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Monthly Archives: June 2010

Recission of Health Care Reform: the usual suspects

29 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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August 3rd, ballot measure.Proposition C, Brad Lager, HB 1764, health care reform, Jack Goodman, missouri, Patrick Tuohey, repeal

On May 21, 2010 Missourians for Health Care Choice (pdf) a campaign [issue] committee was established with the Missouri Ethics Commission. On June 21, 2010 the committee filed an amended statement changing their name to Missourians for Health Care Freedom (pdf). When you think about it the apparent aversion to the first choice is somewhat amusing. And yes, they have a website.

They exist to support the August 3rd ballot question (from HB 1764) that asserts our right to keep government out of our Medicare.

The committee treasurer (in both organization statements) is Patrick Tuohey.

On June 28, 2010 the committee received three $5,000.00 contributions:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C101350 MISSOURIANS FOR HEALTH CARE FREEDOM (pdf) 6/28/2010

Ray Vincent

Chesterfield, MO

US Auto Protection

6/28/2010

$5,000.00

Missourians for Goodman

Mount Vernon, MO 6/28/2010

$5,000.00

Citizens for Brad Lager

Savannah, MO 6/25/2010

$5,000.00

[emphasis added]

What, no million dollar contributions?

Missouri State Senate

Bills Co-Sponsored by Senator Lager

SB 851 – Requires at least four days notice before voting by governing bodies of local governments on tax increases, eminent domain, and certain districts and projects

SCR 56 – Urges the Department of Natural Resources to consider the use of certain coal technology in its permitting of new coal-fired power plants

SJR 25 – Prohibits laws interfering with freedom of choice in health care

[emphasis added]

There’s that unfortunate choice of word again.

Missouri State Senate

Bills Co-Sponsored by Senator Goodman

SB 721 – Modifies provisions relating to required travel club assets

SB 740 – Exempts prosecuting and circuit attorneys who have completed the firearms safety training course required to obtain a conceal carry endorsement from certain otherwise unlawful uses of a weapon

SB 821 – Requires drug testing for work-eligible Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) applicants and recipients based upon reasonable suspicion

SB 851 – Requires at least four days notice before voting by governing bodies of local governments on tax increases, eminent domain, and certain districts and projects

SCR 56 – Urges the Department of Natural Resources to consider the use of certain coal technology in its permitting of new coal-fired power plants

SJR 25 – Prohibits laws interfering with freedom of choice in health care

[emphasis added]

There’s that word again. Irony impairment alert. Yes, it’s all about that choice you used to have to pay for insurance and have an insurance company deny you coverage. That’ll make perfect sense to a certain percentage of the population.

Ed Martin's secret oil money.

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

corruption, Ed Martin, missouri, Russ Carnahan, tea party

Perhaps you read the recent story about a Missouri farmer who put a sign up in a field with the message:

Are you a Producer or Parasite Democrats – Party of the Parasites

Of course the punch line is that this gentleman, who is so indignant about “parasites,” has taken over $1,000,000 dollars in federal farm subsidies over the past thirteen years. This story, among others, serves to underline the fact that there are far too many small minds on the far right who aren’t at all bothered by the hobgoblin of consistency. Or to put it another way, the GOP winger base may not be made up of the best and brightest.

Since nature abhors a vacuum, for every right-wing simpleton, there is almost surely a cynical, bought-and-paid for huckster with the corporate line du jour on standby standing by ready to take up the slack. The proof? Look no further than Ed Martin, Russ Carnahan’s Republican challenger for Missouri’s third congressional seat.

Martin, who left his job as little Matty Blunt’s capo in disgrace, became a free-lance political jack of all trades, keeping himself viable with the right-wing through organizations like the Missouri Club for Growth and the Missouri Roundtable for Life. In his latest role, he has cast himself as a “leader” in the Tea Party crusade to takeover Washington.

True to the Tea Party ethos, Martin has been outspoken about the evils of government regulation. Most recently, he has come out swinging to protect poor little BP, shamelessly trying to pretend that the Gulf oil spill can be  blamed on excessive government regulation, a talking point that is gaining traction as the right-wing attempts to justify its inflexible ideology in the face of one more example of its failure.

Well, guess what? Just like our Missouri farmer’s disgust with parasitic Democrats, the story about Ed Martin as a valiant defender of beleaguered BP against the big, bad government has a pretty good punch line too.  After local bloggers, including SMP’s Clark, went to town with the fact that Martin seemed somewhat hesitant to file his federal income disclosure forms, he made a few feeble excuses – mostly to the effect that he was just too busy and it’s soooo hard to file those intrusive government forms. (Bear in mind that this guy expects us to trust him to have the energy and sufficient organizational skills to navigate the demands of a complex and demanding elective office.)

