group Targets Talent

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, October 18, 2006 at 2:57 PM

A group of Iraq war veterans have launched an ad campaign against several vulnerable Republicans, including Sen. Jim Talent.

VoteVets.org PAC's ad features Peter Granato, an Army Reservist who reportedly served in Iraq in 2003. In the ad, Granato fires an AK-47 into the type of vest many U.S. troops are wearing in Iraq. Bullets clearly pierce right through the flak jacket. Granato then shoots modern body armor, which stops the bullets.

Granato then points out that Talent voted against an amendment in 2003 to add $1 billion to the budget of the National Guard and Reserves for procurement of such equipment. The ad also says Talent later voted against another amendment which would have appropriated more than $300 million for body armor.

Almost identical ads are being ran against Republican Senators George Allen in Virginia, Rick Santorum in Pennsylvania, and Conrad Burns in Montana.



UPDATE: Rich Chrismer, a spokesman for the Talent campaign, sent over this response:

"Senator Talent has been endorsed by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Vietnam Veterans of America gave him the Lifetime Achievement Award and the Association for Service Disabled Veterans gave him their 2006 Patriot Legislator Award. These veteran groups don't endorse or give awards to people who don't support veterans."

The McCaskill campaign has not replied to our requests for comment on this (or any other) story.

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USA Today: Dems Using Min. Wage Issue

By Antonio D. French

From yesterday's USA Today:

Democratic challengers in more than two-dozen House and Senate races are attacking Republicans in Congress for taking pay raises while voting against a minimum wage increase...

In Missouri, challenger Claire McCaskill says in a TV ad that Sen. Jim Talent is the kind of person who "votes 11 times against increasing the minimum wage, but takes six congressional pay raises."

Rich Chrismer, Talent's spokesman, says the senator has "consistently voted against" pay raises and gives "the ones that pass the Congress to charity."

Click here to read the full story.

Related stories:

Exclusive: ACORN Workers Claim Illegal Activities
ACORN Under Fire
Exclusive: Workers Remain Unpaid, Make More Allegations

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KC Star/Roll Call: Senator McCaskill Would Be Among Nation's Wealthiest

By Antonio D. French

A story in today's Kansas City Star examines how some of U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill's husband's business dealings would create "several potential conflicts of interest" should McCaskill successfully unseat Sen. Jim Talent. Click here to read it.

In the story is an interesting bit that many may not realize. These guys are rich -- really rich.

From the Star: A disclosure report filed with the Senate this year puts McCaskill’s net worth at between $13 million and $30 million, possibly more. Even the low end of that scale would make her one of the Senate’s 10 richest members, according to estimates by Roll Call, a Capitol Hill newspaper.

Republicans have been trying to turn "Mr. McCaskill", businessman Joseph Shepard, into an issue in the final weeks of this campaign, repeatedly demanding Shepard release his tax returns to the media.

"[Jim and Brenda Talent] recognize when you serve in public office you forfeit a certain amount of privacy when it comes to financial information," said Rich Chrismer, a Talent spokesman, in a press release sent out this morning.

According to the Star, the Talents reported a net worth last year of between $300,000 and $1.3 million.

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Final Senate Debate Tonight

By Antonio D. French

Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill will meet tonight in Kansas City for their fifth and final debate before the Nov. 7 election. But St. Louis voters may not see it at all.

The debate will take place at the University Academy charter school and will be moderated by KMBC-TV's Larry Moore. The panelists are KMBC-TV’s political reporter Michael Mahoney, Kansas City Star political reporter Steve Kraske, KCPT-TV public affairs and the news programming director Nick Haines, KCUR-FM news director Frank Morris and Examiner Independence editorial board editor Jeff Fox.

The debate will not be televised live in St. Louis, in Kansas City, or anywhere else. Instead, according to Brad Belote at The KY3 blog, the debate will air tomorrow night in K.C. on both KMBC and KCPT. Tonight, KMBC viewers will be treated to "Dancing with the Stars" instead.

St. Louisan may be able to stream video of the debate from one the television station's websites tomorrow. Maybe.

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French on "Reality Now" Tonight

By Antonio D. French

I'll be a guest on "Reality Now" with host Ed Bishop, editor of the St. Louis Journalism Review, tonight at 7:00 p.m. on KDHX 88.1 FM.

Listen live or download the episode from the show's homepage here.

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VIDEO: ACORN Workers Remain Unpaid, Make More GOTV Allegations

By Antonio D. French

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE

Dozens of ACORN workers were disappointed Tuesday to find that the paychecks they were promised were still not available. And some gave even more details about the organization's GOTV activities which have recently drawn a formal complaint from the state's Republican Party and, according to one source, a visit last week from the FBI.

Marcus Holmes said he has worked for ACORN for more than a month and has yet to be paid. "First they said Friday. Came up here Friday, then they went from Friday to Monday. Monday to Tuesday. Now today, they don't know when its going to be up here," said Holmes, who told us he was in danger of being evicted from his apartment as a result.

Holmes was not alone. More than a dozen angry workers waited outside of ACORN's office on Manchester Street in south St. Louis, frustrated by the continued delays and empty promises. Inside, tensions ran even higher. Police were called after several loud confrontations almost turned physical.

"There's over a hundred-and-something people that haven't been paid," said Timothy Coopwood, an ACORN worker who was fired last week after the organization was hit with allegations of voter registration fraud.



Coopwood repeated claims made last week by other ACORN workers that they were instructed to go door-to-door and ask voters to support Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill.

There is no evidence of a direct link between the McCaskill campaign and ACORN's GOTV efforts. But several ACORN workers told PUB DEF that they were told by ACORN managers that the effort was part of "Project Victory 2006", which is also the name for the Missouri Democratic Party's GOTV campaign.

Josephine Perkins, a 10-year veteran ACORN worker whose allegations of improper and illegal GOTV activities we first reported in an exclusive video report two weeks ago, was also at the office Tuesday picking up her last check from the organization.

Perkins told PUB DEF that FBI agents visited ACORN last week and that afterwards, managers at the organization instructed some employees not to cooperate with their investigation. [We will be following up on this part of the story later this week.]

Perkins and others again named Johanna Sharrard, ACORN's new political field director, as one of those giving instructions to get out the vote for McCaskill along with their efforts on behalf of Proposition B, the proposal to raise the state's minimum wage.

