• About
  • The Poetry of Protest

Show Me Progress

~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

Show Me Progress

Monthly Archives: April 2017

Lt. Gov. Mike Parson (r) – April 2017 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report

19 Wednesday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Inaugaration, Mike Parson, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

The April quarterly campaign finance reports are in.

Mike Parson (r) [2016 file photo].

At the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C091129: Parson For Missouri
Committee Type: Candidate
Party Affiliation: Republican
[….]
Established Date: 06/15/2009
[….]
Information Reported On: 2017 – April Quarterly Report
Beginning Money on Hand $30,183.86
Monetary Receipts + $28,700.00
Monetary Expenditures – $17,866.77
Contributions Made – $635.00
Other Disbursements – $3,481.60
Subtotal $6,716.63
Ending Money On Hand $36,900.49

[emphasis added]

Almost as good a fundraising quarter as Governor Greitens (r).

The contributions:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION
CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED – SUPPLEMENTAL
4/17/2017 PARSON FOR MISSOURI
Samuel Gohn PO Box 378 West Plains Mo 65775 West Plains Bank and Trust 1/20/2017 $100.00
Paul Lindsey PO Box 32 Lebanon MO 65536 Horizon Energy Holdings Co Inc — Vice President 1/20/2017 $1,000.00
Evergreen Investments LLC PO Box 1600 Lebanon MO 65536 1/20/2017 $500.00
Jackie Hartman 2622 Old Mount Hoope Road Lonedell MO 63060 Crab Apple Village Senior Estates — Administrator 1/20/2017 $500.00
Stephen Holden 718 West Business Highway 60 Dexter MO 63841 CRA Investments — Partner 2/18/2017 $2,500.00
Zimmerman Properties LLC 1730 E Republic Rd Springfield MO 65804 2/18/2017 $1,000.00
Robert Hartle 2201 Walton Drive Jackson MO 63755 Double Diamond Construction 2/24/2017 $1,000.00
Matt Mills 13722 County Road 642 Dexter MO 63841 CRA Investments — Partner 3/24/2017 $2,600.00
Nathan Maurer 327 Roxy Lake Ests Poplar Bluff MO 63901 Poplar Bluff Realty — Owner 3/24/2017 $2,600.00
Ryan Holden 11386 Bay Hills Drive Dexter MO 63841 Young Real Estate LLC 3/24/2017 $2,600.00
Howard Wood 203 NE Main Street Bonne Terre MO 63628 Wood Land and Cattle — Owner 3/27/2017 $2,600.00
HE Whitener 11764 N Farm Road 177 Fair Grove MO 65648 Trailiner — CEO 3/27/2017 $2,000.00
William Darr 2951 S White Oak Drive Springfield MO 65809 American Dehydrated Foods Inc 3/27/2017 $1,000.00
Bruce Buwalda 95 Grand Circle Drive Maryland Heights MO 63043 Retired 3/29/2017 $50.00
Edwin Rice PO Box 11250 Springfield MO 65808 Ozarks CocaCola — CEO 3/29/2017 $100.00
Linda Rallo 450 Conway Vlg St Louis MO 63141 Pick Strategies 3/29/2017 $50.00
Carol Coryell Carnes 3595 E Montrose Ct Springfield MO 65809 TLC Properties 3/28/2017 $500.00
Ryan DeBoef 350 S John Q Hammons Pkwy Springfield MO 65806 Attorney 3/28/2017 $250.00
Carol Novak 258 Rosewood Rd Phillipsburg MO 65722 Self — Breeder 3/29/2017 $100.00
WE Shoehigh LLC PO Box 104232 Jefferson City MO 65110 3/28/2017 $500.00
Missouri Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Assn PAC 205 E Capitol Ave Jefferson City MO 65101 3/28/2017 $500.00
MO Majority PAC PO Box 651 Perryville MO 63775 3/28/2017 $1,000.00
Daryl Duwe 12122 County Road 4040 Holts Summit MO 65043 Lobbyist 3/28/2017 $500.00
Xcaliber MO PAC 215 E Capitol Ave Jefferson City MO 65101 3/28/2017 $2,000.00
Cheyenne International LLC 701 South Battleground Ave Grover NC 28073 3/28/2017 $2,500.00
Jeff Davis 5818 Pebble Creek Dr Wardsville MO 65101 BNSF Railway — Attorney 3/28/2017 $100.00
Missouri State Chiropractors Assoc PAC 220 E Dunklin St Jefferson City MO 65101 3/28/2017 $250.00
AMECPAC PO Box 1645 Jefferson City MO 65102 3/28/2017 $300.00
Mark Stephens 211 W Broadway Bolivar MO 65613 Stephens Photography — Owner 1/9/2017 $1,375.00
Susie Stephens 211 W Broadway Bolivar MO 65613 Stephens Photography — Owner 1/9/2017 $1,375.00
Quality Building PAC 101 E High Street Jefferson City MO 65101 3/29/2017 $776.26

