Bad Bills That Failed In The Iowa Legislature

The fact that these terrible bills did not pass is a victory. We have to count it as a win and be glad about it.  Things are already bad but these failed bills, had they passed, would have made things super-bad.  

We are stuck in a time where the best good news seems to be when something terrible could have happened, but didn’t. But Republicans will keep trying, we can count on that.

Today I thought I would share my state representative Elinor Levin’s end-of-session newsletter.  Our Democratic reps and senators work hard and it can’t be easy. I see my rep. Elinor and my state senator Janice Weiner at every major political event in Iowa City that I attend, including #handsoff and the 50501 day of action. They are out there helping win special elections and knocking on doors, too.

Scroll down to see what Republicans didn’t get done this session so you can feel temporarily relieved knowing that it could have been much worse. When you read through the list of failed bills, even though you already knew what Republicans were up to,  you will be shocked all over again at the anti-people policies they thought were good ideas and tried to pass.  

Have a happy Wednesday to the extent you are able.

Closing my third legislative session at the Iowa State Capitol, I feel compelled to speak plainly and directly to you about what did — and more importantly, what did not — happen this year.

Time and again, House Republicans make bold promises to the people of Iowa. They told us they would tackle the pressing issues facing our families, our schools, our seniors, and our communities. They stood behind microphones and promised to support Iowa’s public schools, pledged action on property taxes, swore to address the childcare crisis, and vowed to strengthen protections for nursing home residents.

And then… they did… next to nothing.

Schools? No meaningful investment increase. No plan to ease the burdens on teachers, no effort to address crumbling infrastructure, no serious moves to ensure every child in every district in Iowa, receives the education they deserve.

Property Taxes? They talked a good game but failed to deliver any significant relief for working families and seniors struggling to stay in their homes – instead continuing to shift burden onto middle-class Iowans and local municipalities.

Protecting our Nursing Home Residents? While headlines continue to expose horrifying neglect and abuse, House Republicans ignored Iowans lucky enough to have made it to elder status. No sweeping reforms. No new protections. Just empty words.

Childcare? In a state where families scramble daily to find and afford safe, quality care for their children, this Republican majority offered no real solutions. The best we can say is that the Governor’s proposal to take funds away from 0-3 year olds to increase transportation services for 4 year olds died this morning.

This Legislative Session Summary: Majority leaders said they were going to do something — and did nothing. Well, nothing but take away Civil Rights and healthcare from trans Iowans and give tax breaks to multinational companies that lay off workers.  So, what would I do differently?

Iowans deserve leaders who don’t just campaign on promises but actually show up, roll up their sleeves, and get to work for the people of Iowa. Who open their minds to policy ideas that offer the changes Iowans are asking for!

This is about priorities. It’s about whether we choose to invest in our children, care for our elders, and build a state where working families can thrive. Whether we embrace protecting our water and soil so we can have a future.

I promise you this: I will keep fighting. I will keep speaking out. And I will keep holding this majority accountable for the promises they make but refuse to keep. I don’t know what else to do.

Iowa deserves action — not bait and switch.

Legislature Concludes 2025 Session

After weeks of overtime, the 2025 Legislative Session adjourned in the early hours of Thursday, May 15th. The extended session reflected deep divisions over key issues such as school funding, property tax relief, and support for working families. While some bipartisan progress was made, many important proposals were left unresolved.

Thank You for Speaking Out

To every Iowan who stood up, spoke out, and took action, thank you for being part of the fight. Using your voice to stand up for what’s right is a core part of what it means to be an Iowan.

Legislative Democrats heard those voices and stood in opposition to harmful bills that would have cut critical services, opened the door to more discrimination, restricted reproductive healthcare, and allowed the government to overstep.

Because of Iowans’ advocacy, the following bills failed to advance this year:

  • Prohibition of mRNA vaccines – almost all COVID vaccines (SF 360)
  • Expands the ability to carry a gun into a school (HF 621)
  • Criminalizing homelessness (SSB 1195/ HSB 286)
  • the Governor a $100,000 pay raise (SF 544)
  • First step to eliminate Social Security & Medicare (HJR 11)
  • Taking away unemployment benefits for short-term workers (SF 466)
  • Cuts funding to libraries based on affiliation (HF 880)
  • Immunity for pesticide companies giving people cancer (SF 394)
  • Overturn marriage equality (SCR 3)
  • Allow unlicensed chaplain services in public schools (HF 884)
  • Gadsden flag plate to raise money for the NRA (SF 488)
  • Limit food options for hungry children (HF 970)

Together, we pushed back against efforts that don’t reflect who we are as Iowans. While the fight isn’t over, your voices made a difference, and it will continue to guide us as we work toward Iowa’s future.