When we attempted to interview Ms. Sharrard again to respond to these allegations, we were asked to leave ACORN's offices. We were told that no one was available to speak to us on the record.

Check back later this week as we continue to investigate this developing story...

Related stories:

Exclusive: ACORN Workers Claim Illegal Activities
ACORN Under Fire

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 11:55 AM

THE POST NEEDS ADS -- For the second day in a row, the Post-Dispatch ran a full-page ad pleading with political campaigns to advertise in its pages. "Attention Candidates: We can help you win the vote," read Tuesday's ad on page A7.


TAX RETURNS RETURN -- The GOP continues to try to make Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill's husband an issue in her campaign.

The Missouri Republican Party issued a press release this morning blasting McCaskill and her husband, Joseph Shepard, for refusing to release his tax returns to the media.

"With a family fortune of between $13 million and $30 million amassed through taxpayer-financed tax credits, hundreds of government subsidized real estate partnerships and an offshore tax shelter in Bermuda, McCaskill and Shepard for months have arrogantly refused to release their tax returns even though Sen. Jim Talent and his wife Brenda released theirs long ago," Republicans said in the press release.

On KWMU's "St. Louis on the Air" this morning, McCaskill said they have released more than enough information on their personal finances and that her husband's "complicated" tax returns would just be used to further distract from the important issues of the campaign.

CRACKING OPEN THE PIGGEE BANK -- A telling sign of the trouble Missouri Republicans find themselves in is this little bit from Steve Kraske of the Kansas City Star:

"Sen. Kit Bond, a Missouri Republican who has stashed $2.8 million in his political action committee, is spending it. The biggest recipient: Jim Talent, with $450,000."

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Tonight's Debate

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, October 16, 2006 at 11:59 PM

The fourth of five debates between Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill is over. Your thoughts?

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Blunt, Martin Make Some Changes

By Antonio D. French

Just a few weeks on the job and Gov. Matt Blunt's new chief of staff, Ed Martin, is making some changes.

The Governor's Communications Director Spence Jackson has moved to the Department of Economic Development where he will serve as a deputy director.

State Rep. Todd Smith, of Sedalia, resigned today from the State House to replace Chuck Pryor as Director of Legislative Affairs.

Pryor is now the new Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Legislation.

Brian Hauswirth will be the new interim Communications Director. He currently works as the Communications Director for the Missouri Department of Corrections and previously worked at KTRS in St. Louis.

"I am pleased to announce these appointments and believe they will enhance our ongoing mission to bring real and positive change to Missouri state government," Blunt said in a statement released today.

"We are honoring our charge from Missourians to improve service while being responsible stewards of their hard-earned tax dollars and this will continue to be our focus."

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Supreme Court: ID Law Unconstitutional

By Antonio D. French

BREAKING NEWS | READ IT HERE FIRST

The Missouri Supreme Court just issued its voter ID decision. In a 6-1 opinion, the Court affirmed the decision of the trial court striking down the law. Only Judge Stephen N. Limbaugh Jr. (cousin to Rush Limbaugh) dissented.

Developing...

From the Court's decision:

"The Missouri Constitution provides a specific provision that enshrines the right to vote among certain enumerated constitutional rights of its citizens... SB 1014's Photo-ID Requirement creates a heavy burden on the right to vote and is not narrowly tailored to meet a compelling state interest, so it falls afoul of the Missouri Constitution's equal protection clause... and of Missourians' specific constitutional protection of the right to vote... For these reasons, the trial court judgment is affirmed."

From Judge Limbaugh's dissenting opinion:

"Although the majority agrees that there is some evidence of voter fraud at the voter registration stage, they discount that evidence as if it had no connection with fraud at the polling place. But why else does voter registration fraud occur if not to vote persons fraudulently registered?"

"And if, as in the DOJ report, there are more voters registered to vote than persons eligible to vote, the requirement to present a photo ID will at least eliminate those who attempt to vote in the place of others and those who attempt to vote more than once."

"It must be said, too, that even if there were no substantial evidence of existing voter impersonation fraud, legislatures are permitted to respond to the potential for such fraud, and they may do so 'with foresight' rather than 'reactively'... In any event, as the Carter-Baker Commission recently concluded, 'there is no doubt that [in-person voter fraud] occurs' and that such fraud 'could offset the outcome of close elections.'"

Click here to read the both opinions in their entirety.

Related Video... At a recent neighborhood meeting in south St. Louis, Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan predicted that the Supreme Court would uphold the lower court's ruling that the law was indeed Unconstitutional.

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Happy Birthday, Pub Def

By Antonio D. French

It all started exactly one year ago with a simple message at 10:03 a.m., "PUB DEF returns".

365 days, 1,082 postings on three blogs, and 230 videos later, we're still here.

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Bonner New Vashon Coach

By Antonio D. French

St. Louis Public Schools will be holding a press conference today announcing former NBA star Anthony Bonner as Executive Director of Community Outreach and new head basketball coach at Vashon High School.

The press conference will be held at 3:00 p.m. at the district's downtown headquarters, 801 North 11th Street.

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Earl Wilson Says He's 'Sick and Tired' of Being Taken Advantage Of [Updated]

By Antonio D. French

The head of the Gateway Classic Foundation has a beef with State Sen. Joan Bray (D-St. Louis County) and he's taking his support across the aisle.

Earl Wilson has endorsed Bray's Republican challenger, John Maupin, after being personally offended by Bray's refusal to support his nomination by Gov. Matt Blunt to the Lincoln University Board of Curators earlier this year.

In a press release sent out Friday, Wilson said he was "sick and tired of some Democrats taking advantage of Afro-Americans by not doing anything for them and expecting them to vote for them during election time." Wilson said since Bray didn't support him, he won't be supporting her.

"From this point on, I will support the candidate who is best for the community, whether he or she be a Democrat or Republican," said Wilson.

The 74-year-old founder of the foundation known best for its annual black college football game said he's tired of being disrespected by so-called liberals. "A liberal thinks he or she can kick your butt and still have you support them," he said.

"Not me. Scrutinize each candidate whether they be Democrat or Republican and vote for the individual based on his/her record."

UPDATE: Sen. Bray told PUB DEF this morning that it was at the request of three of her senate colleagues, Senators Rita Days, Maida Coleman, and Yvonne Wilson (all Lincoln alumni), that she supported replacing outgoing curator Pearlie Evans with another female candidate on the overwhelming male board.

