Adam Sullivan Ends Campaign: Nadler Breathes a Sigh of Relief
Adam Sullivan, who was challenging Congressman Nadler in the Democratic primary Sept. 9th mainly over the issue of impeachment, has declared he is ending any active campaigning. From his website:
New York, NY Adam Sullivan announced today that he will no longer actively seek to unseat Congressman Jerrold Nadler (NY-8) in the September Democratic primary, but he will continue his fight to persuade Nadler and the Congress to initiate impeachment hearings against the Bush Administration.
In a press conference held outside the U.S. Post Office in Manhattan, Sullivan explained that he did not mention to his campaign staff that he had changed his enrollment from unaffiliated to Democrat at the start of the campaign, incorrectly assuming that his change of enrollment would be current at the time his petitions were filed. Members of his campaign assumed that he was a properly enrolled Democrat. According to New York state election law, Sullivan would have had to have changed his enrollment by October 12, 2007 to run in this year’s primary. “I regret if I have let down my supporters but given the rules I cannot in good faith continue this campaign through to the primary,” Sullivan said.
At the same time, Sullivan vowed to fight on over the issue that prompted him to run—impeachment. Of Nadler, he said, “His outright contempt for the process of impeachment makes him unfit to serve as Chairman of the [House Judiciary Committee] Subcommittee on the Constitution. His abandonment of the Constitution in its hour of greatest need—when he has sworn an Oath of Office eight times to protect and defend it, when he could use his Chairmanship to draw his district’s and perhaps the nation’s attention to impeachment proceedings . . . makes Representative Nadler complicit in our nation’s current suffering and the assaults on our freedoms.”
As for next steps, Sullivan stated “I will continue to seek other avenues, other ways to press my congressman on this issue. I will continue to support those in government who are truly progressive, who are committed to preserving the living Constitution, and who truly represent their constituents. With this in mind, I and others are making arrangements to travel to the nation’s capital on Friday, where we will assemble to show our support for Congressman Kucinich as he and others testify before the full House Judiciary Committee on the matter of the illegal war in Iraq and other related abuses of Executive Power.”
Oops. I want to say two things about this. First off, Sullivan and his supporters are right that Nadler has been an absolute eunuch when it comes to impeachment. I have heard his reasoning and I think he is dead wrong. His arguement lost most of its weight in 2006 when it was clear that opposition to Bush is the best route to electoral victory. And this failure on Nadler's part is even more stark when I learned that even some 9 Republicans supported a recent impeachment vote. What would it have taken for Nadler to have supported impeachment? Congress's inaction against Bush's abuses of power and Constitutional violations is a horrible precedent that will allow a much stronger executive branch than the Founding Fathers ever intended. Nadler's reasoning would have blocked impeachment hearings against Nixon as far as I can tell. If someone like Nadler doesn't stand up against Bush's abuses of power then it is hard to imagine who will. Quite a disappointment.
That said, I have found the impeachment movement's challenge of Nadler to be ill organized and ill fated from day one. They went through some three candidates before settling on Sullivan, each potential candidate made very basic mistakes (e.g. Sullivan's registration fiasco) that leave the whole movement looking like amateurs. Contrast that with the much more professional challenges being made against Shelly Silver by Paul Newell and Luke Henry. A longshot challenge against a long time incumbent doesn't have to look lame! I like Nadler, but I also felt the challenge by the impeachment movement was important. The electoral challenges by the anti-Ratner movement in Brooklyn have not generally been successful but yet have in many cases led to the seemingly more pro-Ratner candidate taking on a more balanced approach to Atlantic Yards Yassky and Jeffries, for example, took on tougher stands towards Ratner after they were challenged by the anti-Ratner movement. The impeachment movement could have had their desired effect, but only by being far more effective and organized than they actually were.
election 2008 | Impeachment
Which nine Republicans?
Seriously, which ones? And where (if you can tell us) did you hear about it?
