Nonbinary People Deserve To Live

Stock photo of a “nonbinary person.” Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com

Editor’s Note: This post contains material of a highly sensitive nature including description of events leading to the death of Nex Benedict that may be triggering for some individuals.

U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren describes how many of us feel about the death of Nex Benedict after a beating in a school bathroom in Owasso, Oklahoma.

The killing of Nex Benedict is gut-wrenching and underscores the danger of extremists who are dehumanizing kids with anti-trans hate in Oklahoma and across the country. Every student should feel safe at school and supported for who they are. Nex deserves justice.

U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren on Threads, Feb. 21, 2024.

Oklahoma Republican state legislators passed a bathroom bill. Now a nonbinary kid is dead. A definitive narrative of what happened has been slow to emerge. An autopsy was being conducted to determine cause of death. Authorities are waiting for the results of toxicology studies. Here’s part of what we know from the local police department investigation:

This story is complicated and reports in media are not uniform. Likewise, there is public skepticism about the police statement “the decedent did not die as a result of trauma.” The toxicology report as well as the complete Medical Examiner’s report will show the cause and manner of death and that could still be weeks away. On Thursday, Feb. 22, the Owasso Police executed a search warrant at the school and collected evidence to be used in the investigation.

One of the things we do know is the state passed a book ban law and the school district that includes Owasso High School hired the producer of a conservative, right wing website, Libs of TikTok, to oversee the process. After work began, the Libs of TikTok website featured a video with one of the school teachers who they characterized as a groomer because they disagreed with books selected for exclusion from classrooms and the library. That teacher subsequently resigned. Who would want to attend a public school with this type of environment?

There are reports Nex Benedict was harassed for a year before their death. School harassment is common in the United States. In many cases, it is parents and other adults who bear responsibility for such harassment by giving permission to school children to harass people who are different. Some say the Libs of TikTok is culpable in creating an environment where harassment was more likely. In any case, Nex Benedict is dead after being harassed.

When asked about the death of Nex Benedict, Oklahoma State Senator Tom Woods said,

We are a Republican state – supermajority – in the House and Senate. I represent a constituency that doesn’t want that filth in Oklahoma. We are a religious state and we are going to fight it to keep that filth out of the state of Oklahoma because we are a Christian state – we are a moral state. We want to lower taxes and let people be able to live and work and go to the faith they choose. We are a Republican state and I’m going to vote my district, and I’m going to vote my values, and we don’t want that in the state of Oklahoma.

State Senator Tom Wood, Tahlequah Daily Press, Feb. 23, 2024.

Nonbinary people tell me the thing they fear most about living in America is that a segment of the population wants LGBTQ+ people completely erased from society. Dead would be preferable, they said. If there is one certain lesson to learn as this story develops, it is nonbinary people deserve to live.

Below are links to some of the major stories about this death, which readers can review for themselves.

The Independent

Washington Post

The Daily Beast

Los Angeles Blade

New Republic

The Oklahoman

If you live near Owasso, this is happening Feb. 25. Other, similar events are popping up across the United States.

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Best Political Commentary For The Weekend

This could be fun if Keith Olbermann is right. Just listen to the first five minutes.  Chuck Grassley gets a mention.  Happy Friday!

 

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HCR: Biden’s Extraordinarily Successful Presidency vs. A Complete Mess On The Republican Side


Check out Heather Cox Richardson’s February 20 podcast.  Yesterday on the topic of some people making an argument about a challenger to President Joe Biden she had this to say:

“Just speaking as a political historian one of the things that frustrates me to no end when I hear that is the people making those arguments clearly know nothing about political history because the last thing one does in a party that has an incumbent is to challenge that incumbent.”

“..the truth is the Democrats are thrilled to be behind Biden. He’s had an extraordinarily successful presidency. So first of all they wouldn’t do that but stop even going that far. If you think about where we are in politics right now the Republican party is in the middle of a civil war. And literally the Trump people are physically threatening those who are not on the Trump team, those that are trying to regain control of the Republican party or trying to undercut the Trump side – it is a complete mess on the Republican side. So the idea that the Democrats would want to do that – there’s an old adage in politics that says that whenever your opponents are beating themselves up just stand back. So the idea that the Democrats would also want to jump into a civil war is just bonkers from anybody that studies politics.

The other thing that nobody is really talking about is…by definition the reason that the Republicans are going after Biden’s age is because they have nothing else. They have looked for years now to try to come up with a scandal and at this point even they are admitting they don’t think they will vote to impeach because there is no there there. The chief witness turns out now to be under indictment for lying and having made that up. Their stories keep falling apart so what they have on Biden is age, which is undeniable, he’s an older man… I have talked to him at length in close proximity… he’s fine, he’s smart, he knows a lot, he knows how things operate.. and one of the things that people who are really good at politics do is they see the story that’s not there.. and that’s actually hard to do – and he’s always on that every time, always looking at the whole picture.

Anyone who would try to replace him would by definition – have skeletons in their closet because they have not been vetted by 50 years in public office. So anyone who thinks someone who steps into Biden’s place would be this great miracle worker are those who wish the Democrats ill or are just bored. Democrats are boring because they are just getting the job done.”

Watch the rest of the podcast here.

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George Soros Is Buying Radio Stations

As far as I can tell there are no Audacy stations in Iowa but still this could be good news for the national media ecosystem.

www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/george-soros-fund-poised-to-take-control-of-nation-s-second-largest-chain-of-radio-stations

George Soros is poised to take a massive stake in the nation’s second-largest radio company, which owns more than 220 stations nationwide, according to court filings and sources close to the situation.

