Friday, May 26, 2017

I Agree with Bob Gannon


"I Agree With Bob Gannon" are five words that I never imagined that I would ever string together. Gannon is the Republican State Representative from District 58 in Washington County, covering West Bend, Jackson, and Slinger. Gannon's anti-worker, anti-woman, anti-education, guns-everywhere-anytime-by-anybody agenda is so extreme that no rational human would agree with him. The loony Gannon once had to apologize to Rep. Peter Barca for angrily flipping him off during an Assembly debate.

After a tragic shooting at a Madison mall, Gannon called for even more indiscriminate shootings, saying, "Wisconsin does not have a death penalty law, but with significant practice and careful aim, law abiding citizens can help clean our society of scumbags."

By any measure, Gannon is on the far-right fringe. He was an early endorser of the batshit-crazy candidate for State School Superintendent, Lowell Holtz. He recently sponsored a celebration of failed President Trump's First 100 Days- at a local firing range. His two Facebook sites are compendia of divisive, far-right sentiments, including a photo-shopped picture of Chelsea Clinton reading "Nana Goes to Prison" to her toddler, and an ultra-ironic statement that Gannon would "not vote for a candidate under investigation by the FBI".

So there are very few topics on which I agree with Gannon. However, there was a recent Assembly Bill, pushed by Gannon, that I heartily endorse. I was shocked ! The bill, AB 243, provides $50,000 for a study to look at the feasibility of assisting people on unemployment in moving to where there are jobs.

Passed by the Assembly on April 10 by a 84-13 margin, the bill is now in the hands of the State Senate. The proposal is for conducting "a study regarding the feasibility of establishing a program, using a social impact bond model, to assist claimants for unemployment insurance benefits under chapter 108 of the statutes by offering them mobility grants to relocate to areas with more favorable employment opportunities."

Over my technical career, I was fortunate to have worked in a field in which a relocation package was standard with job offers. Hiring companies paid for all moving expenses, house-hunting trips, and temporary housing. Some companies would, through an agency, purchase your home if you couldn't sell it. Others provided an up-front one month salary for incidentals.

Being the beneficiary of this kind of inducement, I always wondered why everyone who was out of work could not get the same sort of help in moving to a new job. After all, there are areas of the country with high unemployment, while other areas are screaming for workers. Low-income unemployed workers usually cannot afford to move themselves. For many lower-paid positions, employers cannot afford to pay to move workers. However, the Federal government certainly could help here.

The Assembly-proposed study, to be conducted through the Department of Workplace Development, certainly doesn't go far enough-but it is a good start. Rather than work through a social contract bond model, It would be better to have direct government funding of the program.

And a state-directed program would likely only provide grants for movement within Wisconsin. A better option would be a Federal program, which would not have such limitations. Under a Federal program, the unemployed could move anywhere in the country.

Many details of a relocation program would have to be worked-out. Grantees would have to secure a job by a legitimate employer before qualifying for relocation funds. There would have to be some way of connecting people with assured jobs before initiating a move. There might be some partial recoup of the money, from both the employer and new employee. There should be assurances that there would be no compulsory moves. But the basic idea, of governmental financial assistance for people to move to where they can work, is a good one.

I seldom agree with Bob Gannon. However, in this one rare case, we concur. A program is needed to assist the unemployed in moving from depressed areas to where they have work. Assisting workers in moving from Great Plains ghost towns or hard scrabble Appalachian coal towns or the industrial rust belt can help America in so many ways. Employers can get good workers. Workers can regain the self-esteem and prosperity of having a regular job. Government gains new taxpayers and the financial burden of relief programs is lightened. Everybody wins!
 
 

Friday, May 12, 2017

Keeping Politically Current



Because of the high-speed train-wreck in Washington, and because of the slow-motion ship-wreck in Madison, Wisconsin progressives must keep-up with the latest political news. However, none of us has unlimited time to devote to current events. We have our lives to live, our careers to focus on, and our families to occasionally acknowledge.

We all must make the most efficient use of the time we spend absorbing the news. We must seek-out the best, most condensed, and most reliable news sources. All political geeks have their own favorite TV news broadcasts, newspapers, blogs, and pod-casts. Today, I would like to share some of my favorites that are focused on national politics. A future blog will cover especially useful sources for state and local politics.

Websites- My two favorite progressive websites are Daily Kos and Huffington Post. Both are excellent portals for connecting to other media sources. Daily Kos carries reader-submitted blogs without editing, so the quality of the writing is variable. Daily Kos is useful because some of the blogs summarize articles in top-notch newspapers, like the New York Times and Washington Post, that give very limited free web access. They also have a handful of paid staff writers. For example, Joan McCarter does a great job in covering the GOP attempts to destroy the American health care system.

I have followed HuffPost for years. This site has a professional staff of decent writers, who cover politics in almost real-time. Huffington also links to important stories in high-quality, non-fake media sources. They serve as a one-stop source for links to progressive columnists in top newspapers.

There are a zillion progressive Facebook sites that specialize in sensationalist click-bait stories. You know, the kind where some Republican is EVISCERATED, or HUMILIATED, or SCHOOLED and has a MELTDOWN. These stories invariably end-up a big nothing-burger. However, even though the stories are unreadable, the pictures and clever made-up captions are often funny and worth a quick look. I follow Occupy Democrats, Americans Against the Republican Party, and Hate Liberals? Bite Me. You probably have your own favorites.