I’ll bet you’re not really that surprised, though, when I tell you that we are now learning that maybe Martin didn’t file these publicly accessible forms because he just might have had something to hide – like the fact that he has been kept afloat on a tide of big oil money. It seems his wife has oil holdings worth something in the area of $100,001 to $250,000.

Kind of puts a different light on our crusader. As the Carnahan campaign put it:

Letting Big Oil drill without oversight in the wake of this disaster is a position that defies logic – unless you realize that bigger profits for Big Oil would directly benefit Ed Martin’s bank account

It’s probably a good thing for Martin that the Tea Party types don’t seem to be too disturbed by good ol’ boys who conceal their conflicted interests – even when they’re playing the Tea Party faithful for fools.

 

Time to Turn Off The A/C At the White House?

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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As President Obama prepares for his meeting tomorrow with Senators at the White House to discuss clean energy and climate change legislation, he might want to check with the White House staff on an important matter first. No, not the details of the legislation, although that’s important of course. Instead, what President Obama might want to make absolutely sure about is the non-trivial matter of whether the White House air conditioning is in tip-top shape. I say “non-trivial,” but these days it’s more like “life or death.” How hot is it in the Washington, DC area?  As NBC Washington puts it, “We're Talking Spontaneous Combustion.” (UPDATE: it's more likely this is apocryphal than literally true, but it sure feels like plants could catch on fire these days in Washington, DC!)

How hot is it? It's so hot that dead plants are spontaneously combusting in Frederick, Md.

Don't believe it? Just ask Frederick County Fire Marshal Marc McNeal, who told the Frederick News-Post that excessive heat caused a dead plant to catch fire Sunday afternoon in a hanging planter on the rear deck of a townhouse.

The hanging basket fell to the deck and burned some vinyl siding, causing about $3,000 in damages.

It has definitely been hot in the Washington region. Monday will be the 10th day in a row that we've reached 90 degrees or higher, and this will be the 17th day of the month that the thermometer has reached 90.

NBC4 meteorologist Tom Kierein said that when it's all said and done, June 2010 likely will be the hottest June on record in the District.

Dead plants catching on fire in the hottest June on record in the Washington, DC area?  Sadly, this may not be an aberration, but a frightening sign of things to come in a global warming world.   True, we shouldn’t draw broad conclusions about the earth’s climate from one heat wave in one specific geographic area, as certain climate change deniers dishonestly did during last winter’s “snowpocalypse” blizzards.  However, when we see month after month, decade after decade of record-setting heat globally, it starts to get a bit hard to ignore.  

In fact, climate scientists are not ignoring these heat waves and other phenomena.  Earlier today, for instance, The Project on Climate Science reported that the “record-breaking heat wave” we are currently experiencing in the eastern United States “is consistent with climate change.”  According to Tom Peterson, Chief Scientist for NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center, “We’re getting a dramatic taste of the kind of weather we are on course to bequeath to our grandchildren.”  Of course, as The Project on Climate Science points out, “individual heat waves can be driven by a number of factors.” However, they conclude, “more frequent heat waves are one of the more visible impacts of climate change already underway in the United States” and “will occur more frequently in the future.”

In sum, if you enjoy record-setting warmth – not to mention the stronger storms, mass extinctions and “record sea ice shrinkage” in the Arctic  that go along with that warmth – you have a lot to look forward to!  If not, then you should contact your Senator and let him or her know you want climate action now.  

Come to think of it, perhaps we should all hope for the White House air conditioning to be broken tomorrow – or turned off on purpose – so that the Senators meeting there get a taste of what the planet will feel like everywhere if they don’t do something about it now.  When you think about it, a bit of Senatorial sweat and a few stained shirts is not too high a price to pay if it results in long-overdue, comprehensive clean energy and climate legislation on the President’s desk sometime this sweltering summer.  Is it?

Tinker to Evers to Chance…

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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14th Senate District, campaign finance, Joe Adamas Don Calloway, Maria Chappelle-Nadal, missouri, Rex Sinquefield, Ted Hoskins

…campaign contributions in the 14th Senate District.

Progress for the Saint Louis Region, a continuing [political action] committee, was established on June 7, 2010.

The treasurer for the committee, Mark A. Tucker, is also a lobbyist who represents:

LOBID:L002620

Date:10/22/2007

Lobbyist’s Name Mark A. Tucker

….Mark A. Tucker or The Avery Group, LLC….

