Today is Thursday, 23rd January 2025

Massachusetts House votes to restrict unions

Are Massachusetts Democrats realizing that colluding with Unions is bad for their state?

From Boston.com:

House lawmakers voted overwhelmingly last night to strip police officers, teachers, and other municipal employees of most of their rights to bargain over health care, saying the change would save millions of dollars for financially strapped cities and towns.

The 111-to-42 vote followed tougher measures to broadly eliminate collective bargaining rights for public employees in Ohio, Wisconsin, and other states. But unlike those efforts, the push in Massachusetts was led by Democrats who have traditionally stood with labor to oppose any reduction in workers’ rights.

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New House Speaker to be Chosen in Arizona

Will former speaker Kirk Adams run for Congress?

From AZCapitolTimes:

House members will be coming to the floor Thursday to elect a new speaker as Kirk Adams, R-Mesa,will be soon stepping down from his position.

House spokesman Daniel Scarpinato said members were notified about the meeting this afternoon.

“He called some members to inform them personally, and staff called everyone else to make sure they could be there,” he said.

Scarpinato would not offer any information about why Adams was stepping down, but the common speculation is that Adams will be pursuing a bid for Congress.

Read the Rest…

Wisconsin – Steve Doyle: Bad Decisions

The RSLC has released a new ad in the Wisconsin 94th Assembly race. The ad targets Democrat Steve Doyle and his “bad decisions.”
Be sure to visit RSLC.com and donate to keep us in the fight in Wisconsin.

Politicians like Democrat Steve Doyle are pushing Wisconsin to the brink. He sponsors a bill to give himself a pay raise and foots taxpayers with the bill. Politician Steve Doyle, doesn’t get it:

Real Change is in the States

From Time Magazine:

Republican gains in last November’s Congressional elections were minor compared to the rout the party engineered in statehouses around the U.S. The GOP won a net gain of nearly 700 state-legislature seats on Nov. 2, wresting away control of 19 chambers. It was the biggest landslide in decades, dwarfing the “Republican revolution” of 1994. “As we enter a time with huge policy and political implications,” Ed Gillespie, chairman of the Republican State Leadership Committee, wrote in a congratulatory note Nov. 3, “new Republican officeholders will be given an opportunity to demonstrate common-sense conservative leadership and implement solutions that promise real results and positive change.”

?Since then, however the party has marshaled its manpower in state capitals to advance a conservative agenda that goes far beyond its stated goal of creating jobs. The battle over public-sector unions in Wisconsin was the first in a nationwide war over local government wages, pay and bargaining rights, with fronts in more than 20 states, including Indiana and Michigan. A number of other states have pushed to limit abortions. Thirty states have considered omnibus bills cracking down on illegal immigration, according to the bipartisan National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL).

Read the Rest…

New GOP Majorities and Governors have made mark in States

From the Washington Post:

The measures are among the thousands of bills proposed as newly empowered GOP statehouses take advantage of their first opportunity in decades to have such a broad impact on policy. Twenty legislative bodies across the country flipped from Democratic to Republican control, and the party picked up governorships in 10 states.

“There’s been a real seismic change in the states, and the effect will be felt for many years,” said Ohio State Rep. Bob Mecklenborg, a key player in Ohio’s voter ID measure. “However, we must be very smart in our approach on many measures and not overplay our hand.”

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Indiana AG: Greenhouse gas case blurs separation of powers

From Attorney General Greg Zoeller:

Volatile issues of global climate change, energy-sector jobs, judicial activism and the roles of federal government branches will collide April 19. That’s when the United States Supreme Court hears arguments in a case with a potential to affect indirectly all Americans who use electricity.

The case is American Electric Power Co. Inc. v. Connecticut. At issue is whether states and private plaintiffs can sue utility companies for producing greenhouse gases that contribute to global climate change.

The state I represent in court, Indiana, is not a party in this lawsuit. Nonetheless, as Indiana’s attorney general, my duty is to alert the Supreme Court to Indiana’s legal concerns. To raise our arguments, we authored a 28-page amicus brief that 22 other states signed, and filed it with the nation’s highest court.

The facts of the AEP v. Connecticut case and its procedural history are complicated and the underlying science is technical. But at its core is a concept that dates to the very founding of our Constitution: the separation of powers of our three branches of government.

In our brief we contend federal district courts are not the venues to decide inherently political questions that belong instead within the legislative and executive branches.

Consider how this case began: Connecticut filed suit against six utility companies alleging their carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired electric-generating plants contribute to global climate change. Connecticut, five other states and New York City alleged a “public nuisance” under common law and asked the federal court to determine and impose limits on the amounts of CO2 emitted from utility smokestacks.

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Recalls in Wisconsin

Looks like some of the Democrats who fled the state are going to have to deal with a recall. Wisconsinites aren’t happy.

From wsau.com:

Organizers plan to file a petition tomorrow demanding a recall election against Democratic state Senator Jim Holperin.

The Northwoods Patriots group says it has gathered more than 21,000 signatures from residents in Holperin’s 12th Senate district. That’s more than the 15,960 signatures they need.

The petition will be filed with the state Government Accountability Board. If the signatures are validated, the board would schedule an election where Holperin would have to defend his seat.

Read the Rest…

Also, an article from Fox11.com says Dave Hansen may have a recall fight on his hands by the end of the week.

A group working to recall State Sen. Dave Hansen, D-Green Bay, has also told FOX 11 it has enough signatures to force a recall election. More than 13,000 are needed in Hansen’s district. The group has said Winter Storm Gabe delayed its trip to Madison. No date has been announced for the petitions to be filed.

Recall petitions must be filed with the state Government Accountability Board at its offices near the state Capitol. The GAB then works to confirm and certify the signatures, and if there are enough, a recall election is set.

Read the Rest…

Check out the ad the RSLC is running in Wisconsin:

Donate to the RSLC!

NJ: Republicans Challenge Carl Lewis State Senate Run

From NJ.com:

Republicans today challenged the state Senate candidacy of Olympic track and field star Carl Lewis, saying he voted in California as recently as May 2009 and does not meet the state constitution’s four-year residency requirement.

“By voting in 2008 and 2009, Mr. Lewis confirmed that by law, he was a ‘resident’ of the State of California,” the complaint alleges. “Accordingly, Mr. Lewis cannot also have been a ‘resident’ of New Jersey at that tim

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States and ObamaCare Opt out

From the Wall Street Journal:

It’s not often that states turn their back on money from Washington, but at least two states may say no thanks to federal grants to implement the new federal health-care law.

In February the federal Department of Health and Human Services selected seven states to get $240 million in demonstration grants this year to kick start the health-care plan. But Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin announced last week that the Sooner State will decline $54.6 million from the feds to establish new insurance exchanges.

And as early as this week the New Hampshire state house is expected to pass a bill rejecting $666,000 the feds bequeathed to that state to start up exchanges. Two other grant recipients—Kansas and Wisconsin—may also turn down the funds as well as request Medicaid waivers to design their own health-care law for low-income residents.

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KY: Senate President has lead in Governor Primary Race

From Courier-Journal.com:

With the election less than five weeks away, Senate President David Williams holds a commanding lead over his two opponents in the Republican primary race for governor of Kentucky, according to a Courier-Journal/WHAS11 Bluegrass Poll.

But the poll also found that Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear would defeat Williams by 12 percentage points if the general election were held today.

Williams and his running mate, Agriculture Commissioner Richie Farmer, are favored by 49 percent of Republicans likely to vote in the May 17 primary.

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