Here you go
From Daily Kos:
Congressman Kevin Brady (TX)
Congressman Wayne Gilchrest (MD)
Congressman Walter B. Jones (NC)
Representative Don Manzullo (IL)
U.S. Congressman Tim Murphy(PA)
Congressman Ron Paul (TX)
Congressman Dave Reichert (WA)
Congressman Christopher Shays (CT)
Representative Mike Turner (OH)
impeachment movement is disorganized / the Dems refuse to lead
Mole, I also thank you for covering all this. And you're right, we are disorganized, meaning the citizens both here in NYC and nationwide who made the time between our jobs, families and life in general to work as hard as we could to hold the Bush Administration and its enablers of all parties responsible for what they did, continue to do, and in the case of holding impeachment hearings, refuse to do. We are disorganized because people in leadership positions in government (such as Nadler) as well as in corporate America and the main stream media who could have provided the necessary organization and focus have been astonishingly AWOL in sounding the alarms necessary to protect the Constitution. To slightly revise Naomi Wolf, tyranny is not only easy (liberty is hard), it’s well organized. Most citizens at one time thought we had elected officials and a free press to hold powerful feet to the fire. Those illusions are now long gone for many of us, and not a moment too soon.
As a result, normal citizens have taken on this fight ourselves. In some ways, the millions of involved Americans have done an amazing job of organizing, as anyone spending any time online at all over the last 7 years can tell you. We have made a mighty noise in Congress, and we have been heard. Nadler hears us loud and clear, I guarantee you that. The tragedy, one might say crime, is that Nadler, Conyers, Pelosi and even St. Obama (“impeachment is unacceptable”) just choose to ignore us. While we have the Constitution on our side, we don't have the bucks to compete with the vested interests that do not want true representational government, vigorous executive oversight or a moral commitment to keeping America a nation of laws, not men.
If we learn anything in high school about how our government is supposed to work, we learn about the Separation of Powers. We learn that the Legislative, Judicial and Executive branches are designed to be co-equal in order to check and balance each other. Yet under the Bush Administration, the Democrats as a party have refused to fight to restore this Constitutional order as a reality. Instead, they helped bury it. By reducing Congressional and Judicial relevance and ensuring future Executive overreach and lawlessness, Jerry Nadler and his fellow Democrats have damned us to repeat our mistakes, which will inevitably lead to more stupid, illegal, bloody wars for resources and corporate empire building.
On the bright side, if Nadler is breathing easier, he won't be for long. People in the 8th now know he is hardly the Constitutional warrior he claims to be. He should have led the fight to hold impeachment hearings. Instead, he took his marching orders from Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton. He dug in and protected the status quo. He showed himself to be the calculating pol so many of his constituents always knew him to be, and hopefully we’ll get rid of him in 2010. But his problems don't matter - as Adam Sullivan says the Constitution is what matters and it's now no longer operative in Washington. As a nation, we will look back at this gutless, complicit 110th Congress and wonder why the hell they refused to do their jobs.
My good friends who worked so hard for Adam Sullivan should be damn proud of themselves, and Adam is a hero for standing up and speaking Truth To Power. It’s to his credit that he wasn’t a lifelong Democrat, and I urge him to switch back to being an Independent as soon as possible.
Dave Robinson
Brooklyn NY
Fair enough
But I am also just a citizen who made time between my job, family and life in general to work as hard as I can as a blogger and activist. DDDB is composed of citizens who made the time between their jobs, families and life in general to work as hard as they can for Brooklyn. Many candidates I know are citizens who made the time between their jobs, families and life in general to work as hard as they can to win elections. I understand it's tough and Sullivan's people aren't unique in this. But a grassroots campaign begins at a disadvantage. It will almost never get the backing and funding of a mainstream campaign. So it has to compensate for that. And disorganization and mistakes will doom it to failure.
Grassroots either have to forge strong ties to more mainstream groups (e.g. unions or collaborations with the mainstream party) OR they have to excell. Otherwise they will fail and fail miserably. A grand effort by the impeachment movement bogged down in mistakes and disorganization. It didn't have to happen that way. Many candidates I know are just as busy and grassroots based. They know they can't make any mistakes if they want to have any shot. Sullivan and the impeachment movement, perhaps, will learn from this. At first DDDB made some blunders, and for similar reasons that you did. But they learned fast and have continued to hold up Ratner despite being amateurs who made the time between their jobs, families and life in general to work as hard as they could...in a more careful way.

















Nadler Breaths a Sigh of Relief
Thank you for your coverage of Adam Sullivan's campaign.
This effort was undertaken by impeachment advocates, all volunteers, without fundraisers, campaign managers, or field coordinators. In spite of this, Sullivan reached audiences in the street and in the Democratic clubs, and garnered close to 2,000 petition signatures. This challenge to Jerrold Nadler was staged solely to get Nadler's attention and persuade him to hold impeachment hearings, not to win an election.
Sullivan's campaign may yet prove more effective than Henry's or Newell's.