….REX AND JEANNE SINQUEFIELD

ST. LOUIS MO…10/24/2007….

On June 17, 2010 the committee received a very large contribution:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C101378 PROGRESS FOR THE SAINT LOUIS REGION [pdf] 6/18/2010

Rex Sinquefield

Westphalia, MO 6/17/2010

$100,000.00

[emphasis added]

On June 25, 2010 the committee made substantial contributions to two candidates for the open seat in the 14th Senate District. The seat will be determined in the August primary election – all of the candidates filed in the Democratic Party primary:

State Senate – District 14

Democrat

THEODORE (TED) HOSKINS ST LOUIS MO 267 2/23/2010

JOE ADAMS ST LOUIS MO 504 2/23/2010

DON CALLOWAY ST LOUIS MO 795 2/23/2010

MARIA N CHAPPELLE-NADAL ST LOUIS MO 841 2/23/2010

The contributions:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C071061 CITIZENS FOR DON CALLOWAY [pdf] 6/26/2010

Progress for the Saint Louis Region

Saint Louis, MO 5/25/2010 [sic]

$30,000.00

[emphasis added]

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C010499 FRIENDS TO ELECT THEODORE `TED` HOSKINS 6/27/2010

Progress for the Saint Louis Region

St.louis Mo 6/25/2010

$30,000.00

[emphasis added]

Who’s next? There’s $40,000.00 left.

On Saturday the St. Louis Post-Dispatch did a piece on Rex Sinquefiled’s political campaign contributions:

Sinquefield not discouraged with return on his political efforts

Rex Sinquefield has become a household name in Missouri political circles.

Dropping five- and six-figure checks, he plows millions of dollars a year into contributions to state and local candidates and causes. But he doesn’t stop there.

To sell his free-market philosophy, he finances a phalanx of lobbyists, think tank experts, public relations staffers and university economists….

The campaign finance reports among the candidates in the 14th Senate District (in ballot order):

Ted Hoskins filed his first quarter 2010 campaign finance report with the Missouri Ethics Commission on April 14th:

Detailed Summary of Committee Disclosure Report

Committe: FRIENDS TO ELECT THEODORE `TED` HOSKINS

ReportDate:

1. TOTAL RECEIPTS FOR THIS ELECTION PREVIOUSLY REPORTED $37,305.00

2. ALL MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $5,425.00

3. ALL LOANS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $25,000.00

9. TOTAL ALL RECEIPTS THIS ELECTION(SUM 1B + 7A – 8A) $67,730.00

15. TOTAL EXPENDITURES THIS ELECTION (SUM 10B + 14A) $11,059.34

28. MONEY ON HAND AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 25 + 26 – 27) $89,734.55

35. TOTAL INDEBTEDNESS AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 29 + 30 + 31 – 32 – 33 – 34) $25,000.00

Joe Adams filed his first quarter campaign finance report with the Missouri Ethics Commission on April 15th:

Detailed Summary of Committee Disclosure Report

Committe: ADAMS FOR SENATE

ReportDate:

1. TOTAL RECEIPTS FOR THIS ELECTION PREVIOUSLY REPORTED $52,525.65

2. ALL MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $18,785.00

3. ALL LOANS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $0.00

9. TOTAL ALL RECEIPTS THIS ELECTION(SUM 1B + 7A – 8A) $74,310.65

15. TOTAL EXPENDITURES THIS ELECTION (SUM 10B + 14A) $40,517.35

28. MONEY ON HAND AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 25 + 26 – 27) $24,393.30

35. TOTAL INDEBTEDNESS AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 29 + 30 + 31 – 32 – 33 – 34) $0.00

Don Calloway filed an amended first quarter campaign finance report with the Missouri Ethics Commission on June 14th:

Detailed Summary of Committee Disclosure Report

Committe: CITIZENS FOR DON CALLOWAY

ReportDate:

1. TOTAL RECEIPTS FOR THIS ELECTION PREVIOUSLY REPORTED $0.00

2. ALL MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $23,701.00

3. ALL LOANS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $0.00

9. TOTAL ALL RECEIPTS THIS ELECTION(SUM 1B + 7A – 8A) $23,701.00

15. TOTAL EXPENDITURES THIS ELECTION (SUM 10B + 14A) $3,988.00

28. MONEY ON HAND AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 25 + 26 – 27) $19,713.00

35. TOTAL INDEBTEDNESS AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 29 + 30 + 31 – 32 – 33 – 34) $0.00

Maria Chappelle-Nadal filed her first quarter campaign finance report with the Missouri Ethics Commission on April 15th:

