Monday, September 30, 2013

Local color, Part 5 of 7: The 1996 Vernon Democratic campaign—facts and narrative; serious stuff and comedy; conclusions and questions



Showing that when a political group’s resources are limited, making careful shots is key; and more generally, that politics (as today) should be about possibility, not “ignorant armies clashing at night”

[Prefatory note: This old story is not meant to address the recent news in Vernon Township about the owners of Mountain Creek’s plan to build a $120 million (per The New Jersey Herald, Sept. 24, front page) indoor waterpark/hotel, with essential help from a stipulated “PILOT” (payment in lieu of taxes) local-tax arrangement with the town (not exactly the type of project to greet, as a TC member, at first blush with a "Good plan!" or the like when you are expected to stand up for voters' interests). However, this entry, whose further relevance will become clear in a future entry, tries to convey that effective and intelligent public debate on crucial issues in a town like Vernon Township can be done in professional and not excessively personally-defending ways, which admit there are a plurality of viewpoints. Also note: I am not taking any stand on the Mountain Creek plan at this time. A few minor edits 9/30/13 p.m. More edits 10/4/13. Edits 10/5/13, including important ones between asterisks. Edits 10/7/13, to second half of entry. Edit 10/9/13. Edit 10/16/13. Edit 10/18/13. Edit 10/20/13.]

Subsections below:
The primaries—in 1995 and 1996
Isolation of our ad hoc campaign group came into play
The division of labor
Involvement with the SCDC
Mass mailings—something useful in principle, and a focus of problems here
A sharp complaint roils things—based on a misunderstanding
The true substance of the complaint was even more objectionable, and unrealistic
Financial facts of the campaign
Campaign staples—signs, debates…
John and I on “going cheap”—and his limited focus on specific issues
Next stop: radio ads


The primaries—in 1995 and 1996

Strangely, I neglected to talk about the primaries, which had to be relevant to us Dems in each of the 1994-96 election years, because we were among the two standard parties, and primaries required us to have our candidates be elected during the primary to be the persons selected for their party on the November ballot. (There could be an exception, as we’ll see.) So, for example, when Howard Burrell ran in the primary in spring 1995, he won over any contenders for the available seat (actually, there were two such seats), and hence was placed on the November ballot.

I know that in 1995 there was an itch to have two candidates for the two seats, not just one, so a second candidate was sought and located. I think that maybe Frank Sharkey was also on the ballot in the spring, and was elected for one of the two TC slots that were open—that is, elected as one of two Dem candidates that would be on the ballot in the fall. But then he had to drop out in the summer, as I said in Part 3. Then, following election law and the Sussex County Democratic Committee’s bylaws, Dick Conklin was chosen as the second candidate, in a meeting of the Vernon Township portion of the SCDC. (For 1994, the primary phase took place before I even got involved with the Democratic group, but Howard and Bill Bravenboer were, I believe, on the ballot in the primary, and got elected to be on the November ballot. Few problems there.)

In 1996, I am sure John Kraus was on the ballot in the spring (he would have had to have a petition signed, with X number of signatures, to get on the ballot). He agreed to be our candidate for what at the time was one three-year TC seat to be on the ballot in November. I don’t think any other Democrats ran against him. When Ginny got on, I’m not sure; it’s possible the Republican Paulette Anderson tendered her resignation from the TC early in the year, hence Ginny was initially chosen (by the Vernon Dems) to run on the June ballot for her seat (to actually get on the ballot, she had to file a petition, too [Update 10/18/13: Actually, normally this would have been the case, but...see immediately-next update.]). Hence, Ginny would have been elected in the primary to be on the ballot in November, as had John. [Update 10/18/13: I had forgotten about this, but actually Ginny had run as a write-in for the primary, according to an article in The New Jersey Herald (May 12, 1996), p. B-6, which includes a sentence on her appearance at a county Democratic fundraiser MC'd by Charlie Cart: "The loudest round of applause came when Ginny Crotty of Vernon was introduced. Crotty recently switched from the GOP to run a write-in campaign for a one-year seat [i.e., the last year on an unexpired term for a three-year seat] on the Township Committee in the June 4 primary."]

This is all fairly routine stuff; nothing sinister.

Where things started getting complicated for us in 1996 was when the “Independents” started running. Because “Independents” don’t run in primaries (under current state law), the two who eventually ran in 1996 weren’t on the ballot in June (a technical detail: people in New Jersey can, today, declare in their voting registration that they are “Independents”; but more often in New Jersey, “independent” when used by rank-and-file voters means that they are unaffiliated with either major party, and hence they can’t vote or run in primaries). They had to have circulated and gotten signatures on petitions to be on the November ballot, and I would suspect (though I’m not 100 percent sure) that as registered Republicans (which I know one of them was), they were technically allowed to run as “Independents” in the fall.

Also, it was easy to see that the two who ran as Independents in 1996—*Heinz Sell, whose political affiliation was not hard to divine, and the other being someone, Dennis Miranda, whose association with the township's "rebel Republicans" was clear enough (End note 1)*—were really of the “rebel Republican” school of thought in town, and it wasn’t hard to suspect that they thought they would have some advantage by virtue of (1) the fact that they were running outside the category of either the usual Republicans or us Democrats, and (2) the not-unlikely notion on their part that because they were known names, they could have an edge. But in a way it was more obvious (to us Dems) that they made a race for all three groups rather hard, because it’s hard to strategize messages when you have three groups like that.

They first appeared on the scene probably in about August—they would have needed to have petitions signed (by sometime in September, I think) to get on the ballot in November.

It would be interesting to know the order of some things in mid-1996, but as with a number of other things from this period, I know the fall stuff better, partly because it was more dramatic. Anyway, the spring “drama” doesn’t matter a whole lot.

There was talk in the Dem club (by maybe late June) about whether to have a fundraiser in the summer, I think. In 1995, there certainly was a summer fundraiser—a big picnic at Dick’s house, for which a huge amount of food was made (including Dick working in his kitchen until about 4 in the morning). To this event, a huge array of people came—including those supportive of Howard (as from 1994), various friends of Dick’s from the various corners of his life, and probably an array of Democrats behind our effort who weren’t in these other two categories. It was quite an affair.

It was notable that not only was there no great idea for an equivalent fundraiser in 1996, but it was realistically seen that no way could you try to get a huge number of people as had come in mid-1995. (I seem to recall that Chris Rohde spearheaded a yard-sale-type affair, but I forget what year that was.)

Anyway, by August 1996, Dick announced, in somewhat somber or “renouncing-mood” tones, in a small meeting (I forget whether it was an official club meeting) of some of us Dems that he wouldn’t be helping run the campaign in 1996. “This is your campaign,” he assured John (and maybe Ginny was there too). There was something a little odd about this announcement, but I didn’t know at the time about a certain health crisis Dick had had earlier that season. I keep the nature of this private, but it would prove to be the focus of a rather unacceptable bit of communication by another during the campaign.

Dick also announced that there was not enough money in the club account to start the campaign’s bank account (which latter was required for us to be able to report, as necessary, to the state). We would simply have to wait for donations.

I forget when people were named to the various “offices” of the campaign—such as treasurer (which, quickly enough, I was named to) or manager (which would be Chris M.), but as soon as a viable campaign group was together, the idea of the fundraiser came back up. And this time it would be a golf “tournament.” I remember John saw this as a promising avenue. I myself, not a golfer, wasn’t too keen on it, but I do seem to recall, as part of the preparation for the event, going to the golf course at what was called the Spa then, and helping set this up. I believe John was with me at the time.

Then when it took place (in September), I wasn’t there. There may have been a good reason why (probably it tied to my freelance work). As I’ve said elsewhere, Chris M. was instrumental in getting some special arrangement with the Spa management that would let it happen.

I would find out later that, if it wasn’t for the Sussex County Democratic Committee’s buying 10 tickets (without the putative “buyers” of these attending), the golf tournament would have made nothing for us after expenses. A number of people attended, but I guess the golf course took a hefty enough share as a fee that it basically absorbed all the money that the attendees donated (i.e., had paid for tickets).


Isolation of our ad hoc campaign group came into play

There was an odd way that the 1996 campaign group was being cut off from the usual pillars of the Dem group. I remember going to Dan Borstad, maybe looking for some suggestions of where to get money to start our account, and he indicated that he wasn’t going to help out so much this year. No money from him yet. (He would donate later, as it happened [at an arm-the-helpers club meeting in October, I think], and it was unexpected.)

The fact that Dan seemed to feel as Dick did, though Dick’s reason seemed more personal, gave some suggestion that each of them was right, based on some premise they maybe shared. But why were they hanging back? The club had lingered on earlier in the year, and candidates were chosen by the spring, and were to be on the November ballot. Why the standoffishness? Did they somehow not have enough confidence in the candidates?

