Contributed by Gary Sanders:
“I go to this every year. I think it is very moving.
Anyone can read from MLK’s speeches or sit and listen. People come and go all day.”

Contributed by Gary Sanders:
“I go to this every year. I think it is very moving.
Anyone can read from MLK’s speeches or sit and listen. People come and go all day.”


tip of the hat to http://all-hat-no-cattle.blogspot.com/
From our inbox – a word from Democracy Docket
Democrats sued to block President Donald Trump’s executive order targeting mail-in voting Wednesday, calling it “unconstitutional” and designed to rig elections ahead of the 2026 midterms.
The lawsuit, brought by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic Governors Association and Democratic congressional leaders, alleges Trump’s order would “upturn the electoral playing field in his own favor and against his political rivals.”
The plaintiffs* are asking a judge to quickly halt enforcement of the order before it can take effect.
At the center of the lawsuit is the core constitutional principle that presidents do not control elections.
“Our Constitution’s Framers anticipated this kind of desire for absolute power. They recognized the menace it would pose to ordered liberty and the ways in which it would corrode self-government like an acid,” the complaint reads.
Democrats argue Trump’s order would restrict mail voting access and insert federal agencies into election administration — a role the Constitution explicitly reserves for states and Congress.
“Undeterred by this consistent authority— and his own continued failures to convince Congress to adopt his self-aggrandizing election policies — President Trump has yet again taken matters into his own hands,” the complaint adds. “Just days after it became clear Congress would fail to pass the President’s SAVE America Act, he signed a new Executive Order … This Executive Order seeks to impose radical changes to the manner and conditions under which citizens may cast absentee or mail-in ballots — changes that imminently threaten to disenfranchise lawful voters and plainly exceed the President’s lawful authority.”
The lawsuit also takes aim at one of the order’s most controversial provisions, the creation of a national citizenship database for voters, describing it as part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to centralize control over elections.
“The Order drops the veil on a months-long campaign to amass a national citizenship registry—now formally mandating that Defendants create wholly unauthorized “State Citizenship Lists” and share those lists with States within 60 days of every federal election,” the complaint states. “Even as this Court recently expressed ‘grave concern’ over disclosures related to the same databases the Order directs Defendants to use in amassing this ‘List.’”
That citizenship list would violate federal laws aimed at protecting Americans’ sensitive data, like the Privacy Act, the complaint alleges.
The complaint also notes that Trump has already tried this once before and failed, issuing an executive order last March attempting to impose new limits on mail-in ballots and voter registration.
“Courts across the country — including this one — soon invalidated much of that executive order and its purported attempt to regulate elections as a violation of the separation of powers,” the Democrats argue.
The lawsuit further alleges that the order would violate various laws established by Congress that govern the operations of USPS, an “independent establishment” directed by a bipartisan board of governors.
If left to stand, the Democratic plaintiffs contend the order would turn the Postal Service “into an election administration agency that must determine every single voter’s eligibility to vote by mail—even though such determinations are solely the province of the States under the Elections Clause’s distribution of authority for voting administration and federal law.”
The complaint generally describes the order as a confused jumble of unclear and sometimes contradictory demands in service of solving the nonexistent problem of widespread illegal voting. Amid a series of unclear provisions, the order refers to both a “Mail-In and Absentee Participation List” of enrolled mail-in voters that USPS would provide states (after the states sent USPS their own list of eligible mail-in voters) and a State Citizenship List that DHS would send the states.
“The Order also does not clarify how the USPS’s Mail-In and Absentee Participation List is connected to the State Citizenship List; presumably, the latter will be used to help develop the former, but the Order never says so, nor does the Order otherwise establish any legitimate criteria or process for the USPS to use in determining who is eligible to vote,” the Democrats contend.
“In short…even when a voter is eligible to vote by mail under state law, a State sends the voter a mail ballot, and the voter completes the ballot and attempts to mail it to the State’s election officials, USPS must refuse to deliver the ballot unless the voter appears on USPS’s own Mail-In and Absentee Participation List,” they continue. “As a result, the Order will unlawfully disenfranchise qualified voters.”