Detailed Summary of Committee Disclosure Report

Committe: CITIZENS FOR MARIA CHAPPELLE-NADAL

ReportDate:

1. TOTAL RECEIPTS FOR THIS ELECTION PREVIOUSLY REPORTED $60,102.45

2. ALL MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $6,960.10

3. ALL LOANS RECEIVED THIS PERIOD $0.00

9. TOTAL ALL RECEIPTS THIS ELECTION(SUM 1B + 7A – 8A) $67,062.55

15. TOTAL EXPENDITURES THIS ELECTION (SUM 10B + 14A) $25,485.66

28. MONEY ON HAND AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 25 + 26 – 27) $52,549.82

35. TOTAL INDEBTEDNESS AT THE CLOSE OF THIS REPORTING PERIOD (SUM 29 + 30 + 31 – 32 – 33 – 34) $0.00

“…his free-market philosophy…”

Yep, a check to a campaign for $30,000.00 from a single source can be a game changer.

Wouldn’t it be easier just to write the damn checks directly to the campaigns? Just asking.

Unless someone was planning independent expenditures.

John Ashcroft: the liberal lion

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Kevin Horrigan began his Sunday column in the Post-Dispatch by quoting that “liberal lion”, John Ashcroft:

“Almost 200 years ago, the great conservative Edmund Burke wrote that mere stinginess is not economy: ‘Expense . . . may be an essential part of true economy.’ That statement is no less true today. Unless we replace the revenue taken away by the courts, we’re going to find ourselves in the race of international competition equipped with a decent car but with no money to put gas in the tank and thereby run the race . . . .” That quotation comes from a speech to the Missouri Legislature on July 5, 1989, by Gov. John Ashcroft, of all people. He had called a special session of the Legislature to deal with what was then regarded as a major financial crisis.

The Supreme Court had ordered the state to refund taxes to federal employees who had retired.

For Missouri, this meant the state had to refund $150 million to 65,000 retirees, the equivalent of about $264 million today. But today’s a different world, meaner perhaps, and surely less open-minded.

Today, a governor can get up one Thursday morning, as Gov. Jay Nixon did 10 days ago, and whack $301 million from the budget and nobody – except a few of those damned liberals – thinks twice about it.

Twenty-one years ago, Gov. Ashcroft was in agony about the prospect of having to cut $150 million in state spending. He was a conservative’s conservative, a perfect product of Assemblies of God religious conservatism and Ronald Reagan political conservatism.

He would go on to become a stalwart conservative in the U.S. Senate and, as U.S. attorney general, the face of the Patriot Act. Today he’s doing what most ex-politicians do, cashing in on his public service as a lawyer and consultant.

Ashcroft’s journey illustrates what has happened to the state Republican Party in the last two decades. There would be no place for the John Ashcroft of 1989 in the Missouri GOP of 2010.

He refused to cut $150 million from the budget to pay the refunds the state had been ordered to pay. Instead he proposed – horrors! – tax increases.

Jay Nixon, the Democrat?, would no sooner utter the T word, despite the many desperate Missourians, than he would expose himself in public. But John Ashcroft, in his younger, more idealistic days, said all the words we wish we might hear from Nixon. Go and read Ashcroft’s eloquent defense for raising taxes.

Who owns Roy Blunt and Robin Carnahan?

28 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

campaign contributions, missouri, Robin Carnahan, Roy Blunt

Robin Carnahan paints Roy Blunt as a corrupt politician, pointing out that he takes more money from lobbyists than any other member of Congress:

“There are 535 members of Congress. USA Today says Congressman Blunt has taken more campaign contributions from them than anybody else.”

She follows that accusation with this one:

“So when it comes to PAC contributions, he’s the number two recipient in the entire House of Representatives.”

She didn’t even bother outlining his crooked ties to Tom DeLay and Jack Abramoff or mentioning the hypocrisy of a family values man divorcing his wife to marry a tobacco lobbyist and then trying to sneak through a piece of legislation beneficial to one of his largest donors, Phillip Morris–legislation that would have benefited not only his new wife but his son Andrew, also a Phillip Morris lobbyist.

Scum.

Sadly, though, we cannot assume, just because the Republican in a race whores after money, that his opponent is necessarily virginal. So let’s take a look, shall we?