The left-leaning billionaire’s Soros Fund Management has bought up $400 million of debt in Audacy — the No. 2 US radio broadcaster behind iHeartMedia with stations including New York’s WFAN and 1010 WINS, as well as Los Angeles-based KROQ, according to bankruptcy filings.

One insider close to the situation, noting that he was a Republican, said he believed it was possible Soros was buying the stake to exert influence on public opinion in the months leading up to the 2024 presidential election.

Read more

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It’s Not About Trump – It’s The Enablers

Al Franken has a great, funny podcast which he disparages each time in the intro, “We got a great one for you today – for a change.” Truth is, it’s always interesting and funny.  It is also worthwhile to listen to what “fallen away” Republicans have to say about current devout Republicans. The dysfunctional GOP enables Donald Trump. Democrats and liberals can’t cope with their crazy ways, and generally have no idea what really makes Republicans tick  – as opposed to what Republicans say about what drives their behavior –  and we seem to have no idea how to fight them.  So I like to listen to Republicans like Frum who are being honest about the Republican mindset – a rare thing – with the understanding that with Republicans, even former Republicans, you always have to be skeptical. I shared Al’s apparent skepticism about some of Frum’s ideas.

But there were also useful insights into GOP psychopathology. For example, on Republicans and the border deal they blew up, Frum explains their nonsensical behavior beyond the fact that Trump told them to so they did.

“The very act of negotiation is mistrusted by them..Republicans did this deal where they got almost everything they wanted and Democrats got almost nothing they wanted and the Democrats said yes. Like a bad negotiator the Republicans can’t figure out when they’re getting a good deal or not. They just say, if the other guy doesn’t look crushed and humbled and upset, how do I know I got a good deal? If he says yes it must be bad for me. They don’t believe in the principle of negotiations. They don’t understand their own legislation.”

This was followed by a fascinating conversation about immigration, jobs, more teen-agers coming into the country seeking asylum and work, and not coincidentally, red states loosening child labor laws.

I’m not the first person to observe that while the total focus is on Trump in the media, he could not have done what he did and would not be a danger today were it not for his supporters and enablers.  I’m talking about people like Senators Joni Ernst and Chuck Grassley, Iowa Reps. Randy Feenstra, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Ashley Hinson, Zach Nunn, and other Republican elected officials.  Despite Kim and Donald’s little spat, she said on Fox News she will support him if nominated. And let’s throw in Nikki Haley who while fully cognizant of the danger of Donald Trump as reflected in her presidential campaign, has at the same time said if she were to be elected, she would pardon Trump.  And all the rest of the Rs, the right wing media, regular “both sides” media, hangers-on, opportunists, grifters, spineless individuals and those who maybe don’t know any better or are just enjoying the false feeling that they are politically relevant.

There are only a handful of Republicans with national name recognition who are speaking out against Trump and a shout out to them for sure because we need their help. To name a few, Steve Schmidt, Nicole Wallace, Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, Cassidy Hutchinson, Mitt Romney, Bill Kristol, The Lincoln Project – George Conway, Rick Wilson.

As E. Jean Carroll observed after Trump was ordered to pay $83 million for defaming her, after being order to pay $5 million for raping her, and Rachel Maddow asked her how it felt to face him down in the courtroom,

“”I looked out and he was nothing. He was a phantom. It was the people around him that were giving him power; he himself was nothing. It was an astonishing discovery for me.”

Let’s hope the majority of the electorate discover this by November.

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Which Bills Did And Didn’t Survive The First Funnel

Your guide to which bills survived the first legislative ‘funnel’ (and which didn’t)

by Robin Opsahl, Iowa Capital Dispatch

Here’s a rundown of  some of the notable bills that survived – and some that did not – during the first funnel week:

What survived:

Agriculture

Food labeling: Senate Study Bill 3162 would forbid the producers of faux meat to label it in a deceptive way to insinuate they are meat from slaughtered animals. The bill was also amended to prohibit research at the state’s regent universities into “manufactured protein products.”

Grain Indemnity Fund: Senate Study Bill 3174 would roughly double the fund’s operating balance and will expand its coverage to credit-sale contracts. The fund reimburses farmers for their losses when a state-licensed grain dealer buys their corn or soybeans but goes defunct before paying.

Livestock feedlots: Senate File 2371 would allow operators of open feedlots to dispose of manure under certain conditions if failing to do so risks contaminating the state’s waterways. It was amended to remove a provision that might have allowed feedlot owners to spread manure on farm fields for long periods of time without state approval.

Education

AEAs: Two versions of legislation making changes to Iowa Area Education Agencies – House Study Bill 713 and Senate Study Bill 3073, survived the funnel deadline. Both are different from Reynolds’ initial proposal making changes to the system. The original legislation would have allowed school districts to contract with companies or work with other AEAs to provide special education services for Iowa students with disabilities, as well as contract with other providers for general education and media services and given the state Department of Education more oversight and control responsibilities over AEAs.

The amended bill moved forward by the Senate Education Committee Wednesday would require AEAs to continue providing special education, general education and media services, with a gradual shift to allowing more funds to go directly to school districts. District would then be allowed to choose to continue working with AEAs or seek other service providers.

The House bill, advanced Thursday, would require special education funds be used by school districts with AEAs and sets out a three-year timeline for districts to begin to work with outside providers for media and general education services. The legislation would also scale back the education department’s oversight role.

