-
Pre-Primary Candidate Forums and Debates
Jul 13, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
There are many, many
opportunities to check out a candidate forum before the primaries or even to
watch debates! The primaries, in case you haven't been following closely, are on
the 17th of August. Forums are a great opportunity for you to hear directly from
the candidates and also to ask them the difficult questions! Here are a few, but
more promise to arise:
Regional Service Providers, Disabilities
Forum - Thursday, July 15, 7
pm at the Best Western Ramkota (800 N Poplar St) in Casper, Admission Free. For
more forum information contact Chris Boston at 233-0401.
Greater Cheyenne Chamber of
Commerce Forum Thrusday, July
15, 7:30-9 am at the Historic Plains Hotel in Cheyenne.Breakfast will be served.
The cost is $15 for chamber members and $20 for non-members. Please call
307-638-3388 to RSVP. Fiind out more online at
www.cheyennechamber.org.
Casper Area Chamber of Commerce
Forum - Wednesday, July 21,
11-1 pm at the Casper Petroleum Club ($25 for Chamber members, $35 for potential
members). Confirmed candidates are Matt Mead, Rita Meyer, Ron Micheli, Leslie
Petersen, Pete Gosar, and Chris Zachary.
9-12 Coalition
Forum - Tuesday, July 27, 6:30
pm at the Oil and Gas Commission (2211 King Blvd, Casper), Admission Free.
Confirmed candidates are Rita Meyer, Matt Mead, Ron Micheli, Alan Kousoulos,
Mike Wheeler, Chris Zachary, and Tom Ubben.
Statewide Elected
Officials Debates -
Debates for statewide elected offices will be broadcast on Wyoming PBS prior to
both the primary and the general elections. The debates will be hosted by PBS'
Geoff O'Gara and representatives of other Wyoming media outlets, including the
Wyoming Business Report's Publisher Dennis Curran and Editor MJ Clark. Members
of the public are urged to send in questions for the candidates, either to the
PBS subsite,www.wyomingpbs.org/decision2010,
or as a comment to this article by clicking on the comment link below.
In
a unique collaboration between thatsWy.com and the Cowboy State Free Press the
entire debate series will be offered via live streaming video far beyond the
PBS-TV coverage area, and be archived for easy access whenever a viewer chooses.
In addition, the Cowboy State Free Press will be implementing interactive online
polling and discussion surrounding the debates.
The primary election
debates will be held Aug. 9-11. All qualified candidates who will appear on a
statewide ballot in November were invited to participate; the following schedule
reflects the dates and times for the first round of debates:
• Republican
gubernatorial debates - Monday, Aug. 9, at 7 p.m.; Repeats: 8-13 at 8 p.m., 8-15
at 5:30 p.m.
• Democratic gubernatorial debates - Tuesday, Aug. 10, at 7
p.m.; Repeats: 8-13 at 9:30 p.m., 8-15 at 3:30 p.m.
• Republican U.S. House
of Representatives debates - Tuesday, Aug. 10, at 8 p.m.; Repeats 8-12 at 9:30
p.m., 8-15 at 3 p.m.
• Republican state auditor debates - Tuesday, Aug. 10,
at 8:30 p.m.; Repeats 8-12 at 9 p.m., 8-15 at 2:30 p.m.
• Republican
superintendent of public inst debates - Wednesday, Aug. 11, at 7 p.m.; Repeats
8-13 at 10:30 p.m., 8-15 at 4:30 p.m.
-
Fourth of July 2010
Jul 2, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
This Independence Day as you enjoy friends and family, firecrackers and
barbeque take a moment to recognize your enormous contribution to making America
and Wyoming better places to live and work.
It is because of your dedication that Democrats have a voice in
Wyoming. In 2002 Governor Freudenthal was elected and will soon leave
office as the most popular Governor in the nation. In 2008 we made history
by electing Barack Obama as President. The accomplishments of this time
are just as extraordinary; from protecting the Wyoming Range to passing
comprehensive health reform your voice has been instrumental in positive and
lasting change.
Your momentum has led us to this point. The 2010 elections are a
crucial time for the Democratic Party in Wyoming. We have excellent
candidates across the state and they need your passion and support as they seek
to bring a stronger voice to those values we cherish: family, equality,
integrity, and
...continue reading
-
Be Engaged - File for Office!
May 25, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The candidate filing period closes on Friday, May 28th. If you are
interested in following who the candidates are across the state you can check
the Secretary
of State's Primary List . The document is updated several
times a day and proves to be very useful.
There are many Democrats running for reelection to the legislature and a
few new faces. We are extremely excited about everyone who decided to put
their hat in the ring!
That being said, there is still time for you to do so. We always need
more people to be engaged whether that is on a board, as a precinct
comitteeperson, or as a statewide elected official. If you are curious
about getting started or getting more involved let us know. Getting
involved by running for office is one the best ways to create positive and
meaningful change in your community and country!
...continue reading
-
Snyder v Phelps: A Free Speech Case
May 25, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Guest blog by Ken McCauley,
Vice Chair of the Laramie County Democratic Party
The US Supreme Court will soon
address the case of Snyder v Phelps.
The case centers on the Rev.
Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church. In Snyder v. Phelps, the 4 th
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed an award of damages granted by a lower court,
which awarded damages to the father of a US Marine killed in Iraq ( for intrusion and intentional infliction of emotional
distress) .
The Rev. Phelps, and his church,
frequently picket funeral processions and publish printed and on-line literature
displaying anti-government, anti-gay, and what many offensive messages. In overturning the award of damages, the
Court of Appeals focused on the First Amendment.
Rev. Phelps argues that the First
Amendment protects his actions (Congress shall make no law … prohibiting the
free exercise [of religion]; or abridging the freedom of speech). In this case,
he
...continue reading
-
Election 2010 Announcements
Mar 16, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
2 comments
Login and comment
Today Rep. Byrd (D-Cheyenne) announced he will seek reelection to the Wyoming
House. His statement is below. A number of other democratic
legislators have announced their intentions (mainly to not seek
reelection).
Those who will not throw their hat in the ring for another round
include: Rep. Lori Millin (D-Cheyenne), Rep. Debbie Hammons (D-Worland),
Rep. Pete Jorgensen (D-Jackson), and Rep. Ross Diercks (D-Lusk).
Also - Colin Simpson, as anticipated, has announced his candidacy for
Governor on the Republican ticket. Simpson vacates a House seat in Cody
and also opens the running for a new Speaker of the Wyoming House. Rita
Meyer, Matt Mead, and Ron Micheli are also all contenders for the Republican
nomination.
Stay tuned here for more election 2010 gossip as it becomes available.
Another great place to watch is Casper Star Tribune reporter Jeremy Pelzer's
blog: http://tribtown.trib.com/wypolitics .
