Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sherman Vs. Berman: California's Doppleganger Democrats Go To War

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sherman Vs. Berman: California's Doppleganger Democrats Go To War

    SHERMAN VS. BERMAN: CALIFORNIA'S DOPPLEGANGER DEMOCRATS GO TO WAR
    By Joel Stein

    TIME Magazine
    Nov 2 2012

    It is a shame, say local Armenian leaders, to have to choose between
    Los Angeles area Congressmen Howard Berman and Brad Sherman, two older,
    balding, Jewish, liberal Democratic Congressmen who both went to UCLA,
    graduated law school, sit on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and
    have nearly identical voting records. Jews also feel it's a shame. As
    do Latinos, environmentalists, union members, gays, the ACLU and
    people who hate traffic on the 405. It's as if San Francisco had
    to choose between their current Congresswoman and a rich, far-left,
    smooth-browed Congresswoman named Ann Shelosi.

    Because of the influx of Latinos in the area, Berman and Sherman knew
    that eventually redistricting would collapse their neighboring San
    Fernando Valley districts and force them to run against each other.

    But they didn't think they'd have to do it two times - once in the
    spotlight of Election Day in a Presidential year. A new California
    law created a "jungle primary," which sends the top two winners,
    regardless of party, to the general election. It's designed
    to reduce the gridlock, vitriol and extremism in Washington by
    promoting centrist candidates who appeal to both parties. Instead,
    it produced a race between Berman and Sherman, the 69th and 85th most
    liberal members of the House.The new district favors 57-year-old,
    eight-term Congressman Sherman over 71-year-old, 15-term Congressman
    Berman: 50% of the new district's voters are already represented by
    Sherman, and another 25% used to be before a round of redistricting in
    2003. Only 25 percent come from Berman's old district. In the primary
    on June 5, when only 80,000 people voted, Sherman beat Berman by 10
    points.The challenge of having debates between these candidates, it
    would seem, would be finding something to debate. It didn't turn out
    to be a problem. Though they started out their September 29 debate
    at Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School by complimenting each other,
    Sherman quickly accused Berman of being part of the Turkish caucus,
    "the number one Armenian genocide-denying caucus in the U.S. Congress!"

    Shortly after calling Sherman "a brother in arms," Berman also said
    he was "full of it" and accused him of "venom and smears and lies
    and distortion." Later, Sherman shook his head and said, "This isn't
    a place for schoolyard putdowns."

    (PHOTOS: Political Pictures of the Week, Oct. 19-25)

    Outside on the blacktop, a perfect place for schoolyard putdowns,
    Berman and Sherman stood within five feet of each other as volunteers
    fenced them in by holding aloft campaign banners while the candidates
    did local TV interviews with their backs facing each other. The
    opposition videotaped every word, hoping for a gaffe, even though these
    interviews were already going to be on TV. When I talked to a Berman
    staffer about setting a date for our interview, Matthew Dababneh,
    Sherman's chief of staff yelled at me, so the Berman folks could hear
    him, "We'll talk to the press at any time! We have nothing to hide!"

    Sitting at a small desk in an office in the high school, Sherman
    explained that his dislike of Berman isn't new. It started back
    in 2001 over redistricting after the census. "He tried to create
    a district where there was a one block wide corridor connecting my
    house to this district so that one of his key allies would beat me,"
    he said. Berman's brother Michael, a confidante of the Clintons
    who was a partner in political consulting firm Berman & D'Agostino,
    helped run the redistricting.

    There's more than just a history of political jockeying. Though
    their backgrounds are similar and they live three miles apart, people
    who've been to enough big Passover Seders can recognize that Berman
    and Sherman are two very different types of Jews. Berman is reserved
    and academic; Sherman is outgoing and aggressive. It's the Neurotic
    Jew versus the Tough Jew; Woody Allen versus David Mamet.

    Berman is a key foreign policy player who has sponsored far more
    legislation in his career (he accuses Sherman of having only
    sponsored three bills in his entire career, "and two were renaming
    post offices.") "Brad is very much in love with being a Congressman. I
    love the job. It's not the title," Berman said in his campaign office,
    which features a mocking cartoon of Sherman spouting all his rehearsed
    lines. "If elites voted, I would win overwhelmingly." He qualifies
    elites to mean his Congressional colleagues-with no candidate in
    the race, Republicans like John McCain and Lindsey Graham have backed
    Berman-but he also has been endorsed by the L.A. Times and the Valleys'
    Daily News, and has had fundraisers hosted by Jeffery Katzenberg,
    David Geffen and Steven Spielberg. Betty White, along with Wendy
    Malick, appear in an ad for Berman, endorsing him for the good work
    he's done for pets.

    Sherman is closer to his constituents, going to far more local events
    where he hands out flags and combs (Sherman, you see, doesn't need
    them.) Sherman finds Berman to be arrogant and condescending. "He's
    above it. He not only has disdain for me personally but the process
    of having to run instead of being anointed," Sherman says. "You can
    almost see the self-loathing when he has to imitate me. He showed
    up at a Little League closing ceremony. Do you know how much he
    hates that?" Berman won't even give Sherman the facts on the Little
    League event, insisting it was a soccer game. "Brad may not know the
    difference," he says. But he does concede that he dislikes pandering
    for votes.

    The campaigns have spent more than $9 million altogether on the race so
    far- a SuperPAC has bought nearly $1.5 million in ads for Berman-and
    most of that money has been spent attacking each other. The campaigns
    have accused each other of improper use of funds that are pretty benign
    (Berman for paying his brother to be his campaign manager and taking
    free research trips overseas as ranking member of the foreign affairs
    committee; Sherman for lending his own campaign money at a low-interest
    rate). "It went from Mayberry to Hatfield and McCoy," says Rob Eshman,
    the editor of L.A.'s Jewish Journal, who arranged one of their debates
    in February. "Just to get them to agree on a venue and the rules,
    you would have thought it was Palestinians and Israelis. They say
    politics makes for strange bedfellows. It makes for angry bedfellows."

    That anger was on display October 11, when Berman and Sherman had
    another debate. Shortly before the debate ended, Sherman accused
    Berman of not really authoring the DREAM Act as he claims; Berman, who
    did help write it, became frustrated and got in Sherman's face. Then
    Sherman, who is quite a bit taller, grabbed Berman by the shoulder,
    pulled him into his chest and yelled, "You want to get into this?" The
    sheriff's deputy pulled them apart, and some Sherman campaign workers
    gently led their candidate to his podium. The debate got more than
    125,000 hits on YouTube and was shown on The Today Show.

    The Berman campaign seized upon outburst, claiming it plays into their
    argument that Berman is the more effective, respected, non-hitting
    statesman. "Brad massively exaggerates his role. The notion that the
    guy you saw in that debate - that Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson were
    listening to that guy and changed TARP because of him is preposterous.

    He's like Zelig. He's in Yalta. He's in Munich," says Berman. "He
    is neither dumb nor lazy. He doesn't have the skill set to work well
    with other people." During my hour in Berman's headquarters during our
    interview, two people dropped off checks to the campaign citing the
    fight. One recent poll showed Sherman's lead reduced from 10 points
    to 6.

    And there's still a few days left for the race to get even rougher.

    California's new primary system was based on the assumption that the
    negative tone in Washington is due to extremism. But it turns out
    that politics is even meaner when two people agree on everything.

    http://swampland.time.com/2012/11/02/sherman-vs-berman-californias-doppleganger-democrats-slug-it-out/

Working...
X