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Monthly Archives: July 2017

Talking about health care at Sen. Roy Blunt’s (r) office in Kansas City – July 7, 2017

07 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist, Roy Blunt, US Senate

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#resist, ACA, Indivisible, Kansas City, missouri, Roy Blunt, Trumpcare, U.S. Senate

Nope. Still no open public town halls in Missouri with Senator Roy Blunt (r). Go figure.

At noon today over seventy constituents showed up at the building entrance for Senator Roy Blunt’s (r) Kansas City office at Tenth and Walnut to express their opposition to the republican Senate Trumpcare bill. Many held umbrellas.

“Keep us covered”

“People before money”

“Coverage for all”

Individuals in turn told their health insurance stories and the challenges they will face with repeal of the provisions of the Affordable Care Act and any implementation of Trumpcare.

A personal health care story.

“Affordable healthcare is a human right”

Two staffers from Senator Blunt’s (r) office came out to the building entrance to listen and take notes.

“Don’t defund Planned Parenthood”

“Rural Missouri needs Medicaid”

Previously:

Talking about health care at Sen. Roy Blunt’s (r) office in Kansas City – June 23, 2017 (June 23, 2017)

A Sen. Roy Blunt (r) health care story (June 23, 2017)

Talking about health care at Sen. Roy Blunt’s (r) office in Kansas City – June 23, 2017 – signs of the times (June 24, 2017)

Talking about health care at Sen. Jerry Moran’s (r) office in Olathe, Kansas – June 28, 2017 (June 28, 2017)

Talking about health care at Sen. Jerry Moran’s (r) office in Olathe, Kansas – June 28, 2017 – signs of the times (June 29, 2017)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): even more town halls (July 5, 2017)

Claire McCaskill Town Hall Meeting in Eldon Missouri – video by Jerry Schmidt (July 5, 2017)

Another day

07 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

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Tags

#resist, clouds, missouri

This morning in west central Missouri:

Early morning.

#resist

Campaign Finance: post it

06 Thursday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

campaign finance, initiative, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, organized labor, right to get paid less, Right to work

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission for the initiative to fight “right to get paid less”:

C171127 07/06/2017 We Are Missouri American Postal Workers Union St. Louis Gateway District Area Local 1705 S. Broadway St Louis MO 63104 7/5/2017 $7,250.00

C171127 07/06/2017 We Are Missouri International Union of Operating Engineers Local #101 General Fund 6601 Winchester Ave Suite 280 Kansas City MO 64133 7/5/2017 $15,000.00

[emphasis added]

Organized labor keeps chipping in.

Previously:

Campaign Finance: working people (May 23, 2017)

Campaign Finance: fighting right to get paid less (May 31, 2017)

Campaign Finance: more from working people (June 2, 2017)

Campaign Finance: gaining some ground (June 8, 2017)

Campaign Finance: slowly but surely (June 20, 2017)

Campaign Finance: Working people! (June 26, 2017)

Campaign Finance: stepping it up (June 28, 2017)

Campaign Finance: going somewhere, eventually

06 Thursday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, organized labor

Yesterday at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C000035 07/05/2017 Operating Engineers Local 101 Political Fund Engineers Political Education Committee 1125 17th St NW Washington DC 20036 5/19/2017 $100,000.00

[emphasis added]

We’ll see.

Claire McCaskill Town Hall Meeting in Eldon Missouri – video by Jerry Schmidt

05 Wednesday Jul 2017

Posted by jerrycentral in Claire McCaskill, Democratic Party News, Roy Blunt, Uncategorized, US Senate

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, Democrat, term limits

Ann Wagner implies that she’s afraid to run for the Senate – but not for the House

05 Wednesday Jul 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

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Ann Wagner, Election 2018, Josh Hawley, missouri, Missouri Republicans, Political Violence

In the St. Louis Post-Dispatch a couple of days ago Ann Wagner announced that she won’t be the Missouri Republican who will face Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill in 2018, but will instead run to retain her 2nd district House seat. It has been widely assumed that she was persuaded (forced?) by Missouri Republican luminaries to stand down in favor of another candidate – Attorney General, Josh Hawley seems to be the current fair-haired child of many of Missouri’s big GOP money and influence wielders.

Wagner offered the usual pablum about family considerations and, in typical treacly Wagner style, “love” for her 2nd district, as reasons for not taking up the cudgel against McCaskill – even though her intentions to do so had been obvious for some time. As the Post-Dispatch observed, she had already hired interns to handle the the added demands of the campaign.

Wagner also, however, seems to have hinted at another reason; the Post-Dispatch article implies that in the wake of the shooting of the Republican House Majority Whip, Rep. Steve Scalise, by a deranged individual a couple of weeks ago, Wagner intimated that she fears violence that could be directed at her and her family. This fear, it is implied, was the “significant event” that precipitated her decision not to run for the Senate:

The source said that Wagner was told after her decision that no one would believe that it was made solely on family considerations, “but that is what happened.”

And a significant event last week led up to it

Wagner visited Scalise, her close friend, in a hospital Wednesday, the source said. Scalise was shot and badly wounded while practicing for the annual congressional baseball game in Alexandria, Va., on June 14.

