Progressive Liberal Democrat – Mississippi 4th District

Posts tagged “Democrats

The End of This Race and Looking Forward

Trish Causey - Liberal Democrat, Mississippi 4th District, running for U.S. House of Representatives 2014In February 2014, I entered this race because the idea of Steven Palazzo running unopposed made me nauseous.  As an activist, I knew little of the inside political arena.  I couldn’t get much help because there was a possibility of other candidates putting in and those with the Party didn’t want to show favoritism.  I understood that.  So I did the best I could with what I had and what I felt was right.  I was just going to be me.  And I knew this was uphill.  My daughter even asked if I were going to vote for myself, and I said, “Of course.  It might be the only vote I get.”

I wanted to run because the idea of the same (or yet another) GOP puppet having control over legislation that affects my body and my bedroom just pissed me off.  I wanted to run for office because I wanted to see if there were other progressives like me, stranded on dwindling life-rafts in this deep, scary Red GOP Sea.  I have always loved my home state of Mississippi, but I have never fit in.  I’ve wanted to be on Broadway since I was 11, and I’ve wanted to “Be the Change” since I was 13.  These two divergent paths have always been at the core of what I wanted to do with my life.  So my life didn’t follow the usual “script” that so many other people followed.  Yet, every chance I had to leave Mississippi, I didn’t; I stayed.  Except for three months I lived in Memphis, and it was just like Mississippi.

My love of Broadway musicals led me to create Musical Theatre Magazine.  My activism led me to create ArousedWoman, a site, blog, radio show, and an upcoming project all of which focus on women’s issues and women’s rights.  “Arouse” means “to stir to action, to awaken”, and I felt it was perfect for my activism for women’s rights.  ArousedWoman(TM) was borne out of the horrible misogyny of the 2012 campaigns that gave rise to Romney, and “legitimate rape”, and “binders full of women”, et al.  With Palazzo’s horrible voting record, I had to do something, so in 2013, I began throwing around the idea of running for Congress.  Years ago, I used to make the joke, “When I’m Governor of Mississippi…” and explain some egregiously progressive, liberal change I would enact to benefit the People and support social justice.  In September 2013, ” When I run for Congress…” was becoming a reality, and one that I liked very much.

I had to raise the money for the $200 candidate fee because I am a poor single mom, the epitome of the “struggling artist”.  In 2011, I worked as a writer for two companies in New York, but I lost one job to the economy later that year and lost the other to reorganization in July 2013.  Since then, I have worked hard to build my theatre magazine from scratch.  I live below the poverty line.  For the most part, it’s okay.  My daughter and I live very simply — no car, no TV.  The only time it is hard is when my daughter needs extra money for a field trip at school — that kind of thing has to be budgeted in.  Or when my daughter wants to do something after school but can’t unless she can find a ride because I can’t pick her up.

When I say, I understand what Mississippians are going through, I actually mean it.

After I put in for my candidacy, an email was sent out to local Dems, looking for a “well-funded, viable candidate”.  This incensed me at the time, but as I introduced myself to more and more people, the first two words out of their mouths were always, “What’s your platform, and how much money do you have?”  I soon learned that the entire conceivability to win was based on money.  Raising money is not something I wanted to do.  I raised a little and felt guilty doing it.

Every day, I wanted to quit because the more I learned about politics — even on this level — was disturbing and disappointing.  Frankly, it seemed pointless because there are political machinations in play that cannot be undone single-handedly.  But then someone would reach out to me on Facebook or Twitter and say how glad they were to see me running.  And so every day, I had renewed energy for the idea of the process, while I rather loathed the process itself.

Because I am not financially invested in politics or the projects that politicians bend rules to protect or instigate, I felt a freedom to be me.  I said what I felt and how I felt it.  I am an activist and an artist, after all.  I’m accustomed to my First Amendment privileges.  Some people were taken aback by that.  Someone in politics saying what they actually feel?  Quelle surprise!

Things were going swimmingly as I ran my campaign by myself, until politics itself reared its ugly head.  My opponent, the current candidate for the general election, made strange, passive aggressive comments about me on his Facebook page, but I had only met him a few days prior.  As one Facebook viewer commented, he seemed to be taking cues from Palazzo.  So it was very disheartening to see this sort of political play within the Democratic campaign.  Silly me.  I thought the dirty stuff wouldn’t happen until one of us went up against the GOP candidate.  He deleted the comments, but I took screen shots, so I have it on record.