And some of the expenditures:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION
ITEMIZED EXPENDITURES OVER $100 SUPPLEMENTAL FORM
4/17/2017 PARSON FOR MISSOURI
Campaign Concepts 1418 W St Joseph Street Perryville MO 63775 1/9/2017 Consulting $1,000.00
Cakes By Linda 129 Mockingbird Road Lake Ozark MO 65049 1/17/2017 Inaugaration Expense $710.00
The J Harris Company 1301 Southwest Blvd Jefferson City MO 65109 1/17/2017 Consulting $2,250.00
The Capitol Grill 201 West Capitol Ave Jefferson City MO 65101 1/17/2017 Inaugaration Expense $143.27
Campaign Concepts 1418 W St Joseph Street Perryville MO 63775 2/8/2017 Consulting $1,000.00
The J Harris Company 1301 Southwest Blvd Jefferson City MO 65109 2/8/2017 Consulting $2,250.00
Sams Club 849 Stoneridge Pkwy Jefferson City MO 65109 1/3/2017 Inaugaration Expense $102.13

Alrighty then, back to business.

Gov. Eric Greitens (r) – April 2017 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report

18 Tuesday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Eric Greitens, governor, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

The April quarterly campaign finance reports are in.

Eric Greitens (r) [2016 file photo].

At the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C151053: Greitens For Missouri
Committee Type: Candidate
Party Affiliation: Republican
[….]
Established Date: 02/24/2015
[….]
Information Reported On: 2017 – April Quarterly Report
Beginning Money on Hand $2,946,164.04
Monetary Receipts + $24,726.21
Monetary Expenditures – $511,248.95
Contributions Made – $0.00
Other Disbursements – $39,701.86
Subtotal ($526,224.60)
Ending Money On Hand $2,419,939.44

[emphasis added]

$24,726.21? It’s rough when you can’t raise the money one $1,975,000.00 contribution at a time.

$511,248.95 in expenditures? Whoa, Nelly.

Let’s look at the contributions:

13. TOTAL MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED FROM PERSONS GIVING $100 OR LESS $3,713.99

[emphasis added]

Nope, that’s not $1,975,000.00.