Missed Opportunities

At the start of the session, Iowa House Democrats prioritized lowering costs, recognizing that too many Iowa families are struggling with rising healthcare and childcare expenses, stagnant wages, and growing concerns about potential layoffs across the state.

While many Iowans hoped for meaningful property tax relief this session, Republican lawmakers failed to reach a resolution. In contrast, House Democrats introduced two proposals aimed at delivering real relief to Iowa families:

  • Expanding property tax credits to all seniors (HF 916)
  • A $1,000 property tax rebate for homeowners/$500 rebate for renters (HF 691)

House Democrats also introduced several bills that would have put working families first by raising wages and lowering costs. Those included:

  • Creating more affordable housing units & making it easier to buy a first home (HF 659)
  • Neighborhood grants to help current homeowner improve and stay in their home (HF 659)
  • Capping rent increases & refunding 50% of the rental application fee to anyone denied housing by a landlord (HF 266)
  • Expand the Childcare Tax Credit and Childcare Assistance program to provide immediate relief to families (HF 611)
  • Raising wages & expanding benefits for childcare workers (HF 661)
  • Tax credits for small businesses that provide childcare employee benefits (HF 661)
  • Raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour (HF 283)
  • Capping the price of insulin to $25 per month (HF 658)
  • Ending state taxes on tips & overtime pay

Unfortunately, the voices of most Iowans were repeatedly ignored this session. Instead of putting Iowans first, the Governor and Republican leaders prioritized special interests and political power, advancing bills that do just that:

  • 44% increase in funding for private school vouchers, but just a 2% increase for public schools (SF 167)
  • Stripping Civil Rights from Iowans (SF 418)
  • Requiring public schools to provide false information to kids on pregnancy (SF 175)
  • Ending Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion in Iowa (HF 856)
  • $1 billion in new tax breaks for corporations that lay off Iowa workers (SF 607)
  • Putting the health care of 182,000 Iowans at risk (SF 615)

Some Common Ground

Iowans expect lawmakers to listen and work together to get things done. And while it’s to be expected that there are honest policy differences between Republican and Democratic lawmakers, there were a few issues that lawmakers found common ground on, including:

  • Ban cell phone usage in schools (HF 782)
  • Expanding parental leave for adoptive parents & state employees (HF 889/HF 248)
  • New tools to address human trafficking (HF 649)
  • Protected landowner rights (HF 639)
  • Expanded cancer and health care coverage for firefighters (HF 969)
  • Hands-free driving (SF 22)
  • Helping Iowans impacted by the opioid crisis (HF 1038)
  • $14 million for paraeducators’ pay (SF 660)

Capitol and Community Updates

GOVERNOR SIGNS SCHOOL FUNDING 103 DAYS LATE: Governor Reynolds was 103 days late signing school funding and then gave 44% more new money to private schools while Iowa’s 485,000 public school students got a 2% increase.

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Meet The Iowa Democrat Challenging Senator Joni Ernst

In case you missed it, Nathan Sage was interviewed on The Weekend Show with Jonathan Capehart in April.

Watch the video then click here to volunteer or donate to his campaign to defeat Joni Ernst.

 

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Memorial Day Events Around Iowa

Photo credit: Paul Deaton

Memorial Day 2025: How Iowans can celebrate

by Tom Foley, Iowa Capital Dispatch

The United States will celebrate Memorial Day on Monday, May 26, by honoring soldiers who died during service.

Originally known as Decoration Day, the tradition can be traced back to May 30, 1868. Gen. John A. Logan, 3rd commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, an organization of former Union soldiers, proclaimed it a day to commemorate the soldiers who lost their lives in the Civil War. This year, many organizations across Iowa will keep the tradition alive.

Here’s where Iowans can participate in Memorial Day 2025 with a variety of local events:

Iowa Gold Star Military Museum Memorial Day Celebration – 6 a.m.