...continue reading
-
Gov Freudenthal Announces Plans
Mar 4, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
As you have surely read Governor Freudenthal announced he will not seek
another term. He made the announcement today at 10:00 AM and WDP put a
statement out soon thereafter. Succinctly, we were greatful for his
service and leadership and are sad to see him go.
He thanked Wyoming and indicated he had been leaning in this direction since
around Christmas. He also said his children were universally in favor of
his decision.
He said for the first time in 17 yrs he has the opportunity to make
choices. "Ain't no plan now," he joked.
There was talk about the poll he commissioned late last year, but he
indicated that since the polling has not begun the poll will be turned over to
the state party.
He also indicated he plans to stay out of the next race and will allow
potential candidates to speak for themselves. When asked if he expects to
be a candidate for higher office he said he does not expect to be a candidate in
2010,
...continue reading
-
Nellie Tayloe Ross 2010
Mar 1, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Every year during the legislative session we gather for meetings and the
Nellie Tayloe Ross (NTR) Banquet. This past weekend was our 2010 NTR and I
think it turned out to be a success. We had a number of great speakers,
folks from all around the state, and a lot of enthusiasm. Our county
chairs had a meeting that helped to evaluate what the basic function of a county
party is and how they can expand, shape and fill that role. The central
committee had a successful meeting that included topics ranging from fundraising
and fiscal stability to the current legislative session and the great work of
the state marketing committee. The rough cuts of four more really exciting
ads were debuted and the group was able to give feedback. Also there
was a wonderful presentation from Brian Kuehl regarding opposition research and
how it can be utilized in the upcoming campaign season.
The main event was in the evening and there were simultaneous cocktail
...continue reading
-
Legislature considers funding statewide legal services program
Feb 24, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Today the Senate Judiciary Committee passed a bill (HB 61) that would create
a statewide legal services funding program. There is currently no program
in the state the offers legal service in civil cases such as divorce, child
custody, or domestic violence. The program would be funded by raising
court fees by $10. The committee room was packed and a variety of groups
stood in favor of the bill. Wyoming Supreme Court Chief Justic Voigt stood
in favor and explained that this will help the entire justice system to run more
smoothly because even filing documents correctly is difficult for those
representing themselves when they have no legal training. Oversight of the
program would lie with the WY Supreme Court. Justice Voigt said, "This is
meat and potatoes. We are talking about helping people in cases such as
domestic violence or dealing with collections, often from medical bills."
AARP Wyoming, Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne, Wyoming State Bar,
...continue reading
-
WY House says it will no longer support school lunch program
Feb 23, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
A budget amendment was brought today in the Wyoming House that would provide
funding for the school lunch program. The amendment was brought by Rep. Cathy
Connolly (D-Laramie), but failed in a voice vote. It would have provided
$3.6 million in funding.
Connolly argued that this problem has come about because costs of programs
have increased by 20% in the past few years and that there are often very few
students in Wyoming schools. She pointed out how 1/3 of all Wyoming
students are eligible for free or reduced cost lunches. Many families, she
said, count on this program to feed their children because they cannot afford
to.
Connolly noted that school districts could raise meal prices to cover the
deficit, but noted, "A study done in 2007 for the Wyoming Department of
Education indicated that the current charges for paid meals in the schools are
generally considered to be the maximum that students and families can pay and
they are among the highest
...continue reading
-
Guest Blog on Foreign Language Education at Young Ages
Feb 19, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Guest blog written by James DuPont of Teton County. James is
serving as a high school intern for Rep. Pete Jorgensen (D-Jackson) during the
first two weeks of the session. Many thanks for his insight and
perspectives.
On February 12, 2010 House Bill 55 passed the House with a vote of 49 to 9.
The bill was introduced by the Joint Education Interim Committee with the
intention to eliminate elementary foreign language instruction as a component of
the required state educational program.
Funding for this program was eliminated in the Governor’s recommended budget
for the 2011-12 biennium, resulting in a decrease in funding of
$1,894,184. If this bill passes the senate it is likely elementary schools
across the state will be unable to adequately continue their foreign language
program.
There have been countless studies proving adolescents are in many ways are
better at learning a language than adults. Studying a second language brings an
individual more
...continue reading
-
Guest Blog on Conceal and Carry Permits
Feb 18, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Guest Blog written by Gus Harrison of Teton County. Gus is
serving as a high school intern for Rep. Jim Roscoe (D-Wilson) during the first
two weeks of the session. Many thanks for his insight and
perspectives.
House Bill 113 is one step closer on it’s way of becoming a law after the
House Judiciary committee passed it with the recommendation it do pass the
General Committee. The Bill first passed introduction last week with a strong
52-6 vote and was referred to the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Rep.
Keith Gingery (R-Jackson). The committee discussed the bill, and passed it with
a 6-2 vote, with the opposing votes coming from two of the same representatives
who opposed the bill in it’s introduction (Rep. Barbuto, D-Green River and Rep.
Patton, R-Sheridan). The bill, if passed into law, would allow anyone 21 years
or older to carry a concealed firearm, providing they do not have a criminal
record or, a substance abuse problem, or not be currently adjudicated
...continue reading
-
Bill Calls For Support of Wyoming Business
Feb 18, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The AFL-CIO, Wyoming Contractors
Association, ABC Wyoming, National Electrical Contractors Association and
Wyoming Building and Construction Trades are supporting an important bill that
is on general file in the Wyoming House.
HB 89, Resident Contractor
Preferences, would support Wyoming jobs and the Wyoming economy by requiring all
public contracts to be let to a Wyoming resident as long as the bid is not more
than 5% higher than a lower non-resident bid.
All bills on general file must go on first reading by
Friday or they will die on general file.
Wyoming projects, such as stimulus supported highway projects or capitol
construction, should be let to Wyoming companies and subcontractors. Let’s hope the majority leadership
agrees and moves the bill up for first reading before it is too
late.
...continue reading
-
Transparency at the Legislature
Feb 16, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Wyoming's Legislature may have worked on being more transparent by making all
bills available online and streaming proceedings live, but there is still a long
way to go. Last week the legislature took a big step by allowing people to
testify by video conference. According to the Equality State Policy
Center, committee chairs are now questioning whether testimonies should be
permitted by phone.
There is a new feature available online that allows you to give an opinion on
a piece of legislation in 140 characters or less. Essentially you can
tweet the legislature. I encourage you to visit the Online
Hotline .
These are great first steps, but the system remains inaccessible for a
majority of Wyoming's people, often because of geography. One glaring
issue is that voting is not immediately available online and those interested in
the outcome of a specific bill cannot quickly and easily look up the roll-call
vote on the floor. Normally the votes are
...continue reading
-
Gov Weighs In During Press Conference
Feb 16, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Today in a morning press conference Gov. Dave Freudenthal discussed some of
the pieces of legislation passing through the Wyoming Legislature.