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED – SUPPLEMENTAL
4/17/2017 GREITENS FOR MISSOURI
MO Ambulatory Surgery Center Assoc PAC 1034 S Brentwood Blvd Suite 1700 Saint Louis MO 63117 1/5/2017 $1,000.00
Missouri Archietects PAC PO Box 105938 Jefferson City MO 65110 1/5/2017 $2,000.00
Steven Privette 1179 Co Rd 1050 Willow Springs MO 65793 Self-employed — Attorney 1/11/2017 $500.00
Michael Hoffmann 950 Francis Pl Clayton MO 63105 Self-employed — Dentist 2/21/2017 $1,000.00
People to Elect Curtis Faulkner 2556 Burchard Drive Saint Louis MO 63136 3/8/2017$200.00
Kristi Fulnecky 2872 S Forrest Heights Ave Springfield MO 65809 Fulnecky Enterprises LLC — President/Attorney 3/8/2017 $500.00
Bradley Selle 432 S Hazels Run Rd Nixa MO 65714 Requested — Requested 3/8/2017 $2,500.00
Debra Hart 2955 S Ridge Dr Springfield MO 65809 Requested — Requested 3/8/2017 $2,500.00
William Gipson 299 Oak Tree Point Lane Shell Knob MO 65747 Retired — Retired 3/12/2017 $1,000.00
Edwin Rice PO Box 11250 Springfield MO 65808 Ozarks Coca-Cola/Dr Pepper — CEO 3/20/2017 $2,600.00
William Scharf 155 Carondelet Plaza Clayton MO 63105 MO Office of the Governor — Policy Director 3/29/2017 $2,600.00
Arthur Caleb 9177 Haney Drive Houston MO 65483 Sun Solar — CEO 3/27/2017 $1,500.00
Diana Ijames PO Box 487 Sullivan MO 63080 Ace Manufacturing — Public Relations 3/27/2017 $500.00
Mary Krause 1702 Pheasant Run Drive Maryland Heights MO 63043 Allergan — Sr Sales Executive 3/27/2017 $250.00
Timothy Hunt 4088 Pr 3336 Greenville TX 75402 Self-employed — Insurance 3/31/2017 $250.00
James Henderson 1532 Hollow Brook Saint Charles MO 63303 Dynamic Sales Co Inc. — President 3/28/2017 $200.00

Meh. Well, okay.

Some of the expenditures:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION
ITEMIZED EXPENDITURES OVER $100 SUPPLEMENTAL FORM
4/17/2017 GREITENS FOR MISSOURI

The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/18/2017 Travel $1,257.20
The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/18/2017 Travel $1,257.20
The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/18/2017 Travel $1,257.20
The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/18/2017 Travel $1,257.20

Illinois State Society of Washington DC PO Box 320776 Alexandria VA 22320 1/20/2017 Event Expense $1,236.00
Southwest Airlines PO Box 36647 1CR Dallas TX 75235 1/20/2017 Travel $645.88
The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/23/2017 Travel $166.15
The Liaison Capitol Hill 415 New Jersey Ave NW Washington DC 20001 1/23/2017 Travel $308.20

The Westin Washington DC 1400 M St NW Washington DC 20005 1/30/2017 Travel $286.26
Delta Airlines 800 Connecticut Ave Newark CT 6854 1/30/2017 Travel $760.40
Southwest Airlines PO Box 36647 1CR Dallas TX 75235 1/30/2017 Travel $785.88
The Westin Washington DC 1400 M St NW Washington DC 20005 1/31/2017 Travel $112.24

Marriott 1331 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington DC 20004 3/1/2017 Travel $416.78

Something Else Strategies 212 Golden Willow Court Easley SC 29642 3/22/2017 Media Production $173,483.89
c5 Creative Consulting PO Box 11987 Atlanta GA 30355 3/22/2017 Media Services $180,000.00

American Airlines 11300 S Airport Dr Columbia MO 65201 3/24/2017 Travel $486.20
American Airlines 11300 S Airport Dr Columbia MO 65201 3/24/2017 Travel $486.20
American Airlines 11300 S Airport Dr Columbia MO 65201 3/24/2017 Travel $486.20

Southwest Airlines PO Box 36647 1CR Dallas TX 75235 3/24/2017 Travel $1,178.82

W HOTELS WASHINGTON 515 15th St NW F St Washington DC 20004 3/27/2017 Travel $346.36
W HOTELS WASHINGTON 515 15th St NW F St Washington DC 20004 3/27/2017 Travel $346.36
W HOTELS WASHINGTON 515 15th St NW F St Washington DC 20004 3/27/2017 Travel $346.36

Contempoary Producations Inc 190 Carondelet Plaza Suite 1111 St Louis MO 63105 3/28/2017 Inauguration expenses $14,667.38
Capitol Plaza 415 West McCarty Street Jefferson City MO 65101 3/28/2017 Inauguration expenses $14,161.39

W HOTELS WASHINGTON 515 15th St NW F St Washington DC 20004 3/29/2017 Travel $346.36

Washington, D.C. calls!

$353,483.89 in media production and media services at the end of March. Fancy that.