Camp Dodge, 7105 N.W. 70th Ave., Johnston.

This family-friendly event held by the Iowa Gold Star Military Museum features a complementary military-style breakfast from 6 a.m.-9 a.m., a LifeServe blood drive from 7 a.m. to noon, live music vendors, and special exhibits and activities.

Iowa Veterans Cemetery Memorial Day Ceremony – 8 a.m.

34024 Veterans Memorial Drive, Adel.

The Iowa Veterans Cemetery will be hosting a ceremony to honor all those who served in the U.S. military. The service begins at 8 a.m. and will be streamed on the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs Youtube channel.

Raymon Veteran Park Memorial Day Service – 8 a.m.

307 W. Johnson St., Albion.

Live music and a raising of the colors by several local veteran associations will be hosted in Albion by the Marshalltown Chamber of Commerce.

Highland Memory Gardens Cemetery Memorial Day Celebration – 8 a.m.

1 N.E. 60th Ave., Des Moines.

This celebration held by Highland Memory Garden and American Legion Post 374 will begin with a bagpipe performance and tribute from the Iowa Patriot Guard Riders at 9 a.m. The service will begin with a reading listing the names of all veterans buried in the Garden since Memorial Day 2024, and will conclude with a gun salute and taps. Refreshments will follow the service. Participants are encouraged to bring their own outdoor seating.

Davenport Memorial Park Cemetery Memorial Day Event – 9 a.m.

1022 E. 39th St., Davenport.

The Davenport Memorial Park will host a Memorial Day event to allow families to stroll the grounds and pay their respects to the fallen soldiers who rest there. There will be food trucks on site.

Memorial Day Murph with REPX – 9 a.m.

5335 Carey Ave., Davenport.

REPX is a local Davenport crossfit gym that will be hosting a workout event in honor of Navy Lt. Michael P. Murphy. The traditional Murph challenge begins with a 1-mile run, followed by 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups, 300 air squats, followed by a second and final 1-mile run.

Holy Cross Parish Memorial Day Mass – 9 a.m.

2223 Indian Hills Dr., Sioux City.

This service will be held at St. Michael Church by Holy Cross Parish to honor those who served in the U.S. military.

Burke Memorial Park Memorial Day Ceremony – 9 a.m.

635 E. University Ave., Des Moines.

The Larry Nehring Detachment #103 of the Marine Corps league will be hosting a service near Burke Memorial Park, at the Polk County Gold Star Monument. This service is open to all and will begin at 9 a.m. with a ceremonial firing detail.

Waterloo Annual Memorial Day Parade – 10 a.m.

Along 6th and Commercial streets, Waterloo.

The annual Waterloo Memorial Day Parade begins at 6th Street, then travels down Lafayette Street, finally ending at Commercial Street. Participants should set up along these streets for the best experience.

Capitol Complex Memorial Day Ceremony – 10 a.m.

East Walnut between Finkbine Drive & East 12th Street, Des Moines.

The Larry Nehring Detachment will also be holding a service at 10 a.m. at the memorials on the south side of the State Capitol Complex. Following the service, Amvets Post 2 will host a luncheon at 2818 5th Ave., Des Moines.

Rock Island Arsenal Memorial Day Ceremony – 10:45 a.m.

Bldg 118, Rodman Ave., Rock Island, Illinois

This year’s speakers include Dr. Amanda Hale, from the Defense POW/MIA Accounting agency, and Col. Joe Parker, the Rock Island Garrison commander. Visitors should park in Memorial Field where buses will shuttle them to and from the ceremony.

Memorial Day Tribute at Cedar Memorial – 11 a.m.

4200 1st Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids.

This ceremony will include patriotic music, rifle volley, taps, and a speech from Dustin Peterson, director of Linn County Veteran Services. Participants are encouraged to bring their own outdoor seating.

Council Bluffs Memorial Day Service – 11 a.m.

100 Pearl St., Council Bluffs.

Join American Legion Post #2 in celebrating their annual Memorial Day service. Rev. Nathan Sherrill, pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, will serve as master of ceremonies. Michele Takin will sing the National Anthem. Mayor Matt Walsh, Post 2 Commander Sharlene Anderson, and Honor Guard Captain Brad Powell will give speeches. This ceremony will also include a special drill presentation by the Abraham Lincoln ROTC Drill Team.

