|
|
|
Author: |
Dan McGrath |
Created: |
3/10/2008 |
 |
|
Dan is a Minneapolis resident. Living in the heart of the beast, he brings an urban perspective to Minnesota conservatism. |
|
Thwarting the Will of the Majority, Committee Blocks Voter ID Bill |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
2/12/2009
|
|
|
|
Poll after poll consistently demonstrates the overwhelming majority of Minnesotans want a photo ID requirement to vote. A bill that would have made that wish reality ( HF 57) got a shot at the big time today, but was ultimately defeated in the House Government Operations Committee. By a vote of 11-8 the committee decided not to refer the bill to the Public Safety Committee, stopping it dead in it’s tracks. Every “no” vote was a Democrat, but not every “yes” vote was a Republican. Newcomer, Phil Sterner broke ranks with his party and voted to refer the bill to the next committee.
Chairman Pelowski (D-31A), Representatives Poppe (D-27B), Hilty (D-8A), Hornstein (D-60B), Kahn (D-59B), Kalin (D-17B), Marquart (D-9B), Morrow (D-23A), Nelson (D-46A), Simon (D-44A) and Winkler (D-44B) voted to kill photo ID.
Representatives Emmer (R-19B), Anderson (R-13A), Buesgens (R-35B), Gottwalt (R-15A), Kiffmeyer (R-16B), Lanning (R-9A), Sanders (R-51A) and Sterner (D-37B) voted to pass the bill out of committee.
Secretary of State Ritchie, who has recently proposed a wide array of new voting initiatives, including opening up in-person early voting for several days before the election testified that requiring ID would substantially increase the need for judges at the polls. He said the extra judges could cost up to $800,000 a year. Election judges who were present and testified contradicted Ritchie, saying Photo ID would actually streamline the process and wouldn’t require any extra judges. Ritchie’s own proposals do require extra judges, however, and at substantially higher cost than the pittance he suggests would be required to implement Photo ID. In today’s government, any price tag that isn’t measured in millions or billions of dollars may as well be pennies as far as legislators are concerned.
Former Secretary of State and current committee member, Representative Mary Kiffmeyer said that when she had Ritchie’s job, her office ran the numbers and determined that even in the face of budget cuts and unallotment, her office could absorb the negligible costs of issuing free IDs to the poor and managing any infrastructure changes into her existing budget.
Well-to-do, white, male DFL legislators argued that voter ID would disenfranchise minority groups. Maryland “Lucky” Rosenbloom, a respected leader in the black community refuted that notion in his testimony. He said current document requirements for identity verification are confusing, poorly understood and difficult for many to meet. He argued that everyone knowing that photo ID is the standard would simplify the process and eliminate confusion. He held up a utility bill addressed to “Lucky” Rosenbloom, noting “I can vote with my nickname using this utility bill, but this ID has my full legal name,” and “I'm gong to have my ID in my pocket, every day. I don't keep this utility bill in my pocket every day. It's very empowering to walk in and say, here's my ID. You can't turn me away now.”
Take Action:
|
 |
|
Comments (3)
|
|
|
|
Budget Hawks Jam & Bash - Thursday Night at Trocadero's |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
2/2/2009
|
|
|
|
Join in the fight to protect our wallets and reduce state government spending. Minnesota Majority, together with like-minded organizations, is sponsoring the Budget Hawk’s Jam & Bash at Trocadero’s Night Club in Minneapolis on Thursday, February 5 from 5:00 - 8:00p.m.
Gather together with like-minded neighbors, have some refreshments, and meet political leaders. Learn more about what you can do to fight liberal lawmakers who want to increase spending and raise our taxes.
Click here to see a flyer for the event. Here’s a link with a map to Trocadero’s and here’s a link with a map for parking. Hope to see you Thursday night.
|
 |
|
Comments (0)
|
|
|
|
Governor’s Budget Proposals Miss an Opportunity for Long Term Solutions |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/28/2009
|
|
|
|
While the governor’s recent proposals to solve the looming $6 billion state budget deficit do not include any tax increases, as he promised, his plan comes up short on lasting solutions. The governor’s plan relies on one-time (and indeterminate) bailout money from the federal government, borrowing and tapping the cash reserves of the Health Care Access fund. These are all stopgap measures that may or may not help solve the current biennium’s budget woes, but do nothing to provide needed long-term stability in the state's finances.