Previously:

Gov. Eric Greitens (r) – January 2017 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report (January 18, 2017)

Oh, sure, it’s all laughs and giggles…until the bill comes due. (March 8, 2017)

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): making it easy

18 Tuesday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

4th Congressional District, missouri, social media, town halls, trolling, Twitter, Vicky Hartzler

Last week, Senator Claire McCaskill (D):

…I think some of my Republican colleagues are hiding and don’t want to come out and do town halls. Especially the members of Congress…

… Have any of them [Vicky Hartzler (r), Anne Wagner (r)] done town halls that you know of? I don’t think any of them have done a town hall. You know, if you can’t do a town hall I’m not sure why you would run. I think you’re supposed to be serving the public. I’m pretty sure, so…

Yesterday, via Twitter:

B Yates‏ @OldDrum
Great. Where can we find your schedule for townhall meetings with your regular constituents?

Rep. Vicky Hartzler  @RepHartzler
Had a great day touring Windsor and meeting with the community leaders there #MO4

2:37 PM – 17 Apr 2017

The great unwashed? Don’t hold your breath.

Qu’ils mangent de la brioche.

After all that rain

17 Monday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

missouri

At noon in west central Missouri:

Surely, you jest

17 Monday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist, social media, US Senate

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#resist, missouri, Roy Blunt, social media, town halls, Twitter

Roy Blunt (r) [2016 file photo].

Open public town halls?

B Yates‏ @OldDrum
I missed you schedule of townhalls. Please post it.

Senator Roy Blunt @RoyBlunt
This week I toured Mo-Sci, an innovative company that works closely w/ @MissouriSandT, @WUSTL [….]

2:23 AM – 17 Apr 2017

Roy Blunt (r) might want to ask Claire McCaskill (D) about how it all works.

Roy Blunt (r) isn’t at all concerned, K Street is happy

16 Sunday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist, social media

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#resist, Donald Trump, Jason Kander, missouri, Roy Blunt, social media, Twitter

We could have had a senator who actually lives in Missouri:

Jason Kander (D) [2016 file photo].

From Jason Kander (D), via Twitter, pointing out the painful reality:

Jason Kander‏ @JasonKander
If not for the blue checkmark, we’d surely think this was a parody account.

Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
Our military is building and is rapidly becoming stronger than ever before. Frankly, we have no choice!
8:41 AM – 16 Apr 2017
Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
Someone should look into who paid for the small organized rallies yesterday. The election is over!
8:13 AM – 16 Apr 2017
Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
I did what was an almost an impossible thing to do for a Republican-easily won the Electoral College! Now Tax Returns are brought up again?
8:07 AM – 16 Apr 2017

9:22 AM – 16 Apr 2017

Sadly, for everyone, it isn’t.

Building? In three months? What color is the sky in his world?

If he liked this week’s anti-Trump rallies he’s really gonna love next week’s.

Uh, Donald Trump has already held campaign rallies for 2020.

Tax returns? That’s rich.

Going somewhere

15 Saturday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#resist, missouri, sunset

This evening in west central Missouri:

Sunset.

At least they know where. Unlike most of the rest of the country under Donald Trump (r).

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): press availability – Parkville, Missouri – April 13, 2017

14 Friday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in US Senate

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, Media, missouri, Parkville, town hall

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking to the press – Parkville, Missouri – April 13, 2017.

After Thursday afternoon’s open public town hall at Park University in Parkville Senator Claire McCaskill (D) took questions from the press:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): …But I am confident, because, behind the scenes there are Republicans in the Senate that are just as committed as Democrats to getting all the facts out. And some of them serve on the Intelligence Committee. So, even if the chairman, uh, would veer off course and neglect to go after an area of evidence that is crucial I believe the Democrats and a few of the Republicans that are on the committee would be able to right that, um, that trajectory. And I also am very confident about [Senator] Lindsey Graham, who’s the chairman of a subcommittee on the Judiciary Committee. He said, in public at a hearing, that, on a committee that I’m on, in no uncertain terms, everybody needs to realize next time it’ll be the Republicans. This isn’t about Democrats or Republicans. This is about whether or not we allow Russia to try to break the backbone of the most important Democracy in the world. [crosstalk] That’s what he said.