I would, after a while, develop a theory of my own on this, but for now, let me say a couple things about three key men here:

Dan Borstad has always struck me as a warm, generous local businessperson who has the will and ideas to be a solid community leader. He is one of the best examples I have ever met of the old-time Germanic or Scandinavian burgher who has achieved enough as a homeowner and/or businessperson and paterfamilias that he is, in later life, willing to go the extra mile and support some honest local-political endeavor, especially over a sequence of years. Even in the many years since, when I encounter him in town, he’s ready with a warm handshake and seems never to have developed a reason to have a grudge against me. He not only supported Democratic causes in town, but he was elected to, and served on, the TC by 1992. One year, I think, he was mayor, when that office was selected by the TC. Whatever extent people have misunderstood (or assumed) he was in thrall to some interest like Great American Recreation or Gene Mulvihill, he always occupied a position of wanting to support an underdog party in town in a sort of ceaselessly idealistic way. (In fact, as shows he wasn’t a benighted patsy of GAR or of Mulvihill, his son Sigmund—who died in 2012 at about age 52, and whom I remember a bit from his time at the Vernon high school in 1976—had had a skiing accident on GAR’s slopes back in the 1980s, and had been bound to a wheelchair since. The Borstads had sued GAR over this; I forget what the outcome was.)

Dick Conklin has long been a friend; he is a lifelong resident of McAfee, N.J. (a subsection of Vernon Township). He met my mother in 1982 when she was seeking to buy a new car, then he dated her for a time. He attended my college graduation in Washington, D.C., in 1984. Not that he would deliberately seek recognition for such things, but he helped financially support the education of the children of a family in Pine Island, N.Y. [or they may be in the small town of Florida, N.Y., which is a little further into Orange County, N.Y.], just over the state border from Vernon. He worked at various local jobs such as an eatery in McAfee many years ago, but as a main support of his adult life, he worked at G&T, an auto parts store, and [important addition 10/20/13] even owned it for a period (after buying it from its original owners), in Warwick, N.Y.; his total tenure there, as I understand, was about 25 years. He has been involved with such groups as the Rotary or the like, and has gotten involved in numerous other community groups or ad hoc projects. He is the sort to have met many people in all sorts of contexts in the local region, hence his ability to get a variety of people involved in the Dems in 1994-95 (including ones who might not normally have been involved with a Democratic group in town).

John Kraus, one of the 1996 candidates, a few years older than I, was a teacher working in, I believe, Union City, N.J. I don’t remember exactly how long he had lived in Vernon (it might have been about 13 years), but he lived in the Pleasant Valley Lake subsection, and with a regional appeal that often has happened with a Vernon TC candidates, he attracted a lot of support from that community—PVL, for short. He had three young kids, I think it was, and was a dyed-in-the-wool Democrat, but of the sort who had developed his ideas on how such a party worked from the city areas of the state—which would turn out to be a bit of a problem for us in 1996. He also had a constellation of buddies with whom he had CB (citizen’s band) communication during drive time to the city where he worked. He was a busy paterfamilias with the idealism for certain things as teachers often have.

These sketches show that, when Dick and Dan seemed to draw back from being as centrally involved in the 1996 race as they had been in 1994 and 1995, it was puzzling. John, for his part, had committed to being a candidate, as had Ginny Crotty, who had long been associated with Vernon Township, first as a summer resident (see Part 3 and Part 4 for some more facts on her). These two both needed some campaign support.

(By the way, in about September 1996, I touched base with Bill Bravenboer, stopping by his home; he not only had been one candidate in 1994 but had helped out the 1995 campaign, and this time he distinctly didn’t want to get involved. There were one or two other Dems in town, who had been part of the 1994 and/or 1995 campaigns, and they were not available this time, either.)

And when the fall campaign season started in September, running only about two months, it was like the train leaving the station, and generally speaking, if you had thrown in your lot as one of the candidates or main helpers, you had better hop on, fast. And the train would start running, not only fast but on a sort of bumpy track—even becoming a sort of roller-coaster.


The division of labor

Another baseline fact is that everyone who gets involved in local politics, as I’ve seen—whether on the campaign level or in serving in office—brings to that role whatever background he or she has had as a paid professional. Especially when the political roles in town are volunteer, you are not apt to do otherwise. So, for example, someone from the insurance or financial industries will be focused (when serving on the government) on financial/budget issues; someone from a real estate background might be more focused on land-development or homeowner-interest issues; and so on. From the media background myself, I could bring to the mix my knowledge from how the media worked. And I knew just enough, especially about local newspapers, that I would navigate getting the candidates’ ads in the papers—even have them designed ahead of time—so the ads could reasonably be expected to be most effective and timely. As far as the radio side of things went, that wasn’t an area of my expertise—but this would be both relevant and NOT relevant to the 1996 campaign, as we’ll see.

As the eight or nine weeks between Labor Day and Election Day rolled on, it became clear that I—the titular treasurer (whose most crucial role was filing reports to the state on our handling of money and in-kind donations)—was the only one equipped to place the print ads. Chris M., it would turn out, was key to the golf tournament (i.e., in arranging it); she would also host a “coffee” at her house—to which no one came (which wasn’t her fault)! Chris, the two candidates, and I were there—I don’t think anyone else was! We’d tried to advertise it, but to no avail, it would turn out.

And Chris would also buy all sorts of catered food for a get-together at a clubhouse in PVL, to hand out lawn signs and leaflets, and otherwise prepare whoever came—who all were mostly from John’s home area of PVL. Chris paid for this food, and thus it was her in-kind donation to the campaign.

Every other significant managerial task in the campaign, I did. (I’m not being bitter.)

Perhaps the most controversial decision I made, aside from the radio-ads issue to be recounted (which latter was a non-issue on my part), was hiring Chris Rohde to design and write our print ads (and some fliers and “palm cards,” which latter were her idea). This was controversial only in terms of Dick later raising an issue over it—he not only seemed to object to her being so involved, but he made a special point of objecting to my paying her, on the ludicrous argument that she should not have been paid as a “volunteer”—but he was wrong, because I was utilizing Chris as a freelance contractor, just as Dick had paid Paul Horuzy for designing an ad in 1995 (and using, and bowdlerizing, some copy of Chris Rohde’s, no less).

But having Chris on board was fun. From the start, I was determined to have a strong hand in how she did the media materials (a sort of natural tradeoff for her being paid). There was an initial talk I had with Chris at her house about what I wanted to do. Then there was a production session: I had Ginny on hand at Chris’s house (I don’t think John came), where Chris worked on her computer while her two daughters, whom Chris home-schooled, were busy with their independent studies. For hours one day, we had one long session of working out the copy and the layout. Chris joked and made Ginny laugh…this was a somewhat demanding (as well as fun) session, but it resulted in work that a lot of deliberation went into.

The next step was paying for the ad space in two newspapers, which I still have paperwork on. With Straus Newspapers, we dropped off a mechanical (which Chris had made) that Straus printed from. But with The New Jersey Herald, the newspaper art department designed—or rather, laid out—the ad on their own equipment (Quark, I think), following a design that had been hammered out with Chris Rohde in her home. There were a lot of faxes sent to me (because of errors in intermediate versions) for approval from the Herald.

For print ads in both papers, John and Ginny had joined me at a photo studio and retail store (called Camera Haven) in the A&P plaza in Vernon—a place run by the same man for about 38 years that recently, with some fanfare and public recognition in the municipal building, closed its doors. John’s and Ginny’s portrait photos were taken, for a variety of media items we’d have.

This was all good work of a kind I like.


Involvement with the SCDC

One of the nice things about the Sussex County Democratic Committee—which, incidentally, I was a member of from 1999 until about 2005 (End note 2)—is that they got us involved in more statewide Dem-related affairs, whether events, or a funding structure, or even seats on the state Democratic committee. (Some members of the SCDC, I believe, would run for this latter organization; I never considered it.) Charlie Cart, once he was elected the SCDC chairman in 1995, managed to scout up some fundraiser event, one of which was fun to go to—a dinner at Nazarro’s [sp?], a restaurant that used to be in Sparta Township (it was demolished some years ago). It had a catering loft on its second floor, and we Dems rented that and had a meeting there, which wasn’t just for our getting together, but for our trying to raise funds from whomever came and chose to donate (not just SCDC members). Charlie had the same guy—I forget his name—who served as a “sergeant at arms,” who signed people in at the door, or such. This man, who had a slight Addams Family quality, gave the event a kind of slightly puzzling esoteric air.

