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OH-Sen: Senators Shitkicker, Little Marco & Tom Cotton (R. AR) Endorse Trumper Josh Mandel (R)

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Scumbag Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel (R. OH) has been racking up the clown car of GOP endorsements in his second attempt to try and unseat true Progressive Populist, U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown (D. OH):

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz on Tuesday endorsed Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel for senate, making him the fourth Republican U.S. senator to do so this election cycle.

"We need a conservative leader like Josh Mandel in the U.S. Senate," Cruz, the 2016 failed presidential candidate, said in a written statement. "When I first met Josh five years ago, I was immediately impressed by his dedication and passion for advancing conservative principles. He has shown his willingness to stand up and fight for those values, leading the charge in Ohio to stop sanctuary cities, crack down on illegal immigration and put an end to Common Core. I look forward to standing shoulder to shoulder with him in the Senate and encourage all Republicans to do the same."

The endorsement from Cruz, among the most prominent figures in the national conservative movement, is another boost for Mandel as he seeks to further consolidate his grip on the the GOP Senate nomination in Ohio nearly a year before the 2018 primary election. Mandel also has landed endorsements from Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Sen. Marco Rubio, and last week, Ohio Sen. Rob Portman.

But there’s one key Republican endorsement that Mandel may not get and it could hurt his chances:

In a national podcast released Tuesday, Republican Ohio Gov. John Kasich indicated he may not endorse GOP Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel's bid for the U.S. Senate if Mandel turns out to be a "negative guy."

But Mandel, who is seeking to unseat Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown in 2018, doesn't seem to be losing any sleep over Kasich's possible endorsement, judging from a Mandel spokesman's response to Kasich's comments, made on Politico's "Off Message" podcast.

"It's no secret that Josh Mandel supported Donald Trump during the campaign, stuck with him in the rocky times, and continues to support him as President," the spokesman, Chris Berry, said in a Wednesday email to cleveland.com. "We understand that Josh's support for President Trump may upset Governor Kasich, and we respect his decision whenever the time is right for him. Either way, Josh is the hardened, unabashed conservative and Marine vet, ready to win a primary and ready to beat Sherrod Brown."

In his new book and during a promotional tour, Kasich, an unsuccessful 2016 presidential candidate, has criticized Trump's political approach as harmful, fact-challenged and divisive. When asked on the podcast for his thoughts about politicians like Mandel, who since the November election has adopted some of Trump's methods as his own, Kaisch cut off interviewer Edward-Isaac Dovere mid-question.

"Any politician who is going to be in the dividing business, I'm not helping," Kasich said. Pressed further if he would help Mandel, the only declared candidate in the race, he continued, "Well, I don't know what he's going to be saying. But if he's a negative guy, if he's a divider, I won't."

However, Mandel hasn’t convinced all the party leaders he’s the guy to unseat Brown:

Some Republican activists and donors worried about the prospects of their party’s Senate candidate in Ohio are kicking around an outside-the-box alternative: Hillbilly Elegy author J.D. Vance.

The recruiting overtures reflect unease with the early GOP frontrunner, state Treasurer Josh Mandel, who is seeking a rematch with Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown.

Four sources with knowledge of the private encouragement confirmed the conversations to BuzzFeed News. They requested anonymity to speak freely about what could become another intra-party fight in a battleground state where Republicans are divided between those who embraced Donald Trump’s winning presidential campaign and those who didn’t.

“The donors are kind of wishy-washy on Josh,” said one top Republican activist who has discussed a draft Vance scenario with party insiders. “So enter J.D. Vance.”

Whatever happens on the GOP side, we have to be ready. Brown is a great progressive ally and a true populist and we need to keep him the U.S. Senate. Click here to donate and get involved with Brown’s re-election campaign.


The state of Ohio is suing five pharmaceutical companies over the opioid epidemic

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Reuters is reporting that on Wednesday, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine filed a lawsuit against pharmaceutical companies Purdue Pharma LP, Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc unit, a unit of Endo International Plc, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd's Cephalon unit and Allergan Plc.

DeWine said the companies helped unleash the crisis by spending millions of dollars marketing and promoting such drugs as OxyContin and Percocet, overstating their benefits and trivializing their potential addictive qualities.

"These companies continue to mislead the public," DeWine said at a press conference in Columbus.

Janssen emailed Reuters to tell them that the lawsuit was “unfounded.”

The suit, filed in Ross County, in Southern Ohio, where addiction has hit hard, alleges the drug companies violated the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act, committed Medicaid fraud, and created a public nuisance by disseminating false and misleading statements.

Ohio continues to have one of the worst rates of opioid addiction in the country and this is not going to go away by doing nothing, let alone cutting healthcare budgets. DeWine says that almost a fifth of Ohio’s population was prescribed opioids last year. That’s in one year. And while Trump clearly lied about his interest in doing anything to regulate big pharmaceutical’s unchecked greed, politicians of both parties have let down our country. 

Morning Digest: Horse-riding paraplegic legislator launches Democratic bid for South Dakota governor

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Leading Off

SD-Gov: Republicans have controlled South Dakota's governor's office in this conservative state since the 1978 elections, the longest gubernatorial winning streak in the country. Still, state Senate Minority Leader Billie Sutton is hoping to break through, and he announced on Wednesday that he would seek the Democratic nomination.

Campaign Action

Sutton has a very tough job ahead of him, but he does have an interesting background. Sutton was a well-known rodeo rider in college (in a 2013 profile at the Argus Leader, David Montgomery described him as "arguably the greatest rodeo rider the University of Wyoming had seen"), and he aimed to become a professional. However, just before graduation, Sutton was paralyzed after the horse he was riding threw him into a wall. Sutton instead became an investment banker, and while he remains in a wheelchair, he still is able to ride horses.