Fast forward to the past few days in which people all over the Democrat and left leaners’ Facebook pages were debating whether to vote Democrat or cross over to sink Palazzo by voting for Taylor in the Republican primary.  It has been a whirlwind of hypotheses on which would result in a better outcome…. because apparently Democrats voting for Democrats is deemed unnecessary by some.

There were many angry words within the Democrats the past week or so, and this likewise was sad to see.  Every single rights’ group I have ever worked with has fallen apart due to in-fighting: name-calling, labeling, inability to understand another’s perspective.  Why do you think the right-wing is so successful?  They are united in their narrow focus of protecting their power and their wealth for their little bubble.  Activism caves in to in-fighting for the very quality that makes activists so strong — our diversity!  Of course, we will disagree!  We have so many diverse backgrounds and experiences that we have many choice personal stories to engage and learn from.  THAT is the ONLY way we will ultimately defeat the united front that is the GOP.

Even with the Tea Party faction finally losing its stranglehold on the “stupid party”, the GOP is still rich and powerful.  Instead of using our differences against each other, we should use our different but equal experiences as bricks in a foundation on which to build up our activist groups.   THAT is how we create change that will rise up through society to our government.  Government does not exist to be proactive for the People.  The politicians are representatives; they take their cues from We, the People.  And when We, the People don’t give a rat’s ass to vote or are too busy arguing amongst ourselves within our little groups, the united stupid party wins and the People lose.

Which brings us to tonight’s results for the 2014 midterms’ primary election for Mississippi’s 4th Congressional District.  Democrats reportedly crossed over to vote for Taylor, while Republicans crossed over to vote for my opponent.  I will consider this to be a sign the Republicans were scared that someone like me could whip Palazzo’s ass in the general.

When the final tally came in, I had 44.6% of the vote.  I wish I had had enough votes to go to the general, but that is not to be.

Trish-Causey-2014-Run-for-Congress-Final-Results

I have to remember that for most of these voters, I came out of nowhere just 4 months ago.  I’ve been told that my running in this election has changed the political landscape of Mississippi.  I’ve been told that my running has encouraged other progressives and liberals in my district to be more outspoken, now that they know they are not alone in this Red Sea.

I have to remember that I am unlike ANY candidate who has ever run for Congressional office in Mississippi.  I was up front about my ArousedWoman activism, and my bisexuality, and my non-Christian, pagan beliefs.  AND I AM A WOMAN.  And I got a whopping 44.6% of the votes.  Just today, I got calls from people in Taylor’s home turf, Hancock County, to tell me how glad they were to be able to vote for me.

At 44.6% (4,848 votes), I guess I did okay for a loudmouth, non-Christian, bisexual, pagan female candidate in Mississippi.  Is this Red Sea looking a little purple, now?

I’ve already been asked if I will run for State office next year.  If I recall, the people in my area really like their State legislators.  But here is what you need to know….

I learned a lot from this process.  I already knew that every major change in our society began with a grassroots movement within the People.  Change trickles UP, not downward.  And now I know why.  The People must be awakened in order for government to awaken to the needs of the People (remember, “to stir to action, to awaken”?).  As long as half the People are asleep in their bubble, the rest of us will suffer for their narrow-minded bigotries, while they decry our refusal to settle for oppression at the hands of crony capitalism, religion-infused politics, and good-ol’-boy games.

If I run for another office, I will be even MORE loud and proud about my activism for women.  I will be even MORE persistent with fighting for equality and non-discrimination.  And I will be even MORE up-in-your-face about saving Mississippi from the tentacles of the rabid GOP monstrosity that seeks to pull us under every time we catch a gasp of air in this Red Sea.

I will NEVER back down from the GOP’s misogyny, racism, homophobia, and selfish egotism.  EVER.

If you want to support my activism, make a tax-deductible donation to my radio show.

But don’t ask me to run unless you’re really ready for my brand of full-throttle activism.

Until then, I love you all.  Thank you so much for your love and support.