Teacher pay: The Senate Education Committee advanced a teacher pay provision as part of the AEA bill, setting a new starting teacher salary minimum at $46,251, lower than the governor’s $50,000 minimum starting salary proposal. House lawmakers introduced a separate bill, House Study Bill 714, to raise teacher salaries to a $47,500 minimum in year one and then to $50,000. The bill also set a minimum $15 hourly wage for education support personnel.

Fetal development videos: House File 2031 would require Iowa schools to show students videos on fetal development, from the process of fertilization to pregnancy, in health and human growth and development classes. The bill cites “Meet Baby Olivia,” a video produced by an anti-abortion organization, as an example of material to show students. The bill was amended by the House Education Committee to only be shown to students in grades 7-12.

Improving literacy: Both chambers’ education committees advanced bills aimed at improving literacy rates for Iowa elementary students. Senate Study Bill 3155 and House Study Bill 650 would train teachers in the “science of reading” approach to literacy instruction and require teachers pass a “foundations of reading” test. The proposal would also have schools notify parents if their child is not proficient in reading by third grade, giving parents the option to hold the student in third grade for a year to obtain proficiency.

Gender-neutral terms in world language classes: House File 2060 would prohibit the introduction of gender-neutral terms in public and private-school classes teaching a language “that utilizes a grammatical gender system.”

Use of preferred names and pronouns: House File 2396 would forbid school districts and charter schools from taking disciplinary action against teachers and students for using a student or school employee’s legal name instead of their preferred name or pronouns – even if a parent has registered a request for their child to have a different name or pronouns used in school.

Community college state aid distribution formula: Senate File 2373, formerly Senate Study Bill 3164, would establish a “presidents council” made up of Iowa’s community college presidents and chancellors to determine and approve the formula to distribute state appropriations among the colleges on a yearly basis.

Tuition caps, program changes at state universities: House File 2558, formerly House File 2327, would cap tuition and fee increases at 3% and guarantee steady costs for students admitted to a state university next school year, alongside requiring universities to conduct studies of cost-reducing measures. It would also codify DEI directives from the Iowa Board of Regents to state universities, bar universities from hiring certain administrators without board approval and add two ex-officio, nonvoting members of the state’s general assembly to the board of regents.

Community colleges as well as state universities would need to form programs for students to work part-time under a registered employer while attending classes, with the employer paying their tuition and wages, and craft in their strategic plans ways to prioritize high-demand careers in the state.

Community college reporting requirements: An amended version of House File 2347 would require community colleges to report data on graduate income and student debt, among other items, and provide them to school districts for juniors and seniors. College and career transition counselors would also be made exempt from supplemental weighting caps for shared operations in school districts.

Student teaching requirement changes: Senate File 2260, formerly Senate Study Bill 3143, would shorten student teaching requirements for certain groups with paraeducator or substitute teaching experience and expand work-based learning programs for students who wish to participate when school is not in session. It would also allocate $30 million from the Unemployment Compensation Reserve fund to the new Workforce Opportunity Fund and change eligibility requirements and programming for the Last-Dollar Scholarship program.

Similar legislation in the House also made it through the funnel deadline. House File 2516, formerly House Study Bill 686, would also change student teaching requirements and establish the Workforce Opportunity Fund, but does not include where dollars for the fund would come from.

Citizenship proof for in-state tuition: House File 2320, formerly House File 2128, would require students admitted to Iowa’s community colleges and state universities to provide proof of U.S. citizenship or lawful presence in the U.S. to qualify for in-state tuition and fees.

Health care

Defining ‘sex,’ sex-segregated spaces, birth certificates: House File 2389 defines the terms “male” and “female” in Iowa code on the basis of a person’s biological reproductive system requires that birth certificates list a transgender person’s sex as designated at birth and as designated after gender-related medical care. The bill would allow transgender people to be excluded from sex-segregated spaces such as restrooms, locker rooms and domestic violence shelters. Lawmakers held a public hearing on the legislation Monday.

Mental health and substance abuse: Both Senate and House committees advanced the governor’s proposal to establish a Behavioral Health Services System (BHSS) in Iowa to provide mental health, substance abuse and other addiction recovery services. House File 2509 and Senate File 2354 would divide the state into seven districts for providing mental health and substance abuse services, taking over services currently provided through the Mental Health and Disabilities Services system. Disability services would move under the Iowa HHS’ division of disability and aging services.

Birth control: House Study Bill 642 allows pharmacists to dispense birth control from behind the pharmacy counter, with various check-ins and self-risk assessments with the patient, for a total of up to 27 months before the patient would be required to see a physician in order to continue the prescription.

Nursing home inspections: House Study Bill 691 would allow the Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals and Licensing to opt out of conducting in-person nursing home inspections under certain conditions. The bill would also allow nursing home representatives to “review” allegations of substandard care with DIAL so they could provide additional “context and evidence” before top officials at DIAL decide whether to issue the citations. Department inspectors would also participate in joint training sessions with nursing home industry officials to review the violations cited most frequently in the state.

Postpartum Medicaid: House Study Bill 643 and Senate File 2251 would expand postpartum Medicaid coverage to a year for mothers and infants. The bill limits eligibility to those with incomes at 215% of the federal poverty level, or about $42,000 a year, lawmakers say.

State government

Boards and commissions: House and Senate committees passed different plans for consolidating Iowa’s system of boards and commissions. Senate Study Bill 3172, a bill introduced by the governor’s office, follows the recommendations of the Iowa Boards and Commissions Review Committee to merge or eliminate 111 of Iowa’s 256 existing boards and commissions. House Study Bill 710 would only consolidate or cut 49 boards or commissions.