The order’s new administrative burdens on mail voting and USPS, which delivered nearly 50 million ballots in 2024, come just two weeks after the postmaster general warned Congress that the agency was running out of money and less than a week after Trump voted by mail in a Florida special election.
*Democratic plaintiffs in this case are represented by the Elias Law Group (ELG). ELG Chair Marc Elias is the founder of Democracy Docket.
Democratic plaintiffs in this case are represented by the Elias Law Group (ELG). ELG Chair Marc Elias is the founder of Democracy Docket.
In 2025 and this year, efforts are underway to eliminate the exemption and create a special property tax on forest and fruit tree reservations called a “program fee” – bill SF633.
Ask your state representative to oppose SF633
To look up your House member, see www.legis.iowa.gov/legislators/house
to find your legislator, see www.legis.iowa.gov/legislators/find
Follow the Sierra Club Friday Lunch and Learn on Facebook

Prairie Dog
From the Spring 2026 edition of The Prairie Progressive, Iowa’s oldest progressive newsletter. The PP is funded entirely by reader subscription, available in hard copy for $15/yr. Send check to PP, Box 1945, Iowa City 52244. Click here for archived issues
by Dave Leshtz
Dick Myers passed away on March 19 at the age of 91.
There are very few people in Johnson County (indeed, in the state of Iowa) who haven’t felt Dick’s influence, starting with his service as a city council member and Mayor of Coralville in the 70s. From 1982 to 1993 he was on the Johnson County Board of Supervisors. He then spent ten years in the Iowa House of Representatives, including several years as House Democratic Leader. The only election he ever lost was in 1978, to Jim Leach (who went on to serve for thirty years). In addition to being elected over and over at the city, county, and state levels of government, Dick was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to a federal position, spending a year as Iowa director of the FHA, the Farmers Home Administration.
Throughout this time, for nearly forty years, Dick owned the legendary Hawk I Truck Stop in Coralville. The popular restaurant and supply shop served countless truckers, travelers, and townspeople (one regular customer: Jim Leach). It was a landmark in Johnson County and beyond, but it was also known to many as a place to get a job. People with alcohol and other drug problems, with prison records, with mental illness, people with no homes, down to their last chance… they could find a job at the Hawk I Truck Stop.
How did people know to look for a job at the truck stop? Well, Dick had been an alcoholic himself (a legendary one, some say). When he quit drinking, he became a key player in starting MECCA, the Mid-Eastern Council on Chemical Abuse, which later became Prelude, and is now known as Community and Family Resources. Dick helped with fundraising, with a building, and even with hiring the first director. Thousands of people with substance use disorders have since received help, largely thanks to Dick’s behind-the-scenes efforts.
Dick was not only legendary as an elected official, a truck stop owner, and a friend to people needing a hand. He was a relentless campaigner for Democratic candidates. When he got on board for someone, few were more valuable. In 2003 he helped boost Howard Dean into frontrunner status by endorsing him and traveling the state for him (on his Harley). Dick and his wife Doris were more successful in 2007, when they became early supporters and tireless workers for Barack Obama.
A word about Doris—a powerhouse in her own right. She is the epitome of a selfless, hard-working Democrat. She was a nurse at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics for twenty years and was active in the successful Service Employees International Union organizing drive there. While Dick was the high-profile elected official, Doris was making phone calls, stuffing envelopes, bringing food to headquarters for volunteers, and hosting dozens of receptions and fundraisers at their home in River Heights.
Dick and Doris were inducted into the Johnson County Democrats Hall of Fame in 2011. That same year, Dick was also the recipient of an honorary doctorate degree from the University of Iowa. But the honor he said he was most proud of in his long career was the honorary membership he received from Iowa’s largest public employee union, AFSCME Council 61. What a sign of respect for a guy who negotiated many labor contracts from the management side and who was never a union member himself. That was Dick Myers: the only person in Iowa with both an honorary union card and an honorary doctorate degree!
The legend is gone but won’t be forgotten.
—Dave Leshtz

These are photos I took at the Iowa City No Kings 3 event Saturday. There were sixty-one events around Iowa. Dubuque broke its own record with three thousand attendees, pretty impressive. According to official reports, more than eight million Americans showed up.