The best place to get the skinny on both candidates is Open Secrets. That site offers a summary of the contributions they’ve received, lists their top contributors as well as the industries they get money from, provides bar graphs showing which sectors of the economy give them money, examines how much out of state cash they get, and of course peeks at their PAC contributions.

That last one is especially relevant, considering how Carnahan spotlights the fact that Blunt is number two in the House in PAC contributions. 27 percent of the money Blunt rakes in comes from PACs, while 14 percent of Carnahan’s contributions do. But there are PACs and then there are PACs.

Some are devoted to skewing legislation for their own profit. Think Tamko Building Products, Monsanto, Peabody Energy and Goldman Sachs, a few of the firms on Blunt’s top ten list.

But there are also labor PACs and what Open Secrets calls ideological PACs. Think NEA and Council for a Livable World, for example, or Emily’s List, which, as of the end of the first quarter, had given Carnahan $171,000. Her green bar is small–I’d estimate about 1/12th as high as Blunt’s. Still, there is money from Boeing, Anheuser Busch, and Monsanto, so she’s not entirely virginal. Blunt, on the other hand, is … what’s the male word for slutty? Wouldn’t that be the way to describe the man who “succeeded in tapping dozens of corporate chief executives around the country and also took $156,000 from hedge fund managers and other investment interests.”

Which reminds me. Open Secrets informs us that “historically, the financial sector has consistently been the biggest source of funds in U.S. elections. In 2002, financial interests gave $105 million to federal candidates.” Hmm. Does anything stand out like a sore middle finger on the bar graph below?

Tell me he wouldn’t have voted with every single Republican senator last week, if he’d had the chance, to block a bill that would have required hedge fund managers to pay taxes on a larger proportion of their income.

Compare Blunt’s middle finger with Carnahan’s:

Now that’s what a middle finger oughta look like. And the bar for “lawyers and lobbyists” consists mainly of lawyers, as you can tell by looking at the list of her top contributors.

Finally, consider that Carnahan gets twenty percent of her contributions from individuals giving less than $200. For Blunt, that figure is only five percent. So, plaid shirts and rented pickup trucks notwithstanding, Blunt is owned by big money not by the grassroots.

Robin Carnahan is just the reverse.

That just may be about right

27 Sunday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

civilian, Emanuel Cleaver, McChrystal, military, Obama, polling, Rasmussen

Congressman Emanuel Cleaver (D), from April 27, 2008:

…And so the president’s [George W. Bush] poll numbers dropped down to where they are now, twenty seven. Satan is at twenty nine. [laughter, applause] Some of the lowest poll numbers in the history of the republic, since we’ve been keeping poll numbers…

[emphasis added]

From Plunderbund:

28% of Americans Believe the Military Should Have No Civilian Oversight?

by Joseph on June 26, 2010

….Does ANYONE really think we should have unbridled military control? Without civilian oversight?

Did Rasmussen limit their call list to 14 year old boys who just watched Taps for the first time?….

I’m almost surprised that the number was that low.

The Rasmussen poll:

28% Say Civilian Control of Military Bad for U.S.

Friday, June 25, 2010

….a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that just 44% of U.S. voters think civilian control of the military is good for the country.

Twenty-eight percent (28%) think it’s a bad idea to have civilians with the final say over military leaders. Another 28% are not sure which course is best….

….The survey of 1,000 Likely U.S. Voters was conducted on June 23-24, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence….

[emphasis added]

That just may be about right, given the number of batshit crazy people in America right now.

What would Lincoln or Truman have done?  

Bills in the Missouri General Assembly Special Session: Peter, meet Paul

27 Sunday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

HB 1, HB 2, HFR 1, Jay Nixon, jobs, missouri, pensions, SB 1, Special Session, tax credits

The Missouri General Assembly is now in a special session, called by Governor Jay Nixon, for the purpose of enacting incentives for Ford to create and retain jobs at its Claycomo plant and paying for those incentives by creating a second tier retirement system for new state employees.

You know, robbing Peter to pay Paul.

Peter, in the form of HB 1 (on pensions)

…. (2) Requires any person who first becomes a state employee on or after January 1, 2011, to be a member of the Missouri State Employees’ Retirement System (MOSERS) Year 2000 Plan….

….A member of this plan must contribute 4% of his or her pay to the system….

[emphasis added]

Paul, in form of HB 2 (on incentives for job creation/retention incentives directed at Ford, though not by name), from the Bill Summary:

….(2)  Defines “qualified supplier” as a company that:

…. d) Provides health insurance to employees and pays at least 50% of the insurance premiums….