Question: Senator, what do you…Senator, what do you, what did you mean by I want to get to the bottom of the op, opioid industry?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): I want to find out why we have five percent of the population and eighty percent of the opioids. Uh, that doesn’t happen by accident. They came from somewhere. Why do we have such an over prescribing in this country compared to other nations?

Question: Are you suggesting that these companies were not truthful about the addictive nature?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Well, we have anecdotal evidence that at least one of these companies actually said at one point, uh, that less than one percent of the population will be addicted by his drug. Um, that is totally factually incorrect. And we want to find out if this was going on a wide scale basis, what it is was an individual salesman that said something inappropriate, that’s why we need all the documents we’ve requested from these companies. And we [voice: “Are you getting them?”] …We’ve made a formal request. It’s a long list so we’re gonna give them some time. But, we’re not gonna stop until we do.

Question: Senator you mentioned, uh, that, having conversations with colleagues in Washington encouraging them not to look down on Trump voters. Uh, what does the party have to do nationally and what do you have to do specifically to help persuade those Trump voters, what you are talking about, that we’re the ones fighting for you on these issues? Obviously you’re gonna, you’re going into a tough fight in twenty-eighteen and you’re acutely aware of that. So, if could you speak about both yourself and the party nationally.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Well, I think it’s important that I, I’m comfortable in the role of underdog. Um, I’ve been here many times before. I think it’s also important that I’m not afraid to go anywhere in this state and encounter people who disagree with me. Uh, you know, if you want to hide behind a spokesman or if you want to hide behind talking points or some, by some technology that’s not a good substitute for getting out into these small communities, looking folks in the eye, and say, talk to me, I respect you, talk to me. What can I be doing better? How can I improve? Uh, what can I be fighting for that you’re really frustrated by? And I think doing that matters and that’s what I’m gonna do.

Question: So does that make this the unofficial start of the, the reelect campaign? I mean if somebody like Brian or I would say, you know, unofficially this, it, it started here. Would be, would we be wrong?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Well, I, you know, I think, um, you know, when you’re hired by the public then you have an obligation to the public throughout your tenure. So, if you want to be rehired you need to do a job, a good job for your entire tenure. So, I hope I’ve been doing that kind of work, uh, since Missourians elected e in twenty-twelve. But, I’m certainly gonna continue to do that kind of work the next eighteen months and then we’ll let the chips fall where they may.

Question: The unofficial start then?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Uh, that’s your words, not mine. [crosstalk] You’re not gonna get me to say it.

Question: You said, you did say at one point that, um, there’s a tea party type movement going on in the Democratic Party. Can you elaborate on that?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): I, I don’t think I used the word tea party but I do think there’s [crosstalk]…

Question: So there’s something like [crosstalk] the tea party going on?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Yeah, there’s a, there’s a, there’s an energy that is different. Um, we’ll be releasing our fundraising numbers for the first quarter and, uh, in a few hours and, um, it [laugh] it, it’s, it’s different, it’s different. People are really engaged. People are showing up. People are speaking out. People want to be organized. They want to do more.[voice: “That’s a good thing.”] Uh, and that’s a great thing. I, I, I’m tickled pink about that.

Question: When you talked about the Democratic Party in particular and factions in the party that might make it hard for a, a centrist like you who works across both sides of the aisle.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Well, you, I think that’s a reality I need to acknowledge. Um, I am not afraid to call myself a moderate. And I’m not gonna change who I am. I’m not gonna shift with the polls, I’m not gonna shift with the wind. I’m a moderate. And that means sometimes as you saw today I give answers that some of the people in the base of my party are not happy with. But I’m hoping that overall they see that I stand up, uh, when I need to, that I’ve had some guts and I’ve had the courage of conviction to take on some really hard problems. And I think they also realize Missouri’s a tough state for somebody who has a D behind their name.