The Governor's proposed excise tax on wind energy was one of the most
discussed proposals since lawmakers amended the legislation to $1 per megawatt
hour versus the proposed $3, but did not change the 60-40% split between state
and local governments. The Governor stressed that he does not need this
tax revenue in order to balance the budget and since it was slashed he would
prefer the counties recieve 100% of the revenues.
Gov. Freudenthal also commented on the lobbying push against the excise tax
and noted that it is the most robust effort since the severance tax was
enacted. "If your business plan is so fragile that a few bucks is going to
throw you off track them maybe you should produce wind in a different state,"
said Freudenthal. He noted that many of these wind companies have local
names, but none
...continue reading
-
Wind Tax Cut by 1/3
Feb 15, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The House Revenue committee met this morning to discuss the excise tax on
wind energy (HB 101) brought forward by the Governor. The proposed tax was $3
per megawatt hour of energy produced, but following amendments it was reduced to
$1 per megawatt hour.
According to the Casper Star Tribune, “If a $1-per-megawatt-hour tax existed
last year, wind companies would have paid just over $4.9 million.”
There was also a proposed amendment to change the split of revenue between
the state and counties to give all the counties. This amendment failed and the
split will remain 40% to the counties and 60% to the state general fund.
A final amendment made it so the excise tax will not take effect until 3
years after a wind farm has been in operation and taxes will not start being
collected until 2012. The excise tax as well as regulation will continue to be
central discussions in the upcoming weeks.
-
2010 Legislative Budget Session News - Week 1
Feb 15, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The
Legislature has been in session for a week and things are moving along quickly.
Friday was the last day for bill introductions and a number have moved through
the three readings in their house of introduction and are being sent to the
other chamber for consideration. If you are unfamiliar with the process you can
learn under the “Legislative Process” section of the Citizen's Guide to the Legislature . In short, a bill must pass three readings in both chambers
before it can be sent to the governor, who can either sign it into law or veto
the bill. Below is a summary of action on some of the higher-profile
bills from Week 1 of the budget session. You can access the 2010 Bill Index online. If you are
interested in the breakdown of certain votes you can track it by selecting
“Digest” next to the bill you are following. Carbon Capture (HB 17) -
Proposed by the judiciary committee, it would establish a procedure for
requiring entities
...continue reading
-
Democratic House Members Stand United
Feb 11, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Today a resolution asserting the US constitution 10th amendment and amending the
Wyoming Constitution directly aimed at health reform and Wyoming opting out of
any national health reform initiative was killed on a party-line vote. Rep.
Debbie Hammons stood and spoke against the resolution saying that it is not a
reasonable approach to amend the Wyoming constitution to completely “deal us
out.” She stated, “I believe in my country and the ability of the citizens to
listen and reason with judgment.” Minority Floor Leader Patrick Goggles also
stood in opposition saying the house is a creative body and this resolution is
premature as no national reform plan has been enacted.
The house Democrats don’t always have the unity that we are seeing this
session, but with their 19 votes in opposition the Republicans were unable to
muster the 40 votes needed for introduction. This directly echoes some of the
sentiments that members of the caucus expressed yesterday during a weekly
meeting.
...continue reading
-
Do away with concealed weapons permits?
Feb 11, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Rep. Lorraine Quarberg (R-Thermopolis) introduced a bill
giving concealed weapon authority to Wyoming residents over the age of 21. This would do away with the current
requirement that residents show knowledge of firearm use and register and
receive a concealed weapon permit from the state of Wyoming. This proposal changes the standard
considerably by making the requirements to carry a concealed weapon limited to
“not suffering from a physical infirmity which prevents the safe handling of a
firearm,” not being a convicted felon, not being an abuser of controlled
substances or alcohol.
This bill has been referred to the Judiciary
Committee. It is sponsored by Representatives Quarberg, Brechtel, Buchanan,
Davison, Diercks, Gingery, Illoway, Jaggi, Semlek, Simpson, Wallis and
Zwonitzer, Dn. and Senator(s) Case, Coe, Jennings and
Ross .
...continue reading
-
Minimum Wage for Tipped Employees Remains Pitifully Low
Feb 10, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Rep. Bagby (D-Rawlins) introduced
a bill to raise the minimum wage for tipped employees from $2.13 an hour to
$5.00. He brought this last year
and it failed and the same with this year.
Three Republicans stood up in opposition and said things like: “If a waitress is making $100/hour in
tips why would we want to pay her more on top of that?” Find me a Wyoming waitress that made that much money in an
hour, consistently. There isn’t
one. Find me one that makes $20 an
hour consistently. There isn’t
one. Sure there are good nights
during a big event (Frontier Days, Jubilee Days, State Fair) when tipped
employees have a really good showing.
I was a waitress and made great money on UW football game days, but in
general my job was barely paying my rent. I was a single college student. How do single mothers with two children
do it? I know; they go get another
job.
...continue reading
-
Quest for General File
Feb 10, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The 2010 Budget session has officially begun and currently each house is
considering which bills will be accepted onto the General File. It takes a 2/3
vote for bills to reach general file.
A few to note: HB 37 and HJ 04 introduced by Rep. Keith Gingery (R-Jackson) –
These bills would remove the current law that Wyoming Judges and Justices must
retire by the age of 70. Passage of both would ultimately bring a Wyoming
constitutional amendment and statutory changes. Both are referred to the
Judiciary committee which will meet tomorrow morning.
A rather controversial bill (SF35) being discussed tomorrow is the committee
sponsored proposal to make I-80 a toll road. The Senate Transportation committee
will be discussing it tomorrow, 10 minutes after adjournment.
Rep. Ken Esquibel (D-Cheyenne) is sponsoring HB 11 to amend the Cancer
Control program by allowing for follow-up screenings for colorectal cancer. The
bill was accepted to general file and referred to the house
...continue reading
-
2010 Budget Session Convenes
Feb 8, 2010
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The budget session of the 60th Wyoming Legislature convenes today.
Governor Freudenthal will be delivering the State of the State at 10:00 AM and
you can listen in here: http://legisweb.state.wy.us/2010/audio/AudioMenu1.htm .
These blogs will be regularly posted throughout the budget session on topics
important to Wyoming's Democrats, working families and informed citizens.
If you have any questions about a particular issue or post please feel free to
contact me at brianna@wyomingdemocrats.com .
Happy legislative session all!
Yesterday the Wyoming Democratic Caucus met and discussed the budget
reccomendations coming from the Joint Appropriations Committee (JAC) as well as
individual bills certain legislators are bringing forward. The caucus was
also addressed by Gov. Dave Freudenthal, Speaker of the House Simpson, Sec. of
State Max Maxfield, and Superintendent of Public Instruction Jim McBride.