Gender balance: House File 2540 and Senate File 2096 would eliminate the requirement that Iowa boards and commissions have equal gender representation.

Eminent domain: House File 2522 would allow those who are subject to pending eminent domain requests to petition a district court judge to decide whether the requests are proper, prior to a final ruling by the Iowa Utilities Board. The bill was amended from an earlier version to remove a provision that enabled state lawmakers to pause carbon dioxide pipeline permit proceedings.

Foreign land ownership: Senate File 2204 would enhance reporting requirements for land that is owned or leased by foreigners.

Election law: House Study Bill 697 and Senate Study Bill 3161 make changes to absentee voting in Iowa, banning ballot drop boxes, requiring absentee ballots be received by county auditor’s offices the day before the election to be counted, and requiring voters list their driver’s license or voter identification numbers when returning absentee ballots. Ranked-choice voting would also be banned under the law.

The legislation would also limit challenges that Iowans can make to a federal candidate’s eligibility to appear on the ballot, a measure critics linked to former President Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign.

Private CPAs conducting state audits: Senate File 2311 would allow state agencies and departments to employ a certified public accountant to conduct their annual audits instead of the state auditor’s office. Iowa Auditor Rob Sand criticized the bill in a news conference Thursday, saying it would decrease government accountability.

Hemp regulation: House Study Bill 665 includes measures allowing the state Department of Health and Human Services to more directly regulate the sale of hemp-derived and cannabis products. The bill outlaws selling alcoholic beverages infused with THC and also creates a criminal penalty for distribution of consumable hemp products to people under age 21 and for underage possession.

Parking meters: House Study Bill 669 requires parking meters to allow the use of a parking space by any user for the duration of the time purchased, regardless of whether the person who paid for the parking is occupying the space. It would also require meters, kiosks, or internet applications used to purchase parking to display any remaining time left by a previous user.

Public lands: Senate File 2324 would bar the Iowa Department of Natural Resources from obtaining new land at auction or from not-for-profit organizations that obtained the land at auction.

Union recertification: Senate File 2374 would require the decertification of public employee bargaining units if the government employer fails to provide a list of eligible employees to the Public Employee Relations Board within 10 days of receiving written notice of intent to conduct a certification election. The bargaining unit or bargaining representative could avoid decertification by petitioning the court to compel the government to provide the employee list.

Use of artificial intelligence in election materials:  House File 2549, formerly House Study Bill 599, would ban the use of artificial intelligence technology in voting equipment and make it a felony to fail to disclose the use of AI in published election materials. The bill would also criminalize publication of a “materially deceptive depiction” of a candidate without disclosure, as well as making or publishing a false representation of a candidate or ballot issue with the intention of influencing an election.

Labor and the workforce

Job-search requirements: House Study Bill 655, renumbered as House File 2524, would set the statutorily required number of work searches for the receipt of unemployment benefits at four per week. It also would require Iowa Workforce Development to verify the identity of each claimant before any benefits are paid out. The bill would essentially bring Iowa’s state law into alignment with existing practices and administrative rules that already require claimant identification and four job searches per week.

Justice and public safety

Arming school staff:  House Study Bill 675 allows school personnel who pass several training courses and receive a permit to carry a firearm. The state would provide all schools with up to $50,000 in matching funds if they choose to hire school resource officers or private security. The bill also indemnifies school districts from liability arising from the “use of reasonable force” in the workplace.

Bail for violent offenses: House File 2555 would raise to $100,000, from the current minimum of $10,000, the bond for charges ranging from attempted murder to possession of a firearm by a felon.

Bestiality penalties: Senate File 2180 and House File 2318 expand the definition of sexual abuse of an animal and increase penalties for violations.

Eligibility for public assistance, expanded definition of human smuggling:  House File 2112 would expand the definition of human smuggling and also require background checks of noncitizen applicants for public assistance.

Employer verification of legal residency: Senate File 108 would require employers to use a federal system called E-Verify to check the immigration status of job applicants.

Firearm regulation: House File 2556 creates penalties for officials of political subdivisions that enact firearms ordinances that are more restrictive than state law. The bill would allow a judge to impose penalties of up to $2,500 per day of the violation on a person who “knowingly participated” in the violation.

Hands-free cell phones and traffic cameras: Senate File 2337 would prohibit drivers from using cell phones and other electronic devices behind the wheel, except in hands-free mode.  The legislation also would ban the use of traffic cameras for enforcement of speed limits and other roadway laws. A companion bill, House Study Bill 668, did not receive a subcommittee meeting.

Illegal immigration: Senate File 2211 proposes making illegal immigration a state crime in Iowa, giving law enforcement the authority to arrest undocumented immigrants, and state courts the ability to order the deportation of people who entered the country illegally.

Jail booking photos: House File 2309 would allow county jails to withhold photos of those who are arrested until they are convicted, with some exceptions.

Police officer decertification: House File 2413 extends the list of offenses that require decertification by the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy. It applies to an officer who twice pleads guilty to or is convicted of driving a vehicle with a blood-alcohol concentration of .08 percent or more, or with a measurable amount of a controlled substance in their blood or urine.

Religious freedom:  House File 2454 and Senate File 2095 would raise the legal bar for government actions that burden a person’s exercise of religion, requiring a compelling government interest. A government body that is found to be in violation could be assessed actual damages, attorney fees and court costs.