Namaste.

trish


Ordinary People Can Do Amazing Things

Trish Causey - Liberal Democrat, Mississippi 4th District, running for U.S. House of Representatives 2014One of the things I’ve learned in this process is that many people look at candidates and elected officials to be perfect or flawless.  Why are ordinary mortals put on such pedestals?  It certainly doesn’t help when the candidates themselves try to pretend to be perfect.

I openly admit I’m human.  I am an ordinary person just like you.  I have always traveled the path not taken to learn as much as I can.  This philosophy has been one of the guiding principals in my eclectic life and my writing — I just wanted to experience as much of life as I could.  From a spiritual perspective, that is the main reason we incarnate into these carbon-based bodies: to live, to learn, to love, to make mistakes, to grow, and to move forward, sharing our learned wisdom and helping others as we go along.

So much of politics is about being “in the club”, which is why so many of us feel left out of the process.  I think that is also why so many elected officials seem like dead-inside-robots, as if they are all manufactured in a factory for their party’s bubble or their campaign donors.  They are zombies to the political machine that finances their campaign for political favors later.

The founding fathers established a process whereby the average person could step up and take a position of leadership to represent the People.  So, I’m here, stepping up, ready to make herstory for Mississippi and help Mississippi ease into the 21st century — so the rest of the country can see Mississippi for all she has to offer.  And I hope you will step up at the primary this Tuesday.

Ordinary people can do amazing things.  Change has always happened from within the People and moved upward to the legislative and executive branches of our government.  And YOU can turn Mississippi BLUE.  In fact, the only way Mississippi will finally lose the GOP stranglehold is when the People actually get to the polls and vote Democrat.

I hope you will vote for me on Tuesday, June 3rd.

trish

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Trish Causey’s Interview on Liberal Fix Radio to Discuss Progressive Liberal Democrat Issues

Liberal Fix Radio Trish Causey Interview on Progressive Liberal Democrat IssuesLast night, I did an interview on the internet radio show, Liberal Fix.  All progressive, all liberal, all the time!

Keith and Naomi were great to talk to. They asked me about Mississippi and what we’re like politically, socially, economically, as well as what it’s like for me to be an open progressive liberal in such a Red State.  We talked about various issues, including women’s issues, LGBT, religion, and more.

I can’t wait to be back on and continue to get the word out that progressive liberals are here and ready to kick the GOP out of office around the country.

Check out my interview: Liberal Fix w/ Trish Causey (D) candidate for C0ngress in (MS-04), and leave a comment below to let me know what you think.

trish

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I am running for Congress, not Miss Congeniality.

comment-sound-bites-anonI received this message on my Facebook page last night:

Hi Trish, Your sound bites are catchy and are point on. I’d like to edit your blogs, though, to soften up the rough edges and present your ideas respectfully. I like what Delores Huerta says in defining Peace. “Peace is respecting other’s civil rights.” Please contact me.

Thanks, but no thanks.

Did it ever occur to you that I write what I write in the way I write it for a reason?

I’m a professional freelance writer.  I know all the whiz-bang fancy techniques for writing.  I can even spout off some $5 words to impress you with my communication lexicon.  However, I write exactly what I want in the exact manner I want to express it for an exact purpose — waking up the people in Mississippi.  I have a basic right to be angry and a First Amendment right to express my anger.  I will not have my activism “edited” because it doesn’t meet your approval.  (P.S. “sound byte” is spelled with “y”.)

Being born and raised in Mississippi, I was brought up in the fine arts and private schools.  I was trained on all the fine points of being ladylike and demure, exhibiting the epitome of etiquette and decorum.  As an activist, I choose not to use them.

I am running for Congress, not Miss Congeniality.  I don’t exist to make anyone feel warm and fuzzy inside.  What I want more than anything is for people to get angry, to wake up from the apathy, to stop guzzling the Kool-Aid that GOP leaders have been shoving down Mississippians’ throats for decades.  I want people to get angry and funnel that anger into action.  Action.  Activism.  Awakening.  But don’t pollute the air with complaining.  Get up off the couch and march to the voting booth to create change.

From day one of my campaign, I have said I am not a politician.  I am an ActivistArtist.  From day one of my campaign, people have told me how to talk, how to be, how to dress, even how to style my hair in order to get elected.  Interestingly, these admonitions come from older white men and a few white women.  Some of these older men talk to me like I’m a three-year-old simply because I’m female.  I doubt they would talk to me in their condescending manner if I were a man.  And when confronted with a strong, opinionated woman, confident in herself and her abilities, they tend to storm off in a temper tantrum because I stood up to them.

