Our Mission

To promote fair and just government as an instrument of good, and a sustainable community that is inclusive, diverse, and tolerant, through a grassroots network that values the average American as our nation’s strength.

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Party Officials

Chairman
Fielding Ballard, III


Vice Chair
Ann Ellerkamp

Treasurer
Walter Clare


Secretary
Marty Lanus

In Honor of Judge Stratton

Resolution in Honor of and Respect for

Robert J. "Bobby" Stratton

April 22, 2009

Click here for full text

In Honor of Mike Casey

Resolution in Honor of and Respect for

Michael T. Casey

April 22, 2009

Click here for full text

Democratic Elected Officials

President of the United States

Barack Obama

 

KENTUCKY
Governor
Steven L. Beshear

Lieutenant Governor
Daniel Mongiardo

Attorney General
Jack Conway

Auditor of Public Accounts
Crit Luallen

State Treasurer
Todd Hollenbach

SHELBY COUNTY
County Clerk
Sue Carole Perry

Sheriff
Mike Armstrong

Jailer
Bobby Waits

Property Valuation Administrator
Brad McDowell

Circuit Clerk
Kathy Nichols

Magistrates
Cordy Armstrong
Tony Carriss
Betty Curtsinger
Hubie Pollett
Mike Whitehouse

SHELBYVILLE
Mayor
Tom Hardesty

City Council
George Best
Donna Eaton
Alan Matthews
Shane Suttor
Mike Zoeller

It's A Great Time To Be A Democrat In Shelby County!

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Sue Carole Perry Files For Re-Election Print
Friday, 01 January 2010 13:21

From The Shelbyville Sentinel News

By Lisa King

Shelby County Clerk Sue Carole Perry said her love for her hometown, and her concern for her neighbors has prompted her to run for office 32 years ago.

Now she's been in office longer than any of the elected officials today.

Under the leadership of Sue Carole Perry, the County Clerk's office was the first in the county to be computerized.

Shortly after taking office in January 1978, Perry started a computer indexing system for the real estate records. Shelby was the second county in the state to join the statewide Automated Vehicle Information System known as AVIS, and the clerk's office was also the first county to have Web page. Now, Title examiners are able to view and print the records of the deed room via the Internet.

The county clerk is charged with the responsibility of preserving the permanent records since 1792. One of the accomplishments of which she is most proud is the opening of the "Old Records Room."

"This keeps the genealogists away from the tile examiners and others who work with current records," she said.

Perry received the 2001 Award of Merit from the Friends of the Kentucky Public Archives for her work in the preservation and computerizing of the records.

Perry said service to Shelby Countians is another one of her priorities.

"My staff and I are here to serve the people of Shelby County and anyone who comes in the office with need," she said. "It is nothing unusual for one of my staff to go outside to help senior citizens replace the tags on their vehicles."

For her community service, Perry received the Sun Walton Community Leader Award in 1995. She served on the Shelby Development Board for several years and was chairman of the board in 1992. She also worked with the Girl Scouts as County Coordinator and Cookie Chairman.

She remains active in many statewide organizations and served as president of the Kentucky Association of Counties in 1987 and the Kentucky County Clerk's Association in 1992. She also served as vice chair of the Kentucky Democratic Party in 1988. She currently serves on the Board of Directors of the County Clerk's Association of County Officials.

 

Read the entire article here.

 
Thanks For Another Great Christmas Parade! Print
Saturday, 12 December 2009 16:05

Thanks to all who helped the Shelby County Democratic Party make another strong showing in the annual Christmas Parade.  Here are a couple of pictures from the parade, with the SCDP contingent being led by Biscuit, our trusty mascot.

 

 

 

 
Democratic Senate candidates share values at forum Print
Wednesday, 18 November 2009 23:34

From the Shelbyville Sentinel-News:

By Scott McDaniel

As the acting State Auditor, Crit Luallen said she knows a thing or two about "values."

"That's a word that gets thrown around casually in politics too often," she said. "But if there's one key lesson that I've learned in my long career, it's that having strong personal values and holding ourselves to the highest ethical standards that determines success in the public arena."

To enlighten the point, she pointed to recent headlines of groups with power, but without strong values, and acknowledged how these groups hurt the Commonwealth. She mentioned the Kentucky Association of Counties (KACo) and recent reports showing it had more than $3 million in questionable spending during a 3-year period. She said the report on questionable spending by the Kentucky League of Cities would be released in a few weeks.

Speaking on behalf of the Women’s Network as one of several speakers at Claudia Sanders Dinner House on Saturday, Luallen told the crowd of around 100 women that it’s up to the informed public to have an impact by ensuring they choose the right candidates to lead the state and country.

That’s the goal of the Women’s Network. The group, which calls itself Advocates of Democratic Principles, aims to get more women involved in the political process.

"It's always great to get together in a room full of women. There's a different energy. There's a different dynamic. There's a different sort of synergy that goes on I think when we all come together," she said. "And if we can just harness that energy, we can solve all the problems that the commonwealth faces -- 'Yes we can,'" she said as the audience erupted in applause.