Unborn personhood: House Study Bill 621 would increase penalties for the nonconsensual termination of a pregnancy. The legislation also amends current language on these crimes from referring to the termination of a “human pregnancy” to the “death of an unborn person.”

Natural resources

Lake Panorama: House File 2485 would allow large homeowners associations near public lakes to regulate their members’ conduct on those lakes and to place buoys on them. The bill is meant to assist the Lake Panorama Association, which worries a recent court decision will erode its authority.

What died:

Education

Free school meals: Rep. Sami Scheetz, D-Cedar Rapids, criticized Republican lawmakers for not taking up House File 575, a bill that would have provided free breakfast and lunches to students who qualify for free and reduced school lunches. In a news release, Scheetz said the measure would have provided meals for 23,000 Iowa students in low-income households.

“Unfortunately, Republican leadership in the Iowa House chose to put politics over Iowa kids,” Scheetz said. “Every child deserves access to nutritious meals, regardless of their family’s income. Child hunger is a serious issue that requires immediate action. Sadly, the Republican Party in our state government appears ready to put politics over the needs of the people they were elected to serve.”

Singing the national anthem: The House Education Committee did not take up House Study Bill 587, a bill that would have required Iowa students sing a verse of the national anthem each school day.

School chaplains: ​​House File 2073 and Senate Study Bill 3092 would have allowed chaplains to be employed or volunteer at Iowa schools, providing “support, services and programs” to students.

State university tuition guarantee and supplemental funding: House File 2352, introduced by House Democrats with the goal of lowering costs for Iowa college students, did not make it to subcommittee. The bill would have frozen tuition and fees for students entering their first year at a state university between 2024 and 2028, and offered additional funds to universities to help recoup lost funds. The tuition freeze was added to House File 2558, which passed through the House Education Committee.

Health care

Nursing home reform: A package of legislation offered by Democrats this week didn’t make it past their assignment to a subcommittee. The bills included Senate File 2304, which would have established a Long-Term Care Facility Safety Council to add an element of citizen review to the oversight process, and resulted in the hiring of 30 additional nursing home inspectors and assisted living monitors. Senate File 2305 would have established a new minimum wage of $15 for front-line caregivers, with that minimum gradually rising to $20 an hour. Senate File 2303 would have increased, from $50 to $85, the Medicaid-funded personal needs allowance that care facility residents receive each month to pay for such things as cell phone bills, favorite snacks or shampoos, and other sundries. It has been 21 years since the Iowa Legislature last raised the personal needs allowance. Senate File 2306 would have provided support for alternatives to institutional long-term care to better enable Iowa seniors to age at home.

State and local government

Gender identity as a protected class: A House subcommittee did not advance House File 2082, a measure to remove “gender identity” as a protected class under the Iowa Civil Rights Act and classify “gender dysphoria” as a disability.

Obscene performances: Senate File 2176 proposed making the act of exposing a minor, selling a minor a ticket, or admitting a minor, to a performance that involves the exposure of genitalia or sexual acts or which “appeals to the prurient interest and is patently offensive” a misdemeanor offense. Advocates said the measure could be used in litigation targeting LGBTQ+ events and drag shows.

Libraries: Lawmakers discussed several bills related to library oversight in recent weeks, but none advanced. Senate Study Bill 3168 would have given city councils the ability to oversee and change hiring practices for library directors, and allowed the use of certain library tax money by ordinance without a referendum. A similar measure, House Study Bill 678, proposed giving city councils this power as well as the ability to overturn library board policy decisions on issues like book selection without requiring a public vote.

Senate Study Bill 3131 would have allowed city councils to change the makeup and duties of library boards, as well as removed state law requirements for local governments to levy taxes for libraries.

Homelessness: Unauthorized camping, sleeping or long-term shelter on public property would be a misdemeanor under Senate Study Bill 3175. The bill proposed providing state funds to political subdivisions to create parking lots, camping facilities and shelters for homeless people, as well as restricting state funds from going to local governments in areas with higher per capita rates of homelessness than the state average.

Child care assistance for child care workers: House File 2338 would make child care workers eligible for state child care assistance, expanding an existing pilot project statewide. The bill, sponsored by House Democrats, was not assigned to a subcommittee.

Medicaid wait list: House File 2205 would eliminate the waiting list for Home and Community-Based Services under Medicaid for people with disabilities. The bill, sponsored by House Democrats, was not assigned to a subcommittee.

Minimum wage:  House File 2293 would raise the state minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026. The bill, sponsored by House Democrats, was not assigned to a subcommittee.

Permanent daylight saving time: House File 498 would make Daylight Saving Time permanent throughout the year.

Banking discrimination: Financial institutions, like banks and credit unions, would be prohibited from discriminating against people or businesses through use of a “social credit score,” defined as tracking of religious practices, associations, protected speech, expression or conduct under Senate Study Bill 3094. The bill would have also prevented financial institutions from declining to provide services based on business activity involving firearm, gas or oil sales, or in instances where a business owner does not disclose information on issues like greenhouse gas emissions, diversity audits or refusal to assist employees in “obtaining an abortion or gender reassignment service.”

Justice and public safety

Death penalty: Senate Study Bill 3085 would reinstate capital punishment in Iowa for first-degree murder cases where a person intentionally murders a police officer or prison employee. A second bill, Senate File 357, would have allowed the death penalty in cases where a minor is kidnapped, raped and murdered.

Age verification for viewing pornography: House File 2051 proposed holding commercial entities and social media platforms liable if their platforms did not implement an age verification method before being allowed access to obscene material.