In an interview with the Post-Dispatch days after the shooting, Wagner said Scalise’s shooting had greatly affected her, and she spoke about threats made against her and her family.

Do you see the problem with this suggestion? Why, if Wagner is really worried by the possibility that a run for the Senate might lead to violence against her and her family, is she still planning to run for the House? Are House candidates magically exempt from threats faced by candidates for the Senate?

And the questions just keep popping up. Has any politician anywhere ever tried to get so much mileage out of a few protesters who are properly disturbed by her failure to acknowledge their concerns? Will Wagner be using this excuse retroactively? Did she, for instance, refuse to debate her last Democratic opponent, Bill Otto, or appear at open constituent meetings because she, delicate creature that she is, was afraid for her life? Will we be hearing endlessly about her fear of the naughty “leftists” during her future congressional tenure – however long that may be – whenever she is challenged to explain her policy preferences?

If Wagner is really that frightened about the consequences of holding public office, shouldn’t we work really hard to bring her home from Washington and let somebody, preferably a brave Democrat, go to Washington in her place? Seems like we’d really be doing her a big favor.

Finally, Does anyone else find this mock-subtle effort to leverage tragedy into political gain as tasteless and disgusting as I do?

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): even more town halls

05 Wednesday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in US Senate

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

California, Claire McCaskill, Eldon, missouri, Tipton, town halls, U.S. Senate, Versailles

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) took the opportunity provided by the congressional break to schedule ten open public town halls in Missouri. The first five were scheduled for today. We attended four – at 8:30 a.m. in California, at 11:00 a.m. in Tipton, at 12:45 p.m. in Versailles, and at 2:30 p.m. Eldon. Each town hall lasted approximately one hour.

Tomorrow Senator McCaskill will hold five more town halls.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) in California, Missouri.

The format for these town halls was the same as past ones held by Senator McCakill. Anyone can submit a written question. An individual in the audience who volunteers that they “would probably never vote for” the senator is asked to randomly select the questions from a basket. That volunteer gets to ask the last question.

Not surprisingly, most of the questions were about health care. There didn’t appear to be any enthusiasm for Trumpcare cutting Medicaid and Medicare. And no enthusiasm for the massive tax cuts for the wealthy in the republican Trumpcare bills.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) in Tipton, Missouri.

By our headcounts around fifty-five people attended in California, around forty in Tipton, around sixty-five in Versailles, and around eighty in Eldon.

There were a number of questions about veterans issues, student loan debt, infrastructure, the budget, and support for public education. There were a few questions about Donald Trump’s social media habit. “What can we do about it?” “Nothing.” There were questions about local concerns and constituent services.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) in Versailles, Missouri.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) in Eldon, Missouri.

Standing room in Eldon.

Anyone wonder what Senator Roy Blunt (r) was doing today? Just asking.

Previously:

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)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): press availability – Parkville, Missouri – April 13, 2017 (April 14, 2017)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): on Zombie Trumpcare – May 6, 2017 (May 7, 2017)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): on Trump and Russia – May 6, 2017 (May 7, 2017)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): on Trump’s policies and Missouri – May 6, 2017 (May 8, 2017)

Promises, promises …

05 Wednesday Jul 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

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Tags

ACA, AHCA, Obamacare, Repeal and Replace, republicans, Trumpcare

At this point, Republicans have been reduced to trying to justify stripping healthcare from millions of Americans, including large numbers of working class Republicans, by claiming that they are helpless to do otherwise; they have to “repeal” and – maybe – “replace” Obamacare because they’ve spent the last seven years promising their base they would do away with all such remnants of that black Kenyan’s presidency.

As if the only voters that matter are the so-called base – voters who represent a largish segment of the smallish 30% of Americans who currently identify as Republicans. Anyway, it isn’t as if the members of the Grand Old Party have had any problem breaking other promises. They usually just figure out a way to reframe it or divert attention, and their compliant base mostly goes along.

It’s a fact that repealing Obamacare doesn’t fare well when the full range of actual public opinion is taken into account. Obamacare’s popularity has been growing since the election of Donald Trump put it in peril, until, finally, by March, one could safely say that Obamacare had become more popular than Donald Trump. By the end of June 51-53% of poll respondents said that Congress ought to leave Obamacare in place and/or fix its very fixable problems. Republicans are still negative, but their disapproval, ginned up as it was in the first place, by politicians seeking to sabotage an elected Democratic president, is showing signs that it may waver once the real repercussions are felt.

Replacing Obamacare, in the form of the various Trumpcare iterations produced by Congress, does even worse. In a poll produced at the end of June, just 12% of those polled supported the replacement plans. Other polls find approval ranging from the aforementioned 12% to 18%. Given those numbers, there have got to be lots of even “base” Republicans who don’t think that the GOP is going in the right direction in their efforts to replace the bill.

So much for repeal and replace and promises.

Yet the GOP is going full-throttle toward repealing an imperfect, but functional healthcare plan and replacing it with a widely loathed disaster because … they promised.

So what gives? Do Republicans have a political death wish?

