Despite her parents' legal problems, 19-year-old Latasha was
elated. From a broken home in D.C., she just got word that she
would be employed, for the first time, at Reagan National
Airport. Her job: to pick up trash.
"I just wish I had more training so I could do more than pick up
trash," she tells Patrick Mara, about the time her parents were
being cuffed for brutally attacking each other in the Trinidad
neighborhoods of D.C.
Mara, who met Latasha doing a police ride-along in Trinidad, is
running for an at-large GOP spot on the D.C. Council, the
District's 13-person legislative body. D.C. Council elections are
in November, but the primary election will be held on Tuesday
September 9, 2008. Mara is taking on incumbent GOP candidate
Carol Schwartz in the primaries.
Mara supports the controversial police checkpoints in the
Trinidad neighborhoods, which were installed earlier in the
summer to combat surge of violent crime in that area. "Difficult
times call for harsher measures," he explains, "and the
checkpoints have caused crime rates to go down." With the new
checkpoints up, some security is coming to the life and
neighborhood of this newly employed young woman.
Latasha's story brings to light the issues that Mara is focusing
on in his campaign for D.C. Council: "We need vocational
training, we need safer streets, and we need better schools."
Vocational training is the one program Mara supports: otherwise,
he plans to slash taxes, and streamline D.C.'s inefficient
government. "The Council takes money, and takes money, and spends
money and spends money. That's not the way things should be
done," he says, staying true to his conservative principles.
Before Mara can begin reforming anything, he first must win his
primary race, and Mara's supporters acknowledge that that will be
an uphill battle. Of all the candidates, Mara, a government
relations manager with ML Strategies, has the distinct
disadvantage of being two-times the underdog. Not only is Mara
running as a GOP candidate in a city where Democrats outnumber
Republicans 10-to-1, but the D.C. Republican Committee is
shunning him in favor of incumbent Carol Schwartz.
But it's strange that Schwartz is running on the GOP ticket, and
that the D.C. Republican Committee is actually supporting her:
she is a Democrat in all but name. Nine of her ten staff members
are Democrats, her record has alienated the business community,
and she does not endorse fellow Republicans in their respective
Council races (but has endorsed a Democratic mayor). Not to
mention: according to an analysis of her 2004 contributions,
50 percent of her donors were Democrats, while 20 percent
represented interest groups.
SO WHY IS THE D.C. Republican Committee using its resources to
support Schwartz?
When I contacted the D.C. Republican Committee, Paul Kraney, its
Executive Director, said, "I suggest you contact Carol's staff
because we're trying to stay out of it [the primary race]." The
conversation then ended with Kraney declining to answer any other
questions, and swiftly hanging up.
If the D.C. Republican Committee is trying to stay out of the
race, it's bizarre that the committee's chairman, Robert Kabel,
told Mara, "Your future in Republican politics here is over
if you run against Carol," according to the Washington
Examiner. Paul Kraney himself, told Mara, "You will be
blackballed by the party if you run against Carol Schwartz." The
committee has also attempted to smear Mara by implying he
receives funding from "special interests," an accusation that is
just "silly," Mara claims.
Mara has certainly received funds and donations from businesses
in D.C., which prompted the committee's "special interest" cry,
but he has also received donations from everyday D.C.
constituents, ranging from $10-$100, whom he has contacted by the
thousands. But the business community is understandably excited
about Mara's candidacy: he is campaigning on a platform to
finally bring fiscal responsibility back to D.C.
"D.C. is the fifty-first worst place in the nation to do
business," Mara says, citing the District's high tax rates. "It's
driving businesses and economic development away from the city."
While Ms. Schwartz has voted, over the past five years, to
increase the budget by 51 percent, Mara has taken the Americans
for Tax Reform's pledge not to raise taxes.
Given that Schwartz is a candidate whose voting record sides with
labor unions, teachers unions, and liberal interest groups, it's
clear why Mara, firmly conservative, is so passionate in his
criticisms of the incumbent. Schwartz spearheaded the March 2008
"Sick and Safe" legislation through the Council, a bill that
labor unions were ecstatic about. The law requires small
businesses to pay for employer sick leave. "Small businesses
suffer in D.C.," Mara points out, "and this legislation, which is
the most liberal legislation east of San Francisco, doesn't
help." As of March 2008, Washington and San Francisco are the
only jurisdictions that mandate paid sick-leave
"When I go door-to-door and educate voters on Ms. Schwartz's
record, they agree with my message," Mara explains, "and when I
give them the facts of Ms. Schwartz's record, about 5 percent of
them won't believe me because it's so far fetched, while the rest
acknowledge that they've been frustrated for years."
According to the Home Rule Act, the law that created the D.C.
Council, at least two at-large members must not be from the
Council's majority party (i.e., must not be Democrats). One of
those seats will likely go to incumbent independent candidate --
but former Republican -- David Catania. With another independent
bowing out, the Republican primary winner is likely to take the
other slot. Schwartz is an entrenched incumbent, but don't count
her reformist challenger out yet.
topics:
Taxes, Business, Law, Unions