Memorial Day Ceremony at Bettendorf Veterans Memorial – 2 p.m.

1645 23rd St., Bettendorf.

Bettendorf Veterans Memorial is a monument to those who previously served or are on active duty. A Memorial Day ceremony will be held in the afternoon for all to attend.

Fleet Farm Salutes Taps Across America – 3 p.m.

5858 Sunnybrook Drive, Sioux City.

At 3 p.m. on Memorial Day, a live bugler will perform Taps at all Fleet Farm stores across America followed by a minute of silence during the National Moment of Remembrance.

This story has been updated to correct the historic Memorial Day name, Decoration Day.

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

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Liberty And Justice Event Monday In Quad-Cities

 

Bettendorf  – Action alert submitted by Molly Regan

Follow Liberty & Justice on Facebook.  Check out their website here.

A SILENT PROTEST against US Rep Marienette Miller-Meeks will be held Monday 26 May 2025 across from the Bettendorf Veterans Memorial Park,  1645 23rd St at 2PM. She is one of the speakers.

This will be a SILENT PROTEST across the street because we must be respectful of the Veterans ceremony and their families and friends.

There will be NO shouting, NO waiving of signs, NO bull horns, NO music.

Just signs saying MMM is a pathetic, hypocritical representative who does not give VETERANS and their families and friends due respect or support, etc.

Wear a mask or bandana over your mouth if possible, just to help us stay silent.

Make a sign, come join us

Photo credit: Molly Regan

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Neil DeGrasse Tyson Says

10 minutes:

I always love it when I have an excuse to watch some Neil deGrasse Tyson videos:

On Facebook Monday, Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson made this observation:

If a foreign adversary snuck into our Federal budget and cut science research and education the way we’re cutting it ourselves — strategically undermining America’s long-term health, wealth, and security — we would likely consider it an act of war. 

Think about that for a few seconds. He is right on the money.

Who just voted for such cuts along with cuts to food for the poor and major cuts to health care dollars for the poor? Iowa’s delegation to the US House.

In case you don’t know who they are, that would be Ashley Hinson, Marionette Miller-Meeks, Zach Nunn and Randy Feenstra. Give them a call. Ask why they want to undermine our country. Maybe they didn’t know they did?

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Sunday Funday: End Of The Republic Edition

Thom Hartmann on the court’s possible loss of the power of contempt as contained in the MAGA Big Ugly Bill (8 minutes):

Normally, I would put a little blurb here about Memorial Day weekend. It is Memorial Day weekend and I honor those who gave their lives to preserve our democracy. Unfortunately, our congress is in the process of destroying our democracy. Our media is almost silent about it. We won’t be.

In the wee hours of Thursday morning, the US House on a straight MAGA vote passed a bill that included a part that would take away the courts’ ability to level contempt charges on the executive branch. In effect, this makes Stinky Pants a king. And thus ends our democracy.

So this Memorial Day, remember the country that was once the shining beacon for liberty in the world. She was killed by a conspiracy of dunces known as the MAGA congress.

Oh – and Stinky Pants took a $400 million bribe from Qatar this week. A little out of the usual for an elected official.

A) As if taking a massive bribe this week wasn’t enough, Stinky Pants also held a dinner at a private club in DC Thursday to do what? 

B) Wait! There is more! How much will it cost taxpayers (that is you and me) to get Stinky Pants’ bribe – the Qatari airplane – into shape?

C) Unfortunately last week ended with the announcement that who had been diagnosed with an “aggressive form of prostate cancer”?

D) While Stinky Pants continued to threaten Greenland, Greenland did what to fortify their situation?

E) Back when I was a kid! Memorial Day was known as Decoration Day. Why?

F) Homeland Security Barbie (aka Kristi Noem) displayed some ignorance this week before a Senate committee when asked about what basic concept of the constitution?

G) Stinky Pants hosted the President of South Africa last week. Stinky Pants ambushed his guests with what during the visit?

H) Thursday DHS Secretary Kristi Noem revoked what university’s ability to have foreign exchange students?

I) Friday morning started with Stinky Pants imposing a 50% across the board tariff against who?