While the governor’s plan relies heavily on these one-time stopgap solutions, there are some spending reductions in the package. The governor has proposed approximately $2.3 billion in spending cuts. All major areas of the state budget are slated to be scaled back except the two largest budget items, K-12 education and Health & Human Services. Those two items combined make up almost 70% of the general fund budget and the governor proposes increased spending in each. K-12 education is slated for a funding boost above and beyond the current budget plan. Governor Pawlenty proposes a permanent per-pupil formula increase of $300 or 5% to get districts not utilizing his performance pay plan, “Q Comp,” on board with that program. He’d also like to give high-performing districts a 2% bump in the general education funding formula. Health & Human Services would get a 9.6% increase over the current biennium.
$287 million in tax cuts are also included in the governor’s plan, with the objective of creating and preserving jobs. He proposed a reduction in the state’s highest corporate tax rate, providing an up front sales tax exemption for new business equipment purchases and accelerated write-off of the depreciation tax deduction on such equipment. These seem like good ideas to try to stave off or reduce the impact of rising unemployment (presently projected to exceed 10% by the end of the year).
There are some positive aspects of the governor’s budget proposals, but the overall plan misses an opportunity to examine the entire state budget situation and make permanent reforms to create a common sense and sustainable budget that wouldn’t go out of whack every other biennium. It’s a temporary political move designed to, as much as possible, maintain the status quo without hiking taxes. Even if all the what-ifs fall in to place and the current budget crisis is dealt with by these proposals, the same ugly problem will resurface in the 2012-2013 biennium. In that respect, the governor’s critics are justified in accusations of band-aid solutions and budgetary gimmicks.
It’s past time Minnesota face reality and wrestle with our out of control spending problem. Budget increases are on auto-pilot, and growing at a rate that far outpaces normal inflation. The present course is unsustainable. The sooner we can change the budget’s tack, the better.
Take Action: Submit your budget-balancing ideas and comments at MinnesotaBudgetSolutions.com.
Additional Resources
|
 |
|
Comments (3)
|
|
|
|
House Legislators Introduce Voter Photo ID Bill |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/26/2009
|
|
|
|
Several House lawmakers gathered for a press conference on Monday to introduce HF 57, a new bill that will require Minnesota voters to provide picture identification before receiving a ballot. Representatives Tom Emmer, Paul Kohls, Dan Severson and Mary Kiffmeyer authored the bill.
The bill also includes provisional ballots for those who may have forgotten their ID, or need more time to obtain proper identification and a clause that will provide free ID for voters who do not have and can’t afford state-issued Identification.
This bill is one great step towards improving confidence in the integrity of Minnesota’s elections. A recent survey found that 85% of Minnesotans favor the photo ID requirement that will be established by this legislation. Dozens of supporters turned out with signs advocating election reform and packed the House Press Conference Room.
The bill will be heard first in the House State and Local Government Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections Committee.
Take Action: Three Ways to Get Involved
Additional Resources: Click here to listen to the podcast of Rep. Mary Kiffmeyer discussing the voter ID bill on the Dan Conry show.
|
 |
|
Comments (0)
|
|
|
|
Coalition Formed To Gather Input on Budget |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/23/2009
|
|
|
|
A group of non-partisan, non-profit organizations have formed a coalition that will be gathering suggestions to solve Minnesota’s current $4.8 billion shortfall. The coalition is seeking methods that can solve the states budget problems without adding to the tax burden of families and small businesses.
The coalition is asking for proposals from policy experts and ordinary citizens in order to begin a constructive dialogue for real budget solutions. A new website has been launched at MinnesotaBudgetSolutions.com where anyone can help identify opportunities to restructure state spending and comment on budget proposals.
"The partners in this coalition range include members of the construction industry to family advocacy groups," said Pat Anderson, President of the Free Market Institute. "Our goal is to make sure that during the state budget process that the day to day challenges of average families are considered when proposed tax increases and spending reductions are offered up."
Members of the coalition include; Associated Builders and Contractors, Minnesota Family Council, Minnesota Free Market Institute, Minnesota Majority, the Minnesota chapter of the National Federation of Independent Businesses, Taxpayers League of Minnesota, and Campaign for Liberty.
"Our object is to understand and develop opportunities to better allocate state funds, and then seek common sense solutions that won’t add to the burden Minnesota families already bear," said Jeff Davis, President of Minnesota Majority. "Minnesota is home to some of the best and brightest individuals. If we roll up our sleeves and work together, we can accomplish this goal."