Some special topics of interest,
...continue reading
-
Health care reform; A beginning, not the end
Dec 21, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The following perspective by Brianna Jones
was printed in the Casper Star Tribune, 12/20/2009, http://bit.ly/5jF80y Our nation’s health
care debate has gone from civil, to raucous, to downright ridiculous, but the
truth is that there are millions of people across the nation -- more than 72,000
in Wyoming -- who cannot go to the doctor because they cannot afford or do not
have adequate insurance. Each day someone falls through the cracks
because they do not have the means to access care. This is not how it should be.
Partisan rhetoric aside, Congress is working on real solutions to confront the
health care crisis, several of which will make a tangible difference to
Wyoming’s people. Supporting small businesses -- In order to provide health care,
small businesses currently pay up to 18 percent more per worker than larger
firms. Local entrepreneurs are the lifeblood of Wyoming’s communities, and we
need to ensure that the 17,144 small employers in Wyoming can
...continue reading
-
Fact Check: Barrasso Wrong on Medicare and Deficit
Dec 21, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Please see below for a fact check on false
claims made by Senator Barrasso on the Senate floor today on the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act today:
RHETORIC: Barrasso Said That The Senate Health Care Bill Would Add $1
Trillion To The Deficit. Sen John Barrasso: "The President said this wouldn't add a
dime to the deficit. Well, it's going to add a lot of dimes to the deficit. This
is going to add $1 trillion to the deficit." [Senate Floor,
12/21/09]
RHETORIC: Barrasso Said The Senate Health Care Bill Would Cut
Medicare. Sen. John Barrasso: "The President said we wouldn't see cuts to Medicare.
The bill says $500 billion of cuts to Medicare, to the seniors who depend upon
Medicare." [Senate Floor, 12/21/09]
REALITY: THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT WOULD REDUCE
THE DEFICIT BY MORE THAN $130 BILLION OVER THE FIRST TEN
YEARS
CBO Said Health Reform Reduces The Deficit By $132 Billion Over First Ten
Years. “ CBO
puts the
...continue reading
-
Fact Check: Senator Barrasso on Fox News 12/1/2009
Dec 1, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
1 comment
Login and comment
Please see below for a fact check on the erroneous claims made by Senator
Barrasso on FOX News this afternoon:
RHETORIC: Sen. Barrasso: Americans Don't Support
Reform, Reform Cuts Medicare, Premiums Will Go Up: "That this is not
the right prescription for america. The majority of people in america do not
support this. The reasons are because it cuts medicare and health care for our
seniors that depend on health- care by half of a trillion dollars, as Senator
McCain just pointed out. For people that have insurance it will cause the cost
of their premiums to go up. I think that we should take step-by-step measures in
a responsible way." [FOX News, 12/1/09]
REALITY: ALL THREE CLAIMS ARE COMPLETELY
FALSE
Since October Of 2008, Never Less Than 53% Of Americans, And Up To 62% Of
Americans Has Said That “Given the Serious Economic Problems Facing The
Country…It Is More Important Than Ever To Take On Health Care Reform Now.” In a
poll conducted by Kaiser Family Foundation
...continue reading
-
Enzi's Staff Holds Meetings around State
Nov 18, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
This is a heads up that Senator Enzi’s staff will be holding
sessions in the following communities over the next few weeks and
starting tomorrow. Please share this information!
Buffalo – Thursday, Dec. 10 – Town Hall – 11 a.m.-12
p.m.
Cowley – Tuesday, Nov. 24 – Town Hall – 10:30-11:30
a.m.
Kaycee – Thursday, Dec. 10 – Town Hall – 9-10
a.m.
Torrington – Thursday, Nov. 19 – Platte Valley Bank – 11 a.m.-12
p.m.
Wheatland – Thursday, Nov. 19 – Platte Valley Bank – 2:30-3:30
p.m.
This is a great
opportunity to encourage community members to speak to Enzi’s staff, ask him
about some of his recent votes and impart the urgent need for robust health
reform.
...continue reading
-
Key Components of the House Health Bill
Nov 5, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Components of the Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962)
Increasing choice and competition. The bill will protect and improve
consumers’ choices.
If people like their current plans, they will be able to keep them.
For individuals who aren’t currently covered by their employer, and some
small businesses, the proposal will establish a new Health Insurance Exchange
where consumers can comparison shop from a menu of affordable, quality health
care options that will include private plans, health co-ops, and a new public
health insurance option. The public health insurance option will play on a level
playing field with private insurers, spurring additional competition.
This Exchange will create competition based on quality and price that leads
to better coverage and care. Patients and doctors will have control over
decisions about their health care, instead of insurance
companies. Giving Americans peace of mind. The legislation will
ensure that Americans
...continue reading
-
Wyomingites in Support of a Public Option - Letter Campaign
Oct 30, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Below is a letter we are circulating in support of a public
option. You can copy and paste the text below into a one-page word
document and then circulate it to your friends and family. Once you have
the ten signatures please return the letter to the
Wyoming Democratic Party
PO Box 1963
Casper, WY 82602
___________________________________________________________________
Wyomingites In Support of a Public Option
To whom it may concern:
The heath care system of the United
States is in crisis. Almost fifty million Americans completely lack health
insurance, including more than 70,000 people in Wyoming. Tens of millions more
lack adequate coverage, and the millions who do have private coverage are paying
increasingly unaffordable premiums, resulting in inadequate access to care and
premature death, illness, or financial
...continue reading
-
Public option makes health care reform work - OpEd by Kim Floyd, Executive Secretary of AFL-CIO
Oct 21, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
A public health insurance plan should be an option for everyone, alongside
private health insurance plans. However, U.S. Sens. Mike Enzi and John Barrasso,
along with U.S. Rep. Cynthia Lummis, are siding with Big Insurance and HMOs over
the citizens of Wyoming and the American people. They have teamed up with
private health insurers and are fighting to make sure no public health insurance
plan cuts into private health insurer markets at a time when we're enacting
reforms to cover everyone. The public supports a public health insurance
plan option. A public health insurance plan is supported by 73 percent of
voters, even when they hear the sharpest insurance industry attacks. This
includes Democrats (77 percent), Independents (79 percent) and Republicans (63
percent), as well as urban (73 percent) and rural (71 percent)
voters. The public health insurance plan would compete on a level playing
field with private plans and would be administered by government but funded
through premiums
...continue reading
-
"Time is Now For Health Care Action" Op-Ed in Casper Star Tribune 9/27/2009
Sep 29, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
By: Mike Bell, Vice Chairman of Wyoming Democratic Party http://www.trib.com/news/e ditorial/forum/article_730 3a04e-dfb2-556d-9905-46e40 36b02db.html A
series of new reports from the Treasury Department, the Census Bureau and
independent organizations underscore something we’ve known in Wyoming for a long
time – we can’t wait another year for health insurance reform. Recent
Census data reveals that 46.3 million Americans lack health insurance, up from
39.8 million in 2001. Most of these people are middle-class – working people who
pay their bills but don’t get health benefits through their employers or can’t
afford to buy it on the private market. In Wyoming, there are now 72,000 of us
without insurance, who are just one accident or illness away from financial
disaster. Even those of us who do have insurance are at risk under the
current system. The Treasury Department found that nearly half of all Americans
under 65 will lose their health coverage at some
...continue reading
-
YOU can have an impact on health insurance reform
Aug 31, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Fellow Democrats,
Below are a number of ideas of
how you personally can make an impact in the movement for health insurance
reform. I know many of you have
done or are doing these things and for that, thank you! It is through individual action that we
accomplish our goals.