"I respected their interest in replacing one good woman with another good woman," said Bray.

She also pointed out that Wilson, a cousin to Congressman Lacy Clay, had already twice before served on Lincoln's board of curators.

"And how does it serve his cousin at all to support a Republican in an overlapping district?" she added.

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Blunt Pushed for MOHELA Chief Firing, May Have Violated Law in Doing So

By Antonio D. French

Gov. Matt Blunt wanted MOHELA's executive director fired after criticizing his plan to sell off the agency's assets. And according to a report in yesterday's Columbia Daily Tribune, he quickly got what he wanted.

"In a telephone conference call earlier this year with two members of the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority board, Gov. Matt Blunt said he wanted the agency’s executive director replaced," wrote Terry Ganey, former Post-Dispatch reporter and current Tribune staffer.

"The telephone call took place Jan. 24, hours before the board met and fired Executive Director Mike Cummins. But Cummins was not replaced with the man Blunt wanted - Rick Fouts, a former controller at MOHELA."

Ganey got his information from court depositions in Attorney General Jay Nixon's lawsuit against the agency. Click here to read the full story.

According to the Tribune, MOHELA board member James Mauze, a central figure in the firing, said he felt strongly that Cummins should be terminated as executive director for making statements to lawmakers opposing Blunt’s plan to sell MOHELA.

Some Democrats are saying Blunt and Mauze's actions amount to seeking retribution against a whisteblower -- which is illegal. State law clearly states:

"No supervisor or appointing authority of any state agency shall prohibit any employee of the agency from discussing the operations of the agency, either specifically or generally, with any member of the legislature, state auditor, attorney general, or any state official or body charged with investigating such alleged misconduct."

Developing...

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4th Senate Debate Tonight

By Antonio D. French

Senator Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill will meet tonight for their fourth of five scheduled debates.

This time the candidates and their supporters with gather in Springfield to participate in the debate sponsored by KYTV, Ozarks Public Television, KSMU, and the Springfield News-Leader.

The debate will be moderated by KY3 News Anchor Jerry Jacob and the panel will include KY3 Political Reporter Dave Catanese, News-Leader Editorial Board Editor Tony Messenger, and KSMU Senior Governmental Affairs Reporter Missy Shelton.

UPDATE: The debate can be watched live on C-SPAN.

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VIDEO: Jeff Smith Fundraiser

By Antonio D. French

Filed Saturday, October 14, 2006 at 10:18 AM

Jeff Smith, the Democratic nominee for state senator from St. Louis' 4th District, held a fundraiser Thursday at the Regional Arts Commission on Delmar Ave. just three weeks before his uncontested general election.



According to Smith's last campaign finance report, his campaign raised $268,350.06 in his August 8 primary win, more than any of his four opponents. The campaign spent $214,393.51 as of Sept 2 and had a respectable $44,567.18 left in the bank.

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McCaskill tells Newsweek that Pub Def's Quote Taken "Out of Context"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, October 13, 2006 at 6:39 PM

In an interview with Newsweek.com published today, U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill claims a quote first reported by PUB DEF was taken out of context.

Newsweek: You took a lot of flak for your comments about President Bush and Hurricane Katrina. You said: “George Bush let people die on rooftops in New Orleans because they were poor and because they were black.” Correct me if I’m wrong but I haven’t seen any retraction. Could you just explain what you meant?

McCaskill: The quote was taken out of context. What I was doing was acknowledging how many people in America felt. And the reason those feelings were so prominent after Katrina was because of the way this administration has treated the most vulnerable in this country. I think that is something we need to get to work on. I think acknowledging that a lot of people felt that way is an important part of fixing the problem.

Newsweek: Do you think race played a significant role in the federal government’s response to Katrina?

McCaskill: I certainly do not think that President Bush is a racist. Obviously, I do not think that. I do think, however, that gross incompetence led to tragic results because the people in New Orleans did not have the resources to help themselves. Part of the reason they were so vulnerable is a direct result of the policies of this administration.

Here again is the context in which that comment was made.

On Tuesday, September 5, Committeewoman Norma Leggette (4th Ward) told McCaskill at a meeting of St. Louis City Democratic elected officials -- both African-American and white -- that she wasn't sure what to tell her constituents about what the Democratic Party stood for anymore. She said she felt the there were two parties in the City -- one white, one black.

Leggette has since confirmed to Post-Dispatch columnist Sylvester Brown that her quotes were indeed accurate.

Committeeman Joe Palm (26th Ward) said that McCaskill's opponent, Sen. Jim Talent, was making strong inroads into the black community. He claimed the incumbent Republican has been making promises of financial aid to black church leaders and even some northside politicos. Palm warned McCaskill that gimmicks won't increase voter turnout.

"I know I lost, but my opponents in my [State Rep] race had a big truck with video and signs too, and the turnout was still terrible," said Palm. He said the Republicans have gimmicks too. "Talent lit the Arch up pink," he said referring to Talent's bill that authorized bathing the Gateway Arch in pink lights to bring attention to breast cancer.

McCaskill listened quietly to Palm and Leggette before taking the floor. In a spirited voice, she told them that she would do everything she could to make clear to every Democratic voter that "George Bush has no better friend than Jim Talent."

McCaskill said she would remind people that "George Bush let people die on rooftops in New Orleans because they were poor and because they were black."

Click here to read Newsweek reporter Lee Hudson Teslik's full interview with McCaskill and her opponent, Sen. Jim Talent.

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POLL: McCaskill 51%, Talent 42%

By Antonio D. French

Just a week ago, we said we hadn't been reporting on the polls since they all said the same thing -- the senate race was too close to call. Well that may be changing.

A poll conducted by SurveyUSA and released Thursday shows 51% of likely voters choosing Democrat Claire McCaskill over the Republican incumbent, Sen. Jim Talent, if the election was held today. Only 42% of the 497 respondents said they would vote for Talent. The margin of error was +/-4.5%.

McCaskill's 9 point lead represents a significant change from the dead heat the two campaigns were in before Wednesday's debate. Since a similar SurveyUSA poll four weeks ago, McCaskill has gained 3 points and Talent has lost 5 points.

