Rowdy crowd at Oberstar/Cravaack forum

It was an emotional crowd at the Congressman Jim Oberstar and challenger Chip Cravaack forum on Tuesday, Oct. 19. A crowd filled the main level of the DECC Auditorium and didn’t heed the requests of forum moderators Dave Orman or Chuck Frederick to keep the event civil.

At the beginning Orman told the crowd that there had been a fist fight in the Skywalk (which this blogger thought was a joke, but apparently not). See more photos and the whole Hillsider blog post here.

51 Comments

Hillsider_Editor

about 14 years ago

Is there anything that can be done to hush people up so that there could have been a civilized debate? Maybe the moderators could have just asked that the curtain be dropped or the lights be turned off until everyone decided to be quiet and listen.

That's what grade-school teachers do.

Paul Lundgren

about 14 years ago

It's important to note that Oberstar and Cravaack are debating again on Friday at Itasca Community College. Hopefully a few things were learned yesterday to avoid a repeat performance.

Hillsider_Editor

about 14 years ago

The sound system was terrible. On the very right hand side in the front you could not hear. It didn't sound like anything was coming out of the speakers and/or they were pointed the wrong way.

Scott

about 14 years ago

I didn't know they are debating again. I hope it is taped and put online or on TV.

RS

about 14 years ago

It's pretty disgusting that a political debate can reduce supposed adults to act as immature as children who won't share their sandbox toys.  Everyone is entitled to their opinions and to be passionate about and stand up for what they believe in, but they are NOT entitled to threaten, name-call, and physically lay hands on another person because they do not share the same opinion.  Sadly, people like those at the debate are raising our future leaders.

Claire

about 14 years ago

It's sad that some people think their stupid and inappropriate comments and name-calling are of interest to those of us who came to the DECC to find out where the candidates stand on the issues. It was just rude to behave like that, and disrespect not just the candidates, but the rest of the audience. The sound system not being very effective just made it worse, as there were people shouting that they could not hear. But the sound system in that auditorium has always sucked, what else is new? 

Maybe the candidates themselves should have appealed to the audience -- each to his supporters -- to stop acting like assholes and listen.

It was just a very frustrating experience, and at one point, when someone kept heckling Oberstar, I felt like standing up and shouting, "Shut up, some of us want to hear the candidates, not you!"

Claire

about 14 years ago

RS, you make a good point, and what made the debate even more embarrassing is that there were plenty of teenagers in the audience. It seemed like some school (s) bussed some kids to the debate. What a great civics lesson -- if you don't agree with someone, feel free to threaten, intimidate, name-call and harass them whenever they open their mouths.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Or if you disagree with someone feel free to scream at them and jump in front of their limo, right?

Paul Lundgren

about 14 years ago

Tragically, the fact that this debate was so explosive will make more people want to see it.

WDIO-TV (channel 10.1) will be broadcasting Tuesday's debate this Friday night, Oct. 22, at 7 p.m.

On the bright side, maybe on TV the candidate's statements will be audible.

Lest there be any confusion, I'll note that I did call the station to confirm the debate that will be airing is the one from Duluth, and not a live broadcast of the debate that's happening in Grand Rapids on Friday night.

Ruthie

about 14 years ago

The moderators did a poor job of moderating the debate.  From the start they asked questions in a way that fed one side's angst.  Once it started getting out of control, then they acted more responsibly.  Regardless, those that heckled went to the debate with the intent to heckle, not with the intent to be educated.

Claire

about 14 years ago

Maybe, to maintain some order, like at polling places, they should have not allowed anyone handing out campaign materials within a certain distance of the entrance.  Perhaps they could also have mixed up the audience, instead of people for Oberstar sitting to the left and people for Cravaack sitting to the right. It was just unlike any other debate I've ever attended in Duluth. At least, both candidates showed up though -- unlike Dennis Fink last week.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Yeah.  Separation.  Good idea.  They should have separate drinking fountains set up too, huh?

Paul Lundgren

about 14 years ago

Really, they had separate seating? Did that really happen, Claire? I mean, did supporters naturally gravitate to each other or were there directions pointing Oberstar people to one side and Cravaack people to another? That's an important distinction to make.