As President Obama has said,
" Change will not come if we wait
for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting
for. We are the change that we seek."
Please do not hesitate to contact
me if I can be of any assistance along the way!
Bri Jones
Communications Director
Wyoming Democratic Party
brianna@wyomingdemocrats.com
(307) 752-5288
Taking Action for Health
Insurance Reform: How you can have an
impact
Tell your story, speak your mind, make a difference
...continue reading
-
Project New West Summit
Aug 19, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Representatives from the Wyoming Democrats and the Young Democrats of Wyoming
attended the first Project New West Summit in Denver, August 12-14. The
summit was designed to bring together leaders from around the West to discuss
the opportunities, challenges, and important issues facing the West as we enter
a new decade.
Project New West (PNW), founded in 2007, is an organization dedicated to
strategic planning and research in regards to the progressive movement in the
West. There was a number of high profile speakers including Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), Senator Jeff Bingaman (NM), Governor Bill
Ritter, Jr. (CO), Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper (CO), Robert Redford, US
Senator Tom Udall (NM), and Congressman Raul Grijalva (AZ). There were
many more local leaders and activists.
Wyoming Senator Floyd Esquibel participated in a panel titled "Western
Challeneges and Opportunities: A Conversation with Western Leaders" and
Wyoming Democratic Party
...continue reading
-
Obamas visit Yellowstone
Aug 10, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The Wyoming Democratic Party is excited that President Obama will be visiting
our great state this coming weekend when he and the First Family come to
Yellowstone as part of a greater tour of the West. This trip falls on the
free weekend meant to promote the country's National Parks and will also include
stops in Bozeman, MT; Grand Junction, CO; and Phoenix, AZ. It is great to
have the President and his family coming to Wyoming!
For a bit more information you can check out:
Obamas
visit Yellowstone (Casper Star Tribune) Obama to visit
Yellowstone (Jackson Hole News and Guide) Obama,
First Family to visit Yellowstone (Yellowstone Insider)
...continue reading
-
Saundra Meyer and James Elliot are Wyoming's Newest Democratic Senators
Aug 7, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
The
Wyoming Democratic Party is very pleased to welcome Senator Saundra Meyer and
Senator James Elliot to the Wyoming Senate. The following is taken from a
press release by the LSO:
Following the administration of the oaths of office,
legislators,
legislative staff, family and friends welcomed Senators Meyer and
Elliott to
the
Wyoming Legislature. Senator Elliott addressed the
well-wishers during
the
ceremony stating that he is thankful for his appointment and looks
forward to serving the people of Wyoming, noting, "I am really
humbled by
this
opportunity to represent the constituents of both Carbon and Albany
Counties but one thing that I made as a vow to myself was that if I
take on
a task, I'm going to give it everything I've got."
Meyer
was also thankful to have the opportunity to serve in the both the
House
and the Senate by saying "I really enjoyed my tenure in
...continue reading
-
Sotomayor confirmation in the Wyoming media
Aug 7, 2009
Posted by Brianna Jones
Login and comment
Statements from the state party were featured in a few different media
outlets today. We were pleased that attention was drawn to the fact that
both Wyoming Senators Enzi and Barrasso voted against Justice Sonia
Sotomayor. You can check those out below.
Sotomayor gets her
votes - KGWN Channel 5
Wyoming
Senators vote no on Sotomayor - Wyoming Public Radio
If there are any others that you come across please let me know and I will
include them!
-
Reports on new WDP Chair Leslie Petersen
Apr 21, 2009
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
As a follow-up to the previous post, here are a couple media reports on new
Wyoming Democratic Party Chair Leslie Petersen and our other officers:
Wilson resident to
head Democrats (Jackson Hole News & Guide)
Democrats
elect new state leaders (Casper Star-Tribune)
Please let me know if you run across any more, and I'll add them to the
list!
-
Leslie Petersen elected as our new state chair!
Apr 21, 2009
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Greetings from party central! The big news is that Leslie Petersen of Wilson
was elected as the new state chair of the Wyoming Democratic Party during
our State Central Committee meeting in Casper on April 18th. Other officers
elected were new Vice Chair Mike Bell of Cheyenne, new Secretary Linda Barton of
Lander, and re-elected Treasurer Chuck Herz of Moose (elected for
a second term). I've worked extensively with all four of our officers since
I started working for the state party in 2005, and I'm delighted and
optimistic about the team we have in place.
Leslie has been heavily involved in party affairs for decades.
She has previously served as a Teton County commissioner and has been
involved with various conservation, political and natural resource boards. She
has been a Teton County Democratic Party activist for years, is a former Teton
County party chair, and served as the county's state committeewoman for the
previous election cycle. She also
...continue reading
-
Democrats ready to elect leaders
Feb 15, 2009
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Just a quick note to let you know that Democrats all across the state will be
holding county meetings throughout the month of March to elect their local
leaders for the 2009-10 election cycle.
Then, on April 18, those county leaders will meet in Casper to hold state
party officer elections for the positions of chair, vice chair, secretary and
treasurer.
So tune in on April 18 to find out who will comprise the Wyoming
Democratic Party's new leadership team!
-
09/06/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 6, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper Star-Tribune
U.S.
House candidates talk reform in Cheyenne
“Under a big tent in front of the
stately stone Union Pacific train depot, the candidates for Wyoming's U.S. House
seat took part in a forum Friday as the crowd feasted on barbecued ribs….
”
Judge
will choose new SWC commissioner
“And the winner for the open
Sweetwater County Commission seat is .... none of the
above….”
Canadian
oil company lays off workers
“A Canadian-based oil company that
specializes in underground oil drilling is laying off more than half its work
force, most of them in Wyoming….”
Petroleum
industry cries foul
“Representatives with the petroleum
industry are unhappy with a newly proposed management plan for the Pinedale
region, and they are calling for a do-over on the part of the federal
government….”
Natrona County High School
...continue reading
-
09/05/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 5, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Uranium
and wind industries short of workers
“The growing uranium and wind
industries in Wyoming both face constraints with finding workers, panelists at
an energy economics summit said Thursday….”