Take Action: Visit MinnesotaBudgetSolutions.com to add your ideas about how to balance the state's budget.
|
 |
|
Comments (0)
|
|
|
|
Live from the Minnesota Majority Bunker: Dan Conry is On the Air |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/15/2009
|
|
|
|
Common Sense Radio returns to Minnesota's airwaves on Monday, January 19th. Dan Conry's new syndicated show will be broadcast live weekday mornings from 7:00 to 9:20 on KRWC, Radio for Wright County AM 1360.
Conry's new program based on common-sense conservatism and having a good time while discussing the issues of the day will be streamed live on the internet and podcast from DanConry.com.
Raised in Flatbush Brooklyn in what he calls his crazy Irish family, Dan developed his street smarts & well known self deprecating sense of humor on the streets of New York. Dan joined the NYPD in the 1980s. After several years as a street cop in Brooklyn, he became an undercover narcotics Detective in Manhattan. Dan retired from the NYPD and moved to Minnesota after an injury in the line of duty.
Dan says he's bringing some familiar characters to the new program. Super Dave Harrigan will produce the show and Bill Snyder will be sitting in from time to time.
Minnesota Majority is happy to have Dan as a new neighbor in the bunker. The Dan Conry Show will be broadcast from the brand new Minnesota Majority studio. Don't miss it!
Take Action: Tune in to Dan Conry Monday, January 19th from 7:00 to 9:20 AM.
|
 |
|
Comments (4)
|
|
|
|
Coleman – Franken Mess Underscores Need for Election Reforms |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/8/2009
|
|
|
 Just prior to last year’s election, Minnesota Majority released the results of an investigation which suggested a number of significant flaws in Minnesota’s election system. We cautioned the Secretary of State and other officials that apparent irregularities in Minnesota’s voter rolls, inconsistent data management practices and lax controls in voter registration could lead to doubts over the integrity of election results.
We couldn’t have predicted the near tie between Senator Coleman and challenger Al Franken but the potential for the aftermath that followed was clear. Two months after the election, Minnesota voters still don’t know who will represent their interests in the US Senate. Election-night returns indicated that Norm Coleman had won the election. But the recently completed hand-recount appears to have reversed this outcome and awarded the win to Al Franken. Norm Coleman is now challenging the results in District Court.
Secretary of State Mark Ritchie and other officials are reacting to the recount by asserting a need for relaxed election protocols. Specifically, they have recommended universal registration (registering to vote not required) and early voting (an expansion of absentee voting that allows people to vote early without offering a reason). But the nature of disputes in the recount suggests that absentee ballots and lax registration procedures were the source of most election irregularities. Rather than taking steps to tighten controls, these officials advocate taking the lock off the ballot box.
Minnesota’s election system already functions in such a way that it would, by its very nature, conceal most errors or abuse that may occur. Transparency depends on good recordkeeping and reliable data. Our current election system is flawed on both counts. The solution to the problem isn’t to reduce the security of the process. Relaxing voter registration requirements and expanding absentee voting may help to better conceal flaws in our election system, but these steps will not improve the system’s integrity, fairness or transparency. Instead, they would only further muddy the waters and increase doubts about the legitimacy of our election process. Rather, stronger identity and eligibility verification procedures are necessary to bolster the integrity of our election system.
All Minnesotans deserve to know that their honest vote is not being undermined by errors and abuse in the system. Common sense reform measures such as verifiable pre-Election Day registration, presentation of a photo ID and confirmation of the voter’s eligibility to vote prior to providing a ballot will serve to protect the right of all voters to have their legitimate votes equally counted. These steps would greatly improve election transparency by assuring quality, reliable data and verifiable voter identities.
The muddy waters of the Coleman – Franken election should serve as an example of why Minnesota needs stronger election data handling and verification procedures. While the Franken and Coleman camps have bickered over the eligibility of a few thousand absentee ballots, hundreds of thousands of ballots cast by unverified and untraceable same-day registrants are being indisputably accepted.
After every election, county officials are supposed to verify same-day registrants. Those who cannot be confirmed as legitimate, eligible voters are supposedly purged from the voter rolls. But their votes have already been counted and cannot be retrieved, no matter what is found after the fact.
Those who register on Election Day are subject to no real scrutiny or verification before their ballot is cast. Meanwhile, voters who register in advance of an election are subjected to a verification process. This is a shameful double-standard that gives preferential treatment to unverified voters.