Claire

about 14 years ago

Paul, I walked into the auditorium foyer, and there was a table with campaign materials for Oberstar to the left, next to the entrance into the auditorium itself. I didn't see anyone actually at the table, just the Oberstar materials. I looked to the right, and there was a table to the right next to the door there with Cravaack materials; there were a few people wearing the blue shirts standing at that table. I walked into the left entrance into the auditorium and sat to the left side of the stage, I was sitting among Oberstar supporters. I seem to have read, also, that was how the seating came about -- advertently or inadvertently --  Oberstar's people were to the left, and Cravaack's people to the right. Let me see if I can find mention of it in a news report I read this morning.

Paul Lundgren

about 14 years ago

Thanks for that Claire-ification. I guess we can say in retrospect it was a bad idea to have campaign literature guiding people to separate seating, but it doesn't sound like a pre-planned bad idea so much as just the way things happened to go down.

Of course, mixing up the seating wouldn't have necessarily made much difference, but intentional segregating of the groups would have been a terrible idea, and it sounds like that wasn't the case.

Claire

about 14 years ago

Here's confirmation of the seating arrangement, from MPR's coverage: 

Crowd steals the show at Oberstar, Cravaack debate

Eighth paragraph from the end:
"Oberstar's backers packed the left side of the auditorium, Cravaack's the right. Organizers were surprised at the outpouring of interest in the event and had to move it twice to larger venues. The original location seats only 75, but it was eventually moved to the convention center auditorium, which seats more than 2,000."

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Wait...weren't you just saying earlier that perhaps it would have been a good idea if the people were separated?

Paul Lundgren

about 14 years ago

Danny G, I think Claire was suggesting just the opposite. She wrote that "they could also have mixed up the audience, instead of people for Oberstar sitting to the left and people for Cravaack sitting to the right."

Of course, intentionally mixing up the audience sounds like a bad idea, too. "Welcome to the debate. Are you an Oberstar supporter? OK, please sit in seat 25F, next to the guy in the Cravaack shirt."

Danny G

about 14 years ago

You are right.  I totally read that incorrectly.

adam

about 14 years ago

It was artificial natural seating. Leads directed each team to preferred sides. Pretty normal for union / red / blue organizing.

Is there anything that can be done to hush people up so that there could have been a civilized debate? Yes. Tasers.

Claire

about 14 years ago

I'm not surprised that Cravaack's supporters are so angry. He stokes their anger. I just checked out Cravaack's website and he uses some pretty loaded language there, such as a headline proclaiming that Oberstar's had "outbursts" during the debate. 

And, by now, we've all heard his supporters complaining that Oberstar didn't shake Cravaack's hand before the debate. This complaint originated with the candidate himself, whose campaign posted on YouTube as proof a close-up of Oberstar drinking from a glass of water before the debate began, with a hand touching his shoulder at one point. 



I'm sorry, it's going to take a little more than a close-up of Oberstar drinking from a glass of water and a disembodied hand touching his shoulder to convince me that he consciously snubbed his opponent. 

That this personal attack on Oberstar's manners originated with his opponent himself makes me think a lot less of Cravaack. Not only did he express a lot of trite platitudes that mean little yesterday -- like "I'll bring Minnesota to Washington, not Washington to Minnesota," -- but to try to score points by complaining about Oberstar's behavior towards him says a lot about the kind of campaign he's conducting.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

That's the best you can do, eh?  How about you address Oberstar's oddly extra-wide stance?

Jadiaz

about 14 years ago

Do you have proof that Oberstar did shake his hand? If Oberstar didn't shake his hand, why not? Seems to me there is nothing wrong with pointing out rudeness if rudeness occurred. This forum is pointing out the rudeness of the crowd so why not the canidates? Cravaack interrupted Oberstar a few times. Rude. Oberstar was said not to shake Cravaacks hand. Rude. Claire both sides in this contest have been pretty inciteful. That's politics. To say only one side is doing something wrong or distasteful is to be blind to reality.