BLM
releases final oil shale plan
“Federal officials are releasing a
final plan for opening nearly 2 million acres of public land in Wyoming, Utah
and Colorado to commercial oil shale development….”
Report:
State loses millions due to tobacco use
“Tobacco use costs Wyoming
hundreds of millions of dollars each year in lost productivity and health care,
according to a report released by the state on
Thursday….”
*** Freudenthal:
Complete uranium study
“Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal is
urging the Nuclear Regulatory Commission not to delay the completion of an
environmental study on uranium mining….”
WHP
seizes $10
...continue reading
-
09/03-04/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 5, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
LTE: Global ambitions replace diplomacy by TOM BISHOP,
Atlantic City Anti-Lummis
“Now that Cynthia Lummis has been
properly chastised for her could-have-been-expected blunder, perhaps we could
get both Lummis and her opponent, Gary Trauner, to engage in meaningful
comments. How about answering some relevant questions? Do Lummis and
Trauner support the George W. Bush doctrine of global democratization? Bush
doctrine: " we have begun a world democratic revolution that will continue
until all the despotisms of the Middle East are overthrown and replaced by
democracies." (Quotation taken from the book, "Where the Right Went Wrong," by
Patrick J. Buchanan.) Preemptive warfare: Bush doctrine: "No nation will
be permitted, ever again, to rise to a position of power to where it can
challenge the United States, global or regionally." Or do she and Trauner
support the admonitions of George
...continue reading
-
61 Days Until Election Day 2008
Sep 2, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Do you know where your candidates are
and what help and support they need in these final
weeks?
Click here to check out their websites and get in
touch!
MEET & SUPPORT
WYOMING
STATE LEGISLATIVE
CANDIDATES
...continue reading
-
09/02/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 2, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Wyoming Business
Report
*** Congressional candidates to appear at Cheyenne
forum
PLEASE
ATTEND THIS EVENT TO SUPPORT TRAUNER!
He’ll appreciate friendly faces in
the crowd! “The three candidates running for Wyoming’s lone congressional
seat will appear in Cheyenne on Sept. 5 in the fourth of a series of
congressional forums sponsored by Chambers of Commerce across the state.
W. David Herbert (L-WY), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Gary Trauner
(D-WY) have all indicated that they will attend the forum, which will be held in
a tent in Cheyenne’s Depot Plaza from 11:30 am until 1 p.m. The
forum panelists will include Dennis E. Curran, executive editor of the Wyoming
Business Report, Mick Birge of the Cowboy State News Network/ KFBC Radio, and D.
Reed Eckhardt of the Wyoming Tribune Eagle. The moderator will be Rick Schum,
board chairman of the Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce. The forum is being
held in
...continue reading
-
Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup for 08/28-31/08 & 09/01/08
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
*** FORUM: American energy for the American people by
Gary Trauner
“There has been a
lot of posturing recently about the best way to secure America's energy future
and, by extension, the strength of America's economy and leadership position in
the world. Since the day I started running for Wyoming's lone seat in the
U.S. House, I have been saying that the search for sustainable energy
independence is the issue of our time. It affects our national security, our
economy, our environment and the legacy we leave to future
generations….”
LTE: Outsiders see state with fresher eyes by MARY LOU
MARCUM, Cheyenne Pro-Trauner “I am 71 years old and have spent
many of those years in Cheyenne and consider this my home.…Many of us are here
to absorb, to appreciate, to recognize, to celebrate Wyoming, to stand in awe of
its vastness and emptiness, to respect its toughness and
...continue reading
-
08/26-27/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Holy Torrential Trauner!!! Check out the press
for the last TWO days…
*** Trauner Releases Statement on Energy MUST
READ--Proposal has three key elements: Short-term, long-term and immediate
action.
(Office of Trauner Campaign) -- Since
the day I started running for Wyoming's lone seat in the US House, I have been
saying that the search for sustainable energy independence is the
issue of our time. It affects our national security, our economy, our
environment and the legacy we leave to future generations. But over the past
four months, as I have continued to campaign door to door, community to
community, I have heard countless stories of the incredible burden that out of
control gas prices have put on Wyoming's families, businesses, and particularly,
seniors on fixed incomes. As I attended forum after forum during the
primary season, most of my opponents embraced the simple slogan of "Drill Here,
Drill Now." That's
...continue reading
-
8/24-25/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
CSPAN will be
covering the Convention LIVE from “Gavel to
Gavel”
C-SPAN offers gavel to gavel coverage of the U.S. House of
Representatives. C-SPAN also offers a variety of public affairs programming
including congressional hearings, press briefings from the White House, State
Department and Pentagon, campaign and election coverage, and international
programming.
Roll
Call
Udall Urges Democrats to Stick to
Center
With the Democratic National Convention having kicked off
in earnest Monday afternoon, Rep. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) cautioned that the
four-day Denver event could cause problems for Democrats running in the Mountain
West region if the messaging veers too far left of center. Udall, who is running for Senate, lumped himself in that
category during an interview last week and said that presumptive Democratic
presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) might also suffer
...continue reading
-
Trauner Press Conference: American Energy for the American People
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Gary Trauner, candidate for U.S.
House of Representatives, will hold a press conference tomorrow to unveil and
discuss his energy proposal and you are invited!
It is an innovative new policy
proposal….and you can be the first to hear the
details.
American Energy for
the American People
Tuesday, August 26th
9:30 AM at the Ghost
Town gas station at 6680 W. Yellowstone Highway in
Casper
and
3:00 PM at the
Trauner HQ at 211 W. 18th Street in Cheyenne
For further information
contact
Adam Ruff at 307.699.4956
or adam@traunerforcongress.com
...continue reading
-
08/23/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
***Just in case you missed it, you can read Obama’s
Prepared Text
Sheridan
Press
*** Fulfilling
Democratic duties: Sheridan resident a superdelegate at
convention
“Sheridan resident and Wyoming
Democratic Party Vice Chair Nancy Drummond leaves today for Denver to fulfill
her duties as a superdelegate to the Democratic National Convention, which
starts Monday…Drummond’s husband, Bruce, is Sheridan County committeeman for the
Democratic Party and will accompany her to the convention. Sheridan County
Democratic Chairwoman Janet Maxwell will also go with Drummond to
Denver. Drummond is in her sixth year as Wyoming Democratic Party Vice
Chair — her third term — and said this will be her last term. ‘When I first
got involved, people didn’t whine as much, and that whining really starts
to wear on you,” Drummond said.’”
Casper
...continue reading
-
08/21-22/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Politico
Lummis
wins GOP primary in Wyoming
“…Lummis heads into the general
election against Democratic businessman Gary Trauner as the favorite to succeed
retiring Rep. Barbara Cubin (R-Wyo.). But Democrats believe they have an outside
chance at winning in this heavily Republican state, though without the
controversial Cubin on the ballot, it will be a tough challenge.”