TV- The only political TV show that I watch faithfully is Rachel Maddow on MSNBC. Rachel continues to bring a great in-depth approach to her stories. Unfortunately, most of the rest of MSNBC is becoming unwatchable. Chris Matthew's pomposity, along with their new stable of right-wing blowhards like Gretta Van Susteren, Nicholle Wallace, and Joe Scarborough don't bode well for the future of the network.

Video Blogs-I regularly listen to video blogs by two progressive pundits. Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary in the Clinton administration, and current Stanford professor, is very good. His Facebook page lists stories from only the highest level, most trusted, news sources. Most weeknights, he does a "Resistance Report", in which he calmly and sagely comments on recent political news.

At the other end of the emotional scale, but no less smart, is Keith Olbermann. The former MSNBC host does a political video rant most week nights on GQ, the men's fashion website. Olbermann's show, called The Closer, is guaranteed to make you angry, make you sad, or spur you to political action. He ends each episode by urging people to "Resist !"

Cartoons-My favorite political cartoonist is Clay Bennett, who publishes in the Chattanooga Times Free Press. He has been especially clever in his coverage of Trump. If you "like" Clay's Facebook page, his new cartoons are posted on your newsfeed.

Columnist- Of all of the liberal columnists, my favorite has to be Jonathan Chait, who writes for New York Magazine. Chait covers a wide range of political issues. Every one of his articles is clear, well thought-out, and very well written. Chait is also on my FB newsfeed.

Those are my favorite progressive sources of national political news. You might already follow some of these, and have many favorites of your own. How do you spend your on-line, political information time?

Friday, May 5, 2017

Political Triage


Yesterday's House vote to steal healthcare from millions of Americans made one thing perfectly clear. We must take back the House in 2018. We cannot allow this slithering mass of helminths to spoil all that is good about America. All progressive hands need to be on deck for the next House election cycle.

2018 will give us a golden opportunity to throw the smirking GOP Congress out on their social-Darwinist butts. The President's party has historically lost Congressional seats during mid-term elections, and next year should be no different. The record-breaking unpopularity and incompetence of their fearless leader only makes our job easier.

I would like to boot-out every single Republican who voted for this bill. However, to regain Congress, we need to play it smart. We need to spend our limited efforts and campaign cash where they will do the most good.

Many of us live in Congressional districts where no amount of effort on our parts will change the outcome of our local House race. Gwen Moore and Mark Pocan will easily win Milwaukee and Madison. Jim Sensenbrenner will win his Waukesha and Washington County-based district. But those of us that live in these three districts can greatly affect the outcome of the five other Wisconsin House elections. Our calls and door-knocks and dollars could make all the difference in electing additional Wisconsin Democrats to Congress. They could make all the difference in the taking-back the House.

Several national organizations assist people in overwhelmingly red or blue districts who want to have an impact on next year's Congressional elections. Swing Left is targeting 65 close Congressional races for 2018. The organization matches activists with races where they can meaningfully get involved as volunteers or as donors. Unfortunately, none of Swing Left's targeted seats are in Wisconsin.

Just as groups like Swing Left help to direct money and volunteers to where they will make the most national impact, we could and should do the same within our state. At the risk of angering many, I believe that we should put less effort into those races that we have no chance of losing and those that we have no chance of winning. Instead, we should focus on the races that are in the middle. We should focus where we have the best and most reasonable chances of pulling-off a gain. This sort of political triage will give us the most realistic chance of election eve pick-ups for the progressive cause.

Below, I list the eight Wisconsin congressional districts, along with the 3-election average winning margin (for 2012, 2014, and 2016). For comparison, I also include the Cook Partisan Voting Index, an indicator of the relative partisan lean of each district.

District      Incumbent           Margin % (Ave 3 elections)     Cook PVI

    1              Ryan                     25.0 R                                       R+5
    2              Pocan                   36.9 D                                       D+18
    3              Kind                     20.6 D (Ave of 2)                      Even
    4              Moore                   55.9 D                                      D+25
    5             Sensenbrenner     38.0 R                                      R+13
    6             Grothman              20.5 R                                      R+8
    7             Duffy                     18.7 R                                      R+8
    8             Gallagher               22.5 R                                      R+7

It is no big surprise that Pocan and Moore (Districts 2 (Madison) and 4 (Milwaukee)) are safe for the Democrats. This is an instance of the GOP's partisan redistricting jamming as many Democratic voters as possible into just a few districts. These districts shouldn't require large investments of volunteers or campaign money to remain in progressive hands. On the other hand, Dems must play strong defense to hold Kind's 3rd District, a district that Trump won by 4%.

Sensenbrenner's 5th district, with a 38% R margin, is even more lopsidedly Republican than Madison is Democratic. In the bluest of election tidal waves, we stand little chance of flipping the 5th. Democratic volunteer efforts and cash are much better spent going after the weakest Republicans-Duffy, Grothman, and Gallagher. A flip of 11.3% of voters from R to D would turn any of these three districts blue. Such a flip is within reason when we consider the "yes" votes by these three heartless buffoons on the Trumpcare bill, as well as Trump's own deep unpopularity.

As much as I would love to see Lyin' Ryan return to Janesville, such a defeat is much less likely than Democratic pick-ups in Districts 6, 7, or 8. Instead of a big, expensive, and likely futile effort to unseat the smirking Eddie Munster, we should work smart and do all we can to demote him to Minority Leader.