In 1996, none other than James McGreevey came by, with some campaign operatives; he was running for governor of the state (for the first time [update 10/16/13: the race he first ran for governor was in 1997, when he lost against Christine Todd Whitman, in a close race, about 47 percent to 46 percent; he was doing some early stumping in fall 1996]; he would run again in about 2000 or so, from which term, after he won, he had his famous scandal concerning his aide Golan Cipel). McGreevey seemed in 1996 like a man on the move; he had a way of greeting people with a sharp presence of mind: when he met John Kraus and his wife—John later voiced being quite impressed by him—McGreevey joked about how, given the towns the couple had originally come from, John had “married up.”

There was also some event that Charlie Cart had at his house, where former governor Jim Florio spoke. I have a news clipping from that event, which was in mid-October 1996. Just mentioning it here because it shows how our little Vernon Dem group could get you entré into seeming to run elbows with political glitterati.

Charlie, of course, was also key to our (’96 campaign) funding, as I’ll indicate in a subsection below. He disbursed a few different (hefty) checks. I remember him once coming to us few Dems who were handing out leaflets in the Vernon A&P parking lot—a rare time he would visit Vernon. He drove a dark car (was it a Jaguar?) and, with his dark sunglasses, I thought he could theoretically strike someone (who didn’t know him as, in Dem contexts, quite a nice guy) as almost a picture of a Jersey-style eminence gris—not with entirely positive connotations.

Also, when he delivered one of our big checks (maybe it was at the A&P scene)—which, as the hectic schedule had it (newspaper-ad bill had or would come up; or something else needed payment), came not a moment too soon—he commented with light humor, “Boy, you guys are really spending a lot of money here,” or such. I think it’s true that Vernon Township had the mostly costly campaigns in the county, certainly for the Dems. But I had nothing to hide from him—my state reports would detail just how we spent our money. And in fact, the 1996 campaign would cost almost half what the 1995 one had.


Mass mailings—something useful in principle, and a focus of problems here

Charlie recommended, for sending out our mailings, a man who lived next-door to him who did bulk mailings. We took him up on this—it definitely would save us money. Dick later raised an issue over this—why didn’t we use the McAfee post office? (Dick apparently—as best as I could infer—wanted to maintain favor with that P.O., as if he was partnering as between local businessmen, in utilizing its business for mass mailings. I thought this was a rather silly idea, when you know how the Postal Service works.) Dick (at least one time, but I would think habitually) bought for his mass-mailings first-class-postage envelopes at the P.O., which for mass mailings is quite expensive. Bulk mailings cost about 66 percent of the first-rate price, or thereabouts. A key aspect is that we didn’t have to affix postage stamps—the mass-mailer would stamp them on, once our envelopes were ready.

We had mailing labels from the Board of Elections to affix to the envelopes, and fliers to put inside.

Anyway, what was crazy about the mass mailings is that we had to deliver them all in two big sets, or such. Somehow, the bigger numbers made the deal more palatable or actionable in a business sense for the bulk-mailer. So Ginny, John (?), and I stuffed envelopes—hundreds, maybe thousands. It was crazy. To wet the adhesive on the envelopes, I used my tongue for a while (!), then switched to a sponge. It seemed to take forever. Ginny had fewer than I did, and still probably found the task a bear. I remember taking the many envelopes in several shopping bags, like so much garbage.


A sharp complaint roils things—based on a misunderstanding

The matter of how the mass-mailings were handled was a particular focus of one of the craziest misunderstandings within this campaign. A complaint was made to me—first issuing from John (but not starting with him)—about why we weren’t using the “old Democrats”—and John’s point in particular seemed to be regarding the mass mailings.

Sidebar: Consider this as an immediate lightning-like issue, symbolizing some of the worst communications going on, but not the very worst there was in that campaign. Imagine how this occurred in the press of business, when the mass-mailing task was a crazy bottleneck for a few of us: “Why aren’t we using the old Democrats?”—conveyed in a relatively snappish manner by John (or if the snappishness didn’t come from him, then it would certainly be evident as from Dick). What did he mean? As John would clarify, The elderly people who were stuffing envelopes in the garage (last year)! At some later point I’d hear (from John and/or Ginny): “Dick wanted to know why aren’t we using the old Democrats!” (So this had come from Dick.) Only later would I understand what was meant by “old Democrats”—thus John (and Ginny) had been misled on what Dick meant by this—and it didn’t mean the elderly envelope stuffers.

I seem to recall that I was irked over how much of a tedious, voluminous task it was stuffing and sealing all those envelopes. This, plus how it ate into my time—while the whole reason for doing the mailings this way was to save money—made it especially irksome to me that John seemed to find it a significant fault that I wasn’t using the “old Democrats” for this. This was crazy.

When I later looked into what the “old Democrats” issue was about—the complaint was offered (in a separate communication, I think) by Ginny, too, surprisingly, though she probably made hers with less pointedness than did John—John meant a slew of elderly people such as John could remember seeing in Dick’s garage, like a small cadre of elves, stuffing envelopes. Well, I didn’t have access to those sorts of people (though Dick did). And why, in general, couldn’t we be doing some things differently, anyway? Was everything in a campaign supposed to be done in a cookie-cutter way?

But the lack of our army of envelope-stuffers would turn out to be what John assumed was meant by a stark criticism that Dick Conklin himself made, in an apparent private communication with him, about why we weren’t using “the old Democrats.” This point of grievance seemed to go hand in hand (as I would glean over time) with John’s seeming to have assumed that a Democratic group in Vernon operated as it classically did in the city areas, with a large group of people, as enthusiastic as they were conformist and ready to do dog work. But the actual fact was that this usually didn’t happen in Vernon, certainly not with the Democratic party; and our particular situation was, if nothing else, bringing this into relief (as a longtimer as myself would have seen). But this seemed to be something John was slow to appreciate.

There is a series of illusions that were at work here, and I want to unfold them carefully, because when you had such a small group shouldering so much, the layering of misunderstandings was all the worse, especially as the original complaint here apparently came in such an irascible, tension-raising form.

As a sort of principle I myself operated by, this party activity was done—by sheer facts, by circumstance—by a small number of people enthusiastic enough to shoulder a lot of burdens. (I’d seen the small Board of Ethics in 1993-94, and seen township government business hundreds of times in the municipal building.) In all this relatively small-scale area of affairs, and when the prevailing local party was Republican, again, there was no “army-style” Democratic organization in Vernon. John seemed to have gotten the impression that there was from being in, and seeing, Dick’s 1995 campaign business. (And even if you granted that old people had gotten involved with the group stuffing envelopes, it still wasn’t that big a number of volunteers.)

Hence John was rather hot and heavy, as I recall, with his ratcheted-to-me complaint about “Where are all the old Democrats?” This initially seemed John’s way of balking at the ludicrously tedious task of preparing the mass mailings—which I was certainly shouldering with irritation (I forget whether he did some too; I think perhaps he did). But this also seemed to reflect (as I would hypothesize) a broader sense of dissatisfaction he had with how the campaign was proceeding, especially as stoked—and “validated” to some extent—by a series of remarks from the sidelines by Dick.

(Ginny’s conveying the “old Democrats” issue might have been her echoing John—I don’t think Dick made the same blunt remark to her on this issue as he did to John.)

Before I address what Dick’s real point was, I should add that John, other times, was quite an enthusiastic fellow traveler, enjoying the fillip you could get from the manic campaign situation, and being as ready as any candidate to step lively when needing to appear in events, etc. And more of a demand was on his shoulders as he was working as a teacher at the time. But the way he tended to give credence to some of Dick’s gripes would be part of a broader problem, which I’ll touch on more later. And yet ironically, John definitely would be enough alienated from Dick in a way that, once the campaign was over, he took the lead in wanting the club meetings to start appearing (in mid-November or maybe in December 1996) at a location outside Dick’s house for the first time, hence the first post-election meeting was at a church in the center of Vernon. (I’ll return to this point later.)

But even later—by maybe a couple years or so—I would find that he was associating with Dick again, and John had not been in touch with me in quite some time.


The true substance of the complaint was even more objectionable, and unrealistic

[My apologies for repetitions of some points through the following, which is a function of how this was drafted. Maybe it actually helps you feel the annoyance I felt as recounted in this story; only, yours won't revisit you 17 years later, I think.] 

Eventually I found what the real issue was, I forget from whom: by “old Democrats” Dick was talking about a number of the stalwart-type people (and mostly not elderly) who had helped out in the 1994 and 1995 campaigns. John had misinterpreted this, which was a little annoying in its own right (and Dick’s phrase had been quaint to the extent it had been misleading). Well, Dick’s issue, now clarified, was also annoying, in a different way. The reason some of the “old Democrats” were “not” involved was that they had chosen not to be. Bill Bravenboer consciously opted out. One or two (or more) others did. There definitely was a dropout of some of the enthusiastic 1994 and 1995 “members.” But some of the other “old Democrats” were still involved.