The
Hill
State
treasurer wins GOP nod in Wyoming
“…Lummis defeated rancher and
businessman Mark Gordon 46-37, while 2006 candidate and former Navy officer Bill
Winney took 12 percent. She will now face 2006 Democratic nominee Gary
Trauner, who fell to retiring Rep. Barbara Cubin (R-Wyo.) by 1,000 votes and was
set to face her again before she retired.”
Roll Call
Lummis Declared Winner in
Wyoming Primary
“It might be a perilous
environment for
...continue reading
-
2008 Democratic Convention Speech Archive
Sep 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Monday, August 25: One Nation
Click here
to read the text of speeches delivered on
Monday
Tuesday, August 26: Renewing America's Promise
Click here
to read the text of speeches delivered on
Tuesday
Wednesday, August 27: Securing America's Future
Click
here to read the text of speeches delivered on
Wednesday
Thursday, August 28: Change You Can Believe
In Click
here to read the text of speeches delivered on Thursday
...continue reading
-
Democratic National Convention, Day Two
Aug 27, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
Where to begin in summarizing Tuesday's Democratic National Convention
experience for your Wyoming delegation? How about at the very end, with Sen.
Hillary Clinton's amazing speech to top off the night? Sen. Clinton is a
fabulous orator on a normal day, but I've never seen her in this rare of form.
She laid it on the line, in no uncertain terms: If you supported Clinton's
candidacy and what it stood for - be that its historical ramifications or
its policy significance - if you care about the things that Hillary was fighting
for, then you must vote for Barack Obama this November. Our nation
will be much better off in every imaginable way under an Obama Administration
than it would with McCain as president.
Arbitrary note: The "Hillary" signs that were passed around the
convention hall were, in this blogger's opinion, the coolest signs we have seen
so far in the convention. Check
out this photo . It's a little hard to see the Hillary signs in all their
...continue reading
-
Democratic National Convention, Day One
Aug 26, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Actually, I'm writing this at the beginning of Day Two. As a special bonus
part of the whirlwind of activity known as the Democratic National Convention,
your tireless executive director has the dubious honor of being the designated
Credentials Collection Agent for the Wyoming Democratic Party. This means I have
to be in our hotel lobby between 4:45 a.m. and 5:15 a.m. every day to meet the
nice folks from the DNC who deliver the credentials for our state delegation for
that day. To their credit, both mornings the DNC folks have been here at 4:45
a.m. sharp, which leaves me with some down time I can use to appreciate the
value of a full night's sleep - as a concept, but certainly not as a
reality.
Truth is, it's hard to go to sleep at bedtime when you've just spent six
hours at the Pepsi Center for the first National Convention of your life. My
personal highlight of the night was when Ted Kennedy took the stage in an
unscheduled appearance. I mean, he wasn't on the evening's agenda,
...continue reading
-
08/20/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 20, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
For Compete State and Federal Primary Election
Results:
http://soswy.state.wy.us/Elections/ElectionResults.aspx
Casper
Star-Tribune
Lummis
wins GOP primary
“Former State Treasurer Cynthia
Lummis won Tuesday's Republican primary for Wyoming's lone seat in the U.S.
House. Unofficial results show Lummis defeating Johnson County businessman
and rancher Mark Gordon 46 to 38 percent, with 99 percent of precincts
reporting…A recent ad by the Gordon campaign depicted Lummis as a little girl
digging herself into a hole in a sandbox, implying Lummis would support policies
that would worsen the nation's problems. An ad by the Lummis campaign depicted
Gordon's head pasted on a cartoonish body and mentioned Gordon's past
contributions to Democratic candidates, including John Kerry. Both
candidates criticized the opposition for distorting the facts. Campaign
finance figures through July 30
...continue reading
-
08/19/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 19, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
EDITORIAL: Primary voter turnout: Wyo can do better
“…Two years ago, the lack of
contested Democratic races was singled out as the main reason for the lack of
voter interest in the primary. The same complaint could be registered this year.
Gary Trauner is unopposed for the party's U.S. House nomination, and the two
Democratic contests to oppose Republican U.S. Sens. Mike Enzi and John Barrasso
haven't generated much excitement. Some Wyoming Democrats may be tempted
to switch parties, so they can help the GOP choose Trauner's opponent. It's
difficult to determine how such a move might affect the Republican primary,
because there's no general consensus about who would be a tougher foe for
Trauner in the general election. Because of the interest in the GOP's
four-way U.S. House race and the hard-fought campaign between front-runners Mark
Gordon and Cynthia Lummis, independents who wish to
...continue reading
-
08/16-18/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 19, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Wyoming
briefs
“Plans for ethanol plant
stall….”
Farmers
feel impact of increasing costs
POWELL (AP) -- Wyoming farmers are
receiving higher prices for their products this year, but it also cost them more
to produce them.
Governor
to ask for backup howitzer for Sylvan Pass
“Gov. Dave Freudenthal said he
will ask the Legislature for money to buy a backup howitzer to use for avalanche
control on Sylvan Pass.”
Candidates
differ on government involvement in economy
“To help the economy, the
government should develop a comprehensive energy policy, increase regulations
for the mortgage industry and get its spending under control, said Nick Carter,
Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate.”
COLUMN: Change and the elections
“…Between February and August, the
total number of registered
...continue reading
-
PRESS ENDORSEMENTS UPDATE for 08/15/08
Aug 19, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
EDITORIAL: Dems
should choose Rothfuss
University of
Wyoming instructor Chris Rothfuss may be a political newcomer, but he's our
clear choice to win his first election. His opponent is Torrington house
and sign painter Al Hamburg, a perennial candidate whose presence on the ballot
is difficult to take seriously, even though his main issue, what he calls "the
stupid, wasteful war in Iraq," is a vital one. But Rothfuss also wants to safely
withdraw our troops. Rothfuss, who has a doctorate in chemical
engineering, brings a lot to the table. He says he wants to bring a scientist's
perspective to the energy issue. He has called for a balanced, long-term
energy policy that includes coal, oil, natural gas, wind, solar, geothermal and
nuclear power. Rothfuss wants to double the domestic coal production -- which
would obviously benefit Wyoming -- and liquefy that additional amount, to reduce
our dependence on
...continue reading
-
08/15/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 19, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
USA
Today
Military
donations favor Obama “U.S. soldiers have donated more
presidential campaign money to Democrat Barack Obama than to Republican John
McCain, a reversal of previous campaigns in which military donations tended to
favor GOP White House hopefuls, a nonpartisan group reported Thursday.