Expanding medical cannabis program: House Study Bill 532 would have expanded the state definition for “medical cannabidiol” to include forms of oral, topical and inhalable cannabis — including raw flower cannabis products.

Natural resources

Anonymous environmental complaints: Senate Study Bill 3103 would have required people to supply their names if they notified the Iowa Department of Natural Resources of a potential violation, and it would have required the department to reveal the name of the complainant to the potential violator. It was recommended by a subcommittee but did not get consideration by a full committee.

Firefighting foam: Senate File 2229 would have required airports and other departments of cities and counties to cease their purchases of firefighting foams that contain perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances — commonly known as PFAS or “forever chemicals — which have been detected in the drinking water of more than a dozen Iowa cities and are linked to cancers and other health ailments. It was advanced by a subcommittee but did not get committee consideration.

— Jared Strong, Kathie Obradovich, Clark Kauffman and Brooklyn Draisey contributed to this report.

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. Follow Iowa Capital Dispatch on Facebook and Twitter.

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To Those Tinkering With Voting

Photo by Element5 Digital on Pexels.com

Like in every year since 2017, when Republicans gained majorities in both chambers of the Iowa legislature, there is a voting bill this session, House Study Bill 697. A person could set their clock by this behavior. The impact of the annual process is to make elections more difficult for Iowans. Changing the duties of the Iowa Secretary of State and how elections are conducted is a feature, not a bug, of Republican governance.

While the majority party continues to ratchet down election restrictions, they apparently don’t understand that whatever scheme they devise will serve Democratic success in re-taking control of the legislature. Democrats did required analysis of the election process and designed the work needed to win during the 2008 election when Barack Obama won Iowa. They can and eventually will do it again.

Republicans can dink around all they want. It won’t mean diddly-squat when the Iowa population moves to replace them. The movement will be bigger than only what Democrats want. I believe the day is approaching.

There was drama during the Iowa House State Government Subcommittee over House Study Bill 697, as Trish Nelson pointed out. Rep. Amy Nielsen and Chair Bobby Kaufmann entered a heated exchange about the bill which ended with the two Democrats on the committee, Nielsen and Rep. Adam Zabner, walking out before the subcommittee meeting finished, according to the Cedar Rapids Gazette. The subcommittee advanced the bill to the full committee in their absence. On Thursday, the full committee approved the measure.

Democrats have it wrong if their response to yearly voting restrictions is to bemoan loss of the halcyon years of the Obama campaigns when we could elect Democrats to statewide positions and award our electoral college votes to a Democrat. The kind of work we need to do is not complicated. Figure out who in the Iowa population will vote for our candidates, understand the new rules for voting, and persuade our people to vote. Strategies like this hopefully exist, are kept secret, and have already been implemented by the Iowa Democratic Party.

All you Republicans who are tinkering with the voting process, beware. Iowans are are coming to replace you and it may be as soon as in November.

I hope everyone reading this post is already helping Democrats get elected in November. The time to engage is now.

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Narratives Into The 2024 Election

Photo by Element5 Digital on Pexels.com

There are two parts to turning the country around and 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. Instead, we must develop new narratives that properly 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. I believe this is possible during the 2024 election cycle.

Political Canvassing

In Iowa, the political strategies and tactics Democrats used during the 2006-2008 election cycles have become obsolete. Not because talking to people lost importance to winning votes, but because we, as a society, have grown ever more suspicious of people we don’t know. Have to ask, what happened to Democrats after Obama won his first presidential election? We may feel we have to ask, but that’s the wrong question. What was an ability to win elections in 2006 and 2008, was an all in, once or nothing endeavor the usefulness of which waned by 2010 when Republicans began re-taking control of state government.

I door knocked for Democrats during the 2022 election cycle and can attest the game changed since 2008. In the Johnson County part of House District 91, Democratic voter registrations outnumbered Republican and Democrats still couldn’t win that part of the district. At the doors, I heard people have complicated lives where voting was not among the highest priorities. I did the best I could, yet my efforts, and those of fellow Democratic canvassers, couldn’t get the job done. It wasn’t from a lack of effort. The centralized, targeted canvassing of the past no longer works.

Changing the narrative

How do we change the narrative about how we live? There are no easy answers. Recognizing how important answering this question is to the process of taking back our government is a necessary first step. Our media, in many ways, is the public narrative. It is messed up when one can say, “…the best way to reach the maximum audience is to give Republicans what they want and drive liberals to hate reading, hate sharing, and even hate subscribing. Because even by rebutting them, you spread and strengthen them,” as Jason Sattler wrote on FrameLab. There has to be a better way.

From ten cycles of door knocking for Democratic candidates, I found the narrative voters told me at the door was one of two kinds. The first was a simple statement about the moment in which we found ourselves. Those conversations were pleasant and whether we agreed or disagreed about our politics, we each took something away from the door. The second was less pleasant, as if someone just left a television set where FOX News was spreading misinformation and running down the Democrats. What I heard in both cases was the raw energy of an electorate in motion. It was clear the narratives Iowans lived by were sourced from places other than the issue list I carried at the door. Minds had already been made up.