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AUDIO: Lizz Brown Attacks Pub Def

By Antonio D. French

Radio talk show host Lizz Brown and her co-host, former Ald. Irene J. Smith, took some time between paid ads for U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill to attack PUB DEF for our coverage of the senate campaign. Brown and Smith claimed that the $900 ad that McCaskill's opponent, Sen. Jim Talent, bought on this site was influencing our stories.

"When you look at some of the things that [Antonio French] is doing... and it's not balanced, you wonder whether or not the fact that Jim Talent has an ad on his website -- It's like I bought me some good coverage," said Smith.



Making no mention of the two stories on the McCaskill campaign recently picked up by the national press (on the Democrat's comments on Pres. George W. Bush and Hurricane Katrina, and our report on allegations ACORN was illegally aiding the campaign), the two instead focused on a recent video we posted of McCaskill speaking to a group of seniors in north St. Louis.

In the three-minute video, which features numerous shots of McCaskill interacting with elderly voters, is a brief shot of a senior pulling out an absentee ballot and McCaskill looking at it with her.

The story was actually intended to be a positive piece. We didn't mention anything about the incident in our story. Nor was it highlighted in any way in the video. But several conservative blogs reposted the video with headlines such as "Voter Fraud Caught on Tape".

We have disabled the video's embedding feature on YouTube so no other sites can repost the video with that false characterization.

And speaking of false characterizations, Brown claimed we deleted a comment back in August that spoke negatively about Talent -- presumably to save embarrassment for someone who might one day be an advertiser on this site.

Those that spend any amount of time in the comments section know the only comments we ever delete are vulgar and slanderous ones (and sometimes -- if they're really clever ones -- we even leave those up).

Look, for those that define "fair and balanced" as one explosive story deserves another, then we can see how you think PUB DEF has been harder on the McCaskill campaign. All we can say to you is: Help us out.

We are always looking for news. It's true we have been very successful in breaking news relating to Claire McCaskill's campaign recently. But we can't take all the credit. A steady stream of tips have been coming in from Democratic sources about their senate candidate.

We have repeatedly asked them and other sources for tips about the Republican candidate. But nothing has come in (yet). So should we hold the next McCaskill story until an equal or greater Talent story comes about? That's not how we work.

And so now we ask Lizz Brown, Irene J. Smith, and anyone else who thinks PUB DEF has been bought for $900 and a pat on the head: What are we not reporting on Jim Talent? Where should we be looking for the next big story?

As always, email us at editor@pubdef.net or call our 24-hour Tip Line at (314) 518-2364. All tips are 100% confidential.

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VIDEO: McCaskill Calls Attacks "Sad"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, October 12, 2006 at 11:15 AM

The debate before yesterday's debate centered around a television ad that was being run by U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill's campaign and featuring a young veteran telling how difficult it was for him to receive medical care after he returned home from Iraq.



The "Josh" ad, as it has become known, featured Kansas City native Josh Lansdale, a former medic that was wounded while serving in Iraq. The ad was pulled from the air after Landale's story could not be verified by a Kansas City television station.

"This isn't about the veteran, it's about the credibility of Claire McCaskill's television ads," said Jim Talent's Senior Advisor Lloyd Smith. "McCaskill can not prove the ad is true. McCaskill can settle this right now by providing the media with the veteran's appointment schedule as verified by the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Kansas City."

"I think it's a really sad moment," McCaskill said on the matter last night. "Sen. Talent has sent men and women to die for us over there. And they've been injured. They don't mind going to fight for us, but I don't think they expected to be attacked when they get home."

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GOP Files FEC Complaint Against ACORN

By Antonio D. French

The Missouri Republican Party filed a complaint yesterday with the Federal Elections Commission against the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) citing reports by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and PubDef.net of problems with the organization's voter registration activities.

"The complaint against ACORN filed yesterday with the Federal Elections Commission alleges that the radical non-profit group is making illegal contributions to [Claire] McCaskill by using street workers to gather voter cards and urge people to vote for McCaskill," said the Republicans in a press release issued today.

"We will act promptly and aggressively to protect the honesty of the coming election," said Missouri Republican Party Executive Director Jared Craighead. "The actions we charge are egregiously unlawful. Because our evidence includes videotape, our complaint has a history-making quality. In Missouri’s long and sad history of urban vote fraud, this has to be the first time the vote-creating machinery can be followed on videotape."

The complaint specifically refers to PUB DEF's recent interview with fired ACORN worker Josephine Perkins, a ten-year veteran of the organization who told us that she was fired after she told co-workers to disregard orders to ask people to vote for McCaskill while they registered new voters.

Yesterday, the Post-Dispatch and KWMU reported that nearly 1,500 voter registration cards recently turned in by ACORN have been flagged as "potentially fraudulent" by the St. Louis Board of Elections.

Republicans also said the Kansas City Democratic director of elections identified about 3,000 of the 16,000 applications collected by ACORN examined so far bore discrepancies, including suspicious signatures, applicants being too young, and birth dates and Social Security numbers not jibing with state databases.

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VIDEO: Post-Debate News Conference

By Antonio D. French

Following their third debate, Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill separately spoke to the media to clarify some of their earlier answers and continue the attack on their opponent's record.



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Tonight's Debate

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 10:40 PM

The third of five debates between Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill is over. We'll post some video tomorrow from the post-debate press conference. In the meantime, feel free to offer your own assessments of the candidates' performances in the comments section of this post.

By the way, if you missed the debate it will be broadcast again at 3:30 a.m. on Channel 5. So set those Tivos and VCRs.

UPDATE: A KSDK poll conducted by Survey USA showed 54% of St. Louis area viewers thought McCaskill won tonight's debate. Only 32% thought Talent won and 14% thought there was no clear winner. The poll reportedly had 572 respondents with a margin of error of 4.2%.

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City Kids May Soon Have Day Curfew

By Antonio D. French

St. Louis Public Schools Superintendent Diana Bourisaw wants a daytime curfew for children in the City of St. Louis. And the President of the Board of Aldermen appears ready to help.

"In the past two months, I have approached many elected officials, including Board of Alderman President Jim Shrewsbury and Police Chief Joe Mokwa," said Bourisaw in a press release today. She said a daytime curfew has been a successful tool that has been used in many other cities across the country to reduce the truancy rate. Such curfews typically prohibit children from being in public places other than schools during school hours on weekdays.

According to SLPS, Shrewsbury has already drafted an ordinance to establish a daytime ordinance which is currently being reviewed by Ald. Terry Kennedy, chairman of the Public Safety Committee.