Moreover, a set of “fresh blood” came in, especially people John knew from his own community, Pleasant Valley Lake. And I eventually found, when I sat down to write a report, that we had as many people, roughly *25 (End note 3)*, helping the 1996 campaign as we had in the 1995 campaign. It’s just that some who’d helped in the 1995 campaign dropped out, replaced by some new ones in the 1996. This was actually what, I’ve generally thought, keeps political groups healthy, the ability to attract new long-term members or occasional helpers. I think I argued this in some forum, maybe the post-mortem meeting.

Without further looking at the tangle of “interpersonal oddness” that was going on, this was how ridiculous it could get, that such a complaint could both be beside the point and almost downright stupid, yet misleading such central people as a candidate, and insulting the type of resourceful effort we were making. Meanwhile, John was forming an opinion of his own along the lines that he didn’t seem able to fully trust me. Once he observed to me that I seemed to be organized in what I was doing (well, of course!). (I’ll return to this point.)

On certain passing issues—such as quite minor little stratagems to take—he would argue with me out of what seemed like nothing so much as petty opinionatedness. He really did seem swayed by Dick’s grumbling as if inclined to agree with Dick that I was somehow taking the campaign afield of how it normally operated. And this when John’s knowledge of our group, I found, seemed to be limited mainly to the relatively short episode of the 1995 campaign—where he had indeed seen a host of “old Democrats,” actually elderly sitting in Dick’s garage, stuffing envelopes like good yeomen (they could just as easily have been knitting), which is why he put stock in Dick’s growl about the “old Democrats” as he had. And John had not been part of the regular-meeting club scene in much of 1995 (prior to the campaign), nor had he been part of the 1994 efforts.

The problem on John’s part, which I’ll look at more closely later, is that he seemed at first to think we were the standard kind of Democratic party group as in the urban New Jersey areas, a “party machine” affair, where as a local party leader you could scout up, like a ready militia, people to hand out leaflets, people to stuff envelopes—as if a standing army of Dems was always there. John seemed to think he ascended to the deck of the “Big Ship Democrat” in coming to Dick’s small country house one evening and beholding what a leader Dick seemed to have been, to “command” the group that had gotten things swirling in fall 1995.

John seemed, probably modestly at first, to think he would be a responsible party member to accept the challenge of being a candidate for TC for the Vernon Democratic group (not to say just the club, but the members of the party more widely) in 1996. This was fine, even noble, on John’s part. Then, not least because of Dick and Dan’s standoffishness, when the campaign group showed that it was definitely much smaller than a city-style “party machine,” and that it could really be a small ad hoc group, like a tiny band taxed with producing arena-sized concert results, he seemed to be of two minds: I think he appreciated how much we few were doing to keep the “little machine” working, but I think he also felt a bit cheated. And (sometimes) he seemed to suspect me, as if I was making decisions to somehow keep things running more modestly than they should have been. This aspect I’ll definitely return to.

And how this latter could become more of a “cause for jousting” from his side toward mine will become evident below. But we will also look at our budgetary restraints, and how “running things modestly” was quite inevitable in this situation. Given this, the question became how much not to have a “typical party machine lobbing endless blasts for its candidates, seeming to try winning via sheer volume,” but instead try to be smart with what resources we had.

I should note that Ginny did not feel at all as John did about being disserved, insofar as we didn’t act like a city Democratic group—Ginny who had been a seasonal resident of the township for, by her reckoning, about 30 years, and a permanent resident another 10. And at the end of the campaign, Ginny told me (in a phone message, I think) that it was because of me that the campaign had operated as well as it had, which was in line with how she wasn’t sold on Dick’s bluster.

In fact, on the Monday before Election Day, Dick contacted her and tore into her about something, and she was so “stressed” already—and had seen enough of his weeks-long attitude—that she blasted right back at him. That must have really shocked him, because as my mother has well attested to, Dick gets to points where he has a solid bias against women (and believe me, this is different from what you might gather about me). So for Ginny to blast off at him the day before Election Day not only showed courage on her part, but must have really turned his head around a few times.


Financial facts of the campaign

I kept very good records of the 1996 campaign, for several reasons: I was responsible for keeping good records, given the pell-mell nature of the activity; I was proud of what we were doing; and I was also scared lest someone (as from the news media, or from a state agency) question what we were doing with the money passing through our hands.

Somewhere are copies of the reports I filed with the state election commission [I did find them], which itemize expenses and income, and were filed (per a legally outlined schedule) three or four times during the campaign. But I also have a typed list of contributions, of both the cash and the “in-kind” type (an “in-kind” contribution is some material other than money—such as signs, buttons, or something else [with a monetary value]). Below, I will mention only amounts of $100 or more, and I will show different disbursements from the same entity only as totals (such as from the Sussex County Democratic Committee [SCDC]). One donor, Chris M., the titular campaign manager, donated $100 of in-kind material as far as food, etc., for one party; I won’t give her surname, consistent with keeping it half-hidden elsewhere.

Money contributions:

$4,450 from SCDC (specific donors are named linked to certain sub-amounts);
$500 from the Vernon Township Democratic Club (intake from the golf “tournament”; the way this amount came about is ironic: the SCDC donated $500 in buying 10 tickets, but all other money taken in from ticket-buyers apparently covered expenses of the event);
$250 from D & M Borstad (the company of Dan and Margaret Borstad, no secret in town)
Total $5,200
(then with tiny amounts from two people, the grand total of money is $5,250)

In-kind contributions (materials bought and donated to us by others):

$819 from the SCDC (roadside signs);
$128.86 (from SCDC, mailing labels and printouts);
$118.72 (from Howard Burrell, buttons);
$100 (from Chris M., supplies for party)
Total in-kind contributions: $1,166.58


Campaign staples—signs, debates…

We got a slew of professionally produced roadside signs from the SCDC. Each of us central people in the campaign took some to put wherever, such as on our home lawns, and on roadsides. A good many were eventually given to other people to post somewhere (and, traditionally, there were always some all too willing to do this). (Once when I was parked for the moment while putting a sign on Route 517 near Sand Hill Road, a police car stopped and checked on me, as if he’d never seen someone put up a campaign sign before. Granted, I was in a location with no shoulder, but still….)

There were debates, hosted by various groups. I remember one at the Highland Lakes clubhouse, which both John and Ginny attended, and maybe all the other candidates (Republicans and Independents). That was fun to be at. Heinz Sell, *who was running as one of the two Independents* and whom I mentioned in Part 4, was there.

(Regarding Mr. Sell: I remember that, at the Highland Lakes clubhouse debate, when the issue of the town center was discussed, we [John and/or Ginny] voiced, or otherwise referenced, our idea—which accorded with a notion fully incorporated into town planning business going back to at least 1989—that there were preliminary plans for two town centers—this merely echoed what had been in the Planning Board’s plans for years, in relation to Vernon’s state-required “cross-acceptance” work with the state’s “Development and Redevelopment” plan—which was conducted with all parts of the state. But, of course, eventually the actual work in Vernon Township on a town center, including infrastructure put in place [with controversy that has followed, since], would only be in one location, in Vernon village. But Heinz Sell at this 1996 debate weighed in, when he had a half-minute to do it, that there should be only “one town center!,” as if he’d never heard such an idea as two town centers—which, apparently, he hadn’t heard had been in the works.)

As I said earlier, there was a big party at the Pleasant Valley Lake clubhouse, to arm people with signs, fliers, etc. That was also billed as our one Vernon Township Democratic Club meeting for October (which was similar to what was done in October 1995 for that year’s campaign). A lot of people came to this, mainly from PVL. John had quite a “constituency” in the PVL voting district; and he would be the focus of one of the biggest percentages, per voting district—actually the biggest—of votes for a Dem candidate in town for 1996. This might not have reflected that everyone in that district loved him so much, as that it’s common for any TC candidate in town (in any year) usually to get a bigger percentage of votes from his or her own district.

The candidates were interviewed for newspaper profiles, both in the Advertiser-News (a new paper with which Straus Newspapers was serving the town; this replaced The Vernon News) and the Herald. We were touching all the usual bases of a campaign in town, even with our small number of workers and money. New people came out of the woodwork to help, including an 18-year-old young woman. And I think it was in 1996 that someone from Cliffwood Lake, which is in one far corner of Vernon Township, contacted me and said he wanted to help the campaign but couldn’t…so as “consoling” souvenirs I mailed him a campaign button and (I think) some other specially made tchotchke or two. (You’d try anything to keep up a supportive attitude in someone from the public.)