Sutton, a self-described "conservative Democrat," also does have one other noteworthy distinction. During the 2010 GOP wave, Sutton managed to win a conservative state Senate seat, and he's continued to hold it. (Sutton's grandfather also represented south central South Dakota in the legislature in the 1970s.) Sutton's seat backed Romney 66-33, and it's very likely that Trump did even better. However, Sutton won re-election 59.5-40.5 in 2012, and he had no GOP opposition in 2014 or 2016. Winning statewide is a far tougher proposition than winning one state Senate seat, but Sutton at least may be able to run a viable campaign if conditions are finally right for a Democratic win.

However, Sutton's task certainly won't be easy. Two well-known Republicans, Rep. Kristi Noem and Attorney General Marty Jackley, are competing here. Sioux Falls Mayor Mike Huether recently left the Democratic Party to become an independent, and he's been flirting with a run here. Team Blue has very little room for error, and if Huether gets in and vacuums up too many Democratic votes, Republicans won't have much to worry about next year.

Hold my beer, Ohio's got this

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Will Rogers said, “I don’t belong to an organized political party.  I’m a Democrat.”   And far too often I have not been impressed by the organizing or leadership skills of Democratic or Progressive groups.  I am from the school of get shit done so that is beyond irritating to me. 

Anyway, when I got texts and multiple emails about a conference call tonight regarding the anti-gerrymandering ballot initiative, especially after I’d already signed up but then they didn’t send me any call in information, I wasn’t optimistic.  They sent me the call in info about fifteen minutes before the event after I’d forgotten it was even going on.  Fortunately, I could still call in.

And boy was I wrong.  The Ohio Democratic Party seems to be finally waking up and getting their shit together.  They seem to be organized and have a plan. See their website on organizing, a great video (11 minutes long) on what is needed and sign up here to help.    They seem to be getting energized because the grassroots are making them.  Reinforcements tends to do that.  The dejected Ohio Democratic Party has been getting their ass handed to them in election after election for several years.  But Trump et al has motivated people to the point that the calvary has arrived. 

They asked for help on several things with a clear call to action.

1) Pledge to get signatures. Seriously sign up. If you live in another state but are a US citizen, come help.
2) June 3rd.  Pick up petition books to circulate.  Find a location near you.  Sign up to host one if none are near by.  Locations for petition books here.  
a) Turn it in one week.  
b) Repeat each week.  
3) Get others involved.  Find a person to bring with you to gather petitions. If a person is excited to sign, get them to agree to get petitions too.  They can sign up here too.

4) Look at video to make sure what you are doing is the right way. Definitely, watch the video so you don't do anything wrong and invalidate the signatures you worked so hard to collect.

Back to the anti gerrymandering initiative.  I keep posting on it because it is a bigger deal than the Ossoff race.  There is no way in hell that a state that went for Obama twice should have 3 times as many Republican congressmen than Democrats.  Well technically 12 times as many men since there are 12 Republican men, 1 Democrat man, and 3 Democrat women.  You fix the gerrymandering in Ohio and Congress should pick up at lease 5 Democratic party seats. 

The call appeared to have around 3000 people on it and they are trying to get at least that many more because then the work of the 306K signatures is only about 50 a person which is quite doable.  Hell, you could do it in a weekend.    Wouldn’t that be awesome?  Resistance Weekend. 

OH-Sen: Corey Lewandowski Thinks Josh Mandel (R) Can Beat Sherrod Brown (D), Let's Prove Him Wrong

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Received this e-mail today from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown’s (D. OH) re-election campaign:

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Sen. Sherrod Brown (D. OH)

First thing's first -- Corey Lewandowski, fired Trump campaign manager and former leader at Americans for Prosperity, just said Mandel will win this election.

Lewandowski's words are basically a rallying cry for special interest groups. They'll pour millions into this election to bring Sherrod down.

And only we can stop them.
 

Can you help us reach $15,000 in our Rapid Response Fund in the next 24 hours?

Second thing -- extreme Republicans are willing to say anything to bring Sherrod down.

Take what Lewandowski said on Fox & Friends as an example.

Lewandowski said Trump's putting coal miners back to work. Lie. In fact, at least six coal-fired power plants have closed since Trump won the presidency.

Lewandowski said Trump's trying to bring jobs back to the Ohio valley: Lie. In fact, the President's latest budget cuts spending that communities in the Ohio valley desperately need.
 

These lies will work if we don't have the strength to fight against them. We can't get to that point. Ever.
 

Make a contribution >>

Team Sherrod

Click here to donate to Brown’s re-election campaign.

Voting Rights Roundup: Stubborn Texas Republicans face potential redistricting 'Armageddon'

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Leading Off

Texas: Like their brethren in North Carolina, Republican legislators in Texas have been embroiled in racial gerrymandering lawsuits almost since the moment they passed new redistricting plans following the 2010 census. Earlier in 2017, a federal district court panel ruled that the GOP’s 2011 congressional and state House maps were intentionally discriminatory against black and Latino voters. Because Republicans had already redrawn those maps in 2013, following court rulings that blocked the 2011 districts from ever taking effect, there will be an expedited July trial over the current maps.

Campaign Action

With the Supreme Court dealing Republicans a major blow in North Carolina (see our North Carolina item below), there’s a good chance Texas Republicans will also suffer a courtroom defeat that could lead to yet another set of new maps in 2018. In late May, the district court invited Republicans to voluntarily redraw their maps, and some Republican congressman reportedly even begged GOP Gov. Greg Abbott to call a special session in order to do so. However, the governor has refused to budge, raising the risk of the court stepping in and drawing the lines itself.