[emphasis added]

Uh, is offering a tax incentive to a company which requires they offer health insurance considered “socialized health care”? Just asking. And to think the bill was sponsored by a republican in the Missouri General Assembly. But, I digress.

Then there’s this gem of a quote by the sponsor of the Senate version of the pension bill, Senator Jason Crowell (r), in today’s Kansas City Star:

….Crowell, the architect of the reform legislation, said changes are critical for the state to keep up with broader trends in retirement.

“If you look at where this pension system is, based on where the private sector is, I think any taxpayer would call this necessary reform,” Crowell said….

Is Senator Crowell (r) endorsing a private sector pay scale for all public employees in the State of Missouri?

Then again, the comparison doesn’t quite work – from a technical note in the Bureau of Labor Statistics Employer Costs For Employee Compensation – March 2010 [pdf] news release:

…Compensation cost levels in State and local government should not be directly compared with levels in private industry. Differences between these sectors stem from factors such as variation in work activities and occupational structures. Manufacturing and sales, for example, make up a large part of private industry work activities but are rare in State and local government. Professional and administrative support occupations (including teachers) account for two-thirds of the State and local government workforce, compared with one-half of private industry….

And in higher education [pdf] (the provisions of this bill would apply to public higher education employees in Missouri):

…Salary is one of many factors considered by prospective faculty members in weighing offers of employment; many of today’s academics are prepared to move among institutions (and private sector industries) for a more favorable compensation package. When top faculty members leave to pursue other opportunities, local and regional economic development can suffer through the associated loss of external funding, technology transfer and other entrepreneurial activity, and the loss of talented researchers and graduate students brought and attracted by cutting-edge scholars….

What effect do you think a reduction in pension benefits will have on recruiting and retaining new faculty at Missouri’s public higher education institutions? Just asking.

So much for promoting the long term economic development potential of the state, eh? That defeats the whole stated purpose of the special session, don’t you think? Peter and Paul, meet the Missouri General Assembly.

Retaining and and creating new jobs at the Ford Claycomo plant and for their suppliers is a good thing. It’s the General Assembly’s proposed method of paying for it that has me worried about the unintended consequences elsewhere.

In the Senate SB 1 [pdf] also addresses the public employee pension issue. The different language in the House and Senate bills will have to be reconciled. The Summary of SB1:

SB 1 – This act modifies provisions relating to retirement.

This act creates a new retirement plan for any person who becomes a state employee on or after January 1, 2011. To be eligible for normal retirement under this plan, employees will be required to reach age sixty-seven and have at least ten years of service or reach age fifty-five with the sum of the member’s age and service equaling at least ninety, uniformed members of the highway patrol with a mandatory retirement age of sixty will be required to reach age sixty or reach age fifty-five with ten years credited service, members of the general assembly will be required to reach age sixty-two and complete at least three full biennial assemblies or reach age fifty-five with the sum of the member’s age and service equaling at least ninety, and statewide elected officials will be required to reach age sixty-two and complete at least four years of service or reach age fifty-five with the sum of the official’s age and service equaling at least ninety. Employees, except for uniformed members of the highway patrol, are eligible for early retirement at age sixty-two with ten years of service. Employees must work for the state for ten years to vest in the retirement system. Members of this retirement plan will be required to contribute four percent of their pay to the retirement system. Members will not be able to purchase credit in the retirement plan for their past non-federal full-time public employment, their military service, or transfer credit from other public retirement plans. The employee contribution rate, the benefits under the year 2000 plan, and any other provision of the year 2000 plan may be altered, amended, increased, decreased, or repealed, but such change will only apply to service or interest credits after the effective date of the change. Employees under this plan shall not be eligible for the Backdrop option, which provides a lump sum payment at retirement for those working at least two years beyond normal retirement eligibility. (Section 104.1091)

This act also creates the Missouri State Retirement Investment Board. This board may manage the investment of the assets of the Missouri State Employees Retirement System (MOSERS) and the Missouri Department of Transportation and Highway Patrol Employees Retirement System (MPERS). The board may also administer the deferred compensation plan for state employees and the existing college and university defined contribution plan. Other Missouri public pension systems may upon approval of the system or plan and approval of the board enter an agreement with the board to provide investment oversight and management. The board is prohibited from managing the investments of the Public School Retirement System (PSRS), the Public Education Employee Retirement System(PEERS), the Missouri Local Government Employees Retirement System (LAGERS), the Public School Retirement System of St. Louis, the Public School Retirement System of Kansas City and the retirement plans established by the Bi-State Development Agency and the Reg
ional Investment District.