If you prefer candidates who will do or say whatever they need to in order to get elected, then vote for one of the other candidates.  I don’t want your vote if all you want is yet another puppet in office.  Vote for one of the millionaire Republican candidates — you have your choice between a misogynist corporatist and a political party flip-flopper.

What some of you have failed to see is that I’m not running for the position of Diplomat.  I feel no need to play nicely with the opposite party who spends our tax dollars to violate our rights and waste our money on a daily basis.  Mississippi needs someone who is not afraid to go balls to the wall for our basic rights — those rights which are implied because we are human beings and those where are expressly guaranteed to be protected by our Constitution because we are Americans.

I’m here to be the People’s Representative, not the congenial puppet.

trish

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The Race Is On

Trish Causey - Liberal Democrat, Mississippi 4th District, running for U.S. House of Representatives 2014Now that the race is officially on, let’s review.

I am not a politician.  I am an activist.  I am not here to play games.  I will not change who I am for anyone.

The government is supposed to be here for the People.  NOT the corporations.

The First Amendment, the philosophy of Separation of Church and State, and the Treaty of Tripoli are very clear on keeping religion out of government.

Women are free autonomous human beings with inherent rights to our bodies.  The government has no right to legislate birth control or abortion.  Funny how Congress doesn’t legislate the birth control measures used by men, such as condoms and vasectomies, only the birth control and body autonomy procedures used by women.   Stay OUT of our bodies and our bedrooms.

LGBT are likewise human beings who have an inherent right to love whom we choose.  Love is love.

I am a pacifist and will never vote for war, mainly because war is no longer about protecting our homeland but making the warmongers even wealthier billionaires.  As a mother, I will not vote to endanger the life of someone else’s child to line the pockets of those who run the war machine simply for profit.  Also, our veterans are not props for photo-ops; they are human beings who risked their lives for ours and deserve whatever help they need to heal and transition to civilian life.

The United States is a nation of immigrants, therefore immigration reform is a necessity not an option.

We cannot fix our economic issues by building new Walmarts.  Mississippians need to be able to earn a living wage working jobs that actually enrich our communities, not settle for subsisting on a low-wage job at yet another soul-sucking mega-corporation.

We cannot fix our educational system by instituting more standardized tests.  Mississippi needs to focus on paying its teachers a decent salary and actually teaching students skills they will need for college and in the real world.

Student loans for college should be more easily available and provided at the previous interest rate of 3.4%.  Starting a career with $100,000+ of debt to educational loan sharks is obscene.

Mississippi’s obesity, diabetes, and health statistics are not only abysmal, they are a direct result of a food supply that has been sold out to monolopies in Agri-Biz, while processed junk food has become the staple of many people’s lives — mostly due to economics.  We need GMO-ingredients tagged on all nutritional labels so consumers can make informed choices.  We need to support our local farmers and educate residents on healthy nutrition options.

Children should not be hungry.  Ever.

Social security benefits have been earned by the recipient and should not be touched or bartered away by the millionaires in Congress who don’t live paycheck to paycheck as our older residents do.

Mississippi NEEDS to expand Medicaid, and Mississippians need to understand what the ACA (Obamacare) really is.

A family that uses Medicaid or Food Stamps during tough times is not something to be ashamed of.  What is shameful is a country having a Congress, over half of whom are millionaires, that shuts down the government, cuts food stamps, cuts unemployment benefits, doubles the student loan interest rate, meddles with social security, spends taxpayer dollars to regulate women’s bodies, spews hate toward LGBT and immigrants, and ignores its veterans.

Mississippians need to stop watching FOX News and hear some truth.

This is just the beginning.  If you agree, vote for me in the June primary.  If you disagree with me, then you’re part of the problem Mississippi needs to overcome.

