CHADDS FORD DEMOCRATIC PARTY             CHADDS FORD TOWNSHIP, DELAWARE COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA

 

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Joe Sestak   General Information

 

 PREAMBLE

 

The goals of our Party are to nurture democracy in our unique and cherished town; to help return Honesty, Competence and Democracy to the White House; to institute effective Energy Policy, International Diplomacy, protection of Individual Privacy, Budget Discipline, Political Fundraising Reform, balance on the Supreme Court, Universal Health Care and a host of other core values that are now being held hostage by right wing Republican extremism.

   

We are concerned with the neglect of the public interest by a number of Township Administrations over the last 30 years.  In contravention of the requirements of the State the last Comprehensive Plan for the Township was May 1973.  The plan put in place at that time has been essentially ignored; for example, in 1973 Camp Sunset Hill was described as Protected Open Space; it is now a Toll Brothers private preserve, grinding on our local infrastructure instead of beautifying our surroundings.

 

Absence of democracy in the township has resulted in poor government. This track record has continued to the current day with many examples such as the effective destruction, by extensive, ecologically damaging, speculative development, of Atwater Road – an area that was once one of the most beautiful in the Township.

 

Our Party is a genuinely inclusive group: We are willing to utilize the talents of our fellow residents based on ability and dedication without the application of the litmus tests of ideological purity or political apathy.  

 

We would ask you to judge your Township Administration not by what they say they will do, but by what they have done and, equally importantly, what they have failed to do, over the last 6 – 8 years of explosive growth.   

  

To achieve these goals, we will:

 

  • Help to restore the founding visions of our country as a responsible, caring, genuine democracy both in the eyes of our citizens and the eyes of the world.

 

  • Continue to provide a continuous flow of information to our residents on issues of national, state and local importance.

 

  • Promote the acquisition of Open Space to help stem the decay of our Township. Emphasis will be on preserving the beauty of our environment.  We were active in supporting and in helping to pass our local Open Space Referendum to purchase open space and in taking a modest step in the direction of meaningful Township Ordinances.  We also supported and helped to pass Governor Rendell’s Growing Greener initiative at the State level.

 

  • Protect the property rights and property values of members of our Township; encouraging the responsible management of Township growth. Push for property tax reform in Harrisburg.

 

  • Be fiscally responsible and seek long-term solutions to our financial problems rather than being dependent on handouts from corporations. Toll Brothers is not a public interest organization. We need hardheaded but creative management of our fiscal affairs so that we can withstand the predations of speculative builders.

 

  • Replacing members of the current Township Administration who have not responded well to the Township’s needs; we do have some good public servants; unfortunately they are few in number.

 

  • Complete the integration of our local Party into Pennsylvania State Democratic Party activities; developing ties at the National Level.

 

Some questions for residents to ponder:

 

  • Why was a Comprehensive Plan for the Township defeated eight years ago (one that could have mitigated the disaster of unrestrained infill development that is putting a McMansion on every available 2 acres in the Township)?  Why is there no Comprehensive Plan in place today?

 

  • Why was a $260,000 plan for an historic Township Hall defeated eight years ago to be replaced with a $1,500,000 exercise today? 

 

  • What will be the effect of the new sewer system on the rate of speculative construction in the Township? What will be the effect on the Turner’s Mill property when the sewage plant is installed and effluent begins to flow into Harvey Run?

 

Your local Democratic Party has accomplished a great deal in its two year existence.

If you want a voice in Local, County, State and National Politics, become part of our organization. If you wish to see Chadds Ford preserved and the avalanche of speculative development slowed, step forward. If you think Property taxes are too high, join the group. If you feel unrepresented in the Township Administration, give us your support. We believe that Democrats want a continuing face and a continuing presence in our historic Township. We invite you to contribute to our Party, to become a member, to join us in fostering a two party system in Chadds Ford.

 

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The article below is not a Platform; nevertheless it speaks to much of what we stand for; it is well worth considering. 

The DelCoDem Platform is given in following the section

The New York Times
 


February 12, 2006

Editorial

The Trust Gap

We can't think of a president who has gone to the American people more often than George W. Bush has to ask them to forget about things like democracy, judicial process and the balance of powers — and just trust him. We also can't think of a president who has deserved that trust less.

This has been a central flaw of Mr. Bush's presidency for a long time. But last week produced a flood of evidence that vividly drove home the point.

DOMESTIC SPYING After 9/11, Mr. Bush authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on the conversations and e-mail of Americans and others in the United States without obtaining a warrant or allowing Congress or the courts to review the operation. Lawmakers from both parties have raised considerable doubt about the legality of this program, but Attorney General Alberto Gonzales made it clear last Monday at a Senate hearing that Mr. Bush hasn't the slightest intention of changing it.

