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January 11, 2007


PREACHING
IMPEACHMENT: Eight senior citizens and one adorable
little girl stormed the Eureka offices of Congressman Mike Thompson
last Wednesday at noon, lending their voices to a nationwide
day of protest aimed at fomenting impeachment proceedings against
President George W. Bush.
Left: Liz Murguia and Raging Granny Jean Doran.
Photo by Hank Sims.
It was a cold, wet, blustery day. After several
hours of silent protest outside the office the media showed up,
and the eight elderly folks -- including SoHum organizer Paul
Encimer, publisher of the Greenfuse newspaper, activist
Jack Nounnan and a stripped-down version of the Raging Grannies
-- moved inside the hall and prepared to make entry. Inside,
they were received by Thompson's local aide, Liz Murguia. When
asked if this were keeping her from anything, Murguia assured
the protesters that they were fine -- she usually eats lunch
in the office, she said.
Then the show began. Only three members of the
Granny troupe made the scene, but fortunately they included Carol
Pridgeon of Blue Lake, the Granny with the most powerful voice.
Her interjectory harmonies -- "Heck, no!" -- are a
large part of the Granny appeal, such as it is. The three presented
a 10-minute peace-themed set of filk songs based on "The
Yellow Rose of Texas," "Give Peace a Chance" and
"Down by the Riverside." Afterward, there was a moment
of awkward silence when everyone tried to figure out what to
do next. Murguia graciously thought to ask for copies of the
Granny's lyrics.
Like similar actions across the country, the protest
seemed to have little effect. On the surface of it, nothing has
changed since Thompson exhaustively addressed the impeachment
in an hour-long appearance on KMUD radio a few months ago. Caller
after caller plumped for impeachment; the congressmen, increasingly
exasperated, argued each time that there were more important
fights to fight. And no one else in Washington seems to have
taken up the banner.
But a written statement that Murguia handed out
to protesters that Wednesday contained some language that may
give impeachment fans reason to hope -- or, possibly, reasons
to believe that they're being strung along. It said, in part
and with italics in the original: "While I strongly disagree
with the policies and actions of the Bush Administration, I agree
with all of my colleagues that efforts to pursue impeachment
at this time would be a distraction from getting our troops
home and reversing the many failed policies of the administration
and the former Republican majority in Congress." Is it just
us, or is that a strategically deployed use of the "control-I"
keystroke?
The next day, over on The Hill, Thompson introduced
five bills on the first day of the 2007 session of the House
of Representatives, the first session in which he has served
as a member of the majority. Three of the bills were targeted
specifically at his North Coast constituency -- bills to fund
the Del Norte County Airport, to provide relief to a Mendocino
County water district and, most notably, to provide some $60
million in assistance to fishermen and others harmed by the collapse
of the Klamath River salmon fishery.
-- Hank Sims

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