Election reforms are needed, but not the sorts that perpetuate a mere illusion of fair elections. All voters have the right to equal treatment under the law. This means the state has a responsibility to ensure that each vote is counted and that only legitimate votes are cast. This is not now the case.
The simple and obvious solution that most Minnesotans support is to require photo ID at the polls. Election judges could verify the identity of every voter on the spot by simply asking for their ID, a practice that is currently not employed or even allowed in Minnesota. It’s been suggested that such a requirement would disenfranchise people who don’t possess a photo ID. To the contrary, photo ID requirements that have been implemented in other states provide for free ID cards to those who can’t afford one, which could easily be implemented in Minnesota for a nominal cost to the taxpayer. This could even potentially aid an underprivileged voter in becoming more integrated and functional in the mainstream. It’s extremely difficult to function in modern society without identification.
Before the election, Minnesota Majority and others warned officials that there were significant flaws in the voter registration rolls, data handling practices and other procedures that could lead to a cloud of doubt being cast over the election results. Coleman – Franken only reaffirms the need for common sense election reforms that offer true transparency, accountability and fairness for all.
Take Action: Sign the Election Integrity Petition and send an instant message to your elected officials today.
Additional Resources
Minnesota Senator Ann Rest and Representative Laura Brod discuss election reforms on MPR's Midday:
|
 |
|
Comments (2)
|
|
|
|
Convicted Felon Admits to Voting |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
1/8/2009
|
|
|
 Eric Willems, convicted of felony sexual contact with a minor in 2004 voted in the 2008 general election while on parole. Since Willems was still on probation, and did not have his rights restored, his vote was illegal. There’s no retrieving it now, though. It’s been commingled with all the other ballots and is indistinguishable from any other.
Willems was only caught for his illegal vote when he told his parole officer about it. Willems was evidently unaware that his right to vote was suspended by his felony conviction.
This is one small example of a vote that was counted that never should have been cast, but it underscores the holes in the voter verification process. Better checks on registrations would have caught this problem before it translated into an invalid vote being counted.
Take Action: Sign the Election Integrity Petition and contact your elected officials.
|
 |
|
Comments (0)
|
|
|
|
Ponzi Schemes Explained |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
12/26/2008
|
|
|
|
The term "Ponzi Scheme" has come up in the news a lot lately, primarily in describing $50 billion in investment securities fraud Bernard Madoff is accused of perpetrating. Not often explained is what a Ponzi Scheme is, and how it works.
Named for Charles Ponzi, an Italian immigrant and con man around the turn of the 20th Century, the con is sometimes also referred to as a "pyramid scheme" wherein early investors are paid from the deposits of a widening base of new investors. As long as new people continue to buy into a growing ponzi scheme, money continues to flow upward to the pyramid of investors. These schemes inevitably collapse when the pool of new investors pumping new money in can’t grow fast enough to support the payments to earlier investors, because actual investment earnings, if any, are not sufficient to cover promised returns.
Even though Ponzi schemes always collapse, getting in early ("on the ground floor") can yield tremendous returns. It’s the people who come in towards the end of the scheme that lose big, since their money hasn’t actually been invested, but merely passed up to the personal accounts of the creator of the scheme and earlier investors.
One year after Charles Ponzi was released from prison for fleecing unsuspecting investors out of $7 million, President Franklin D. Roosevelt concluded that the federal government could get away with such a scheme. Social Security was signed into law as part of the "New Deal" in 1935.
Social Security is now the largest government enterprise in the entire world and combined with Medicare/Medicaid accounts for over 40% of all U. S. federal government spending.
Social Security is a mandatory retirement investment, deducted each pay period from every employee’s wages, with the promise that these investments will be repaid with interest by the federal government upon retirement, but like most Ponzi Schemes, the money isn’t actually invested in any conventional sense. In fact, current social security deposits are not only used to cover current transfers to retirees, but also part of the federal deficit. The government can get away with this for the time being because Social Security deposits are currently in excess of payments, but the number of retirees is now growing faster than the workforce. Unless changes are made in the way Social Security functions, it will collapse like all Ponzi Schemes do, when the pool of new investors isn’t contributing enough money to support payments promised to beneficiaries further up the pyramid. Eventually, a whole generation of investors into this scheme is going to get burned. Since the largest generation, the "baby boomers" are beginning to retire, with a smaller generation coming up to support them, that day of reckoning is likely coming sooner rather than later.
