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Keith Roark elected as new...
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Keith Roark elected as new IDP Chairman
Saturday, January 5, 2008
Contact: Chuck Oxley
(208) 871-4976 (office)
BOISE, Idaho –
Members of the Idaho Democratic Party’s
Central
Committee voted Friday to elect attorney Keith
Roark as their new chairman.
Roark, a
central Idaho
resident, was last
seen in politics in 2002, when he ran for
Idaho Attorney General against
Republican Lawrence Wasden, although defeated
at the polls, Roark won the
endorsements of many newspaper editorial
boards and even some high-profile
Republicans.
Roark’s
comments
following the vote Friday appear below:
“It is time for
Idaho
Democrats to take a cold, hard look at some
rather dismal
facts. In the
general elections of 1994,
1998, 2002 and 2006,
Idaho
Democrats have lost twenty four of the twenty
eight races
for statewide office.
Today, not one statewide
elected official is a Democrat. We have
not won a
U.S.
Senate race since 1974 and have lost every race
for the
U.S.
House of Representatives since 1992.
“Unfortunately for
all Idahoans,
Democrats, Republicans and independents alike,
at the statewide level, Idaho
no longer has a two party system. As a result, there is no
accountability for
our top elected officials.
Idaho
currently has a United States Senator who has
disgraced
our state and placed his own petty interests
above the good of the public. We have a United States
Representative whose
comments about Islam show not only ignorance
of the
United
States
Constitution but a total lack of common
decency. We have a
Governor who never holds a press
conference and disdains the very notion of
public access to elected
officials. Where
there is no effective,
two party system there is no
accountability.
Where there is no accountability there
is no responsibility.
Elected officials, under such
circumstances,
eventually ignore not just those who did not
vote for them but those who did as
well.
“Today, I feel
the first,
faint rumblings of a still distant earthquake
that will eventually restore
integrity, fair play and openness in
Idaho
government. The special interests, in the
absence of a two
party system, have come closer each year to
replacing the power of the ballot
with the raw and merciless power of the
almighty dollar.
But Idahoans, like Americans
everywhere,
eventually come back to an understanding of
just how important a vibrant two
party system is to liberty, justice and good
government. When that happens, as
it must, the lobbyists will lose their place
in the halls of
government.
“I am a
realist. The one
party system is firmly entrenched in
this state and will not be overcome in a
single election year.
The road ahead is long and hard. We are going to be
patient, persistent, and
tenacious. We are
going to rebuild our
party from the ground up.
Seizing upon
the winds of change that are clearly blowing
across this nation, we will build
momentum, not just over the coming months but
over the coming years.
We will build precinct by precinct,
county by
county, district by district, election by
election.
“I am not naïve
enough to
believe that, ten years from now, the people
of this state will say ‘2008 was
the year Idaho Democrats made their
comeback.’
But they will say that 2008 was the
year the great comeback of the Idaho
Democratic Party
began.”
Idaho
Democratic Party
Vice Chairwoman Jeanne Buell said she expects
Roark to quickly energize and
mobilize the rank-and-file.
“I know
Keith will
take the reins of the Idaho Democratic Party
immediately to ramp up fundraising
and recruit great candidates,” said Buell, who
has been serving as interim chairwoman
since the resignation of former chairman
Richard Stallings last Nov. 20.
Roark’s first big task
will be to oversee efforts that will ensure
the party is ready for the next
statewide Democratic event – the Feb. 5
Idaho
Presidential Caucus. Like the Iowa Caucus of
Jan. 3, the caucus system is a
grand tradition yet a somewhat complicated
process.
Roark defeated on
other candidate for the job in Friday’s vote.
Jerry Brady, candidate for Idaho
governor in 2006,
also vied for the job but Roark handily won
the secret ballot.