The coronavirus pandemic had a substantial impact on our politics. Where I live it cemented the Republican majority. When Governor Kim Reynolds normalized the pandemic on Feb. 15, 2022, more than a year before Federal COVID-19 public health emergency declarations ended, she had developed a narrative about her role, which she repeated in an Aug. 30, 2023 news release, “Since news broke of COVID-19 restrictions being re-instated at some colleges and businesses across the U.S., concerned Iowans have been calling my office asking whether the same could happen here. My answer—not on my watch. In Iowa, government respects the people it serves and fights to protect their rights. I rejected the mandates and lock downs of 2020, and my position has not changed.” This narrative won her some votes. Set aside the science of a pandemic, or what actually happened, and it might sound pretty good. It is disconnected from reality.

Iowa legislative Democrats have a good idea. “People over Politics” is the right narrative for this campaign because it hits on the need to address the majority of Iowans’ needs and wants, rather than a small minority. After all, 3.2 million people live in Iowa. That’s a lot more than the 15 percent of registered Republican voters who attended their 2024 precinct caucuses. What we Democrats understand is it is not enough to repeat the slogan, check off the box, and return to politics as usual. Our narrative needs development and has to change. I’m confident our legislative leaders are doing that.

There is an easy and a hard part of the 2024 election. I’ll make sure my personal network votes in November. Every other political energy I expend will be devoted to changing the narrative. I believe it can and will make a difference.

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Democratic Letters Dominate Rural Conservative Opinion Page

Check out these great letters published in the Tipton Conservative. Wherever you live, if you don’t subscribe to your local newspaper, subscribe. Support local journalism!

Do Republicans Want Border Legislation to Fail?

Despite diligent work by HHS Secretary Mayorkas on our southern border, all four Republican U.S. House representatives, which includes Representative Miller-Meeks, voted to impeach him. Mayorkas bent over backwards working with Republicans on rigorous border legislation. Fortunately, the House vote failed. A key issue for former
President Trump in 2024 deprives him of another political stunt to campaign on. Senate
Republicans admitted: “The Trump people want to kill it and run on the issue.” (“The Hill,” 1/25/24, Sarah Fortinsky)

Not surprisingly, Republican legislators have consistently denied Biden administration requests for more border control funding including cuts to Customs and Border Protection.

Realistically, our legislators must reexamine the genesis of the current immigration issue
that is rooted in persecution by the U.S. government during the late 1800s when we employed United and Standard fruit companies (Chiquita Banana and Dole, respectively) to use Latin American citizens as slave labor to make bananas an American table commodity. Known as neocolonialism, under the U.S. edict called the “Monroe Doctrine,”
has resulted in a perilous lack of public safety making uninhabitable those countries
for law abiding citizens.

Our southern border is suffering “blowback”— the unintended consequences of U.S. foreign policy. Allowing Secretary Mayorkas to continue work with Republicans and Democrats is key to a permanent remedy for this tragic situation. “…Senate Republicans who support the bill think the concessions extracted from Democrats would be “huge wins.” (Ibid)

Rather than put country first, Miller-Meeks has proved that her only concern is what
Donald Trump thinks. Trump roared for four years never to solve the border issue.
Miller-Meeks must be removed and replaced with a representative who will work for
America and Iowa – Christina Bohannan.

Ellen Ballas

###

Caution: Danger Ahead

As I write this this letter, it is Jan. 27, Holocaust Remembrance Day. Trump’s biographer
stated that Trump kept Hitler’s book, Mein Kamph, on his bedside table. Dictator Adolf
Hitler in Germany slaughtered over six million Jews and others during World War II.
Donald John Trump is the clear danger ahead for the following reasons:

1) Trump has clearly stated that he plans to be a dictator.

2) Trump is a pathological liar.

3) Trump has Narcissistic Personality Disorder, meaning excessive love and admiration of himself with much conceit. He knows it all.

4) Trump was found guilty of the sexual assault of E. Jean Carroll and owes her $83 million for continuing to defame her.

5) The judge has warned Trump’s attorneys several times to control their client after his outbursts in court.

6)Trump is a demagogue and a charlatan.

7) Trump’s professor at his college stated that Trump was the dumbest, stupidest student he’d ever had in his long career.

8) New York State seeks the return of $370 million in ill gotten gains from Trump for loans and deals using statements that greatly exaggerated his wealth.

9) Trump currently has 91 criminal indictments against him.

10) Trump still tells the Big Lie, that he really won the last election.

11) Trump confuses Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, saying Nikki was at the  Capitol during the Jan. 6th insurrection. Pelosi was there, of course.

12) Trump caused the insurrection, then watched it on TV for hours.

13) Trump says when reelected, he will pardon all who have been arrested and sentenced in the insurrection.

14) Trump’s niece, Mary L. Trump, Ph.D., published a book in 2020, calling him the world’s most dangerous man.

15) Liz Cheney, former Republican Congresswoman, has published a book, “Oath and Honor,” and urges people to “stand up and oppose Trump in all the ways you can.”

16) Trump promotes antisemitism, which is on the rise in our country and world-wide.

17) On Dec. 3, 2023, Liz Cheney stated on CBS, “We’re sleep-walking our way into a
dictatorship and will lose our republic,” (after nearly 250 years).

18) Hitler died by suicide April 30, 1945, and Trump was born June 14, 1946. Hitler once stated, “What luck for rulers that men do not think.”

19) Trump is currently blaming President Biden for all his legal problems. Children blame someone else when they get into trouble, don’t they? If Trump is the Republican candidate this fall, think long and hard before you vote.

The survival of this country depends on it.