Luallen said it's important for citizens to look at the values of their potential leaders to determine if they can fight the long-term battles facing the commonwealth.

Many of those issues were addressed by other knowledgeable speakers throughout the morning, leading up to Luallen's afternoon speech, and they included poverty, neglected children, heart disease, lack of insurance and large numbers of uneducated children.

After she finished, there was an open forum for four of the five Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate to discuss some of these issues and share their own values.

Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway, Lt. Gov. Daniel Mongiardo, former national security and war on drugs enforcer Darlene Fitzgerald Price and everyday businessman Maurice Sweeney each had their turns to share what they are all about and to answer questions about issues such as whether they would vote yes or no to the health-care reform bill recently passed by the U.S. House.

Only Price and Sweeney answered the question directly, both saying they would vote for it because it's better than any other current option.

"What we have on the table concerns me greatly," Price said. "I would've probably voted for it because 60 percent of something is better than 100 percent of nothing -- with the hope that once it goes further we will get single care or a real public option."

Neither Conway nor Mongiardo answered the question so straightforward. As a doctor, Mongiardo spoke of the insight he has into the health-care problems of the U.S., but to the question answered, "This is a complex issue. It does not lean itself to yes or no on a bill that has been put together."

Conway answered, "I think we can get a better bill out of the Senate."

From there, the candidates answered questions about jobs and health care in today's economy, each answer giving the crowd a view of the candidates' individual values and thoughts about today's problems.

"Personal values also have to extend to making the difficult decisions that are necessary to make a better future for every community in the commonwealth," Luallen said.

 
Senators Should Visit a Free Health Care Clinic to Really See the America They Represent...and Deny Print
Saturday, 12 December 2009 16:29

By Ed Schultz

On Thursday, I hosted my MSNBC "Ed Show" from the Kansas City Convention Center. There have been few days in my thirty year broadcasting career that have moved me as much as this experience did. I saw the real America. In the middle of the country, two thousand miles from the beltway, I witnessed middle class Americans standing in line for hours waiting to see a doctor. Some had not seen a doctor in years. They have jobs, some working two jobs, but can't afford the cost of insurance and basically are on the GOP plan: pray you don't get sick.

The stories were gut wrenching. I couldn't help but think this is where the Senate needs to do their business. Do it right in front of the eyes of the people in their own country who are struggling to make ends meet and live in dignity. The Senate should do business in front of the families that have played by the rules and have been dealt a personal set back for one reason or another. Have the guts to tell these people to their face that they aren't worthy of health care because they don't have money. They may see these faces briefly on the campaign trail, but they make no decisions in front of them when they are standing in line in pain, in agony and in desperate need.

America has a heartless side to it as well. That is demonstrated when U.S. Senators put the God Almighty Dollar in front of people who put them in office. How any law maker could deny full access and full health care coverage is beyond me. Senators who put themselves ahead of the people and who have been spoiled by the Washington good life have lost their soul and what it means to be an American. We throw billions of dollars at wars, often without hesitation, but some in the Congress are willing to treat humans in their own country like a piece of machinery that can be left in a junk yard.

My God, what has happened to America ?

Click here to read the entire article.

 
Going Cheney on Climate Print
Saturday, 12 December 2009 16:12

By Thomas Friedman

In 2006, Ron Suskind published “The One Percent Doctrine,” a book about the U.S. war on terrorists after 9/11. The title was drawn from an assessment by then-Vice President Dick Cheney, who, in the face of concerns that a Pakistani scientist was offering nuclear-weapons expertise to Al Qaeda, reportedly declared: “If there’s a 1% chance that Pakistani scientists are helping Al Qaeda build or develop a nuclear weapon, we have to treat it as a certainty in terms of our response.” Cheney contended that the U.S. had to confront a very new type of threat: a “low-probability, high-impact event.”

Soon after Suskind’s book came out, the legal scholar Cass Sunstein, who then was at the University of Chicago, pointed out that Mr. Cheney seemed to be endorsing the same “precautionary principle” that also animated environmentalists. Sunstein wrote in his blog: “According to the Precautionary Principle, it is appropriate to respond aggressively to low-probability, high-impact events — such as climate change. Indeed, another vice president — Al Gore — can be understood to be arguing for a precautionary principle for climate change (though he believes that the chance of disaster is well over 1 percent).”

Of course, Mr. Cheney would never accept that analogy. Indeed, many of the same people who defend Mr. Cheney’s One Percent Doctrine on nukes tell us not to worry at all about catastrophic global warming, where the odds are, in fact, a lot higher than 1 percent, if we stick to business as usual. That is unfortunate, because Cheney’s instinct is precisely the right framework with which to think about the climate issue — and this whole “climategate” controversy as well.

Read the entire article here.

 
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The Numbers

Shelby County Voter Registration

As of 8/17/10

Democrat: 14,481 (55%)
Republican: 9,941 (38%)
Other: 1,736 (7%)