"Truancy is a very serious issue and I am willing to help the Superintendent deal with it. I expect to have a daytime curfew ordinance ready to be introduced in the near future," said Shrewsbury.

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Court Rules for Tobacco Tax Supporters

By Antonio D. French

BREAKING NEWS

The Missouri Supreme Court issued a ruling today allowing the proposal which seeks to raise the state's tobacco tax more than 400% to pay for health services to stay on the November ballot.

In a unanimous decision the court ruled that the reasons given by local election authorities for not allowing more than 1,000 valid signatures onto the petition were not good enough to prevent its certification.

"Although the implementing statutes are required to be followed, failure to adhere to mere technical formalities should not deny the people the power to propose changes to our laws or amendments to our constitution," said the ruling.

"Substantial compliance with the implementing statutes is all that is required."

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ACORN Under Fire

By Antonio D. French

The Post-Dispatch's Jo Mannies is reporting that nearly 1,500 voter registration cards turned in recently by the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) have been flagged as "potentially fraudulent" by the St. Louis Board of Elections.

This latest controversy comes just a week after we reported that several ACORN employees claimed they were instructed to tell people to vote for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill when they were registering new voters and performing GOTV activities on behalf of the Give Missourians a Raise committee.



Thanks to Mannies for mentioning our report in her story.

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Senate Debate Tonight in Clayton

By Antonio D. French

U.S. Senator Jim Talent and his Democratic challenger, State Auditor Claire McCaskill, will meet tonight for their third debate.

The debate will be at 8:00 p.m. at Clayton High School. It is hosted by the Clayton Chamber of Commerce and will be broadcast live on KSDK Channel 5 and KWMU 90.7 FM.

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VIDEO: McCaskill Visits Senior Center

By Antonio D. French

U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill visited a northside senior center tonight to talk health care.

The Democrat was joined by Comptroller Darlene Green and soon-to-be State Rep. Jamilah Nasheed, who hosted the event at the Homer G. Phillips Senior Living Community in the Ville neighborhood.



Several dozen elderly African-American men and women listened as McCaskill talked about the shortcomings of the Medicare Part D program, the voting record of her opponent, Sen. Jim Talent, and the overall state of healthcare in America.

UPDATE: This video had been reposted on several conservative websites claiming it shows some kind of fraudulent behavior relating to an absentee ballot. That allegation was not made in the video, in our story that accompanied the video, or by any person in the room at the time the video was shot. Simply, that is not what happened.

For that reason, we've disabled the embedding feature on YouTube, meaning it can no longer be reposted on other sites. You can now only see this video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cida3VwmCG0

In recent days, these campaigns have been doing more than their fair share of mudslinging. We ask that both sides refrain from trying to turn our reports into more mud.

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VIDEO: John Ashcroft at Borders

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 11:54 PM

Former Missouri Governor, U.S. Senator, and U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft signed copies of his new book, "Never Again: Securing America and Restoring Justice", tonight at the Borders in Brentwood.



Click here to read Jake Wagman's take on the event.

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Triplett to Run

By Antonio D. French

READ IT HERE FIRST

It appears Congressional aide Kacie Starr Triplett is indeed running for alderman.

As PUB DEF reported earlier, Starr had been rumored to be considering a run at replace 6th Ward Alderman Lewis Reed, who is almost certainly running for Aldermanic Board President.

Sources now tell PUB DEF that Starr, now a "former" aide to Congressman Russ Carnahan, has someone at the Board of Elections reserving her place at the top of the ballot.

Developing...

UPDATE: Alderman Dionne Flowers (D-2nd Ward) also has someone at the BOE holding her spot on the ballot. The person who was reserving a spot for Lewis Reed has not shown up today.

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Local Journalists Meet Students

By Antonio D. French

Instead of asking the questions, a diverse group of local journalists answered them last Sunday at a student workshop in north St. Louis.

Twenty area high school students, participating in a year-long cultural leadership program, came to Cote Brilliante Presbyterian Church to ask questions of those that write history's "first draft".

Post-Dispatch writers Sylvester Brown and Jake Wagman, the St. Louis American's Chris King, and PUB DEF's Antonio French answered questions from the group of 10 African-American and 10 Jewish teens.



The program, sponsored by the non-profit Cultural Leadership, hosts a series of weekend experiences over the course of year teaching students about each other's cultural history. At the end of the program, the group travels across the nation to major black and Jewish historical sites.

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Journalists Luncheon Tuesday

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, October 09, 2006 at 11:18 PM

The St. Louis Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists will be hosting a luncheon Tuesday, Oct. 10, at Bar Napoli in Clayton. The topic of discussion will be corporate media ownership.

Panelists include Jeff Gordon, president of the St. Louis Newspaper Guild; Dave Ervin, vice president/general manager, KMOX 1120; William A. Lanesey, vice president/general manager, KPLR-TV Channel 11 CW; Alvin Reid, city editor, St. Louis American; Ed Bishop, editor/general manager, St. Louis Journalism Review; and Antonio D. French, PubDef.net.

Bar Napoli is located at 7754 Forsyth Blvd. The discussion starts at 11:30 a.m.

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Washington Post on Stem Cell Debate

By Antonio D. French

The Washington Post has posted an in-depth video report on Missouri's Stem Cell Initiative. Click here to watch the video by Judy-Anne Goldman.

Thanks to FiredUpMissouri.com for the link.

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McCaskill and Mother on Lizz Brown

By Antonio D. French

U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill again appeared on WGNU's "The Wake-Up Call with Lizz Brown" this morning. In the weeks leading up to the election, the State Auditor has paid for a one hour block of time each Monday on the AM talk show. Calling in from the road, she talked about her nationally televised debate yesterday with her opponent, incumbent Sen. Jim Talent.

McCaskill's mother, Betty Anne, also appeared on today's show. She said as a mother it is hard to watch the negative campaigns, some of which effectively call her daughter a liar and a cheat. She said Claire McCaskill was taught as a child in the church to act on behalf of others, not just talk about it.

The elder McCaskill also took issue with Post-Dispatch columnist Sylvester Brown. In his column Sunday, Brown said he left his recent face-to-face meeting with the Democratic candidate unimpressed. "I didn't hear anything that made me too hopeful about political and economic progress for local blacks," he wrote.