It's not clear why Abbott's being so stubborn. It's possible Republicans view a redraw as an admission of wrongdoing—or that they're hoping for a better outcome at the Supreme Court. Yet whatever the reason, this intransigence is potentially to the detriment of Abbott’s own party, since a court-drawn congressional map could have a devastating impact on Republicans and potentially cost them several congressional seats in 2018.

As we explained previously, March’s court ruling only specifically faulted a handful seats, but since so many surrounding seats would have to be redrawn to correct the problematic districts, the possible range of outcomes is very broad. If plaintiffs prevail and GOP legislators ultimately redraw the lines, Republicans could limit Democrats to a gain of just two or three seats. However, if the court implements new lines of its own, that number could rise to something more like a five-seat pickup for Democrats, in what Republicans have aptly called their “Armageddon” scenario.

OH-Gov: Sutton (D) Hits Trump's Budget That Eliminates Federal Funding To Protect The Great Lakes

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Received this e-mail today from former Rep. Betty Sutton’s (D. OH) gubernatorial campaign:

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Rep. Betty Sutton (D. OH)
After a failed attempt to gut funding for our Great Lakes in this year’s budget, President Trump has tried again in his newly proposed 2018 budget. The plan eliminates federal funding that would provide protection for our Great Lakes.
And, worst of all, yesterday Trump announced he is withdrawing the United States from the Paris climate agreement, a landmark deal reached among 195 nations to address climate change.
Protecting our natural resources requires strong leadership at every level of government to fight for an economic agenda that prioritizes protecting our Great Lakes, creating jobs, and boosting wages for working families.
Too often we are told that job creation and protecting our environment are inherently opposed. I don't believe that. In fact, I've spent my life fighting for jobs and our environment in tandem.
As the executive in charge of the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation, I oversaw operations and maintenance of the U.S. Seaway, which supports economic activity in the Great Lakes Region that accounts for one-quarter of the U.S. gross domestic product, provides 227,000 jobs, $35 billion in business revenue, $14 billion in personal income, and $5 billion in federal, state and local taxes.
That experience helped prepare me for a future that requires protecting our natural resources and Great Lakes while creating new, good-paying jobs.
Protecting our lakes doesn't just make sense for our planet, it makes sense for our economy.
I applaud those who have made their voices heard throughout this fight. Please join me in saying you stand for policies that support jobs and protecting our Great Lakes.
Betty

Click here to add your name.

OH-Gov: Connie Pillich (D) Calls On Ohio To Adhere To The Paris Climate Agreement

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Received this e-mail today from Connie Pillich’s (D. OH) gubernatorial campaign:

Donald Trump's shredding of the Paris Climate Accord is shocking, reckless and devastating for future generations.
 We can't let this happen - which is why, if elected governor, ConniePillich is pledging that Ohio will uphold our part of the Paris Climate Accord - no matter what Trump does.
 Will you join her?
 Trump made an incredibly irresponsible decision just to satisfy a fringe element of his supporters. We need leaders like Connie to stand up for the rest of us.
 Governors around the country are banding together to stand up to Trump and work to slow the rate of catastrophic climate change, and Connie hopes to be one of them. But to succeed, she needs your support.

The whole world is watching. Let's act.

 -Team Pillich

Click here to add your name.


UPDATE: Muslim woman protects another from harassment, gets beaten by male white supremacist.

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I haven’t been able to find coverage in the mainstream yet, so I hope this works for everyone. Warning: graphic images.

Edit: link from the comments, non-Facebook, non-graphic (thank you)

The woman, who reportedly intervened to protect another Muslim woman from harassment by the alleged attacker – a white male - was beaten unconscious, resulting in facial fractures and the loss of several teeth. According to the victim, the alleged attacker reportedly screamed “you all will be shipped back to Africa” prior to beating. CAIR-Columbus is her legal representative in the case.

According to witnesses, the alleged attacker was interviewed by police, but released without charge. He had reportedly made racist statements to neighbors in the recent past.

First, I don’t want to jump to conclusions to think some conspiracy is afoot between this horrible racist scumbag and the Columbus police.  Maybe they snatched the wrong guy, realized their mistake, and let him go.  It seems...unlikely...but let’s not focus on that.

Let’s focus on what appears to be yet another hate crime committed by another pathetic excuse for a human being, apparently just because these women had the nerve to be different first of all, and then to try and stand up to his abuse.  We can’t afford to become numb to these acts, just because our so-called-pr*sident seems to have emboldened these assholes into action (MAGA and all that race-laced bullshit).

I may vomit.  I know you’re not supposed to fight violence with violence, but sometimes…

There is an effort underway to help this woman.  I have not investigated, so please do your due diligence before sending money to strangers.

GO TO: https://www.launchgood.com/project/stand_with_sister_rahma#/

In the meantime, do not give up and do not give in.  Clearly they want minorities to feel powerless, vulnerable, and alone.  Continuing to fight for those who cannot protect themselves, risking our own safety and security, that’s really what makes America great.  Not the ethnic cleansing promoted by our Tiny-Fingered Fuhrer.

OH-Sen: Brown (D) Highlights How Trumpcare Guts Medicaid Reimbursements & Hurts Public Schools

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Received this e-mail today from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown’s (D. OH) re-election campaign:

"Ohio schools could lose millions under Obamacare repeal-replace bill"
-- Cleveland.com, 5/5/2017

Here's one casualty of the GOP's ACA repeal you don't hear about much: Schools.

Ohio school districts get reimbursed by Medicaid for providing things like speech therapy, disability services, behavioral services, student evaluations, and other special education services.

According to a report in Cleveland.com:

"Large districts like Cleveland Metropolitan School District would lose more than $500,000 a year, enough to pay the salaries of a number of special education teachers, therapists or nurses.