According to Mr. Gonzales, the administration can be relied upon to police itself and hold the line between national security and civil liberties on its own. Set aside the rather huge problem that our democracy doesn't work that way. It's not clear that this administration knows where the line is, much less that it is capable of defending it. Mr. Gonzales's own dedication to the truth is in considerable doubt. In sworn testimony at his confirmation hearing last year, he dismissed as "hypothetical" a question about whether he believed the president had the authority to conduct warrantless surveillance. In fact, Mr. Gonzales knew Mr. Bush was doing just that, and had signed off on it as White House counsel.

THE PRISON CAMPS It has been nearly two years since the Abu Ghraib scandal illuminated the violence, illegal detentions and other abuses at United States military prison camps. There have been Congressional hearings, court rulings imposing normal judicial procedures on the camps, and a law requiring prisoners to be treated humanely. Yet nothing has changed. Mr. Bush also made it clear that he intends to follow the new law on the treatment of prisoners when his internal moral compass tells him it is the right thing to do.

On Thursday, Tim Golden of The Times reported that United States military authorities had taken to tying up and force-feeding the prisoners who had gone on hunger strikes by the dozens at Guantánamo Bay to protest being held without any semblance of justice. The article said administration officials were concerned that if a prisoner died, it could renew international criticism of Gitmo. They should be concerned. This is not some minor embarrassment. It is a lingering outrage that has undermined American credibility around the world.

According to numerous news reports, the majority of the Gitmo detainees are neither members of Al Qaeda nor fighters captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan. The National Journal reported last week that many were handed over to the American forces for bounties by Pakistani and Afghan warlords. Others were just swept up. The military has charged only 10 prisoners with terrorism. Hearings for the rest were not held for three years and then were mostly sham proceedings.

And yet the administration continues to claim that it can be trusted to run these prisons fairly, to decide in secret and on the president's whim who is to be jailed without charges, and to insist that Gitmo is filled with dangerous terrorists.

THE WAR IN IRAQ One of Mr. Bush's biggest "trust me" moments was when he told Americans that the United States had to invade Iraq because it possessed dangerous weapons and posed an immediate threat to America. The White House has blocked a Congressional investigation into whether it exaggerated the intelligence on Iraq, and continues to insist that the decision to invade was based on the consensus of American intelligence agencies.

But the next edition of the journal Foreign Affairs includes an article by the man in charge of intelligence on Iraq until last year, Paul Pillar, who said the administration cherry-picked intelligence to support a decision to invade that had already been made. He said Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney made it clear what results they wanted and heeded only the analysts who produced them. Incredibly, Mr. Pillar said, the president never asked for an assessment on the consequences of invading Iraq until a year after the invasion. He said the intelligence community did that analysis on its own and forecast a deeply divided society ripe for civil war.

When the administration did finally ask for an intelligence assessment, Mr. Pillar led the effort, which concluded in August 2004 that Iraq was on the brink of disaster. Officials then leaked his authorship to the columnist Robert Novak and to The Washington Times. The idea was that Mr. Pillar was not to be trusted because he dissented from the party line. Somehow, this sounds like a story we have heard before.

Like many other administrations before it, this one sometimes dissembles clumsily to avoid embarrassment. (We now know, for example, that the White House did not tell the truth about when it learned the levees in New Orleans had failed.) Spin-as-usual is one thing. Striking at the civil liberties, due process and balance of powers that are the heart of American democracy is another.

Delaware County Democratic Party Platform

 

Economic Development

 

1. Provide additional resources for job development, especially for small business development and minority business development.
2. Promote livable communities that end the flight of jobs and residents out of state.

 

Health & Safety

 

3. Establish a county health department to eliminate Delaware County’s status as suburban leader among infant mortality rates, sexually transmitted disease rates, preventable cancer and lyme disease incidence.
4. Provide the county health department with adequate resources to prepare for and fight bio-terror.

 

Education

 

5. Provide funding grants to our community college for non-credit courses for job training purposes, thereby providing additional economic development resources and ending Delaware County’s status as the only suburban County that does not contribute funds to a community college.
6. Address the current schools crisis and minimize the impact of partisan politics on the public education of our children by encouraging local, non-partisan citizen groups to run bi-partisan school director tickets.

 

Political and government reform

 

7. Replace the county council with a county legislature that will provide direct accountability to district voters, reflect in its composition the diverse population of our county, and secure the benefits of two-party government.
8. Reform county hiring practices to insure we hire the most qualified, not the most connected.
9. Oppose the privatization of essential public services.

 

Environmental Conservation and Land Preservation

 

10. Promote smart growth strategies that emphasize environmental conservation and land preservation.
11. Establish a County Grant Office to provide assistance to local governments in preparing grant applications for these purposes.

 

Taxes and Reassessment

 

12. Use the clout of county government to urge property tax reform in Harrisburg.
13. Institute a regular, recurring tax reassessment plan to avoid the mistakes that lead to the recent reassessment debacle.
14. Insure the assessment appeals process is fair to all property owners

 

PO BOX 875, CHADDS FORD, PA 19317-0634

PHONE: (610) 459 4809 

EMAIL: CFDP@COMCAST.NET

 FAX: (610) 358 5914