Sam

about 14 years ago

There is nothing wrong with pointing out a fact.  But there may be something wrong with pointing out an unsubstantiated rumor.  Given that there is no evidence whatsoever that there was a refused handshake, it is an unsubstantiated rumor.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

"All the water we ever had in the world is with us today."

-Jim Oberstar at yesterday's debate

Jim

about 14 years ago

Find me a photo where he isn't scolding us for being idiots (a union rally doesn't count). His finger wagging and shaming didn't have anything to do with the attitude of the attendees? Give me a friggin break. We're so sick and tired of his pathetic schtick. 

Shaming the Supreme Court, because Jimmy knows better. Shaming the people of Minnesota over and over because he's so damn smart and we're nothing but a bunch of dumb taxpayers. Did you forget when he wagged his finger at us on TV for not paying enough for roads and bridges while the bodies hadn't even been removed from the Mississippi yet? He must have forgot about the millions he spent on bike paths and building bike depots at airports because "there isn't any better way to get to the airport than by bike!" All while feeding his insatiable appetite for pork and taxpayers money. 

Jimmy is the worst kind of tick -- bloated with the unsuspecting blood of his "neighbors," despite not living here or even caring. I hope Cravaack kicks his Washington Patootie all the way back to his million-dollar DC home.

vicarious

about 14 years ago

"All the water we ever had in the world is with us today."

Technically true. Water vapor does not "escape" into space; it just moves around - mostly in the troposphere - changing form, becoming creatures, exiting creatures when they die, becoming plants, exiting plants when they die, moving to and fro, changing form from liquid to solid to gas and back to liquid. But it never "leaves" the atmosphere.

I don't know the context of the quote, but it's completely true.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Water is wet.

Shamus

about 14 years ago

I got to the debate about ten minutes early, and went to the left side just because there wasn't a line. I think the set up of the theater tends to lend itself toward that side being the first entrance you see. I wasn't guided to any side for any particular reason. Not sure if that was different for anyone else. 

The middle section of the theater was packed with some of the most childish adults I've ever seen ... the majority of which were past retirement age. (Shouldn't they know better?) Many of them wearing Cravaack shirts, and booing and heckling every time Oberstar tried to speak. It honestly ruined the debate, and set a very combative tone from the beginning. 

Soon after, Oberstar must have decided he wasn't going to take this, and started acknowledging the booing and heckling with statements like "I'm sorry, but these folks just don't like hearing facts." I don't know of anyone who ever solved a problem with hecklers by egging it on ... in fact, most hecklers thrive on the attention.

Neither candidate handled the event correctly. Most of Cravaack's statements were not facts, but merely anecdotes based on conversations he's had with people, or random catchy statements meant as shots at Oberstar's record that someone must have told him were going to get some easy applause. 

Oberstar was clearly on the defensive from the beginning, and at his age, has lost much of the boisterous charisma that someone like Cravaack has. This left Oberstar at a strong disadvantage due to the sound issues in the building (which would, incidentally, have been easily solved if people would just shut up and listen). 

Personally, it seems to me that Cravaack is following in the same path as politicians like Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachman, who depend less on their actual knowledge of politics, and more on their good looks and ability to charm and say what people want to hear. 

Since Obama, it seems that candidates and voters alike have been convinced that celebrity status is more important than knowledge (not a knock at Obama, just something that was emphasized with his election). I wonder if they actually care about their country, or if they just care about the name they can make for themselves. I guess that's politics.

Hillsider Newspaper editor

about 14 years ago

Shamus, I like this:

"I don't know of anyone who ever solved a problem with hecklers by egging it on ... in fact, most hecklers thrive on the attention."

I think if the candidates would have just both sat there and not said anything until people hushed up, that would have worked.

Sam

about 14 years ago

They are Cravaack's followers, and he is supposed to be their leader.  Cravaack should have acted like a true leader and encouraged his followers to be respectful.  It seems that Cravaack either lacks the ability to lead or lacks the will to lead his followers in being respectful.  And, of course, a true leader does have the will and ability.

baci

about 14 years ago

Starve monkey, give monkey hatefood, monkey eat, monkey hate. monkey hungry again. Monkey need more hatefood.

I like Jim Oberstar because one time he put me in a headlock and gave me an uncle-ish head rub w/his hairy knuckles ... also he speaks fluent patois and wants more trains. I like trains.