Mary Swan
Tipton

###

Miller-Meeks Wants It Both Ways

How can you have it both ways? That is what Rep. Miller Meeks wants. She and House Republicans demanded border security measures before funding Ukraine and Israel
with arms. They got what they wanted but then objected to the bipartisan Senate measure
which contained the following: significantly increased funding for border security,  increased funding for staffing of border guards and the INS, increased the number of judges to process immigrants’ applications AND authorized the President to close the border if more than 5000 immigrants crossed into the U.S. in a single day. The Wall Street Journal and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce supported the bill.

But former President Trump interceded and told Republicans NOT to support it so he  could keep illegal immigration as the foremost hot button issue for the next six months’ campaign.

After the failure of the Senate bill, Rep. Miller Meeks then demanded President Biden send
troops for this “emergency security threat”. Ironically, Mr. Trump had his fi rst two years to pass ANY immigration measure with a Congress fully controlled by Republicans (including sending troops); instead, only 400 miles of wall (out of 3,000) were built or rebuilt with money pilfered from the Defense budget.

Everyone agrees border security needs addressing so why can’t Congress put partisan
politics aside in the interest of national security? Maybe immigration really isn’t an emergency unless you need it to be-as a campaign issue to stir fear and anger!

You cannot have it both ways. Wouldn’t that be hypocritical?

Mark Patton
Wilton

###

Fighting for Veterans?

On Feb. 8, Representative Miller-Meeks posted a picture on X (formerly Twitter) of her meeting with officials from the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs (IDVA). She correctly stated that “Iowa is home to nearly 175,000 men and women who have served bravely in our Armed Forces.” She went on to say, “I will continue to fight for these men and women every day in congress.

However, in 2022, she and Representative Ashley Hinson both voted against the Honoring our PACT (Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics) Act that expanded VA health care and benefits for veterans exposed to burn pits, radiation, Agent Orange, and other toxic substances. The bill was supported by 11 veterans service organizations and has been recognized as the most comprehensive legislation targeting military toxic exposure since the Vietnam War.

In this election year, Representative Miller-Meeks is using a smiling photo and nice words to convince Iowa veterans that she has been “fighting for them every day in Congress.” She isn’t fooling me. Don’t let her fool you.

Thomas Cook
Iowa City
1st Lt, US Army, Vietnam

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Upcoming Progressive Actions Around The State

From our inbox -thanks to Rob Hogg, retired state senator for his continued involvement in grassroots action for the environment and the common good. Rob is also author of the book, America’s Climate Century. Check out these upcoming events. Please don’t forget to hit the like button and share on social media.

This Sunday, February 18, I am hosting a “meet and greet” for Sarah Corkery, candidate for Congress.

Sarah is the Democratic candidate against Ashley Hinson. As a two-time breast cancer survivor and a mother of a child with a disability, she is a living billboard for health care for all, who will defend the Affordable Care Act and support health care for all Americans.

I believe Sarah can compete and win with a strong grassroots campaign. I hope you can join us there. Contributions are welcome but not required. Here is a link from the Corkery campaign with more details and to register for the event:
https://www.mobilize.us/corkeryforcongress/event/602268/

Other Upcoming Events

Friday, February 16, 10 am to 4 pm – The Iowa Environmental Council and others are sponsoring a series of panels on the clean energy provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act at the University of Iowa Law School and also online. This event will feature experts from Rewiring America and is designed for citizens, lawyers, local governments, school districts, nonprofits, and the news media who want to learn about what incentives are available through the Inflation Reduction Act. Here is a link with more details:
https://heli.law.uiowa.edu/events/inflation-reduction-act-iowa-implementing-clean-energy-and-climate-provisions-panel-series

Monday, February 19 – Deadline to request a mail-in ballot for the Democratic Presidential preference process in Iowa. For more details, visit:
https://iowademocrats.org/caucus/

Monday, February 26, 6:00 p.m. – The Iowa Democratic Party Climate Constituency Caucus will be holding its biennial elections (once every two years). Those who want to participate need to register in advance. Here is the registration link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwtcuGpqz4iG936OgjXm0hVpnrKcBM98JR2

Thursday, March 7, 6:30 p.m. – Editors Brian Hazlett and Ryan Allen will be discussing their book, “On Common Ground: Learning and Living in the Loess Hills,” at Prairiewoods, 120 E. Boyson Road, in Hiawatha. For more details, visit:
https://www.facebook.com/events/947196002920475/

Saturday, April 13 – The Citizens Climate Lobby groups in Iowa are holding a statewide meeting in Ames, featuring Madeleine Para from the national Citizens Climate Lobby. Save the date and stay tuned for more details. (I will not be able to attend due to a prior family commitment.) If you would like more information, please contact Leslie Sand, CCL’s state co-coordinator in Iowa, at lessand52@gmail.com.

Faith Climate Action Week, April 19-28 – Interfaith Power & Light organizes this national week of action. Stay tuned for more events in Iowa including events from Iowa Interfaith Power & Light. For more details, visit:
https://interfaithpowerandlight.org/faithclimateactionweek/

Friday, April 26-Saturday, April 27 – Prairiewoods in Hiawatha is hosting “Spirituality in the 21st Century” with a focus on spiritual, hopeful responses to the climate crisis. Speakers include the Rev. Veronica M. Johnson, Susan Bauer-Wu, and Leah Rampy. It is available in person at a venue in Cedar Rapids or online. For registration and other details, visit:
https://prairiewoods.org/spirituality-in-the-21st-century/

Friday, June 7 – Call Congress to support more (not less) action to cut climate pollution. This is a national day of action. Here is a Facebook event page you can share:
https://www.facebook.com/events/228817073633273/

I hope this information is helpful, and I hope to see you soon.

Rob

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