...States would have to decide whether to dedicate more or less money to other health programs -- such as health coverage for low-income Ohioans -- or make the schools absorb the loss."

Eliminating these Medicaid reimbursements would force schools to choose between laying off special education therapists who students need or increasing class sizes and reducing advanced placement and elective programs.

The Republican ACA repeal will do more than kick 23 million Americans off their healthcare -- it will take millions from schools in Ohio and across the country. Stand against it.

Thank you.

Sherrod

Click here to add your name.

Ohio mother sues police officer who broke teen daughter's jaw in library and there's lots of video

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Cleveland.com is reporting on a new lawsuit filed by the mother of a girl who was assaulted by a police officer last November at the Madison Branch Lakewood Public Library in Lakewood, Ohio. According to the report, the 17-year-old girl’s jaw was broken when Lakewood officer Kevin Jones decided that he needed to use his hands to handle words.

Jones was moonlighting in uniform at the library, where the girl and her 11-year-old brother were regular visitors, the complaint says.

The girl was listening to music on her cellphone with her headphones and Jones told her to turn it down, the complaint says. She moved and sat with her brother in a seating area inside the library and started watching videos on a laptop, sharing a pair of headphones, the complaint says.

Jones approached them and told the girl to get her feet off a chair, the lawsuit says. The girl complied. The surveillance video showed Jones and the girl continued to trade words, until he walked back to her, stood over top of her and told the girl to leave the library, the lawsuit says. The girl stood up, and, when Jones didn't move, she said, "excuse me," the lawsuit says. Jones then grabbed her by the neck and shoved her toward the library's front door, the suit says.

The video below says it all. There is not a single thing that the young woman could have said to warrant the use of force Jones decided was necessary. It’s hard to not call him the piece of shit coward that he clearly is after seeing the video. On a personal note, after college I worked as an information assistant at the New York Public Library at a Bronx branch. We were the large branch right next to a 6,000-kid high school with all kinds of children from all kinds of rough areas and upbringings. Teenagers could be loud and obnoxious and confrontational and all-around jerks. They’re teenagers. It’s not like they’re running for the highest office in the land, amirite? 

But more importantly, these kids, no matter how much of a “no angel” character they may or may not have seemed to be, were at the public library. They were staying at the public library for free internet, for shelter from a storm, because the adult in their lives told them to stay out of trouble and go to the public library. And these kids were doing just that. Nobody is an “angel” (except maybe my children) but some kids are trying harder than others and it is shameful that adults like Kevin Jones can’t even try a little.

OH-Sen: Sherrod Brown (D) Goes After Trump & Senate GOP For Taking Away Health Care In Ohio

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Latest news out of Ohio:

The Anthem health insurance company has announced that next year it will pull out of the health insurance exchange in Ohio set up under Obamacare.

The exchange was supposed to make sure that anyone could buy health insurance, even if the person did not get it from an employer or from the government.

But the announcement means that at least 18 Ohio counties will have no insurer at all in 2018, according to a fact sheet released Tuesday by the Ohio Department of Insurance.

The decision also apparently will reduce choice in Erie and Ottawa counties, which used to have four insurers participating in the exchange and which may have just one next year.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Anthem cited uncertainty over federal government rules and the possibility that Congress will cut off subsidies supporting the plans.

The 18 counties which may have no insurers in 2018 are Coshocton, Crawford, Guernsey, Hancock, Harrison, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson, Knox, Lawrence, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Paulding, Perry, Van Wert, Vinton and Wyandot.

Although the U.S. House has passed legislation to repeal Obama Care and replace it with a plan backed by House Republicans, the U.S. Senate has not taken any action and has not set a timetable for doing so.

And U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown (D. OH) put the blame on the right culprit:

Ohio Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown took note of the cause and effect of Trump’s approach, calling the Republicans out in a statement: “The dangerous game President Trump and Washington politicians are playing just caused 70,000 paying customers in Ohio to lose their insurance and it will continue raising prices for everyone else. It’s got to stop.”

He added, “Instead of using working families as bargaining chips and driving up prices across the market, we need to work together to lower costs and make healthcare work better for everyone.”

Ohio Democratic Party Chairman David Pepper also released a pointed statement: “There is no debate — the Trump administration’s policies are directly responsible for the mess Ohio families now face.” Pepper singled out Ohio Republicans Rep. Josh Mandel (who is running for Senate) and Rep. Jim Renacci (running for governor) for failing “to show independence from an administration that regards Ohioans as props in their political theatre.”

It’s very important that Democrats stand strong when it comes to health care. I urge you to contact your Democratic Senator and tell them to stand firm and reject the Republicans plan to sabotage health care. Click here to find your Senate.

And let's be sure to make sure we keep Brown in the Senate. Click here to donate and get involved with Brown’s re-election campaign.

Kansas Secretary of State and Trump alcolyte Kris Kobach announces his run for Governor

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The speculation regarding a potential run for Governor has come to an end, as Kris Kobach, Kansas Secretary of State has announced his intent to become the next Governor. 

Secretary of State Kris Kobach has been a very controversial figure, not just in Kansas but nationwide. He was the author of the Arizona SB1070 legislation, known as “papers please”. Referred to by some as a nativist, Kobach is also associated with early plans by President Trump for a Muslim registry, and is considered one of the lead advocates for the Muslim travel ban. 

Kris Kobach, Kansas’ secretary of state who says he is advising the Trump transition team on immigration policies, told Reuters Tuesday that confidants to the president-elect are discussing proposals to reinstate a registry for immigrants from Muslim countries. Kobach, whose name has been floated for a possible Cabinet position, said he was involved in regular calls with immigration advisers about the issue.