Question: What were some of the, uh, questions that you were expecting to hear versus what you heard out in the town hall today?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Um, I certainly am getting questions about health care everywhere. Um, I think people are very worried about losing their health care. Uh, I think Missourians particularly, um, we’re a state, for the life of me I’ll never figure out why, uh, the governor of our state is not doing what the governor of Indiana did, Governor Pence. He said, I’ll take the federal tax dollars that Indianans are due and I’ll devise our own Medicaid program. Why doesn’t Missouri do that? Why are we allowing other states to spend the money that Missourians have paid in in their federal taxes? And by the way, that’s where opioid treatment comes from. Most of the opioid treatment in this country is Medicaid. So, they, they want to talk about what a serious problem opioids are and they won’t even take the money that we’re due when they can design their own program. It’s very frustrating for me and, um, so I think that’s one of the reasons health care always comes up. I’m a little surprised we haven’t had more on foreign policy and the conflicts that are ongoing in Syria and, obviously, today, um, we had a, uh, a very large bomb dropped in Afghanistan which is out of the ordinary for what we have been doing in Afghanistan. So I’m a little surprised we didn’t have more foreign policy questions. [crosstalk] I don’t know enough about it yet. I just found out about it before I walked in here. So as a member of the Armed Services Committee I’ve learned the hard way don’t talk about it until you know about it.

Question: Senator you’ve always been a big supporter of labor. Does it concern you now that Missouri has decided to go with right to work.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Yeah. I’m, by the way we’ve created more jobs in Missouri over the last several years than surrounding states that were right to work. I think this idea that if, uh, we take away the right of people to bargain for a wage, workers to bargain for a wage, that somehow that makes us less attractive to, to companies. I, I just think it’s silly. It’s not true. Um, look, you know, bargaining for good wages and benefits is pretty all American. I mean it’s one of the things that built the middle class in this country. And as we try to focus on workers and helping workers and people who are trying to get ahead why in the world would we engage to a race to the bottom on wages? The only thing we know for sure about right to work it means everybody’s gonna take a cut in pay. And, now, maybe it helps the guys at the top of the company do better, but it doesn’t help the people that are struggling, um, that are trying to raise a family and trying to send kids to college. And so I’m gonna try to help repeal it, um, on the ballot next year. We’re gonna try to get it on the ballot repeal it. There’s a provision to do that. We’re gonna work really hard to get it done.

Question: Senator, do you have any opportunity to talk to Governor Greitens since he’s been sworn into office about some of these issues like health care that do involve both federal and state policymakers?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): I have not. Um, he did reach out to me one time after he was elected, but we haven’t talked since then. I was, um, gratified to see that he announced a big broadband program, uh, uh, a week ago when he said Missouri’s putting six million dollars in it. And I thought, started thinking I’m pretty sure that most of that money is federal. He didn’t mention that, but thirty-two million of the money is federal money. Um, so what he’s doing is leveraging, which is by the way what we do with Medicaid, Missouri puts in ten cents and the federal government pays ninety. So he’s putting in twenty cents and the federal government is putting in eighty for the broadband program. The more we can work together on those projects, we got no heads up that he was doing that, um, the more we can work together the more efficient and effective those programs will be. And I’m really worried about REAL ID. Um, I’m worried that Missourians aren’t gonna be able to get on a plan a year from now because the Missouri legislature has not given Missourians the option of getting an ID that will be compliant to get on an airplane.

Question: Your two thousand nine, uh, town hall tour was very similar geographically but, uh, the tone is very different. What do you attribute that to?

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Yeah. It, this is different. Um, you know, I think some of my Republican colleagues are hiding and don’t want to come out and do town halls. Especially the members of Congress. It is shocking to me that there’s members of Congress that have never done a town hall. Um, I want to tell them you should have come with me in two thousand nine, um, it would have been easy to hide under the desk in two thousand nine because people were really upset. And I knew when I went out there I was gonna get yelled at. And I did. But I learned. And I think that people understood that I was willing to encounter conflict and people who didn’t like me, people who disagreed with me. I think it’s important. And, but this is different. This has been, um, if somebody would have told me, I don’t know if you remember the town hall that I did in Hillsboro, Jefferson County in two thousand nine. But it was tough. And yesterday I walked in to a standing ovation, so it was a little bit like here. I don’t know what’s up, but it’s kind of fun.