It got to where I was working full-time at this stuff—yes, about 40 hours a week the last two weeks. John and Ginny, in their ways, would both admit what a good effort we, or the campaign, made. In part, this wasn’t due to the “genius” or sheer hard work of any one person in particular, but it was due in good part to all the usual framework you had for doing a campaign, such as I’d already seen close-up twice (and had been witness to from a definitely greater distance and more limited perspective in years prior to 1994). The main challenge was in keeping your wits about you and meeting the demands.

As I said earlier, John once commented on how I seemed so organized. This was almost like commenting on a bird about how well it stands on two legs. I forget what I answered him, but I knew from my publishing work that being self-organized and having calmness under pressure, of course, were central. And even more key in a way, in a situation like this, was controlling your emotions, just maintaining a sort of balance where you didn’t let the stress or some untoward imposition distract you from the task you consistently had to attend to. It was rather like walking a tightrope. (This was especially a “work of art” for me, since I was desperate due to lack of income from normal paid work at the time.)

Now we return a bit to the issue of clashing egos.

It is from the perspective of how to maintain cool under the pressure of such a campaign that I take no pleasure in noting how a steady stream of criticisms and an almost threatening-toned sense of what “risk,” so to speak, that we were perceived to pose to some party were a repeating “contaminant” of sorts. The result of this is that this tendency was eventually responded to after, or just before, the campaign was over, by all three of us principals:

* Ginny told someone one off (as I already said) in no uncertain terms, just a day before Election Day (she seemed semi-apologetic or the like when telling about it to me, but I didn’t blame her, and I think she knew it needed to be done);

* John wanted—for purposes of future club activity that he felt, reasonably, the campaign had churned up a broad enthusiasm for—to move the location of the club meetings to somewhere new, which wasn’t affiliated with anyone’s private home;

* and I decided no longer to be involved with the Vernon Dems, after December 1996, as deeply as I had been in 1994-96. Which was a decision I’ve never regretted.

Now, why refer to this “dirty laundry”? Could someone who was involved in the group complain, looking at this blog entry, that we were ungrateful for what good we got out of the splendid Democratic “platform” that had been erected by hard work in 1994-96? Actually, my point is that our small group was under pressure in several ways:

(1) we were in a campaign with three different competing groups, which made it hard to strategize;

(2) we were campaigning in a presidential election year, which always brings out more voters in our area, especially those wanting to vote Republican; and

(3) John and Ginny were naturally going to be a little “manic,” if not suffering anxiety, in this situation, given all the practical expectations, and sudden public exposure, that they were subject to.

When I talk about John’s unrealistic ideas regarding me, I am not grumping peevishly 17 years after the fact; I am pointing out how he voiced ideas, partly because of the “mania” of the campaign, in part because of how small-potatoes a group we were, as he was slow to appreciate; and to some extent, this was quite forgivable. And in any event, the real problem in fall 1996 was the darts being thrown at us by a non-centrally involved person from the sidelines, as I’ve reported several times (while limiting the story), which were by no means professional to throw at us.


John and I on “going cheap”—and his limited focus on specific issues

I know one area on which John and I clashed (not hugely)—and this I can’t entirely blame him for—is the notion that we were working within limitations to the campaign, especially financial. He felt this—to the extent I was apt to emphasize it—was the wrong idea (and as if it had a bad component regarding morale); he was in this to win, he conveyed. On the level of how he was new to this whole process (and hence a bit naïve) in Vernon (an important qualifier), this was a natural view for him to have.

But I was coming at the issue of limitations from a couple of perspectives, one being how the Dems had functioned in 1994 and 1995 (to say nothing of what I knew about local politics’ metes and bounds more generally), and the other—more crucial—being the issue I faced of what limitations there were on money I got from the SCDC. In fact, by about the third week in October or so, I was brushing up against limits, including perhaps of patience, from Charlie Cart (I don’t blame him for this) in terms of how much I was looking for, when occasionally touching base with him on seeing “what next was coming.” (Note, again, that the 1996 campaign cost only a little over half what the 1995 campaign had cost.)

I was trying to be as judicious as I could in making smart decisions with what we did with the money, while knowing I also wasn’t the only one to make decisions. I tried on all the important decisions—as I had learned to do in paid editorial work in those days—to get as much consensus from the other “principals” of the campaign group (basically, John and Ginny, with maybe occasional feedback from Chris Rohde) as I could. But for John to start chafing at my suggestions of limitation—this was a very real fault line between us.

To some extent, his reason for his not wanting to hear about limitations was rooted in something else, which I can fault him for a little more, and this is the idea—that it seemed so many people who moved to Vernon from the more citified areas of the state (or from New York City) had—that the local Democratic party was every bit a machine that would go into a variety of action for whatever candidates, just as it did in the city areas. John seemed to have this in mind—as abstract as it was—with the result that, when he didn’t see such a machine operating, he was apt to start blaming the likes of me. As if I wasn’t doing enough to get “the machine” into action. This, for example, seemed to be behind his idea that I wasn’t using the “old Democrats,” as I discussed above.

This may all seem like small potatoes for an after-the-fact analysis, which may be good only for assessing how you would operate a local campaign (“the better to win”) the next year. But in one way, there is a lesson here that still applies today, even beyond the narrow confines of this local group. And as a case in point, this lesson relates to how the radio ads were turned to as another “big resource.” Here, this lesson from my perspective is simply this: If your resources are highly limited, the quality of your message is more important than the quantity of how you get it out. And in the case of the 1996 Vernon TC race, this meant in particular that township issues had to be focused on.

One point I should make is that John was not big on specific issues for the campaign—at all. In a way, he wasn’t alone in the Dem group; you’d be surprised how many of the more stalwart Dems within the 1994-96 period were not very conversant—or might even voice a disdain for—township issues, the same type of issues that roiled the waters in disputes among the different Republican groups (and which not only could make newspaper headlines but could decide who won in elections). I’ve mentioned nice old Mary Harrington (in Part 1), who wanted the group, for her purposes, to be more a social group. Other Dems in the club also were either not well versed in township issues, or might have voiced an antagonism toward the idea of our dealing with them (even some of us Dems who ran for the CSC [see Part 4] were not especially versed in township issues—paradoxically for a charter study, you might say). Among the Dems regularly involved with the club, I was the only one who attended township meetings as I did (hundreds by 1996). And hence I was the only one who had such a front-line understanding of some of the gritty issues faced by the TC.

I hope I don’t overstate this when I say that with John, who himself was new to the group as it had been operating for almost one and a half years before he assented to be our next candidate, he not only wasn’t well versed in township issues, but he didn’t really see the need to get more boned up on them, as I recall. (This, I think, came out in how he appeared in news interviews and debates, which wasn’t helpful to his image as a viable candidate.)

But, for all his open-mindedness to seizing on what among us Dems seemed to be “keys to getting somewhere,” he seemed taken with the people who seemed like stars, who had a je ne sais quoi, and he would follow their advice or lead; but in view of this, to him I seemed maybe like some kind of goofy “wonk” who was all taken with clerical “fetishes.”

Dick he seemed taken with, as I’ve shown indications of, and will show more. Howard he felt was a natural leader from whom to glean words of wisdom, as so many other people did (even outside the Dem circle)—and it would be in line with Howard, and not utilizing my radio-ad idea, that John would agree to a package of not terribly effective radio ads. And the local radio station’s co-owner Jay Edwards, as we’ll see, was regarded by various (such as among the Dems) as an expert.

In the last weeks, when John seemed a bit more desperate, or steely, about getting some solid mechanisms into place so he could win, he seemed more unapt to heed me, with my trying to stitch the campaign together with what small resources he had, and he was more apt—leaving aside, of course, all campaign talking points about local issues (as the public might expect)—to go with the local “stars” who seemed to have their hand on the hem of Great Success but whose particular ways of doing things, in 1996, would ultimately not help the campaign much or at all.


Next stop: radio ads

When it was time to order up radio ads—and we were running at the last minute, going to record the ads on Halloween, just a few days before Election Day, in part because what little money we got for it from the SCDC came that late—Jay Edwards, the principal of the county radio station, WSUS, with whom we were going to work was regarded, as I said, as a sort of wizard, a media shaman. I recall it was said that if Mr. Edwards liked you and your cause, he could be invaluable to you. (I will refine this portrait in Part 6.)

Jay Edwards, as his “stage” name was, ran a radio station on such a parsimonious basis that a “self-playing” jukebox of sorts played the music that went over the airwaves, while the person serving in a given shift as a DJ was hopping in to the “DJ booth” only now and then to speak live, while that same person may have other tasks in the broader office suite, even to deal with blokes like us Dems who walked in off the street to do business there. This radio station was staffed at a given time with as few people as possible; but it was always ready to take in a big chunk of money for such time-sensitive business as fall campaign ads (the “billing” expectation for which was memorably summed up by Howard Burrell as “cash on the barrelhead”). Now if you had only $900 to spend for 1996, instead of the $6,000+ spent in total in 1995, you might end up getting something less than fully inspired for your “last-ditch effort” radio ads.