OH-Gov: Sutton (D) Wants To End Betsy DeVos' Education Agenda By Cracking Down On Charter Schools

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Received this e-mail today from former Rep. Betty Sutton’s (D. OH) gubernatorial campaign:

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Betty Sutton (D. OH)
 
Far too many of Ohio’s charter schools, often run by for-profit companies, have been failing our families and our children for far too long. The culture of corruption and pay-to-play created by politicians in Columbus is hurting our students while benefiting only the most well-connected.
The lack of oversight has led to increasingly failing and unaccountable charter schools — and the worst ones have been allowed to run rampant. They consistently misspend and mishandle tax money while producing worse and worse results.
For instance, the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow (ECOT) has been fighting an order to return $60 million in taxpayer money for inflating the number of their full-time students. ECOT’s challenges to this and similar orders in the courts means more misspent tax dollars which should be going to educate our children. A sham school like ECOT is a clear waste of taxpayer dollars and needs to be shut down.
The education of Ohio's children is too important to allow these schools to continue to fail our kids and waste taxpayers dollars. Add your name if you agree that we need to clamp down on these unaccountable charter schools that are failing at the expense of our children and undermining Ohio's future.
I’ve been speaking about the problems plaguing the Ohio charter school crisis for over 20 years — and under the leadership of Betsy DeVos, we can only expect things to get worse. Just last week, it was revealed that the Trump administration’s education plan would spend $400 million to expand charter schools and vouchers for private schools while slashing public education funding by over $10 billion.
We need to fight to support public schools, and reign in failing charter schools with appropriate oversight. I’m not new to this game, having stood up to lobbyists and special interests in the Statehouse and Congress, and it is time for Ohio to have a governor with a backbone who will do the same.
Thank you for taking action on this,
Betty

Click here to add your name.

OH-Sen: Sherrod Brown (D) Keeps Up The Fight To Make A $15 An Hour Minimum Wage A Reality

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Received this e-mail yesterday from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown’s (D. OH) re-election campaign:

It’s time to raise the federal minimum wage to $15/hour.
 

Our economy has changed a lot over the last several decades, but the amount of money working families have in their pockets has hardly changed at all. The costs of housing, health care, and education have all increased, and workers have achieved productivity gains -- but almost none of those gains have gone to working families.
 

It’s time to change all of that.
 

I’m looking to gather 15,000 signatures from folks like you, so if you’re already on board with providing a living wage to all workers, then click here and demand action from Congress.
 

The plan to raise the minimum wage operates on the assumption that when working people have more money, they’re better able to save for the future, own a home, send their kids to college, or maybe even take a vacation every once in a while.
 

Here in Ohio, we know that we all do better when we all do better. Historically, when the middle class does well, everyone else does well, too. Because when working families have the resources they need to not only make ends meet but also indulge in some of life’s little luxuries -- a night at the movies; buying a new pair of shoes; having some friends over to watch the Buckeyes -- the whole economy prospers.
 

Raising the minimum wage is one good step on the road to rebuilding the middle class. Working Americans bailed out Wall Street and got our economy back on track. It is long past time for working people and families to share the rewards for their hard work.
 

Join me and get us to 15k for $15/hour -- sign our petition and demand an increase in the federal minimum wage.
 

Thank you,
 

Sherrod

Click here to add your name.


Urgent Action to Stop AHCA and the GOP Senators Who are Willing to Vote Your Life Away