The second Glen Beck tries to headlock me, I'm gunna drop tha fruitbat like a tonnabricks.

adam

about 14 years ago

Mmmmm, hatefood.

Lojasmo

about 14 years ago

Too bad.

As an aside, Cravaack is gonna get clobbered.

edgeways

about 14 years ago

Sigh ... you know I would be actually open to having someone other than Oberstar, but frankly all that has been offered as alternatives are pretty damn bad, Cravaack has aligned himself pretty close with Bachmann which should earn anyone a swift metaphorical kick to the groin. So, as it stands I certainly hope Oberstar romps over him in the election, but the only poll so far had Chipper only 2 points back. Mind you that was a partisan poll by Cravaack himself so the validity can be called into question.

As to how people acted at the debate, just fucking horrible, yeah that about covers it.

Shamus

about 14 years ago

Hillsider-

Insulting a crowd is the worst way possible to make them shut up. A better strategy might have been to ask his opponent to control his fans so they could have a debate instead of a wrestling match. Leave it up to the other guy to fix the problem, or look like a jerk for allowing it to happen.

spy1

about 14 years ago

Watching the WDIO footage last night we clearly saw a stand-up handshake. Who knows if it was the beginning or the end. It came at the beginning of the report. And if that is topic No. 1 for the Chipsters, good heavens. Having been neck-deep at one time during this recession, I bristle at the notion that nothing worked in the stimulus to lessen the hurt. Cravaack states it did nothing, and broken promises of unemployment under 8 percent by now prove it. Well, the national rate is in the lower nines and the state rate is under 7. And I'm off the dole. And trades are down from 30 an now into single digits. I don't know what more one might expect.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

I feel like stoking the flames a bit and giving you folks another reason to dislike Cravaack.  Early in the race he was on an episode of Danny Does Duluth.

Claire

about 14 years ago

This is an excellent recap of the debacle that occurred at the DECC Tuesday that raises some more interesting questions. Let's face it: the Duluth News Tribune and the Chamber lost control of the event and let hooligans run the show. They share a lot of the responsibility for what could have been and should have been an informative and stimulating discussion. We're kind of lucky it didn't turn into a brawl.

Minnesota Progressive Project:
Oberstar faces down Tea Party in Duluth

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Lynching eh?  So when does the memorial for Jim Oberstar get built downtown to commemorate the atrocities he faced at Tuesday's debate.

jadiaz

about 14 years ago

I read the article. What disgusts me is this is the second time that the actions of tea-partiers towards Oberstar have been compared to Lynch mobs. The first was an opinion article in the DNT directly comparing to the lynchings that happened in Duluth, the second the article referenced above. The Tea Party has been accused of being racist, yet it is the democrats bringing up references of lynching. Disgusting and shameful. I'm sure the families of individuals who were lynched would agree that the reporter from the above article and the writer of the opinion piece are insensitive people. Democrats raising the race issue and blaming it on republicans and tea-partiers. Gross and pathetic.

spy1

about 14 years ago

Jadiaz:
If this isn't about race, or how people feel about the president, then what is it? Name me another president so vilified not so much for policy but for legitimacy (birthers, anyone?). Or anyone painted with such a false brush (facts, anyone?). Where was the outrage with Clinton? Where was the outrage with Bush. And maybe outrage is the wrong term. A level of basic respect entitled to anyone who holds office (city council to president) and represents is entirely missing. And it brings the whole discourse down, as witnessed Tuesday.

jadiaz

about 14 years ago

First off both references were towards Oberstar a white man. Second Bush was constantly compared to Hitler and the nazis, called an idiot and a murderer ect. This was all over Bush's policies. Now those of us who don't like Obama's policies it is instantly because he's black. Only Democrats are saying that. And yes their are the birthers but again they aren't saying he can't be in because of his skin color but because they believe he isn't American. (I do not share such beliefs). Furthermore the tea-party and republicans are opposed to his policies not his skin color. Your argument that only President Obama has had groups claim outrageous things about him is just incorrect. So cling to your Republicans are racist cause they don't like Obama's policies stance but explain to me how that works with Oberstar, Reid, Pelosi ect. It is only because Obama is an African American that Democrats cry racist when he is opposed. If he were a white man facing the same opposition the accusations would not be thrown out there. (PS I voted for Obama as I felt he would be a change and may bring the parties together. Instead the countries more polarized than ever over his contraversial policies. and refusal to step across the aisle and take any republican input)

Danny G

about 14 years ago

HA!  You really don't get much whiter than Oberstar.