The 1996 story to be continued.

##

End note 1.

I was mistaken about Chris Fuehrer's involvement in the 1996 campaign. See the relevant End note in Part 4 of this series.

End note 2.

Also, until a very few years ago, I still got e-mailed invitations from (as did many other Dems who were still on, or associated with, the SCDC) to sit at the Democratic booth at the yearly county fair (for days of my choice in early August). This followed their tradition to show a Dem presence in the county. I haven’t sat at the fair in some years now.

End note 3.

I originally estimated 35, but the number was closer to 25. A concise report I did on the three campaigns in late 1996, showing how the 1996 campaign stacked up to the others, indicates that there was about 20 helpers--non-central campaign workers--in each of the three campaigns. Since the 1994 and 1995 campaigns each had about six central workers (Dick, Dan, and others), they averaged about 25-30 people apiece. The 1996 campaign had fewer central people--only about four--but we had about the same number of helpers as the others, particularly because of the element of spontaneity among people who just opt to join a campaign from the public at large.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Local color, Part 4 of 7: Prelude to, and start of, the story of the 1996 campaign: With side matters like the august Charter Study Commission, and how a tiny campaign group got rolling



Subsections below:
I. First: Some side stories, and an important set of limitations
The Charter Study Commission elections
My work life (as relevant to the Dem stuff) during fall 1995, and afterward
Some personal eccentricity imposing on the campaign group from “outside,” and my herewith observing some limits on revealing this
II. The start of the “band” doing its thing

[I am trying to avoid lengthy time producing this series, such as it took to get out a series in the spring, and shove this series out, while election season doesn’t last forever (though it may seem like it). Any mistakes below, I’m sorry; will try to fix. Edits 9/26/13. More edits 9/27/13, including important ones between asterisks. Another edit 9/28/13. Edit 9/30/13. More edits 10/5/13, including important ones between asterisks. Edit 10/15/13.]


I. First: Some side stories, and an important set of limitations

The Charter Study Commission elections

One of the “veins” of activity running through my, and certain other Dems’, lives in 1995-96—which now almost seems hard to believe, as to the fact that I even did it or certain others in the Dem group did it—was our participation in the Charter Study process that went on in Vernon Township from 1995 to 1997. With this, the township government slowly, through a deliberate, careful process, changed from elected township committee (TC) and township administrator who was on the “weak” side, to a “strong” manager plus elected township council, with no elected mayor.

In very recent years, Vernon Township had another change of government when a referendum was put on the ballot (after a petition was circulated to gather signatures) in 2010, and this was approved by voters in November 2010. The form of government we changed to was nonpartisan, and involved initial elections held in (I believe) May 2011. Then the council and mayor were elected, to start their terms; and terms among the different council members were staggered (some of the first would serve two years, some would serve four, to start a process where eventually every individual would serve four years, but different subsets of the council—two or three at a time—were elected in alternately biannual elections [2013, 2015, etc.]). After 2011, subsequent elections, starting this year, would only (I think) be in November (since, as I definitely know, primary elections—which are inherently for choosing candidates from each of the standard parties—were now not needed for the new, nonpartisan form of the township council and mayor).

The new form, as just said, involved directly electing the mayor, and to some extent the mayor would assume some of the power of what had just-previously been a “strong” township manager, which had been part of the form the township had since early 1998. The new form of the manager was reduced to one serving a little more in deference to the elected mayor, and in concert with a township council, all of whose members were elected. The general fact of all these members’ being routinely elected was supposed to support the cause of accountability to the voting public.

Also, previously, from 1998 through 2010, township council members were voted on, and a mayor was selected from among them by their vote. And the mayor had not been quite as strong as the township manager.

This is all to explain what the government was changed to starting with newly elected members in 1998, following November 1997 elections. With our current form, only about two years old, people might have forgotten the immediately preceding form. And *the form prior to 1998*, of course, had been in place since at least the 1970s. (End note 1.)

When the Charter Study matter came up in 1995, this was a rather radical undertaking in Vernon Township politics. And the process we undertook was actually quite elaborate and deliberate, taking a few years, which was proper given what serious business was being done.

It isn’t my intention to explain this in great detail, but to show in general terms what was afoot with the Charter Study matter in the mid-1990s, and to explain how we newly organized Democrats got involved. Why the matter started in the first place is hard for me to explain without research, but it seems to me a Steve Imbarrato, who had previously served on one of the township boards and maybe had run for township committee (and had also done news-reporting), spearheaded this, possibly in light of the heavy controversy between the two factions among the Republicans I’ve alluded to. Imbarrato eventually ran for the Charter Study Commission, and was elected in fall 1995.

The way the Charter Study Commission (CSC) was pursued was, first, petitions were circulated for (1) asking people whether they wanted a Charter Study to be done, and (2) for naming individual candidates to serve on the commission if the plan for having one perform its function was approved. Each petition had to get umpty-ump signatures. Now, as I’ve explained in Part 1 and Part 2, the Vernon Democrats were coalescing as a force in town as the party hadn’t been for some time (at least in so large and concentrated and coordinated a group), and somehow among us, the idea came up for some of us to run for Charter Study as well. So what ended up happening is that, on the ballot for the November 1995 election, there were both the question of “Should we do a Charter Study?” and a list of 13 candidates for the commission. At least six of them were Republicans, and there were five of us Democrats (theoretically able to fill the five seats of the planned Charter Study). I’m a little sketchy here, but this is essentially the way five Democrats ended up running. It was almost a lark on our part, though one or so of us was/were more serious about doing it than the others were. Democrat Chris Wyman, in particular, was keen on it—as if (in his view) we would be remiss as Democrats not to try to take part—while the situation with me and Chris Rohde was almost exactly this: she said she’d run if I would run. I said OK, so we did.

Another thing that would have been more confusing for the public than it should have been is that the Charter Study was not supposed to be a partisan matter—that is, it wasn’t true that candidates had to be selected on the basis of party, and there certainly was no good argument to make that people in Vernon should elect five Democrats over Republicans, for whatever value the party identity could be supposed to bring (even if it was secondary to some other qualification). In fact, I remember saying to one or more of the other Dems that (even though we obviously got our petition filled with signatures, and accepted by the Board of Elections, as a group [End note 2]) we shouldn’t be campaigning as a group—and I remember saying this to one of the news reporters who interviewed me (among the other candidates) for the possible CSC. In fact, I think this point was included in what was published of the interview with me.

And in fact, I purposely did not pursue much of a campaign for myself, other than allowing two newspaper interviews, and maybe mailing out a few fliers to people in my voting district. I thought that the whole CSC matter was serious enough, and was enough not a thing related to political party, that I deliberately lay very low in terms of campaigning. (This was a different rationale than how the Kraus & Crotty campaign in 1996 was handled, which I’ll get to.) And it could be argued, by such a person as Wyman—who was keen on doing the CSC thing—that he implicitly helped get signatures for me by the petitions' including all our names together, as was technically allowed (End note 2). And I think the top five who ended up winning, who were all Republicans, may have done the same thing (at least in numbers of maybe two or three).

Meanwhile, Chris Wyman in particular could hypothetically have felt I was a bit of a fink for not campaigning too vigorously after he had helped me get signatures to be on the ballot. In any event, he came in sixth in the election—that is, immediately under the five who won, which was pretty good for a Democrat (especially as one or more other Republicans, who lost, got fewer votes than he). (This notion of “finkiness” works both ways: I myself wanted to run a modest, judiciously-toned race for CSC, to the extent I did. But I felt that Wyman, who was busier with his campaign, used a tone that was inappropriate—a sort of “let’s have a revolution” tone, which I was a bit embarrassed by. Anyway, since he got a few hundred more votes than I did, perhaps people preferred his tone. Which, to me, proves that my strategy to assert we Dems for CSC shouldn’t be running, or considered, as a group was correct and in good taste.)

Of the 13 candidates, I came in 11th. I’ll put it this way: the top five got, in reverse order, from 1,691 votes down to 1,423 votes; Wyman got 1,242 votes. The person who got the lowest amount of votes of 1,000 or more was Chris Rohde (coming in 10th) at 1,113; I came in immediately after her, at 760 votes. The guy with the lowest got 506.