“Be the change you wish to see in the world.” ~ Gandhi

trish

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A Well-Funded, Viable Candidate…

Trish Causey - Liberal Democrat, Mississippi 4th District, running for U.S. House of Representatives 2014I just had an really great conversation with a fellow MS-04 Democrat.  Because I’ve been talking with the other residents of Mississippi’s 4th Congressional District, I know I’m not the only one past ready for change in Mississippi.  I also know I’m more progressive than what even some of the Democrats want.  Well, I’m no DINO.  I’m a true blue, progressive liberal Democrat.

What’s more, I thought all Democrats were as progressive as I was — after all, the Democratic party is supposed to be the work party for the People….  Or that’s how I always understood it.

Some still feel as if I’m come out of nowhere.  Well, I’ve been here all along, just doing my activist thing as I wanted to do it.  However, the political climate has grown so hostile to most people in the United States that this election is too important to sit back and hope someone goes up against the GOP in November.

This campaign will be a huge battle.  I’m just hoping I’m not going up against people within the Democratic party.  We have to be united if we’re to have any chance of beating Palazzo — or whoever is the GOP candidate.  We can’t waste energy arguing amongst ourselves.  I need LOTS of support — very vocal support as well as monetary support before the Democratic Party believes I’m a candidate for whom the people of MS-04 will vote.

The local Democratic politicos are still looking for a “well-funded, viable candidate”.  If you want someone “well-funded”, then you’re looking for a Republican.  If you want “viable”, then actually ask the People what THEY want in a candidate.  I’m willing to bet that even those Dems who disagree with me on some issues will see that I’m willing to stand up for the People every step of the way in the vortex of greed and corruption that is Washington, D.C.

If I’m too progressive for the MS-04 Democrats and Independents, then we’re screwed.  The ONLY way to defeat the GOP in November is to be “true blue” and loud and proud about being for the People not corporations.

Or just expect more of the same crap we’ve seen from the obstructionist Congress that we have the past several years.

trish

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By the People: Where do I stand on NSA, the Patriot Act, and NDAA

Lincoln-of-the-people-by-the-people-for-the-people(NOTE:  I am starting a new series of posts in which I answer questions submitted to me on Facebook, Twitter, or via old-fashioned email.  I’m calling this series “By the People” because, as your next Representative in Congress, I want to make sure I hear from and respond to the People of Mississippi.)

Trish,

I am aware you are running for Congress, as a Democrat!  I am also a Democrat, however the party has become confused lately in supporting the Presidents NSA, Patriot Act, NDAA, that he has continued and reauthorized.  Democrats need to work against these measures in my opinion, after all we campaigned against that in ’08!  I would like to know what you think about the NSA, Patriot Act, and NDAA. Hope to hear from you soon!  Good luck on the run to unseat Palazzo!

David

Hattiesburg, MS

Dear David,

Thank you so much for writing me and asking such important questions.  I voted for Obama twice, and while I stand by that wholeheartedly, I disagree with some of his choices.  However, he has been trying to work with a Congress whose GOP leaders have said on camera that they will do everything they can to hinder anything Obama wants to accomplish.

As a human rights activist myself, I am likewise very upset that Obama has not repealed the Patriot Act.  I was disgusted when the Patriot Act was implemented under Bush.  The Patriot Act and the Bush Regime’s attempt to make America a theocracy is one of the main reasons I wrote my show Witchcraze, set during the Salem Witch Trials, to correlate the human rights violations by men in power who believe they can create the rules for the masses as they go along and then espouse, “If you’re not with us, you’re against us,” setting up anyone who disagrees with them as a “terrorist”.

Which brings me to Gitmo.  The NDAA 2014 continues to violate basic civil rights, even as Obama says he wants to close Guantanamo Bay Prison.  However, I think this is yet another case in which Obama has tried to get something done while having to placate the war-hungry GOP.

The NSA debacle is proof that our government is so far out of bounds that only major reform across the board will fix the problems that have been allowed to fester over the years.  That reform will only happen by getting do-nothing politicians out of their cushy jobs and allow hard-workers to be voted into office so we can clean this mess up.

It’s a big task, and it won’t happen overnight; but we at least need to get it started, which won’t happen as long as there’s a GOP House stalling the important issues (and shutting down the government).  American politics is a game of whom you know, how much money you have, and whether you “do lunch” with the right people.  The founders of the United States would be appalled at the “inbred” system of injustice and corporatism that Congress has become.

I’m ready to #CleanHouse2014.  I hope you are, too.

trish

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