"He didn't point out the fact that when Claire had the biggest prosecutor's office in the state, she hired more African-Americans." Betty Ann told Lizz Brown. "This is actions speaking louder than words."

Lizz Brown's show can be podcasted from the White Rose Society's website here.

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Bush Returning to St. Louis

By Antonio D. French

The Associated Press is reporting that President George W. Bush will be in the City of St. Louis on Thursday. From the AP:

The White House has confirmed that Bush is planning to attend the Advancing Renewable Energy conference at America's Center.

The three-day conference starts Tuesday and is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Bush is scheduled to speak Thursday.

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Ashcroft at Borders

By Antonio D. French

Former Missouri Governor, U.S. Senator, and U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft will be signing copies of his new book, "Never Again: Securing America and Restoring Justice", Tuesday at 6:00 p.m. at the Borders in Brentwood, 1519 S. Brentwood Blvd.

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Pub Def on "Meet the Press"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, October 08, 2006 at 1:35 PM

PUB DEF was quoted on "Meet the Press" this morning during the debate between Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill.

MR. RUSSERT: Let me turn to George W. Bush, because he’s become an issue in the campaign. Ms. McCaskill, you were quoted in the pubdef.net giving a speech which was blogged, saying, “She reminded people that ‘George Bush let people die on rooftops in New Orleans because they were poor and because they were black.’” One, why would you say that, and do you believe it?



MS. McCASKILL: Well, first, I was acknowledging how thousands and millions of Americans felt. The visual that we all saw in Hurricane Katrina was frankly, something none of us will ever forget. Incompetence turned tragic because the people there were unable to help themselves. This administration...

MR. RUSSERT: But do you think the president let people die because they were poor and black?

MS. McCASKILL: I do not, I do not believe the president is a racist. I was acknowledging the feelings of many, many Americans that this administration has left the most vulnerable, helpless—this administration has been about Wall Street and not about average Americans.

MR. RUSSERT: But do you apologize for this statement?

MS. McCASKILL: I, I think if it is misinterpreted that I was calling the president a racist...

MR. RUSSERT: Misinterpreted? “George Bush let people die on rooftops because they were poor and because they were black.”

MS. McCASKILL: That was—I was acknowledging what Americans believed at the time.

MR. RUSSERT: So you stand by it?

MS. McCASKILL: Absolutely, that’s what Americans believed. Now, I don’t believe he’s a racist, and if that—if people think—and maybe I shouldn’t have said it that way, Tim. Maybe I should have said it another way. I probably should have said it another way. But the feelings are real.

And by the way, if we had that tragedy, how ready are we for a disaster in this country? After the billions of dollars spent—once again, no accountability—they still are not looking in Congress at how all the money was misspent in Katrina. With all the billions spent on homeland security, our citizens died because we couldn’t get them food or water. This is not an administration that is ready to protect us.

Click here to read the transcript. Click here to read our original story in which this comment was first reported. And check back later to see the video from today's debate.

UPDATE: Click here to watch the entire debate on MSNBC's website.

UPDATE 2: Thanks to Christina Bellantoni for mentioning PUB DEF in her article on the debate in Monday's The Washington Times.

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Talent Would Still Have Voted For Iraq War -- Even Without WMD Claims

By Antonio D. French

Senator Jim Talent told moderator Tim Russert on "Meet the Press" this morning that he would have voted for to go to war in Iraq even if he knew there were no weapons of mass destruction.

MR. RUSSERT: Knowing what you know today, knowing what you know today, that Saddam did not have the weapons of destruction that our intelligence agencies thought he had, if you knew that today, would you still vote for the war?

SEN. TALENT: Well, yeah, I mean, I think...

MR. RUSSERT: You still would?

SEN. TALENT: ...it was the—I think it was the only possible strategic choice. Look, Saddam had been an organic threat in the region for a long time. He represented a threat to us. That threat is now gone. Tim, look at what’s not happening.

MR. RUSSERT: But Senator, isn’t it an important question: if, if, if the CIA said to you, “Saddam does not have weapons of biological, chemical, or a nuclear program,” you would still vote for the war?

SEN. TALENT: Well, he wanted them. He was trying to get rid of economic sanctions. He would’ve had $70-a-barrel oil. He’d have been competing with—I mean, if action had not been taken to remove Saddam, the same people who are being critical of what’s going on in Iraq now would be screaming that we’d left him in power. We’d have another Iran there. That threat’s been removed.

Click here for the full transcript.

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Senate Debate on "Meet the Press"

By Antonio D. French

Filed Saturday, October 07, 2006 at 5:49 PM

Missouri's Democratic and Republican U.S. Senate candidates will be debating before a national audience tomorrow morning. Sen. Jim Talent and State Auditor Claire McCaskill will take questions from respected moderator Tim Russert on NBC's "Meet the Press". The show airs locally at 8:00 a.m. on KSDK Channel 5. Set those Tivos!

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15,500 visits in a week

By Antonio D. French

We received 15,558 visits in the past 7 days. You really should be advertising your campaign or business here.

www.pubdef.net/advertise

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And Then There Was One

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, October 06, 2006 at 4:20 PM

The person holding Ald. Lewis Reed's place in line to file to run against Aldermanic Board Pres. Jim Shrewsbury abandoned her post today.

Mary Cullins, who had been holding Reed's place since Wednesday, left today around 1:40 p.m., according to sources. Her early departure means someone could jump ahead of Reed and secure a higher placement on the ballot.

Andy Hayes, a 29-year-old aspiring law school student, continues to hold the number one spot for incumbent Shrewsbury.

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Bomb Threat Causes Evacuation

By Antonio D. French

BREAKING NEWS

Pub Def has learned that a bomb threat resulted in at least one downtown courthouse being evacuated this morning.

We are told police received the threat by telephone and evacuated the City Courts building, 1430 Olive, first before marshals at the Carnahan Municipal Courthouse stopped all incoming traffic and searched that building.

Soon after, they issued an "all clear" and have allowed people to again enter Carnahan. We are in route to City Courts. Stay tuned...

UPDATE: Officials at the City Courts directed us to Ed Rhode, spokesman for the Mayor's Office. Rhode said he was waiting to hear back from the police department before commenting. As of 7:40 p.m. he still had not commented.

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Margin of Error

By Antonio D. French

We haven't reported very much on polls in the current race for U.S. Senate between Republican incumbent Jim Talent and Democratic challenger Claire McCaskill. We haven't because the different polls continue to report the same information: it's too close to tell.