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  • Less than 3 weeks. In less than 3 weeks, the Senate will vote on the American Healthcare Act (AHCA) and by all accounts, AHCA is poised to become law. Does that scare you? Well, you are not alone. According to a Quinnipiac University Poll from Fox News, only 17% of Americans support the Republicans' Healthcare Plan. And this is without knowing most of content in the bill.
  • This frighteningly secretive bill is being concocted by a handful of 13-14 Republican Senators lead by Mitch McConnell with only their Republican counterparts privy to the details and negotiations of the bill. It has not been shared with their Democratic counterparts. This is a siren call and a horrible deja vu to the how AHCA passed the House. McConnell officially invoked Rule 14 on June 4 that would fast track the bill through the Senate. No public hearings to seek input from the public, the medical community (who strongly oppose the bill) or from fellow Democrats will be held. There will be no debates, amendments or rewrites as the bill will bypass all committees, including the Health, Education, Labor and Pension (HELP) and Finance committees. After speaking to McConnell's office, as of June 8, there are no concrete plans to release the bill to the public or even a CBO score of it. But by all reports, McConnell and the GOP will rush to vote on the bill in days or even hours once the bill and CBO score is made public to avoid the near certain backlash they will incur from the public. No good comes from an act conceived in darkness and expedited in a frenzy.
  • Make no mistake, this is not just an attack on Americans' healthcare, it is a fundamental violation of America's democratic institutions and norms.
  • But here are the components of the bill we know thus far from reports:
-According to John Cornyn (R-TX) (second in leadership of the Senate GOP) the Senate AHCA bill will "overlap with the House bill by 70-80%."
-CBO score of AHCA reveals that 23 million more Americans will lose coverage by 2026 as compared to if ACA were to remain law.
-Lower-income seniors would find their premiums sky-rocket to as much as 850%.
-7 million veterans would lose tax credits.
-Employer-based plans (which covers half the US) is also at risk as AHCA allows state waivers to opt out of Essential Health Benefits (EHBs) including maternity care, prescription drugs, mental health treatment and hospitalization that employers can choose to implement on their employees.
-Reports that the Senate's AHCA plan would rid waivers on community ratings (as a way to placate those who fear being priced out due to pre-existing conditions) would still not protect people with pre-existing conditions due to EHBs waivers. People in EHBs waiver states would find plans that wouldn't sufficiently cover their medical needs.
-An estimated 5.3 million people with pre-existing conditions live in EHBs waiver states.
-Medicaid would be absolutely eviscerated. $880 billion in federal cuts and a per capita imposition on states. Medicaid covers not only the working poor, but seniors, people with disabilities and children. These people would all have their coverage reduced due to caps or block grants.
-Not only will Medicaid be phased-out (Senate GOP currently arguing whether it should be 3, 5 or 7 years) but those who need it will permanently lock-out of the program. Aging people, people who develop disabilities and children beginning their lives would no longer have access the program.
-14 million Americans on Medicaid would lose their health insurance within a year.
-The wealthiest 0.1% would receive an annual $200,000 in tax cuts through AHCA- $600 billion in total
  • The Duplicitous Players 
  • Bill Cassidy (R-LA) -The Louisiana Purchase that should be returned
Cassidy propelled himself unto the national stage after appearing on The Jimmy Kimmel Show to discuss AHCA. Kimmel's deeply personal story regarding his infant son's heart condition touched millions and prompted Cassidy to propose that AHCA should pass the so call "Jimmy Kimmel Test." However, Cassidy's spotlight was tainted right from the start when he stated on national network TV that children wouldn't lose healthcare through coverage by the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). CHIP and Medicaid are closely intertwined. Perhaps Cassidy forgot AHCA's staggering proposal to cut $880 billion from Medicaid but that's doubtful considering he is a physician. The American Academy of Pediatrics issued a statement against AHCA the day it passed the House. Now Cassidy has abandoned his "crusade" to protect children's healthcare by supporting AHCA because it's "cognizant of pre-existing conditions." Whatever that means is uninterruptible due to the lack of transparency in drafting the Senate's bill. Currently 37 million children are covered by Medicaid. And 170,900 Louisianans with Medicaid will lose coverage or see a cut of $631 per enrollee. Those on the individual market will see an increase in $895 in premiums. Since Louisiana expanded Medicaid through ACA, about half a million were able to gain coverage. Overall, 343,400 Louisianans stand to lose coverage under AHCA.
Louisiana constituents can contact Bill Cassidy at 202-224-5824
  • Dean Heller (R-NV)- A Politician taking the Las Vegas Gamble
Once AHCA passed the House, Heller stated that Medicaid expansion states like Nevada needed to be protected. One can't simply "pull the rug out" from the Medicaid population. Now Heller has flipped on his position and supports a 7 year phase-out of Medicaid. Medicaid expansion under ACA has garnered 10% more Nevadans with coverage. Expansion has allowed 203,000 Nevadans to gain Medicaid coverage, 18,000 of whom are veterans. And if Nevada decides to elicit the EHBs waiver, insurers could increase premiums to $15k for pregnancy and $5k for diabetes just to name a few. As for an elderly, low income Nevadan under ACA, he/she's premium can explode from from $1,700 to $16,100 under AHCA. Unbelievablely. Heller is tolling a fine line between following McConnell's orders and working for his constituents as he is up for re-election in 2018. Last time, he won by only ~12,000 votes. In fact, more than 200 people have already donated to his eventual Democratic opponent in 2018. Donations can be made here: https://secure.actblue.com/entity/fundraisers/50550
Nevada Constituents can contact Dean Heller at 202-224-6244
  • Susan Collins (R-ME)-  Shady like Fall Foliage
Collins stance on AHCA cannot be pinned specifically due to her purposeful evasiveness. After AHCA passed the house, she stated that the Senate will start from scratch. According to Cornyn, this is no longer true as the Senate bill would adopt up to 80% of the House bill. Cornyn has also stated they are "slowly, but surely getting there"-perhaps Collins caved? As a skilled politician, she said as recently as this Sunday on CNN, she cannot support a bill where 23 million loses coverage. Yet, this does not mean she won't support a bill where perhaps 22.9 million loses coverage. Semantics is at play here with Collins and sadly, Maine can't afford it. Nearly a quarter of those on Medicaid are seniors and people with disability and their care account for 64% of Medicaid funding. The drastic Medicaid cuts would hurt the most vulnerable of those in Maine. 57,300 Medicaid enrollees would lose coverage and 116,000 Mainers overall would lose coverage. Those in the individual market would face an increase of $818 in premiums. In rural parts of the state, hospitals are already closing and AHCA's cuts will only exacerbate the problem for Maine's rural population. Maine is also one of states grappling with the Opioid Epidemic. Last year, 378 people died from overdose, making that more than 1 per day. The greatest obstacle to helping those suffering with substance abuse, as one local deputy chief states, is access to healthcare. Perhaps McConnell will buy Collins' vote during their secretive backroom deals with more funding for the Opioid Epidemic. But as we already seen with the Upton Amendment from the House, the GOP doesn't exactly have a precedent for allotting sufficient funding for dire causes.
Maine Constituents can contact Susan Collins at 202-224-2523
  • Rob Portman (R-OH)- Fighting the War on Drugs with a War on Medicaid  
Portman is the the GOP senator on a mission to suffocate Medicaid. He is the leading architect on the Senate GOP's plan on crafting Medicaid. Initially, he stated on CNN that he will not support a plan that does not provide "Medicaid expansion stability," but that has become an empty statement. It would be neglectful to not highlight Portman is also the Senator of one of the states at the epicenter of the Opioid Epidemic. The Opioid Epidemic has ravaged Ohio. In 2015, 30,000 Ohioans died from overdoses- rivaling that at the peak of the AIDs epidemic. In 2014, when Ohio expanded Medicaid under ACA, 700,000 Ohioans were able to gain health insurance, which covered Addiction and Substance Abuse services. Now, 1 in 6 Americans living Ohio who rely on Medicaid for their treatment services risk losing it due to AHCA's staggering Medicaid cuts and eventual phase-out. This is a state wide clarion call for Portman to not only stop working to dismantle Medicaid through cuts, caps and phase-out, but to vote no on AHCA if any part of Senate bill includes these components. For Portman, it's literally comes down to choosing to save Ohioans from death or serving McConnell's agenda. Meanwhile 360,000 Ohioans would lose Medicaid coverage with a cut of $400 per those enrolled. Overall, 539,700 Ohioans would lose coverage due to AHCA and people in individual markets would see their premiums increase by $550.
Ohio Constituents can contact Rob Portman at (202) 224-3353
  • Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV)- Capitulating Costly Capito
Capito was one of the GOP senators initially against the House AHCA plan, but has now come out in support of a 7 year Medicaid phase-out. 117,000 West Virginians gained access to coverage from Medicaid expansion. Governor Jim Justice of West Virginia has stated that a repeal of Medicaid expansion would cost $900 million in the state's healthcare economy. This means a loss of jobs, jobs and more jobs. Now, 77,300 Medicaid West Virginians will lose their coverage or face a $525 cut in their Medicaid coverage. Overall, 122,800 West Virginians will lose coverage under AHCA and those in individual markets will face a $1,006 increase in premiums. And in coal country, Black Lung Disease is still pressing health issue among miners and repeal of ACA can cost them provisions that would allow them to gain benefits.
West Virginian Constituents can contact Shelley Moore Capito at (202) 224-6472
  • Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)- Freezing out Healthcare
Murkowski was also one of the senators who was displeased with the process in which the House passed AHCA. Now she is has been suspiciously withdrawn from issuing any statements regarding her support for the bill. This does not mean her constituents aren't anxious about her decision. Alaska currently only has one insurer and after a rocky period, the market has now stabilized with premiums rising to 7.3% as oppose to the projected 40%. With only one carrier, AHCA might very well put Alaska's healthcare market in a perilous situation. Medicaid expansion has also helped 30,000 Alaskans receive coverage. Due AHCA, 15,100 Alaskans who received coverage through Medicaid expansion are poised to loss coverage and other enrollees would face a $754 in cuts. Overall, 62,500 Alaskans will lose coverage with those in the individual markets seeing a $2,170 increase in premiums.
Alaska Constituents can Contact
Lisa Murkowski at (202) 224-6665
Dan Sullivan (R-AK) (202) 224-3004
  • Conclusion
The American Healthcare Act is not a healthcare plan. It's a no-care plan. Any bill that proposes to intentionally strip away healthcare from even a single American is not design to promote healthcare. In fact, it's just the opposite. It's being done in bad faith to siphon care from the most vulnerable to pay for tax cuts that only the wealthiest Americans will benefit from. Alarm bells should be raised that congress has exempted themselves from this bill. If they don't want it, neither should Americans.
Republican senators are listed and highlighted because they are the ones drafting and deciding the fate of AHCA. No one- no Republican, Democrat, or Independent should have to face the horrors of this bill.
Everyone, no matter party affiliation, should call their Senators to demand they oppose this bill or ask them to be more vocal in opposing the bill. Call now and call often. Less than 3 weeks. We only have less than 3 weeks.
Congressional Switchboard #: 202-224-3121