If Iowa is a net exporter of electricity, why the push for new nuclear reactors?
I get it. Duane Arnold Energy Center has infrastructure to add/renew generating capacity: connections to the electrical grid, access to water for cooling, and transportation in and out. Compared to the new Vogtle nuclear power plant in Georgia, re-starting DAEC would be quicker and less expensive than building a new reactor. If an investor were to pick new nuclear capacity, they can do it on the relative cheap by re-starting old nuclear reactors.
When investors found Google, who was willing to enter a 25-year contract to buy electricity from the Palo plant to support a data center, it resolved a main issue with nuclear power: financial risk. While re-starting DAEC for a single large customer resolves one issue, it isn’t scalable. How many more deals like this are possible at DAEC given that specific infrastructure has a limit: grid capacity, and how much water for cooling can be drawn from the Cedar River?
The president has engaged in nuclear policy and changed priorities in the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Even so, certain things still have to happen for real-world reasons to approve a new nuclear power plant. It takes time, despite entreaties to speed the project approval process. Why the president’s interest in nuclear power? It appears to be self-serving.
The parent company of Truth Social has announced a multibillion-dollar merger with fusion developer TAE Technologies, giving it a stake in this still-experimental form of nuclear energy. At the same time, the administration pushed to accelerate nuclear power licensing and reorganize the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, as mentioned. Critics argue this overlap raises potential conflict-of-interest concerns, although no direct evidence has emerged that regulatory changes were made specifically to benefit the Trump family. In a March 27 article in CounterPunch, Karl Grossman and Harvey Wasserman detail Trump’s potential interest in the nuclear regulatory environment. Read it here. Is the Reynolds administration close enough to the president to be influenced by his self-serving interest in nuclear power? You know they are.
If electricity generation development proceeded on a logical basis, we wouldn’t be talking about new nuclear power. Not only is it very expensive, and subject to implementation delays, it doesn’t fit our state. The build out of wind generating capacity in Iowa makes baseload power like nuclear less desirable. Grid operators like MISO (Midcontinent Independent System Operator) value the flexibility found in natural gas, battery storage, and reduced usage when demand drops. That isn’t what nuclear does well.
Who would want nuclear power when the costs are so high? Each unit of electricity produced from the proposed new technology of small modular reactors would be far more expensive that the same unit from solar or wind power generation, even when the cost of storage technologies and other means of accounting for renewable energy’s variability are included. The answer to my question is no one would want it.
It is also important to note there are no commercial nuclear fusion or small modular reactors operating currently in the United States. The work the legislature (HSB 767/SSB 3181 both advanced this week) and Linn County are doing to promote nuclear power may be good in some respects. I remain unsure the “build it and they will come” philosophy will work here because grid operators need flexibility, not baseload.
There is a lot more to say about Iowa’s current infatuation with nuclear power. Watch this space for more.

With the county convention in the rear view mirror, it’s time to organize for the Democratic primary. Our votes are important, yet three races are at the top of the list here: the U.S. Senate race between Zach Wahls and Josh Turek, and the District 2 county supervisor race between Jessica Andino, Janet Godwin and incumbent Jon Green lead. The U.S. House race matters, yet Christina Bohannan is widely expected to win the primary over challenger Travis Terrell. It’s her third go-around, so she should. My main work this week has been organizing a supervisor meet and greet event this afternoon at the Solon Public Library. After that, it is a mad rush to the June 2 primary.
There was no competition in Johnson County to be a delegate to the district and state conventions and that’s okay. I decided not to advance to district either. There are too many other things begging for our attention to engage in rituals. The thrill is gone from Democratic conventions, and that too, is okay. Promoting Democratic policy in our communities is where most of the action will be in 2026, I predict.
What does that mean?