Here's what I don't get about the whole argument saying the vitriol towards Barry MUST be about race, as evidenced by spy1's comment.  The question that is raised is often "It MUST be about race, what else could it be?  Where was this anger towards [insert previous white president here]?"  To acknowledge the validity of that question at all then the first thing you would have to do is assume that the only difference between Barry and any of the white presidents is that he is black and they are not, otherwise they are all the same.

Also, I can't speak for anyone else, but pretty much the ONLY thing I like about Barry is the fact that he is black.

No Good Bum

about 14 years ago

Is the Tea Party willing to work across the aisle? Doubt it. If so, let's hear your ideas for working with Democrats to come to some compromises on issues. Really, the big problem is that no one wants to compromise on ANYTHING. Money doesn't go to people who are (gasp!) willing to compromise. Democrats are just as guilty in many ways. But the Tea Party seems to me to be just another front for the Republicans to further polarize the country. This type of thing is only going to get worse. We're screwed.

spy1

about 14 years ago

I'm not sure you got my point. What are these "controversial" policies that have people more worked up than um, Clinton and health care, Bush and the wars. Etc. It's the non-policy junk that worries me. And we aren't necessarily talking "racism" or the race card. It's basic fear from something, on the face of it, radically different than in the past. Etc. I live it every day. It exists. And most people just feel buggy and don't root down to the cause, because there is so much junk to mask it all away. Less than two years in and far away from the impact of some of his decisions, I'm not sure how different he might be than all the rest, DG. Main point: I'd just like to see some civility and thoughtfulness return to public discourse. Ity's possible. I see it all the time on this site. Hurrah.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Honestly, non-policy wise there are a lot of non-policy/non-racial things about Barry that freaks people out.  Again, I'm not saying these things are negative or positive to me specifically, but they could be part of the spark that drives their "fear".  One thing that comes to mind is his experience.  Before becoming president Barry was a Senator for basically a hiccup.  Just one example.

Claire

about 14 years ago

This is what bothers me, but it's par for the course for candidates who lack substance, I think, as well as people who don't have the intelligence to discuss the issues, so they try to silence their opponents.

1. Cravaack's campaign gets all bent out of shape over Congressman Oberstar's behavior and demeanor at the debate, for instance, posting a video of the man drinking a glass of water and claiming he wouldn't shake Cravaack's hand. I saw a video of the beginning of the debate and, hello, the two men are seen shaking hands before the debate begins. Cravaack's campaign blatantly lied about this, trying to make Oberstar look bad.

2. An eyewitness observer posted a blog about the incredibly boorish and loutish behavior displayed by the Cravaack supporters at the debate. In response, those obviously supporting Cravaack complain about the admittedly inflammatory headline on this report, and ignore the content of the report. It's hard to defend thuggery and underhanded behavior.

I was also interested, watching a video of the debate, that Cravaack's supporters booed and jeered Oberstar as soon as he was introduced, thus setting the tone for the debate. When Cravaack said something ridiculous, and Oberstar's supporters started jeering and booing him, Oberstar indeed held up his hand to silence them. I was sitting in the midst of Oberstar supporters, and let me tell you, that is not where the heckling and disruptions were coming from. 

It's too bad that Cravaack couldn't demonstrate some class and silence his supporters -- but then, looking at his website, inflaming his supporters is what the man is all about. Maybe because he lacks the qualifications to be elected to the US Congress.

I hope tonight's debate isn't a repeat of Tuesday's embarrassment. I've heard that organizers in Grand Rapids are working hard to prevent a repeat of Tuesday. I hope they are successful.

Danny G

about 14 years ago

Why did you stop numbering your "points" at 2?

Hillsider_Editor

about 14 years ago

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