OH-Sen: Brown (D) Leads The Call To Reject Trump Wall Street Corny To Be Comptroller Of Currency

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Received this e-mail today from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown’s (D. OH) re-election campaign:

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Sen. Sherrod Brown (D. OH)
 

"Trump Picks Former OneWest Chief to Oversee Banks"
-- The New York Times, 6/6/2017

President Trump nominated Joseph Otting, former leader of OneWest, to be the next Comptroller of the Currency.
 

If you've never heard of that title, the Comptroller of the Currency "charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks and federal savings associations as well as federal branches and agencies of foreign banks."
 

In other words: The Office of the Comptroller is a watchdog. And it's here that we run into the problem with Mr. Otting.
 

If the name OneWest rings a bell for you, that's because it's the same lender that now-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin ran. The two men worked together.
 

OneWest engaged in some shady lending practices. During the Great Recession, thousands of OneWest customers lost their homes. It was once described as a "foreclosure machine." In 2011, Mr. Otting signed a consent order with the very agency Trump wants him to run because of those shady practices.
 

Mr. Otting didn't deal fairly with his customers back then. I don't see how we can trust him to look out for the interests of customers at more than 1,400 banks and thrifts across the country.
 

And according to the New York Times, Otting is expected to support rolling back major parts of the Dodd-Frank financial reforms -- the law we passed to protect our economy from risky behavior by banks.
 

Americans need a watchdog as Comptroller of the Currency, not someone who will roll over for Wall Street. Add your name and say "NO" to Joseph Otting.
 

Thank you.
 

Sherrod

Click here to add your name.

The Future of Lethal Injection In Ohio May Hang on What Ohio Itself Has Said About Lethal Injection

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Tomorrow in a Cincinnati courtroom, the future of Ohio’s ability to execute prisoners may come down to statements made by Ohio state officials in years past, specifically, their announcement that they would never again use a drug to paralyze prisoners and a drug that stops their hearts called potassium chloride.

As a new commentary from The Constitution Project argues, the issue at hand is called “judicial estoppel” or the premise that parties to a lawsuit may not make inconsistent representations of their position to various courts. As the commentary notes, “it speaks to the core value of integrity in the judicial system, preventing misuse of the courts and promoting equity among litigants.”