Before the investment board is authorized to manage the investment of assets, the boards of MOSERS and MPERS must each vote to irrevocably transfer oversight and management of the investment of assets managed by these retirement systems to the investment board. If either the MOSERS or MPERS board do not transfer its assets, then the powers and duties of the investment board lapse and the board is prohibited from overseeing or managing any funds.

The Missouri State Retirement Investment Board is organized as a body corporate and instrumentality of the state with its records subject to the sunshine law and its meetings open to the public. The company’s initial capital is provided on an equitable basis by MOSERS and MPERS. MOSERS and MPERS may transfer any of their executives or employees to the company, except for their executive directors.

The board has seven members, the executive director of MOSERS, the executive director of MPERS, the commissioner of administration, and four members appointed by the governor, initially from a list of names submitted by the executive directors of MOSERS and MPERS, and subsequently from a list of names submitted by board members. The governor has the right to reject any or all of the people on the list submitted by the executive directors or the list submitted by the board members. If the governor rejects any of the people recommended on the lists, the executive directors or the board members, as the case may be, are required to submit a list of two people for each vacant position. This process shall continue until no position on the board remains vacant.

No member of the board or member of the MOSERS or MPERS board may be employed by the board or have a business relationship with any service provider of the board for two years after the end of their membership on the board. No current or former member of the general assembly or statewide elected official may become an employee of the board or work for or have a business relationship with any service provider of the board for five years after their service in the general assembly or as a statewide elected official has ended.

The assets of these retirement systems may be held by the board in a collective trust fund for investment as a single pool. The board is not liable for any payment they make as directed by the executive director, chief executive officer, or other person designated by the retirement system. The administrative and investment expenses of the board shall be apportioned among the retirement systems.

The assets of MOSERS and MPERS will be transferred to the board over a transition period after the MOSERS and MPERS boards elect to transfer the management of investments to the investment board. MOSERS and MPERS are responsible for managing their assets until they are transferred to the board. (Sections 104.1500 to 104.1506).

The act also creates a new retirement plan for any person who first becomes a judge on or after January 1, 2011. Judges will be required to reach age sixty-seven and have at least twelve years of service or reach age sixty-two and have twenty years of service before they are eligible for normal retirement. If a judge retires at age sixty-seven with less than twelve years of service, or at sixty-two with less than twenty years service, their retirement compensation will be reduced proportionately. Judges in this retirement plan will be required to contribute four percent of their compensation to the retirement system. Judges will not be able to purchase credit in the retirement plan for their past non-federal full-time public employment or their military service. Judges under this plan who continue to work after their normal retirement date will not have cost-of-living increases added to their retirement compensation for the period of time between their eligibility for retirement and their actual retirement date. When a retired judge under this plan dies, their beneficiary will not receive an amount equal to fifty percent of the judge’s retirement compensation. Instead, judges will make a choice at retirement among the benefit payment options, that includes options for the amount received by the beneficiary. The employee contribution rate, the benefits under the judicial retirement plan, and any other provision of the judicial retirement plan may be altered, amended, increased, decreased, or repealed, but such change will only apply to service or interest credits after the effective date of the change. (Sections 476.521 and 476.529)

This act prohibits a retired judge who becomes employed after January 1, 2011, as an employee eligible to participate in the MOSERS retirement plan, from receiving their judicial retirement benefits while they are employed. Any judge who serves as a judge while he or she is receiving their judicial retirement is prohibited from receiving their judicial retirement while serving as a judge. A judge who serves as a senior judge or senior commissioner while receiving judicial retirement will continue to receive judicial retirement and additional credit and salary for their service. (Section 476.527)

This act is similar to the perfected version of SB 714 (2010).

And, to add to the fun, another republican in the House introduced a joint resolution, HJR 1:

Proposes a constitutional amendment limiting any increase in the merchants’ and manufacturers’ replacement tax, allowing local governing bodies to reduce the rate, and eliminating the tax in 2015.

Yes, yes, let’s keep cutting revenue. That’ll really help to stabilize the cash flow problems for government entities in Missouri, right?

A $10,000 campaign contribution and irony impairment in the 6th Senate District

26 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

6th Senate District, campaign finance, Harry Otto, irony impairment, missouri

The next few days, until the end of the quarter on June 30th, are going to be rather interesting as we witness the mad scramble of candidates receiving those large contributions which help pad their fundraising totals.

Readers here may be aware of our previous interest in republican CPAs who have become involved in Missouri politics. So, when we come across something along that vein, we tend to notice.