A new USA Today/Gallup poll says McCaskill leads Talent 44% to 39% with 7% undecided. But the poll, conducted on Sept. 27, has a margin of error of 5%, meaning McCaskill could have as high as 49% or as little as 39% support.

Similarly, a poll released yesterday by Reuters and Zogby said Talent was leading the race with 43% to McCaskill's 39%. This time the poll had a slightly better margin of error of 4%, but still putting the two candidates in a virtual tie.

It remains too close to tell. And as any political scientist or Election Day poll worker will tell you, there's only one poll that really matters. And it's just 32 days away.

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VIDEO: World Saxophone Quartet

By Antonio D. French

Let's start Friday off right -- with some tunes.

Yesterday we took our camera over to the East Side, near Brooklyn, Illinois. No, it's not what you're thinking. It was for a project. No, not that kind of project... Look, can we just get back to the story?

Anyway, not far past all the strip clubs and prostitutes, in a town called Lovejoy (oh boy), is a school appropriately named Lovejoy School. Six decades ago, a boy named Hamiet Bluiett attended that school. That boy grew up to become one of the most respected saxophonists on the planet. Yesterday, he returned to Lovejoy and he brought along three of his friends. Together, they call themselves the World Saxophone Quartet.



The World Saxophone Quartet -- comprised of founding members Bluiett and Oliver Lake, and master saxophonists James Carter and St. Louis native Greg Osby -- are currently celebrating their 30th Anniversary. They will be performing tonight and Saturday at the Bistro, 3536 Washington Ave., across from the Fox Theatre.

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Why You Bringing Up Old Stuff?

By Antonio D. French

A couple of things that were in my notebook but took a while to get posted...

'BOYISH' JEFF SMITH? -- Washington Post columnist Jabari Asim on St. Louis' own Jeff Smith: "Jeff Smith, an aspiring politician in Missouri, bears no resemblance to Jimmy Stewart. Unlike Stewart, who was a lanky leading man, Smith is small and boyish. Unlike Stewart's homespun tenor, Smith's voice tends toward the upper registers. His appearance is so youthful that a colleague once said of him, 'He's obviously short, looks like he's 12 and sounds like he's castrated.'" Click here to read the full article.

THE POST IS LOSING MONEY -- "Lee acquired Pulitzer Inc. in June 2005, and Pulitzer revenue is reported in statistical periods. For the statistical reporting period ended Aug. 27, 2006, Pulitzer advertising revenue decreased 2.0 percent compared with 2005, with total revenue down 1.6 percent. In St. Louis, advertising revenue decreased 2.8 percent, and total revenue decreased 2.6 percent. In the other former Pulitzer newspapers, advertising revenue decreased 0.2 percent, and total revenue increased 0.4 percent." Click here to read more.

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SPECIAL REPORT: ACORN Workers Claim Minimum Wage Funds Helping McCaskill

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, October 04, 2006 at 9:01 PM

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE VIDEO REPORT

Several former and current workers demonstrated today in front of the St. Louis office of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) demanding to be paid for work they had performed and alleging that they were instructed to tell people to vote for U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill while registering voters in support of the proposed minimum wage increase.

Ten-year ACORN veteran Josephine Perkins claims she was fired last week, in part because she informed the teams she supervised that it was inappropriate and illegal for them to campaign for McCaskill while being paid by ACORN and Give Missourians a Raise, the political action committee which supports Proposition B and, according to campaign finance reports, has given money to ACORN to circulate its literature.



Several other ACORN workers also told PUB DEF that they were told to ask voters to vote for McCaskill. But Johanna Sharrard, the political field director for ACORN, denies that is the case.

"That's not going on in this office," she said. "It's not been the case at all."

She declined to say on-camera why Perkins was fired. But Perkins told us the reason Sharrard, who has been at the St. Louis office only four weeks, gave for her termination was theft, a charge she vehemently denies.

Another ACORN worker, Joseph Weick, said he has not been paid for work he did with the organization last month. He also said that he and others were told last week that they needed to re-apply for their positions, which he took as a termination.

"They refuse to give me my check," said Weick. "I guess there's at least about a half a dozen of us that have worked for these people and aren't getting paid."

Weick said he too was told to ask people to vote for McCaskill while registering voters and passing out literature supporting the minimum wage increase, which if true could be a violation of federal election laws.

"These are very serious allegations and we are reviewing our options as they relate to the McCaskill campaign and the potential exploitation of a tax-exempt organization that is supposed to help those who need help the most," said Rich Chrismer, a spokesman for McCaskill's opponent, Sen. Jim Talent.

The McCaskill campaign declined to comment for this story.

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Reed Starts Committee

By Antonio D. French

READ IT HERE FIRST

Ald. Lewis Reed has started a committee to begin raising money for his campaign against Aldermanic Board Pres. Jim Shrewsbury.

The Committee to Elect Reed was established yesterday in paperwork filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission. It is clearly classified as a "candidate" committee and not an "exploratory" committee.

There has been speculation for weeks that Reed would challenge Shrewsbury for the City's top legislative position. Nearly two weeks ago, Reed told PUB DEF he would be making a final decision sometime within the next 3-4 weeks. It appears an announcement is imminent.

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VIDEO: Carnahan Confident About Case

By Antonio D. French

The Missouri Supreme Court will address the controversial voter photo identification requirement today. Last month, a Cole County judge struck down the new law as Unconstitutional. At a town hall meeting in south St. Louis last night, Sec. of State Robin Carnahan, the state's chief elections officer, said she was confident that the Court will agree with the lower court's ruling.



Carnahan spoke at a neighborhood meeting hosted by State Rep. Rachel Storch (D-64). Aldermanic Board Pres. Jim Shrewsbury also addressed the group of about 60 people, mostly elderly, informing them about the various charter amendments, referendums and initiatives that will appear on the Nov. 7 ballot, just as he did last week in Tilles Park (click here to see that video).

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VIDEO: Patterson vs. Copia (The Remix)

By Antonio D. French

Blogger, urbanist and "best gadfly" Steve Patterson has a way of pissing people off. It's a gift. Earlier this evening, he attempted to share that gift with the owner of downtown restaurant Copia Urban Winery. The result makes for great TV.

Click here to see Steve's video of the incident at his site, UrbanReviewSTL.com. Then watch the Pub Def "Fight the Power" remix...