J) When does the above tariff start?

K) Arlington Cemetery is the US National Cemetery. The land on which the Cemetery sits previously belonged to whom?

L) As MAGAs focused on Stinky’s Big Ugly Bill, what MAGA senator was begging the administration to send FEMA to his state to help with storm damage?

M) Farmers in Iowa, who voted overwhelmingly for Stinky, are outraged as HHS Secretary Kennedy pushes what rules that will greatly hurt famers?

N) Three weeks from yesterday (June 14th) there’s a big military parade planned where?

O) The poem “In Flanders Field” was inspired by the Second Battle of Ypres during what war?

P)  Bottle baby Pete Hegseth seems to have stepped over the line last week when he conducted what at the Pentagon?

Q) What daytime TV talker was told to lighten up on the political talk by Disney CEO Bob Iger?

R) SCOTUS surprised many when it deadlocked on what MAGA desired issue Thursday thus leaving a state Supreme Court decision in place?

S) What “journalist” pretty much gave up any credibility he had with the publication this week of his book bashing President Biden?

T) And finally what sort of controversial football play was allowed to remain in professional football this week after an owners meeting?

A healthy media ecosystem would be spending the day discussing the major scandal of Trump and FEMA going completely MIA as tornadoes killed at least 28 across Missouri, Kentucky and Virginia. No federal response. No comments from the admin. This is a major scandal!!! – Brett Meiselas

Answers:

A) Meet with the largest buyers of his meme coin (another form of bribery). Spokeser Karolyn Leavitt said it was on his personal time so its OK

B) At least a billion dollars!

C) former President Biden

D) Sold mineral rights to a European company

E) That is the day people would decorate the graves of dead soldiers with flowers

F) Habeus Corpus – she had no clue what it meant.

G) Fake pictures and videos that purported to show genocide of white farmers in South Africa – as I said they were fake

H) Harvard – pretty dictatorial thing to do

I) The European Union

J) June 1st or a week from today!

K) Confederate general Robert E. Lee

L) MAGA Senator Josh Hawley was begging for help for St. Louis 

M) His MAHA or Make America Healthy Again rules that will ban many farm chemicals, especially Roundup. Farmers have now lost their markets and pesticides under Benedict Donald

N) Washington DC. Stinky Pants is throwing a big military parade for himself for his birthday. You and I will pay $50 million for this

O) World War I

P) A Christian prayer service- that really crosses that freedom of religion line

Q) The View

R) Public money being directed to support religious (in this case catholic) schools

S) Jake Tapper 

T) The “tush push”

Most attendees at Trump’s private memecoin dinner this week will likely be foreign buyers, according to CNBC. One of the top buyers is Chinese crypto billionaire Justin Sun, who was facing fraud charges until Trump’s SEC dropped them. Call it what it is: corruption. – Robert Reich

In honor of those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our country:

In Flanders Fields

In Flanders fields, the poppies blow
     Between the crosses, row on row,
   That mark our place; and in the sky
   The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
   Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
                          In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
   The torch; be yours to hold it high.
   If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
                            In Flanders fields.

Posted in #trumpresistance, Humor | 2 Comments

So Complex And So Fragile

Thanks to wikipedia for this example of a rebel Goldberg machine

The passage of the felon president’s Big Ugly Bill in the wee hours of Thursday coming up on a holiday weekend should send a super chill through the backbone of every American who loves this country and its people. This bill was designed for the .1% of Americans at the very tip top.

What it did was to show just how much at the mercy we are with an unstable government with an unstable and uninformed leader at the helm. We are at the mercy of this unstable government for many things, but the most vulnerable is our access to medical care.

We are in the midst of watching what is a medical system built for a horse and buggy era about to take the blows from an unstable leadership as that leadership cuts huge chunks of money in order to give that money to their donors. It is as noted by one congress member theft from the poor to give to the rich.

We look at health care systems in other first world countries and we see systems that are systems. They are designed to get optimal results from a flow through the system. By designing it that way they also achieve minimizing costs. In comparison, the USA has no real system. Instead we have people working in an industry with many disconnected parts that seems to be built to extract the maximum dollar from the customer with little concern about the outcome.

While stopping the current crisis that will cause millions to lose their health care coverage is the most important problem for today, it is well past time for a thorough systemic investigation and overhaul. There should never have been a situation where millions could lose their access to health care. A system must be designed that does not allow that.