Question: Are you referring to either Representative [Anne] Wagner of Representative [Vicky] Hartzler, people who have been mentioned as possible opponents[crosstalk]…

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): I, I, all of them. I’m not aware of any of them. Have any of them done town halls that you know of? I don’t think any of them have done a town hall. You know, if you can’t do a town hall I’m not sure why you would run. I think you’re supposed to be serving the public. I’m pretty sure, so.

Anybody else? Thanks guys.

Previously:

You think Sen. Claire McCaskill (D) has been smiling a lot this week? (February 23, 2017)

What a difference eight years makes (April 13, 2017)

If only Roy Blunt (r) could give him something to do at one of his open town halls in Missouri (April 13, 2017)

This ain’t 2009 and right wingnut billionaires ain’t paying to rile up teabaggers (April 13, 2017)

This ain’t 2009 and right wingnut billionaires ain’t paying to rile up teabaggers

13 Thursday Apr 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in US Senate

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, missouri, Parkville, town hall

This afternoon in Parkville, Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill (D) held a sixth open public town hall of the week. This unlike the republican members of Missouri’s congressional delegation.

Approximately three hundred individuals packed the chapel on the campus of Park University for the close to hour and a half long event. Like previous town halls held by Senator Mccaskill over the years those in attendance submitted written questions on cards. The cards were placed in a basket and entrusted to an individual in the audience who the senator solicited to select cards at random – the choser’s qualification for their role is that they state they will never consider voting for the senator.

Unlike those attending the 2009 health care town halls this crowd was polite and largely supportive of Senator McCaskill, greeting her with a standing ovation when she took to the stage. It appeared that supporters of Donald Trump’s agenda in attendance at this afternoon’s event could have been counted on the fingers of one of his tiny hands.

After brief opening remarks Senator McCaskill took questions. Energy policy, health care, education, and Social Security were among the issues addressed in the constituent questions.

An organizer for Indivisible outside the venue before the start of the town hall.

Indivisible organizers outside the entrance to the venue distributed “agree” and “disagree” cards.

Filling out a question card.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – Parkville, Missouri – April 13, 2017.

Disagree.

On coal.

A full house:

Agree.

Demand action.

An interview with local television news.

Nope, it was definitely not like 2009.

Previously:

You think Sen. Claire McCaskill (D) has been smiling a lot this week? (February 23, 2017)

What a difference eight years makes (April 13, 2017)

If only Roy Blunt (r) could give him something to do at one of his open town halls in Missouri (April 13, 2017)

Free speech – you support it or you don’t

13 Thursday Apr 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

free speech, Islamophobia, Robert Spencer, Truman State University

I was kid when in the early 1960s the Free Speech Movement (FSM) erupted in demonstrations on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley. FSM leaders such as Mario Savio and Bettina Aptheker became my heroes. Their goal was to secure the rights of students to engage in unhampered political speech on campus. The result of their efforts insured that right to students of both the right and the left.

Another of my heroes – or heroic group, if you prefer – is the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). I spell the name out in full because I want to emphasize that the group stands for “civil liberties” period, not civil liberties for the left or the right.

I’ve sympathized with many of the ACLU’s crusades that fall on the spectrum of causes involving leftist goals. Easy to do. But what I’ve really admired is that the commitment of the ACLU has been to principle, not political identity. It’s what led the organization to stand up for the rights of a group of neo-Nazis to parade down the streets of Skokie Illinois in 1978, a city where numerous Holocaust survivors lived. Not easy to stomach, but the right thing to do if you value the freedom to speak freely.

I tell you this because I want you to know where I come from when I write about the recent free speech controversy at Truman State University and, by extension, similar occurrences at Universities around the country. US News summarized the Truman State situation:

Some students at Truman State University in northeast Missouri are circulating a petition seeking to halt a speech by an author who runs the website “Jihad Watch.” Concerns arose at the public university in Kirksville when a Republican student group arranged to bring Robert Spencer to campus Thursday night, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/2osMqZG ) reported. The Southern Poverty Law Center identifies Spencer as an anti-Muslim “propagandist,” and the school’s Muslim Student Association has responded by recruiting another speaker to appear beforehand in the same lecture hall. Truman State described allowing the event to proceed as a free speech issue, although leaders stressed the university isn’t sponsoring Spencer’s speech. “Cordial discourse on even the most contentious of topics is a fundamental tenet of a liberal arts education and a hallmark of a free society,” the university said in emails to student, faculty and staff this week. “This often includes viewpoints many people strongly oppose.”