|
 |
|
Comments (1)
|
|
|
|
Over Objections, President Bush Hands Our Wealth to Sinking Automakers |
|
|
By Dan McGrath on
12/19/2008
|
|
|
|
Over objections of the Senate and the majority of American citizens, President Bush facilitated a $17.4 billion loan of taxpayer’s money to Detroit’s troubled automakers today. Since Congress did not approve new funding for the automakers’ bailout, the president tapped the TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program) fund for $13.4 billion of the loan. The remaining $4 billion will still require legislative approval. Ford says it doesn’t need the loan, so GM and Chrysler will apparently split the take. To put the amount in perspective, the state of Minnesota collects about $17 billion per year from all tax and fee revenue sources. Enough tax money to run the entire state of Minnesota for a year is being doled out to two private companies that are unable to stand on their own feet. With these companies teeting on the edge of the abyss, it's entirely possible that these loans will never be repaid.
TARP was established to bailout Wall Street. A $700 billion fund of non-existent money was established to prop up failing financial corporations. Initially the president signaled that he opposed using this fund to bailout the car manufacturers. Following the defeat of the bailout bill in the Senate, the president has changed his tune, saying, "The only way to avoid a collapse of the American auto industry is for the executive branch to step in. My economic advisers believe that such a collapse would deal an unacceptable blow to hardworking Americans far beyond the auto industry."
The bailout "loan" comes with strings attached. Primarily, that the loan will be recalled if the automakers aren’t "viable" by March 31st. In essence, the president has said that the car manufacturers can not be allowed to fail, for dire consequences will ensue – unless they are still foundering this spring, in which case, it’s evidently OK to allow the collapse and ensuing economic Armageddon. Makes perfect sense.
The auto bailout is just the latest in a seemingly endless parade of corporate handouts, taking money from the pockets of hard working men and women, their children and their children’s children to cover the bad decisions of millionaires and billionaires. Current federal bailout commitments total $8.7 trillion. The entire federal budget is $3 trillion and the bailouts now represent nearly 2/3 of the nations entire GDP of $13.1 trillion.
According to the Congressional Research Service, the total value of the bailouts undertaken by the federal government exceeds inflation-adjusted spending for all American wars. The American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Civil War, the Spanish American War, World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan combined cost $7.2 trillion in today’s dollars. Even much maligned spending on the current Iraq war has to date totaled only $648 billion, a figure that pales next to the extraordinary deficit spending for corporate welfare. Throw in all spending for the Louisiana Purchase, the New Deal, the Marshall Plan and NASA, and you still haven’t topped the bailout spending spree of 2008.
America’s present debt equals about $37,000 per person. Representative Price of Georgia said, "By bailing out automakers without real reform or long-term solutions, we are only protracting uncertainty and putting billions of tax dollars at grave risk. It is now clear that the creation of TARP was a rueful mistake which has failed to provide urgent market stability, yet has put our country perilously in debt for the foreseeable future."
|
 |
|
Comments (1)
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
Featured Book
|
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
"Green Hell explains why Americans can't afford to fall for Al Gore's `the debate is over' line on global warming. While we're all for the environment, Green Hell explains why we need to oppose the environmentalists."
--Fred Barnes, Executive Editor, the Weekly Standard
"Green Hell is the `inconvenient truth' on extremist, growth-killing environmentalism. A must-read for those interested in keeping America free and prosperous."
--Steve Forbes, President and Chief Executive Officer of Forbes
"Regardless of whether you believe global warming is a fraud, the fact is that the current depression, the past spike in oil prices, and the coming technology of electric cars are all going to solve whatever problem exists. Liberals want to use climate change as an excuse to take over the economy and regulate everything and this book exposes their plans."
--Dick Morris, FOX News commentator and former political consultant to Bill Clinton
"This book describes why the world can't afford to fall for global warming alarmism and environmental hysteria. Steve Milloy shows how to avoid the environmentalists' vision of our future."
--VACLAV KLAUS, President of the European Union and President of the Czech Republic
"Free market capitalism is still the best path to prosperity. Green Hell is a must-read for anyone who wants to keep America on that path and away from Soviet-style command-and-control environmentalism."
--Larry Kudlow, Host, CNBC's The Kudlow Report
|
 |
|
 |
|