We have gotten into this situation because of money in politics. MAGAs once known as Republicans helped evolve our current Rube Goldberg machine of a health care “system” by designing methods for wealthy individuals and corporations to extract maximum dollars from the system while minimizing their costs. The corporations and wealthy got these favors thanks to their “donations” to candidates for office.

Thus whereas most modern countries have a system for an individuals health that flows in one direction and includes all the body, we have a system with plenty of stopping points where money is extracted. We have Medicare, ”Medicare Advantage”, Medicaid, VA, Obamacare, CHIPs, many brands of private insurance each with their own requirements for entry and many varying cost and deductibles.

On top of that, most of the above listed options (and that is far from a complete list) only covers some of our bodies. They do not cover dental or hearing for instance – another break in the flow.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, we pay dearly, dearly for this god awful disconnected, dysfunctional system. As I often say we pay twice as much for half the results of any other country in the world. How dumb can we be. 

Note that the dysfunctionality of our system is a product of the political system which is built on money donations. Money and the rich are at the very base of our dysfunctional system. While driving the money from the system is really the only way we may ever have a shot at fully reforming the system, we can still make reform a goal.

We can make a difference by becoming really active. If the possibility of losing your health care doesn’t make you want to get politically active I don’t know what you need for motivation. Make it a resolution to call your representatives. Make it a resolution to help get out the vote next year.

Remember taking away healthcare is probably only the tip of the iceberg.

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez discusses waste, fraud and abuse in Medicare Advantage: (5.5 minutes)

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She  Runs Because She Knows She Is Wrong

1 minute:

Many of you have already seen the short video of Iowa’s first district congress member, Marionette Miller-Meeks, running like a scared rabbit from a man with a recorder who is trying to ask her questions. If you did not know, that man is Alex Lawson, executive director of Social Security Works. Mr. Lawson is a highly considered man in Washington for his expertise and advocacy for those receiving Social Security.

So Mr. Lawson is a very highly respected member of the Washington environs. Why then is Miller-Meeks practically tripping over herself to get to the sanctum of the congressional elevator? Miller-Meeks is running because she knows she just cast a vote of which she should be enormously ashamed.

She knows that by voting for Donald Trump’s Big Very Bad Bill she voted to close at least 4 hospitals in her district and to take medical care from some 67,000 or more citizens in her district. That is more than the population of Waterloo or Dubuque. Tough luck suckers. 

This video was taken after Miller-Meeks had voted the Big Very Bad Bill out of committee. Now we are two days removed from her voting once more to advance the Big Very Bad Bill despite her show that she is well aware of what severe problems her vote will cause. She obviously has little concern for her constituents.

Miller-Meeks is not the only representative worthy of our scorn for her vote. As usual the Iowa delegation does not take a back seat to anyone in their subservience to Trump. Miller-Meeks just happened to get caught in an act that outwardly showed that she is well aware of just how wrong her vote is. Hell, it even goes against the oath she took as a physician. 

Adding to Miller-Meeks knowledge that what she is doing is bad is the fact that MAGAs called meetings at 10PM and 1AM to hide what they were doing under the cover of darkness. MAGA leaders and followers alike knew full well what they are doing. Massachusetts representative Jim McGovern calls MAGAs out on hiding under the cover of night (12 minutes)

I have no doubt that Nunn and Hinson are well aware of how damaging their vote is. I know not how Feenstra feels, but voting against health care for Iowans is a hell of a thing to run for governor on. I can almost hear him say “And I will end health care in this state for anyone who makes less than a quarter mil a year!” 

Of course the staggering cuts to Medicaid and their disastrous effects have been the focal point of the Big Very Bad Bill, but there is much more that is Very Bad also. As pointed out by Heather  Cox Richardson in her daily update on History “Letters To An American” that this bill will also trigger cuts to Medicare:

“Yesterday the CBO reported that the measure will add $2.3 trillion to the deficit over ten years, and noted that when a budget adds too much to the federal deficit, it triggers cuts to Medicare (not a typo) under the Pay-As-You-Go law. The CBO explains that those cuts are limited by law to 4% but would still total about $490 billion from 2027 through 2034.”