In any event, if in our part in this Charter Study race we Dems (at least, those like Chris Rohde and myself) were biting off more than we could chew, I think we could well have been. This certainly was true for me (in retrospect; but I haven’t really regretted not winning; in fact, what I saw of how the CSC functioned in 1996 was pretty satisfying to me). Having done such a race once, I don’t really regret having done it; but if I was offered the chance to run for that sort of thing again, I wouldn’t do it with a slew of other stuff going on such as was happening in fall 1995, including my helping the Burrell and Conklin race, and my own full-time editorial job at the time.

Once we Dems ran in 1995 and didn’t get elected to the CSC, that was it for us regarding the CSC. (I did attend some of its meetings.) However, the five people elected (four men and one woman), on the mandate of voters’ also saying yes to a study, meant that the new, time-limited CSC had to work throughout 1996 to come up with recommendations on whether to change the government, and if so, to what and why. They would present a report in late summer, and a question would be on the ballot in fall 1996 for changing the form of government. Then, whatever was decided, new members of the newly defined township council would have to campaign and be voted for in 1997. They wouldn’t take their seats in the new form of government until 1998. (The actual public vote on the CSC proposal was 5,406 to 2,847, according to the November 6, 1996, New Jersey Herald article mentioned in End note 1.)

Incidentally, one last remark on the CSC: when James Kilby, who also was the top vote-getter for the CSC, became elected mayor *(in a separate election, in 1997, from that for the CSC)*, starting his work in January 1998, it seemed—from a number of subtle indications—to be his politically biased idea that Democrats shouldn’t be worked into the fabric of things in Vernon as much as our Dem group had been (which was mainly in floating candidates and campaigns, with a certain power and, thank goodness, a level of public assent). This bias of his, I think, preconditioned—among other things (such as, I think, Dems’ being appointed, per ordinance, by new TC members to fewer, or less-sensitive, board and commission seats)—his rather finky and boob-ish handling of me and the Environmental Commission matter of early 1998. There were also, as I recall, high-handed moves by him regarding other parts of the government (such as his acting in a way not advised by the Planning Board’s secretary and/or the township administrator).

Some of this should be in the blog series for which this entry is Part 1; once opening it on my other blog, search for “Kilby.” But this whole area, which deserves a more nuanced look (and actually in a narrow sense runs beyond the 1994-96 Dem story), has to be held off.


My work life (as relevant to the Dem stuff) during fall 1995, and afterward

I had mentioned an editorial job in fall 1995. This opens another area of my life that actually changed the texture of how I functioned in the Dems for a good while, and which will definitely shape my story of fall 1996. When I was with the fall 1994 campaign, and then helped the club get itself going in the first several months of 1995, I was still working at MetLife. This temp work ended in May 1995, and then I was without steady work for the summer. That was an anxiety-provoking time, and I went on unemployment in about July 1995, which became a highly complicated process in its own right, due to an initial denial, and my appealing, and associated jazz. My money-earning life—whether from highly sporadic freelance stuff in mid-1995, or from unemployment benefits—was inconsistent that year, and my receipt of unemployment benefits was at risk of needing to be repaid if I lost an appeal; and the whole mess was anxiety-provoking. Especially in light of the sheer fumbles of the Sussex County branch of the unemployment office, it actually led me to be hesitant to seek unemployment benefits again, I think until (as circumstances inspired it) 2003.

The point is, when you do this sideline political stuff as I did with the Dems, you had best have a pretty stable work situation going on. This not only helps your peace of mind regarding bills, but tends to provide a practical bulwark to limit the way the Dem activity can leach into your life. If that doesn’t seem entirely clear, people who’ve done this stuff might understand.

The bottom line here is that, by September 1995, when the fall campaign got underway, I was a bit of a basket case regarding my money-earning life, so it was just as well that my role in the regular TC 1995 campaign was not quite as full and spontaneous, I suppose, as it was in 1994. (In fact, as I found recently, I had actually, formally, resigned from my Secretary--officer--post in the club in September 1995, but I would still be tapped to do recording-secretary work for it in its meetings.) But then the CSC thing got going, maybe in September also, and maybe initially I thought I had the freedom to deal with it. But then I got a temporary editorial job with Reed Reference Publishing, which started in mid-October, and this would continue until March 1996. This job became so oddly stressful and anxiety-provoking in its own right—because of the nature of the heavily pressing work and certain weird personality issues posed by some fellow temps there—that this only added to a sense of my having “a lot of things packed into my schedule” in later fall 1995. That helps explain why I handled the CSC thing as modestly as I did, and why I was rather satisfied with a limited role during the Dem campaign for TC.

This all may not seem so remarkable, but it sets up an important prelude for the 1996 story. Once the Reed Reference job ended in March 1996, I didn’t really have much freelance stuff going for several months. And I didn’t start unemployment again in 1996. From March until November, I was in a financially worse condition than anytime since 1989, which means bad. And in fact, having the Dem stuff in 1996 gave me some structure that was “consoling” in a way, while I felt hanging by a thread money-wise.

In 1996 I got some freelance work, from Montage Media (I was employed directly, not through an agency, and wasn’t considered a “temp”). But this was tremendously sporadic. The people there were generally nice, but they only used me when they needed me, which was fairly rarely through 1996. This, incidentally, is why I am generally hesitant to say my freelance career started in 1996; in a very thin way it did, but it only really got going (in a constellation of different work commitments) where I could earn a sort of living wage in 1997.

Further, in November 1996, I got an offer to start work as a part-time copy editor with North Jersey Newspapers. This was a godsend at the time. The Dem activity in fall 1996, while rewarding in some ways and an exercise of healthy responsibility to and mutuality with others, reached a state where I had to cut off from being so involved in the group. This was for reasons of indignation as well as my own priorities, and, importantly, a sense of what was happening to the group. The North Jersey job came along at the right time to give me a “hook” to latch onto to start minimizing my involvement in, and in a sense my emotional dependence on, the Dems.

Why the group soured happened in concert with it also opening up a remarkable opportunity to me: I became the de facto manager of the Kraus & Crotty campaign of that year. There actually was a named campaign manager in 1996, Chris M. (I only recently rediscovered her last name), but as it happened—as was fine by us in the ad hoc campaign group—she did little other than arrange a couple parties/group events, which she was good at. The financial/clerical, media-negotiating, and other highly technical campaign stuff, which I was inevitably more familiar with than Chris M. (who only came to our group that fall), was done by me, making me that much more the campaign’s manager.

Not only did I have this role, but my practical work for the campaign became so voluminous that I was doing it virtually full-time the last two weeks or so of the campaign. At no pay.

Dick Conklin and Dan Borstad were deliberately absent from running the campaign. Chris Rohde, on the other hand, was back in as a media (flier, ad) writer, whom I employed (and paid) as a freelance contractor. Thus, except for Chris M. (who arranged a “coffee,” a golf-“tournament” fundraiser, and a equip-the-volunteers party in Pleasant Valley Lake), the essential people running the campaign were myself, the candidates John Kraus and Ginny Crotty, and in a sense Chris Rohde. You could say that, after the Dem campaigns comprised a larger couple of “rock bands” respectively in 1994 and 1995, there was now a band of “four” members: three regular members, and two alternates for a fourth member, Chris Rohde and Chris M., the former of whom did more for the performances on the public-media stage.

By the way, as in 1995, the group had funding largely from Charlie Cart funneling money in from his role in the county Democratic committee. The total was less than that spent in 1995 (1996 was $6,000+, but 1995’s amount was over $11,000; more details to come). Charlie would sense there was a different tone and consistency to the 1996 effort in Vernon Township than in 1995, but he couldn’t, as a matter of the circumstances, understand why. Thank goodness he got us money to work with.


Some personal eccentricity imposing on the campaign group from “outside,” and my herewith observing some limits on revealing this

I have to say I am proud of how the 1996 campaign worked out, and I am quick to admit that I would not have found myself in the role I did in 1996 if it weren’t for my more subservient role in 1994 and 1995. But there were a number of problems that dogged the functioning of the 1996 campaign, which sometimes were related to a serious health issue (not of myself), were sometimes rather absurd or irritating, and were (at least once) quite comical. These problems largely emanated from one person who sat on the sidelines (not John Whiting! or any other non-Dem in town), and I am in a situation where I don’t want to reveal too much about what this person did (or who it was), but you can’t hear the story about the 1996 campaign—which is worth telling—without my saying something about this problematic person.