Partly, it means participating in campaigns. It also means talking to voters about the race and why it is important to support Democrats. The latter is not a given and this graphic of results from the 2024 general election in my precinct tells why:
| Race | Republican | Democrat |
| President | Trump | Harris |
| 699 | 598 | |
| U.S. House | Miller-Meeks | Bohannan |
| 700 | 617 | |
| State Senator | Driscoll | Chabal |
| 741 | 526 | |
| State Representative | Lawler | Gorsh |
| 716 | 545 |
We voted Obama twice and Trump three times, shifting from blue to solidly Republican. The numbers suggest it is possible to turn that around but not without significant work. My first order of business is to figure out which activists remain after we suffered some people becoming less active, moving out of the precinct, and dying.
Once more activists are located, the next step is finding ways to talk to neighbors and then convert them, if possible, to turn the precinct from red to blue.
There are two parts to this, in my precinct, and in the rest of the state and country. Both run through the ballot box.
The first is voting: making sure we take care of ourselves by checking our registration and then voting in person, either early or on election day. Encourage everyone we know to do likewise.
The second is changing the public narrative about life in Iowa and in the United States. We should not accept narratives being fed to us by media outlets, churches, interest groups, and political parties. Rather, we should develop our own new narratives that reflect how we live despite our differences. I predict this will change how we vote.
If we can do those things, there is a chance to make society a better place to live, possibly this election cycle.
Now it’s a matter of getting out there and doing it.
*Updated* Find your town on this list then go to mobilize.us/nokings/ to RSVP for location information and time. Some events aren’t listed. If you don’t see your town here check with your local Dems to find out if there is a NoKings event in your community.
The White Christian Nationalist Network That Is Trying To Dominate Public Education
by Daniel Henderson
Follow Daniel Henderson on Substack where you can read the entire article. Here is a brief excerpt.
In my last post, Critical Thinking Citizens Or MAGA Loyalists?, I compared Russia’s school program of direct propaganda in trying to create support for their war on Ukraine and loyalists to Putin to the push in the United States for “patriotic education” in the nation’s schools.
In that prior post, I argued that “patriotic education” runs counter to the real purpose of having an educated citizenry. Citizens in a democracy need critical thinking abilities and the ability to question myths of US history and discern true information from misinformation.
This post will go into much more detail about this effort in the United States, which is clearly a white Christian nationalist project. My own experience teaching in private Christian schools allows me to understand what is at stake and the goals of this movement. I’ll explain the who, what, and how of this propagandistic, false-education movement.
Public Schools Are Ground Zero In The Culture Wars
I believe the public school system is ground zero in the tug-of-war over our culture. White Christian nationalists are no longer content to have the freedom to open their own private Christian schools and teach whatever amount of myth and misinformation they want. Because of the Seven Mountain Mandate, these folks believe God calls them to take control over all institutions of society, especially public schools.
I know exactly where this is headed.”
more on Substack.
If you don’t have time to watch, you can always listen on your phone while you are working out or planting your garden or baking cookies or whatever you do.
Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner joins Marc Elias to break down why the rule of law is hanging by a thread. They also discuss the Epstein files cover-up, DOJ ethics violations, and why we need a scorched-earth accountability effort.
Support Democracy Docket’s mission: https://newsletters.democracydocket.c…
00:00 Today’s Guest: Glenn Kirschner
00:41 One Year In: How is the Nation and the Rule of Law Doing?
02:47 Does the New “Accountability Project” Look Like?
05:43 Where Will the Next Generation of Non-Political Prosecutors Come From?
07:40 Context: Glenn’s History with Eric Holder and Bob Mueller
09:42 Unpacking Legal Standards: Probable Cause vs. Likelihood of Conviction
11:06 Case Study: The Sean Dunn “Sandwich Throwing” Prosecution
17:58 Accountability After Jan 6th: What Was Done Right and Wrong?
23:56 Avoiding the “Normalizing” of Political Crimes in 2029
26:19 Current Events: The Seizure of Ballots in Fulton County
28:15 Discussion: The “Presumption of Regularity” in Trump-era Courts
35:02 Is the Supreme Court Recalibrating on Executive Power?
37:21 Potential DOJ Interference in the Upcoming Election
40:13 The Epstein Files: What is Happening with the Missing Records?
47:44 Final Thoughts: What Can Everyday Americans Do to Fight Back?