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Rising "Starr" May Run for Reed's Seat

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, October 03, 2006 at 8:52 AM

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE

With 6th Ward Alderman Lewis Reed still mulling a run against Aldermanic Board Pres. Jim Shrewsbury, attention has turned to who would fill Reed's seat.

Democratic Committeeman Patrick Cacchione has been mentioned as a possible candidate, but several large financial contributions to Republican candidates have left some of his fellow Dems scratching their heads. Tower Grove East resident Christian Saller's name has been mentioned by some white, self-described "urbanites" as a possible progressive candidate.

But the racial dynamics of both the ward (which has a majority black population) and the Board of Aldermen (while whites make up only 44% of the city's population, they hold almost 60% of the aldermanic seats) have caused much of the behind-the-scenes conversation in black political circles to focus on keeping the 6th Ward seat filled by an African-American.

"Black folks need to be picking up seats, we don't need to be giving one away," said one northside elected official who asked that her name not be given.

A name being circulated around as a possible black candidate is Kacie Starr Triplett, aide to Congressman Russ Carnahan and granddaughter of former Comptroller and State Sen. John Bass.

"I have received many phone calls from people encouraging me to run as Alderman for the 6th Ward," Triplett responded in an email.

"I believe this is due to being a lifelong resident of the ward, and also serving the 6th Ward constituents as a community liaison for both Congressman [Dick] Gephardt and Congressman Carnahan. At this time, nothing has been finalized. Just a lot of questions and calls," she said.

Questions and calls. That's what we do.

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

BIG LEAGUE, BIG DOUGH -- Sports fans weren't the only ones holding their breaths hoping the Cardinals wouldn't blow winning their 3rd straight National League Central Division title last weekend. Business owners had their fingers crossed too.

RCGA Chief Economist Bryan Bezold estimates that each home playoff game will have an estimated direct and indirect impact of $2.8 million on the St. Louis regional economy. "This economic impact is due to fan spending in and around Busch Stadium, approximately $1.5 million per game, and the indirect benefits are due to the circulation of that money throughout the region, worth another $1.3 million," Bezold noted Monday in a RCGA briefing.

Tickets to the game for you and your kid - $75. Food and drinks - $55. Watching a home game at home on TV because you can't afford to see the inside of the new Busch Stadium - priceless.

CAN STL BE LIKE ATL? -- Speaking of the RCGA, next month Chairman Scott Schnuck will be leading a delegation of 125 St. Louis regional business, civic and elected leaders in Missouri and Illinois on a trip to Georgia to meet with more than 25 of their Atlanta counterparts. They'll be trying to find out how Atlanta has been so much more successful in the areas of economic development, transit, education, parks and trails, and race relations.

Could it be that many of St. Louis' finest black thinkers in the areas of economic development, transit, education, parks and trails, and race relations all run to Atlanta, a place where they can actually get a job?

BRINGING IN BACKUP -- Claire McCaskill's getting a little more help from the phenom to the East, Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL). Obama -- who told a crowd in St. Louis back in March, "I can't do it alone!" -- will be stumping for the Democatic Senate candidate again this weekend (Oct. 7) -- this time in Kansas City.

Meanwhile, her Republican opponent, incumbent Sen. Jim Talent, is having special guest of his own at a breakfast fundraiser on his birthday, Oct. 18. -- Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC). Let's hope she isn't inspired to go all "Marilyn Monroe" and sing "Happy Birthday, Mr. Senator".

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VIDEO: Bill Clay Induction Ceremony

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, October 02, 2006 at 4:40 PM

In a ceremony in the U-City Loop today, Missouri's first black Congressman, Bill Clay, became the 114th name added to the St. Louis Walk of Fame.



Joining Clay to celebrate his honor was his family, including his son, current Congressman Lacy Clay, and current and former elected officials from all over the region -- among them: State Auditor and U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill, Congressman Russ Carnahan, former Lt. Gov. Harriet Woods, State Reps. Rodney Hubbard and Ted Hoskins, former State Rep. Betty Thompson, soon-to-be State Reps. Jamilah Nasheed and Talibdin El-Amin, former Ald. Irvin Clay, and others.

Walk of Fame founder Joe Edwards was host of the event and welcomed all of the attendees back to his bar, Blueberry Hill, after the ceremony.

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AUDIO: Talent on the Bosley Show

By Antonio D. French

Approaching the last 30 days of a very close re-election campaign against Democrat Claire McCaskill, Republican Sen. Jim Talent made his fourth appearance on former Mayor Freeman Bosley, Jr.'s radio show yesterday. This time the subject was Iraq.

Talent, who spoke via cell phone on his way to Sunday service at the Cathedral in the Central West End, said America must win the war in Iraq and leave behind a functioning, stable democracy operated by Iraqis.

"We gotta win," said Talent. "If we don't win then that encourages the other side and it'll be a set back for us."

Talent's appearance on Bosley's show, which airs on hip-hop station 100.3 FM, is just the latest example of the Chesterfield Republican's push to make inroads into the tradition Democratic base of black voters. Here's an 8-minute clip from the show...

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Clay Joins the Walk of Fame

By Antonio D. French

Former Congressman and political powerhouse Bill Clay has been added to the St. Louis Walk of Fame. There will be a formal induction ceremony and brunch today at 12:00 p.m. at Blueberry Hill, 6504 Delmar, in the Loop.

The St. Louis Walk of Fame is a non-profit organization founded in 1988 to provide a showcase for the cultural heritage of St. Louis and to advance the knowledge, awareness and appreciation of great St. Louisans and their accomplishments.

The Walk of Fame itself consists of sets of brass stars and bronze plaques honoring individuals from the St. Louis area who made major national contributions to our cultural heritage.

Clay's star is located between Meshuggah Cafe and Napps hair salon on Delmar. Click here to see a close-up of the plaque listing Clay's many achievements.

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Creepy Image on Front Page of Post

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, October 01, 2006 at 8:00 PM

Are we the only ones that find this image from today's cover of the Post-Dispatch disturbing?



It's almost like, what if Frankenstein's monster ran for the U.S. Senate. "Fire bad! Either you're with us or you're with the fire!"

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Sunday Funnies

By Antonio D. French


Click to enlarge.

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The 23rd Annual Wine and Roses Ball

The 23rd Annual Wine and Roses Ball

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