We should be clear about the fact that Robert Spencer espouses reprehensible beliefs. But the petition drive that seeks to silence him is, to my mind, almost equally reprehensible, no matter how much its sponsors may believe in their righteous cause. They can protest his presence and I hope they do – protest is speech, after all – but making one’s own views heard through protest should not involve silencing the other guy.

Nor is repression useful to the cause of diversity. Denying Spencer the opportunity to put his views out, as repulsive as they may be, deprives us of the opportunity to expose his errors – errors that thrive and take on added power when they are not fully and openly examined. It is especially important to bring this type of ugliness into the open and show how devoid of substance such hate-mongers are now that we have a President who gives comfort to similar bigoted, white nationalist factions.

Many students who support the petition claim to make a distinction between “free” speech and “hate” speech directed at any specific individual or group. However the distinction is false. Free speech is an activity and is inclusive of even hate speech, which is a category of speech – they are not analogous entities, one of which we can endorse while prohibiting the other. (Clearly libelous speech  is another matter altogether – one with which the legal system has been designed to handle.)

The only way to deal with “hate speech” is to expose its falsity with – cliche or not – more speech. Efforts to prohibit hate speech imply that those who find it disturbing are not capable of counter agument. When we further argue that we aim to spare targeted individuals or groups pain by silencing hateful speech, we need to realize aren’t helping them, but rather condescending to them by underestimating their strength and ability to defend themselves in the – forgive me for another cliche – court of ideas.

Fortunately, the Muslim Student Association at Truman seems to understand the issues and has responded by securing the inclusion of a counter-speaker to appear at the same venue prior to Spencer’s address – to the horror, needless to say of the folks who recruited Spencer. Conservative Club members who sponsored the event seem to believe that adding a dissenting voice will sully the “intellectual diversity” they believe Spencer brings to their campus. Of course, the addition of the Muslim Students’ speaker actually ensures that the event celebrates not only intellectual diversity, but introduces the element of critical argument that insures perspective in evaluating that diversity.

Tomorrow I hope to read that the event at Truman this evening (Thursday, April 13) came off without anything more untoward than a relatively noisy protest – I won’t be disturbed if I learn that Spencer got an earful of the contempt he deserves – but I will be very saddened if he leaves Missouri armed with more ammunition that he can use to tar all progressives as self-righteous, authoritarian enemies of all speech but their own.

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Recent Posts

  • Wholly War
  • Something, something Czar
  • Eric Schmitt (r) lays an egg…again
  • Campaign Finance: Justice is supposed to be free, Conservative Justice costs serious money
  • Campaign Finance: soup lines and gilded plastic

Recent Comments

Michael Bersin on Wholly War
Michael Bersin on Wholly War
Steve Duane Phipps on Profit!
The price we all pay… on “Up, Up and Away……
HB 2075: Who checks?… on Hey Brandon Phelps (r), we hea…

Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007

Categories

  • campaign finance
  • Claire McCaskill
  • Congress
  • Democratic Party News
  • Eric Schmitt
  • Healthcare
  • Hillary Clinton
  • Interview
  • Jason Smith
  • Josh Hawley
  • Mark Alford
  • media criticism
  • meta
  • Missouri General Assembly
  • Missouri Governor
  • Missouri House
  • Missouri Senate
  • Resist
  • Roy Blunt
  • social media
  • Standing Rock
  • Town Hall
  • Uncategorized
  • US Senate

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Blogroll

  • Balloon Juice
  • Crooks and Liars
  • Digby
  • I Spy With My Little Eye
  • Lawyers, Guns, and Money
  • No More Mister Nice Blog
  • The Great Orange Satan
  • Washington Monthly
  • Yael Abouhalkah

Donate to Show Me Progress via PayPal

Your modest support helps keep the lights on. Click on the button:

Blog Stats

  • 1,036,607 hits

Powered by WordPress.com.

 

Loading Comments...