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G_j

(40,367 posts)
Wed May 22, 2013, 09:44 AM May 2013

NC Senate: arrogant, and snarling partisan budget

<snip>

It’s the perfect window through which to understand the Senate budget proposal. It is a mean-spirited, arrogant, and snarling partisan budget that not only falls woefully short of making vital investments in education and human services, but seems to make major funding decisions and policy changes out of spite, not careful consideration.

The budget eliminates more than 5,000 jobs, including 4,000 teacher assistant positions in the second the third grades. Imagine the headlines if a private employer announced the closing a facility where 5,000 people worked.

<snip>

Senate leaders want to slash funding for NC PreK and instead shift the funding to child care subsidies. Apparently they aren’t thrilled with at-risk kids getting the extra help they need before they start school.

The budget makes it harder for low-income pregnant women to access health care services, closes alcohol and drug treatment centers, and puts harsh limits on how many times people on Medicaid can see a doctor.

It denies services to children and vulnerable adults, requires people on public assistance to pay for drug tests when they apply, and removes limits on class sizes in the early grades in public school.

The plan would wipeout many of the state’s successful economic and community development efforts, and end all state funding the widely recognized Rural Economic Development Center that happens to be controlled by a longtime Democrat, but sets up a new rural economic development initiative in the Department of Commerce that Republicans can control.

Partisan control is a major theme of the plan. It eliminates special judges appointed by Governor Beverly Perdue and transfers the State Bureau of Investigation from Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office to the Department of Public Safety that is part of the McCrory Administration. Interestingly, McCrory himself seemed caught off guard by the plan and the law enforcement community opposes it.

It does not include a dime in compensation for the victims of the state’s horrific eugenics program, funding that to his credit McCrory included in his budget proposal and that House leaders have supported in the past. Senate leaders have blocked funding for eugenics victims in the past and seem ready to block it again this year.

And finally, the budget sets aside funding for the Senate’s startlingly regressive tax plan that would force low-income families to pay more for groceries to give millionaires a $56,000 a year tax break.

Budgets at their core are basically a list of priorities. Now we know what’s most important to the current Senate leadership—slashing services for kids and vulnerable adults and making low-income families pay higher taxes, all to give the wealthy a massive tax break and to settle partisan political scores. Snarling and mean-spirited indeed.

http://www.ncpolicywatch.com/2013/05/21/the-snarling-regressive-senate-budget/

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Scuba

(53,475 posts)
1. Similarly nastiness here in Wisconsin where the Governer (sic) throws red meat to his base by ...
Wed May 22, 2013, 09:51 AM
May 2013

... punishing the people they've been taught to hate.

G_j

(40,367 posts)
3. ALEC has been active in many states
Wed May 22, 2013, 10:42 AM
May 2013

Last edited Wed May 22, 2013, 01:36 PM - Edit history (1)

http://www.ncpolicywatch.com/2013/05/17/shining-sunlight-on-a-secretive-lobby-group/

Shining sunlight on a secretive lobby group

"Today, as we have witnessed in North Carolina, the group can move the same legislation in dozens of states at once. In neighboring Virginia, Weyrich’s and Falwell’s home state, ALEC’s minions in the General Assembly have been even more audacious: as the New York Times reported in February of this year, Virginia GOP legislators introduced more than 50 ALEC-proposed laws, “many practically word for word.”

------
http://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/07/10880/alec-bills-wisconsin

ALEC Bills in Wisconsin

In the 2010 elections, Republicans emerged with seven more governor's mansions. They also won control of 26 state legislatures, up from 14. In many trifecta states, where a new Republican majority won control of both houses and the governorship, an odd thing happened. A steady stream of almost identical bills -- bills to defund unions, require Photo ID's make it harder for democratic constituencies to vote, bills to privatize schools and public assets, bills to enshrine corporate tax loopholes while crippling the government's ability to raise revenue, bills to round up immigrants -- were introduced and passed. An almost identical set of corporations benefited from these measures.

It is almost as if a pipeline in the basement of these state capitols ruptured simultaneously, and a flood of special interest legislation poured out. The blowout preventer -- political power-sharing -- was disabled. The source of the contamination? The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).

This week, the Center for Media and Democracy unveiled its ALEC Exposed website to display an archive of over 800 ALEC "model bills." This archive will allow reporters and citizen journalists to identify the ALEC bills moving in their states. We encourage researchers to search for some of the measures written about below.

ALEC in Wisconsin
Decades ago, ALEC targeted Wisconsin as a test case for their agenda. Tommy Thompson, who served as a state legislator from 1966-1987 and then as governor for a record 14 years, was an early ALEC member and supporter. "Myself, I always loved going to these meetings because I always found new ideas. Then I'd take them back to Wisconsin, disguise them a little bit, and declare that 'It's mine,'" he told an ALEC conference in 2002.



 

Scuba

(53,475 posts)
5. And still missing: The liberal counterpart to ALEC, promoting model laws for ....
Wed May 22, 2013, 01:39 PM
May 2013

--Voting rights

--Worker rights

--Education

--Healthcare

etc.


Bandit

(21,475 posts)
7. And the people there will continue to vote these bastards into office
Wed May 22, 2013, 03:08 PM
May 2013

I find it hard to sympathies with the people that vote for this kind of government.

G_j

(40,367 posts)
9. I live in a mostly blue district
Wed May 22, 2013, 03:27 PM
May 2013
http://www.mountainx.com/article/49879/Advocates-for-redistricting-reform-tout-new-study-poll-shows-overwhelming-support

<snip>

Ahead of the last election, Buncombe County was split between two congressional districts, and lines were redrawn in ways that helped Republicans get elected to the N.C. Statehouse and Buncombe County Board of Commissioners. Now, a new study shows how gerrymandering distorts elections in North Carolina, while a new poll finds overwhelming public support for changing the redistricting process.

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still, a key (and shameful) ingredient in this was low Democratic/progressive voter turn out!

JoePhilly

(27,787 posts)
8. At the end of Gulf War #1, Saddam set the oil fields on fire when it became clear
Wed May 22, 2013, 03:14 PM
May 2013

he was going to lose.

That's what the GOP is doing all across the country.

These xenophobic, angry, spiteful whack jobs know that they are dying out. They know they can't stop progress from coming.

So they work to slow it down, to create hurdles, and to create as much damage as possible on their way towards extinction.

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