Another problem we faced is that this was a three-party race: two seats on the TC were open—one of which was for a full term, and one of which was for the last year of an unexpired term that had been filled by Paulette Anderson (elected in 1994), who suddenly tendered her resignation from her seat on the TC—and these were opted for by three sets of people: two Republicans, *John Logan* (for the three-year) and *Ira Weiner* (one-year), two Democrats (Kraus for the three) and Crotty (for the one), and two “Independents” (two that would otherwise have run as Republicans, *Heinz Sell* for the three-year, Dennis Miranda for the one). *Especially notable, Heinz Sell was an elderly local resident who had long written letters to the editor of various papers and had attended Vernon Township meetings (and videotaped the proceedings!), who in his running for the three-year seat would probably have wanted to be understood to be a Republican, though he was not affiliated with the other (labeled) Republicans running.* (End note 3) He has since died; he was a rather droll character; I didn’t mind him so much.

It should be obvious that it’s hard to strategize a message when three sets of people are running (leaving aside Mr. Sell, who, to my mind, was definitely a dark horse and one would have thought was not widely popular; he was a sort of affable crank who inadvertently added some color to the race).

How I approached this issue—what our message was to be—had a couple of roots/rationales, and I don’t think this approach was unwise at first. But later, both Dick Conklin and Dan Borstad—speaking to us campaign group in a club meeting after the election—criticized us for our message, particularly as it came out over the radio ads, which in typical (previous years’) frequency and nature had been run so hot and heavy in the last two or so weeks. Dan in particular said the ads should have focused on specific issues.

What Dick and Dan didn’t realize—and which made for something of an absurd situation, particularly with an accusation one of them made about who had written the ads—is that the people who wrote the ads, with the assent of at least one of the candidates, were not who D and D thought they were, and these actual writers decided not to use an idea that I myself had sketched out on a specific town issue. One ad idea of mine was the “town center,” which has indeed (since then) been an issue in town (intermittently) through the past decade-plus.

My tone may seem to be bitter here; but when we get to a more nuanced, and humorous, picture of the 1996 campaign, you’ll see why, I think, the way it was decided not to use any issue-based content for the radio ads is worth a post-mortem 17 years after the fact. And it has to do with the way local campaigns can sometimes be hindered by their own enthusiastic supporters, not so much my specific idea for an ad.

But this story also touches on the inroads of personal eccentricity that were made, by one person, on communications within our group, which is, as I said, an area I want to limit talk on in this blog series. (Update 10/15/13: A statement about this person that is pretty thorough in its general considerations, but limited in important ways, and that gives credit where it's due, will appear within entry 7, subpart A, on my "Jersey Mountain Bear" blog.)


II. The start of the “band” doing its thing

As I recall offhand, there was something tired and a little half-hearted about how the Dem club carried on with its regular monthly meetings in early 1996. As the year went on, the meetings definitely had fewer attendees; to some extent, we wondered whether we were so much a going concern for that year, or what was left of the year. For my own part, the year before, I didn’t mind being a busy support to the club, which I felt somehow could “keep more honest” than a fall campaign; but it had still seemed the premise, at least among some, that the club was really about the fall campaign—according to this premise, the club in at least some of its activities “anticipated” and would, in due time, rigorously support the campaign. This premise seemed more obvious by about spring 1996. So, in a sense, it seemed that we could really only work up Dem enthusiasm with the group meeting through the year if we had another campaign for fall 1996.

Of course, the CSC was doing its study, and it was obvious that if it concluded Vernon should change its form of government, then the fall 1996 elections would somehow seem anticlimactic: a new form of government would require new elections for the TC to take place in 1997, for the new form of government to start operating in 1998.

John Kraus came to some of our meetings in about spring, maybe even earlier in winter, 1996. I remember he talked at some later point about having helped out the campaign group in 1995, and I couldn’t remember when this was. Strangely, he got some intriguing/positive impression of the Dems from the 1995 campaign, but hadn’t really been around when we had done our regularized stuff earlier in 1995. Therefore, he had little impression of me, when I was still among the attendees in 1996. Then, in fact, when I became so key to the 1996 campaign, he seemed skeptical of me, a point I’ll definitely return to.

But anyway, he readily agreed (at Dick’s suggestion, in good part) to become one of our candidates for the 1996 election, for a three-year seat on the TC to start serving in January 1997. As I said, a second seat on the TC opened up when Republican Paulette Anderson offered her resignation from the TC, leaving a year on her term to be filled. Ginny Crotty became our candidate for that slot, I forget exactly when; but she had been an attendee of some of our meetings, and it wasn’t too hard to get her interested. Also, interestingly, she had been a registered Republican, but she didn’t like what the Republicans were doing in town. I think she was still a Republican when she agreed to be our candidate, then she quickly worked with the Board of Elections to change her party affiliation, a technically easy (and legal) thing to do, if done within a certain timeframe. (Clarification: In New Jersey, changing party affiliation is about as simple as registering to vote. For purposes of being in the party of your choice for being listed on a ballot, the deadline is something like 50 or 60 days prior to the election. If interested, check with your local Board of Elections.) Ginny, incidentally, had little or no skepticism about me during the fall 1996 campaign—in fact, she would be one of the very most supportive colleagues in what came to be a rather stormy campaign-operating situation in October-November 1996.

So we ended up entering the fall season with a little “band”—Ginny, John, myself, and as it would happen starting in September, Chris Rohde. But a sudden twist was put on things: announcing this in about August, Dick Conklin decidedly would sit out this campaign. I’ll return to that whole issue, including as it was tied to John Kraus’s attitude toward me, in the next entry (but I will observe some limits). [Update 9/28/13: One consequence of Dick's not being centrally involved in the campaign was that John would not be as grounded as he could have been in Vernon issues, as would have been apropos to debates and such in the campaign. This will be further looked at in a subsequent part of this series.]  

Chris M. was suddenly in the mix, and I never knew how she joined us, i.e., who invited her. I don’t know if she attended any of our meetings, before about August 1996. She was a nurse by profession, and her husband was someone in the administration at Great American Recreation or some closely related company. Before you say, Aha!, I have to note, very quickly, that she—as good-natured as she was—turned out even less effective as a “manager” than John Whiting had been a sort of organizer in 1994. But Chris M. did prove “key” regarding the GAR complex in only one trivial way: it was she who, by her connections, could arrange a “golf tournament” on the golf course associated with the Spa, which was among the GAR-related properties, for the purposes of a fundraiser for the Dem campaign in, I think, September. This fundraiser really didn’t net a lot (in fact, if it weren’t for the Sussex County Democratic Committee's buying tickets, the fundraiser wouldn’t have made any money for us), and in general, she was certainly less important to our financing than Charlie Cart would be. (She nevertheless donated, in an in-kind fashion, to the campaign.)

But the weirdness of the “power” situation in the campaign group largely lay in a pattern of behavior—which was fluid and yet in good part about attitudes—that involved impressions made on John Kraus. It’s important to remember that as a dynamic operation that brought results for John and Ginny by means of quite Spartan resources—notably by the standards of the Dem campaign of 1995—I think the 1996 campaign was a success; and Chris Rohde and Ginny, from their very different backgrounds, affirmed this to me. But there are criticisms to make about how certain things went, and this isn’t merely my being “crabby” in a surging way in the present year, but it will basically reflect views (related to a specific sub-area of the campaign) that I’ve had since 1996, with my tone only maybe a little sharper 17 years later.

Hopefully there will be one more entry (or two) on this blog that will be the last on the mixed, but generally positive, experience I had with the Vernon Dems in 1994-96.

##

End note 1.

I am speaking from my general knowledge. An article in The New Jersey Herald, “Vernon votes for government change[:] Council-manager [proposal] passes by 2-1 margin,” by Jessica Materna (November 6, 1996), says the Charter Study–based change in 1996 was the “first government change for the county’s largest and most populous municipality since its move in 1983 to create the post of administrator.” I can’t vouch for this latter fact, but it is plausible, and certainly it coheres with the fact that we had a township committee for years before (and after) then; the only change in the committee that I am aware of is that (per a presumably rigorous political mechanism) it went from three members to five; I don’t know when.

End note 2.

Different ones of us in the Dem group—if I recall—had different copies of the petition, with all our names on it; each one of us got different numbers of names, with the total allowing us five to be on the ballot. This was allowed by the rules. I think a number of the Republicans did the same thing, maybe groups of two or three, or such. If this still sounds a little unacceptable, it is moot to the extent that when all the names appeared on the ballot, the public was perfectly free to select whomever they wanted, for a total of five (or even less than that).

End note 3.

In addition to my being forgetful after 17 years, it shows how weird the 1996 race was that Heinz Sell was the Independent running for the three-year seat. If you knew what a sort of offbeat gadfly he was to TC members in those days, you would have been surprised that he even thought he could win in 1996, much less would seem to the public a viable candidate for TC. And when you know what number of votes he ended up getting, you'd be even more surprised. My apologies to those on the side of Chris Fuehrer, for noting him as the three-year candidate. I think the reason I thought he joined with Dennis Miranda in this race is that the two of them were partners in various endeavors in township politics in those days.