Harry Otto, a republican candidate in the 6th Senate District, is a CPA.  

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C091048 CITIZENS FOR OTTO [pdf] 6/25/2010

Committee for Political Action of MO Certified Accountants

St. Louis, MO

6/25/2010

$10,000.00

[emphasis added]

Whoa, Nellie! Have they dropped large contributions on CPA candidates before? Why, yes, they have!

The republican candidates (no Democrats filed) in the 6th Senate District:

State Senate – District 6

Republican

HARRY OTTO JEFFERSON CITY MO 361 2/23/2010

BILL DEEKEN JEFFERSON CITY MO 456 2/23/2010

KENNY JONES CALIFORNIA MO   565 2/23/2010

MIKE KEHOE JEFFERSON CITY MO 962 2/23/2010

The irony impairment? From a September 22, 2009 article in the Jefferson City News Tribune, reproduced at Harry Otto’s campaign web site:

“….I do expect to be outspent in this campaign,” Otto said, “but I don’t expect to be outworked.

“I don’t think this office ought to be purchased.  I think it ought to be earned.”  He said he’s not afraid of a fiveman primary race….

This has happened before, sort of like déjà vu all over again:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C091048 CITIZENS FOR OTTO [pdf] 9/29/2009

Committee for Political Action of MO Certified Accountants

St. Louis, MO

9/29/2009

$10,000.00

[emphasis added]

Two $10,000.00 campaign contributions from the same folks is a lot of not getting outspent, don’t you think?

Small Business Support for Clean Energy A Key to 2010 Elections?

25 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Yesterday’s Democratic Senate caucus meeting – combined with Majority Leader Reid’s push on this issue, combined with President Obama’s leadership, combined with a clear demand by the public for action – has given comprehensive clean energy and climate legislation a major boost as we head towards the 4th of July recess. Clearly, at this point, there’s a better path to 60 votes in the U.S. Senate for comprehensive clean energy and climate legislation than ever before. We are that close to making history, let’s make sure we seize this moment!

With all that in mind, a recent national survey by Al Quinlan of Greenburg Quinlan Rosner Research has potentially powerful implications for the 2010 elections, providing yet more evidence that climate legislation – despite a fallacious “mainstream media” narrative arguing otherwise – is actually good politics. The key findings are threefold (note: the document talks about strategy for the Democratic Party, but could apply to Republicans as well):

  1. Small businesses “are among America’s most popular entities,” with an eye-popping 44:1 favorable to unfavorable ratio (“the highest we have ever seen in our polling on any topic”)
  2. Generating support from small business owners, for either political party, is a key to success in the upcoming mid-term elections.
  3. Small business owners strongly agree “that a move to clean energy will help restart the economy and lead to job creation by small businesses.” In fact, according to Greenburg Quinlan, “One of the most surprising findings of the survey is that despite the fact that nearly two thirds of business owners believe it would increase costs for their businesses, a majority still want to move forward on clean energy and climate policy.”

As if that’s not evidence enough that there’s broad support out there for comprehensive, clean energy and climate legislation, how about this Benenson Survey Group survey, conducted in late May/early June 2010? The key findings of this poll are:

  • 65% of “likely 2010 voters” believe that “the federal government should invest much more than it currently invests [or] somewhat more than it currently invests .”
  • 63% of “likely 2010 voters” support an energy bill that would “limit pollution, invest in domestic energy sources and encourage companies to use and develop clean energy…in part by charging energy companies for carbon pollution in electricity or fuels like gas.”
  • Among “undecided voters,” “62% support the bill and just 21% oppose.”

There is also strong evidence from this polling that voters – including independent voters by a 2.5:1 margin – are strongly inclined, by around a 2:1 margin, to be “more likely to re-elect” their Senator if he or she voted for a strong, comprehensive, clean energy and climate bill.

In sum, solid majorities of small businesspeople and the public at large both support comprehensive, clean energy and climate legislation. Which is why, once again – as we pointed out yesterday – the “mainstream media” narrative, that voting for limits on carbon pollution is bad politics, is just dead wrong. To the contrary, victory this November could go to the candidates – and the party – that seizes this issue and makes it their own. Ideally, it would be great to see both Republicans and Democrats fighting to be the “greenest” candidate, and not just in terms of how much money they raise.

UPDATE: Add another poll to the list, this one by WSJ-NBC indicating that “Respondents favored comprehensive energy and carbon pollution reduction legislation by 63 percent to 31 percent – a two to one margin.”

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