Maybe not. Stop and think: just who plays the bills for Republicans in congress – who are the the people dropping million dollar campaign donations and funding secretive super PACs?

Maybe the promise that Republicans are so hot to keep has nothing to do with the easily manipulated read-meat base, but the people who, in these Post- Citizens United days, pay the bills, the Richie Riches, otherwise known as the oligarchy. The very people who will benefit from the tax cut that Trumpcare funds by slashing Medicaid, one of the most significant components of Trumpcare. The tax cut that many – including Trump – believe to the the first stepping stone to a tax code that only a billionaire can truly love.

Fine. But, please, could the rest of us stop treating the blather about promises and the Republican base as if it has anything to do with reality.

*First sentence in the penultimate paragraph slightly edited.

Ashcroft one of only four AGs to endorse fraudulent Election Integrity Commission

04 Tuesday Jul 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Data Security, Election Integrity Commission, Election Privacy Information Center, EPIC, Jay Ashcroft, Kris Kobach, Voter data

Remember the president’s Election Integrity Commission? To date 44 AGs have refused to comply, either in toto or in part, citing state election laws and concerns about the security of the data which is to be delivered to an online portal where it will be, according to the Chair of the Commission, noted voter-suppression specialist Kris Kobach, made public. I don’t know about you, but I would prefer that a commission charged to examine any kind of data “integrity” not go to such lengths to enable identify thieves.

No matter, though, how sloppy, clueless and potentially malevolent this particular clown-commission is revealing itself to be, according to CNN, our very cooperative Missouri Attorney Jay Ashcroft is only too delighted to hand over the goods:

Just three states — Colorado, Missouri and Tennessee — commended Kobach’s attempt to investigate voter fraud in their respective statements.

“We are very glad they are asking for information before making decisions,” said Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams, a Republican. “I wish more federal agencies would ask folks for their opinion and for information before they made decisions.”

Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft, also a Republican, echoed Williams’ sentiment in a statement Friday: “The commission’s questions are fair and we will be glad to assist in offering our thoughts on these important matters,” he said. “I look forward to working with Sec. Kris Kobach and the commission on its findings and offer our support in the collective effort to enhance the American people’s confidence in the integrity of the elections process.”

I can see agreeing to hand over publicly accessible components of the information Kobach demanded, as long as he requests then via the channels required for other members of the public and pays any attendant charges – none of which, by the way, seems to have occurred to Kobach as a potential contingency.

As an aside,** I wish someone would let the Colorado AG know that demanding sensitive citizen information so that a panel of acknowledged voter suppression experts can play with it does not comprise a request for anyone’s “opinion” – a point that seems to have also escaped our own AG, Jay Ashcroft, who is more than willing to kiss the iron heel of federal authority as long as it serves the goal of Republican electoral hegemony.

Finally, to give you an idea about just how really low Ashcroft’s willing collaboration is, consider the fact that the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) filed suit yesterday to stop this illegitimate and potentially dangerous information grab:

“[T]he Commission had already committed two egregious security blunders,” EPIC said in a statement on its website. “(1) directing state election officials to send voter records to an unsecure web site and (2) proposing to publish partial SSNs that would enable identity theft and financial fraud.”

In its suit requesting a temporary injunction against the commission’s data collection activities, filed in the D.C. District Court, the group called the request for partial Social Security numbers “both without precedent and crazy.”
It also accused the commission of violating the E-Government Act of 2002, which requires a privacy impact assessment be completed and made available to the public before the collection of personal information by the federal government using information technology. No assessment was conducted before requesting voter data, the suit alleges.

The commission’s broad request for data combined with the lack of any privacy assessment could “cause irreparable harm to EPIC’s members,” the suit alleged.

“Once data has been leaked, there is no way to control its spread,” it continued. “With a data breach, there is literally no way to repair the damage, once done.”

At the very least we ought to demand that our Attorney General respect the strictures of the E-Government Act of 2002 and cease and desist in his effort to empower the GOP election fraud sham. If you want to let him know about it and perhaps register a few choice comments on his behavior, the number is 573-571-4936 and ask for the Elections Division.

** Addendum (7/5/2017): I should have also added here that Ashcroft’s statement that the commission’s “questions” are fair defies belief. How is it fair for an “independent commission,” run out of the President’s office – a president who has already started his 2020 campaign – to ask states for information about how citizens have voted since 2006 along with identifying information? On a deeper level, how is it fair to use tax money to investigate a problem for which the only evidence is the pulled-out-thin-air fantasy of partisans and a seriously unstable president? I might just as credibly convene a panel to explore the possibilities that Donald Trump has used arcane magic to control weather patterns. Or whether or not Barack Obama was born in Kenya. One might be tempted to ask what planet Ashcroft inhabits except that the reasons for his glee in assisting this sham commission are obvious.

(Editorial cartoon removed 3:57 pm 7/4/2017)

The 4th of July – 2017

04 Tuesday Jul 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

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4th of July, missouri

“…It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more…” – John Adams – July 3, 1776

“Booms and Blooms” – Powell Gardens, Kingsville, Missouri – July 1, 2017.

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