SURPRISE! Hey, Seniors, how about them apples? Bet Miller-Meeks probably isn’t aware of that.

While the cuts to health care aimed at the poor and most vulnerable are maybe the most immediately alarming parts of the Big Very Bad Bill, but there is a lot more that is bad, bad, bad! Again we look to Heather Cox Richardson for some brief highlights:

Just after 1:00 this morning, the House Rules Committee began its hearing on what congressional Republicans have officially named The One Big, Beautiful Bill. If passed, this measure will put Trump’s wish list into law. Although this is technically a budget bill, items in it from that wish list include a significant restriction on “the authority of federal courts to hold government officials in contempt when they violate court orders,” as Dean of Berkeley Law School Erwin Chemerinsky explained in Just Security Monday. “Without the contempt power,” he writes, “judicial orders are meaningless and can be ignored.”

Three judges are currently considering whether the administration is in contempt of court over its apparent disregard for court orders over its rendition of undocumented immigrants to third countries.

But the center of the bill is indeed related to money: it is the $3.8 trillion extension of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, which disproportionately benefit the wealthy and corporations. Yesterday the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said that Americans in the lowest tenth of earners will lose money under the measure while people in the top five percent of earners will see a tax cut of $117.2 billion, more than 20% of the tax cuts in the bill.

Poorer Americans take a hit from the bill because it cuts federal healthcare and food assistance programs to partially offset the costs of the tax cuts. Cuts to Medicaid are expected to leave at least 9 million people without healthcare coverage. Cuts of about 30% to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program would be “the biggest cut in the program’s history,” Ty Jones Cox, vice president for food assistance policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told Lorie Konish of CNBC. They would cut about $300 billion from the program through 2034. More than 40 million people, including children, seniors, and adults with disabilities, receive food assistance.

Yesterday the CBO reported that the measure will add $2.3 trillion to the deficit over ten years, and noted that when a budget adds too much to the federal deficit, it triggers cuts to Medicare (not a typo) under the Pay-As-You-Go law. The CBO explains that those cuts are limited by law to 4% but would still total about $490 billion from 2027 through 2034.

Tobias Burns of The Hill summed it up: “Republicans’ tax-and-spending cut bill will take from the poor and give to the rich, Congress’s official scoring body has found.”

Call or write Miller-Meeks and the other three stooges for the rich. The congressional switch board number is on the side of the page.

Let us hope elections are fair and free in November. Until then let’s put as much pressure on those who are supposed to represent us.

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Join The 48 Lakes Initiative At Lake Darling For Iowa’s Water Quality

From our inbox – Action alert from JFAN (Jefferson County Farmers and Neighbors)

Driftless Water Defenders (DWD) is launching a powerful initiative this Saturday to heighten attention on the poor state of Iowa’s waterways. The 48 Lakes Initiative will gather stories from Iowans from across the state on how the deteriorating quality of Iowa’s water is impacting our recreational use of its lakes.

These stories will be used to start a vibrant social media dialogue to make water quality an issue our legislators can’t continue to ignore.

This Saturday focuses first on 10 lakes that repeatedly suffer with the most “swimming not recommended” advisories. Lake Darling is on that list.

JFAN is helping DWD to collect stories from anyone who wants to share what Lake Darling means to them and their concerns about the lake’s all too frequent swimming advisories. What better location to do that than at this beautiful lake!

We’ll be at Lake Darling on Saturday from 11:00 am – noon to collect videos of anyone who wishes to share their experiences and concerns. DWD will use these videos on social media to start the dialogue.

We’ll meet at the picnic area directly on the Lake Shore Loop Trail next to the Lake Darling Main Boat Ramp. This is BEFORE the beach. (Here’s a map of where to find us.) We’ll have a few treats on hand to share, too!

Water quality was dubbed the “third rail of Iowa politics,” but it’s a major concern of nearly every Iowan. Join JFAN on Saturday from 11 am – noon, and let’s help DWD make water quality an issue legislators have to face and fix!

If you’re camera shy, click here to see how you can contribute your stories.

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“I watched A Bit of FOX News – OMG”

An ordinary Canadian stumbles onto Fox News and this is what he has to say. It’s only 4:47 minutes. Please watch.

“We’re all going to pay a price for it. All of us in the world.”

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