First three paragraphs of the article:
Next week, the Democratic Party will be having its Central Committee Meeting in Tonopah. (December 4th.) I attended my first of such meetings between the Primary election and the General election and it disproved (yet again) the idea that we live in a democracy. I attended the meeting with several of the DeVoe campaign activists, including Rick DeVoe and George Matthews, the campaign manager. When we arrived, we discovered there was free pizza, and enough for everyone, but there were not enough copies of the agenda.
Agendas be damned, the meeting was called to order and Adriana Martinez chaired the meeting under the strict direction of Rebecca Lamb, executive director. There were many representatives from all the different Nevada counties (called “rurals”) who gave reports on their Get Out the Vote efforts, and there was your typical treasurer’s report, no details, no written copy, no transparency, no chance for asking questions. There was encouragement and advice based on statistics of voter positions, and warnings about talking to potential voters about hot-button issues. Certain issues are approved for talking about- others, like the war, were more divisive. It’s all right there in the statistics- we should not be talking to our neighbors about the war, about abortion rights. Interesting how that’s what people are talking about now anyway.
Once old business had concluded, and we’d heard everyone’s reports, it was time for new business. According to the agenda, after new business was over, there was to be an optional canvassing training session- you know, one of those things no one actually stays for, but it looks good to offer. However, a strange thing happened: Rebecca kept motioning to Adriana to somehow manage to skip new business. Hmm.. What could be going on? The Chair (Adriana) started talking about unrelated things when Rick DeVoe asked the Chair when new business was going to begin. Instead of the Chair answering, Rebecca answered that she wanted to do the cavassing training first, then new business. This deviation from the agenda would effectively assure that no one would stay for new business, because the training session would break up the meeting and people would go home. Adriana recognized some people in the back who reminded them they’d driven four hours to cover new business. At this point, Rebecca moved that we do training first, then new business, and the entire room shouted the loudest “NO!” I’ve ever heard. Now *that* was unity! Defeated, they began new business.
http://lasvegas.staughton.indypgh.org/news/2004/11/800.php