Back in 2009, the state of Ohio was facing serious legal challenges over its three-drug lethal injection drug protocol, which used a barbiturate to provide pain relief, then a paralytic and finally a heart-stopping drug. With a hearing on the case scheduled, an execution went horribly wrong. The state tried for two hours to execute prisoner Rommel Broom but failed and had to abandon the attempt. Mr. Broom is the only prisoner in U.S. history to survive a lethal injection execution.

In this climate, facing a hearing on its lethal injection protocol, the state announced it would no longer, ever again, use a paralytic or the drug that stops the heart. There was no need for the litigation to continue, the state argued. The issues were moot because there was “no possibility” (in the state’s words) that they would ever again use the challenged protocol.

A federal judge said not so fast and so did a panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, both of whom ruled that the state is judicially estopped from using those two drugs. The state appealed these decisions and won the right for the legal case against the lethal injection protocol.

On Wednesday, June 14, 2017, the full court of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit will again consider the case. Hopefully the Sixth Circuit will agree that the State can't use the same drugs they promised to never use.

OH-Gov: Nan Whaley (D) Goes After Trump's Assault On Lake Erie's Funding

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Received this e-mail today Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley’s (D. OH) gubernatorial campaign:

Ohio wouldn’t be Ohio without Lake Erie. With over 300 miles of coastline bordering the lake, millions of Ohioans depend on Lake Erie for their livelihoods, vacations, and even their drinking water. It’s extremely important for our state to ensure that Lake Erie remains clean and safe for drinking, fishing, commerce, and recreation.

Sadly, the Trump administration in Washington seems to disagree. They recently proposed a budget plan that would cut all funding to the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which since 2010 has protected our lakes from invasive species, pollution, and other threats.

We can’t allow Trump to harm Lake Erie. Will you add your name to tell Trump not to slash funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative?

Lake Erie alone is a source of drinking water for 11 million people in the U.S. and Canada. Some parts of the Midwest have enough problems getting clean, safe water -- can you imagine if we weren’t able to draw from the world’s 12th largest lake, right on Ohio’s northern border?

But that’s a distinct possibility if we don’t invest in projects that reduce nutrient runoff, prevent and control invasive species, restore native habitats, and clean up the most affected areas -- all of which the GLRI does. This program has strong and bipartisan support among Midwesterners -- and yet, the Trump administration thinks they know what’s best for us.

Well, as the Trump administration showed last month when they proposed to cut the entire Environmental Protection Agency’s budget by 30%, Washington doesn’t know jack about protecting our environment. So we need to tell them, loud and clear:

Add your name to tell Trump: Don’t slash funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.

Thanks,
Nan

Click here to add your name.

MA & OH-Sen: Dem Senators School Betsy DeVos On How Delaying Student Loan Rule Violates The Law

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Schoolin’ them haters:

Four influential Democratic senators ― Dick Durbin (IL), Patti Murray (WA), Sherrod Brown (OH), and Elizabeth Warren (MA) ― have written to Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to warn that her department cannot, without engaging in an extensive process, delay or cancel an Obama administration rule providing debt relief for defrauded students. The senators assert that stalling on the new borrower defense rule “would be a monumental dereliction of the duty you have to protect students and taxpayers.”

In the letter, sent on Thursday and provided this morning to Republic Report, the four senators point to indications that the department is considering a delay of the rule, which is scheduled to go into effect on July 1. The rule would create standards and procedures to implement a long-standing law cancelling the federal loans of students who are defrauded by their schools. The rule also requires financial shaky colleges to post letters of credit to ensure money will be available to student victims in the event of a collapse, and it bars colleges receiving federal dollars from denying students the right to take them to court for injuries.

The day after the senators sent their letter, 31 military and veterans organizations wrote to the Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate education committees opposing any delay of the borrower defense rule. In the letter, groups including AMVETs, Vietnam Veterans of America, the Iraq Afghanistan Veterans of America, and Student Veterans of America, write, “Please urge Secretary DeVos to implement the regulation immediately and start processing veterans’ applications. Any delay is an affront to defrauded servicemembers, veterans, survivors, and military families.” And earlier last week, 19 state attorneys general wrote to DeVos asking her department to move ahead with existing applications for student debt relief, a process that the Trump administration appears to have put on the hold.

In their letter, the four senators note that at a June 6 hearing in federal court in Washington, addressing a lawsuit by for-profit colleges seeking to block the borrower defense rule,  a U.S. Department of Justice lawyer representing DeVos said the Education Department is “studying its options with regard to the effective date” for the new rule. In addition, Politico has reported what many in the higher education world have been hearing: that the Trump administration “has been eyeing further delays ... as it considers opening new negotiated-rulemaking sessions to rewrite” the borrower defense rule as well as another Obama rule, called gainful employment, aimed at penalizing career training programs that consistently leave students with overwhelming debt.

The senators warn that blocking the borrower defense rule “would harm thousands of students, many with crushing levels of student loan debt and few meaningful job prospects.”

They also warn that delaying or cancelling the rule would violate the law. As the senators note, the federal Higher Education Act (HEA) and Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provide that major Department of Education rules be developed through a process called negotiated rulemaking, where the department assembles representatives of key stakeholder groups to discuss issues and provisions before the department issues its rule.  The borrower defense rule was developed after such a process. The senators contend, accurately, that the HEA and APA “prohibit the Department from unilaterally amending or delaying a final rule except through a new negotiated rulemaking or in very narrow circumstances,” where the department, as the relevant statute reads “for good cause finds ... that notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.” As the senators argue, “implementing the borrower defense rule without delay is practicable, necessary, and very clearly in the public interest.”

Warren and Brown face the voters next year and they  will need our help to make sure they stay in the Senate to continue to fight back against the Trump-DeVos agenda. Click below to donate to their re-election bids:

Elizabeth Warren (D. MA)

Sherrod Brown (D. OH)

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