Troops serving abroad have given nearly six times as much money to Obama's
presidential campaign as they have to McCain's, the Center for Responsive
Politics said. The results also are striking because they favored
Obama, who never has served in the military. McCain meanwhile, is a decorated
war veteran who spent nearly five years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. The
Arizona senator graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and had a 22-year career
as a naval aviator Obama has opposed the war in Iraq and says he would withdraw
combat troops within 16 months. McCain has been a steadfast supporter of the
war, saying he would withdraw the troops
...continue reading
-
08/14/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 14, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Wyo
drivers drive less, highway tax revenue holds
steady
“Many Wyoming drivers are heading
in the same direction as those elsewhere in the nation by not going
anywhere….”
BLM
sets grouse protection zone
“The greater sage grouse will
receive special protection from oil and gas development on about a million acres
in the Powder River Basin under an interim management plan announced Wednesday
by the Bureau of Land Management….”
Injecting new life into old
wells
“In a sandy meadow just south of
Riverton, Devon Energy Corp. is finishing construction on a $100 million carbon
dioxide pipeline and injection facility, which company officials say will revive
an aging oil field and help the environment at the same
time….”
Forest
Service mulls roadless ruling
“The U.S. Forest Service said
Wednesday it's
...continue reading
-
08/13/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 14, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Candidates focus on alternative
energy
“Alternative sources of energy and
conservation efforts will play a large role in reducing fuel prices and fixing
the current energy crisis, two Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate said in
separate interviews. One of candidate Nick
Carter's major campaign issues is creating a comprehensive energy plan that
would set a goal of becoming independent from the Middle East for energy in 15
to 20 years….Goodenough's solutions include not using military force as a first
option, working toward a balanced budget and reducing the demand for oil in the
United States. Neither of the candidates see drilling in the Wyoming
Range, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska, or other "pristine places" as
a viable option in the near future…. ”
*** Estimates
of heating costs this coming winter
“The Wyoming Public Service
Commission says natural gas
...continue reading
-
08/12/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 14, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Obama supporters to get VP announcement via
text Be the first to know! Sign up to receive an e-mail or
a text message the moment he announces his decision.
You can text VP to 62262 to receive a text message
on your mobile phone. Or go to the link above and sign up to receive an e-mail
alert.
Casper
Star-Tribune
EDITORIAL:
House hopefuls: Focus on vision for Wyoming by the
Star-Tribune Editorial Board
“Wyoming's
Republican U.S. House primary is in danger of deteriorating into a "he said, she
said" debate about candidates' records. With only a week to go before the Aug.
19 election, we urge both Mark Gordon and Cynthia Lummis to refocus their
efforts on how they each plan to serve Wyoming if they win their party's
nomination and the general election….But we'd like to remind both candidates
that it's their party's nomination they're seeking, and Republicans already have
their work
...continue reading
-
08/11/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 12, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper Star-Tribune
Sweetwater
commissioner dies Sweetwater County Commissioner Joe Oldfield died
Thursday after a sudden illness. County spokesman Garry McLean said
Oldfield died at 2:30 p.m. McLean said at this time they did not know the cause
of death other than noting the sudden illness. Oldfield served as a
commissioner for five years and seven months. The county commission has
three members.
Columnist A
popular job -- in most counties
One of the three Democratic
candidates is Dale Groutage of Lander. Groutage, you may recall, was a
Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2006, but lost the general election
to the late Republican U.S. Sen. Craig Thomas. The other Democratic
candidates are Daniel Cardenas of St. Stephens and Ernie Over of Pavilion. Over
is a former newspaper editor and broadcaster.
Gordon,
Lummis probe past records
Republican U.S. House
...continue reading
-
08/08/08 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 12, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
***ACTION ALERT***
It is August Break, so US Senators Enzi and
Barrasso will be all over the news.
Our candidates need to be all over the streets
knocking doors to combat the excessive press.
I would urge you to volunteer to walk with your
candidates every day.
Never let them knock doors alone.
Cultivate and assign volunteers to go with our
candidates EVERY day.
Consistent support, moral and otherwise, on the
campaign trail will equal victory in November!
For August 8, 2008
Casper Star-Tribune
Enzi
stresses energy, health care in Casper visit
“Energy, health care and
education are the three areas U.S. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., would concentrate on
if elected to another term in November.”
*** Wyoming
is growing younger
And young people
are our voters!
...continue reading
-
The passing of our dear friend Joe Oldfield
Aug 12, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
We begin this day with
very sad news about the untimely death of our dear friend Joe Oldfield,
Sweetwater County Commissioner. As you know, Joe had a zest for life
following the “work hard, play hard” adage. He was an avid skier, an
educator who served with distinction and his passion public service improved the
lives of everyone he touched. He prepared young people to meet the world’s
challenges, he made certain that the aged live comfortable and secure lives, and
he addressed all the challenges life laid before him and his family with grace
and grit. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family, friends and the
citizens of Sweetwater County.
Details about Joe’s
funeral will be forthcoming and I will keep you informed.
...continue reading
-
08/07/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 12, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
WyoFile.com
'Purple' States
Get VIP Seats At DNC
30,000 seats at Obama's acceptance
speech at the DNC are for Coloradans, and 30,000 are open to other critical
battleground state residents.
E -mail: commcredentials@demconvention.com
or call: (720) 362-2500 to apply
for tickets.
Casper
Star-Tribune
Newcomer challenges incumbent on property taxes
“Political newcomer Al Snell is challenging longtime state senator
John Schiffer in the Republican primary for District 22 on the issue of rising
property taxes. Snell favors a property value assessment system based on
the most recent purchase price. Schiffer calls that the "California"
system of assessing property values, and maintains that he and other legislators
have provided relief for elder and lower-income homeowners in recent
years. The relief includes a
...continue reading
-
08/06/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 12, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
I am still trying to identify people to sign
Letters-to-the-Editor as we enter the general election.
Two people have responded thus far, but we need many more from
every county to step forward.
Can I count on your help to volunteer or identify
volunteers?
The news is filled with coverage on Monday’s Primary Debate,
Wyoming schools’ poor showing on the No Child Left Behind test, conservation,
health and energy issues.
As you read these articles and go through your day think about
the top issues on people’s minds:
·
job and financial security now through retirement,
·
access to affordable health care,
·
a sound education for our children, and
·
...continue reading
-
WDP was given NO (ZERO) Tickets to this event.
Aug 7, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
To apply for tickets:
Call: (720) 362-2500
or E-mail: commcredentials@demconvention.com
and write WYOMING in Subject
line.
L eave the following
information:
Name
Telephone number (including area
code)
E-mail
address
State where you
reside
How you plan to get to
Denver
If and where you plan to stay during
the Convention
http://www.demconvention.com/invesco
...continue reading
-
08/05/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 5, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Feds
set wind farm public meetings
The Bureau of Land Management's
Rawlins field office has scheduled four public meetings as part of its analysis
of the proposed Chokecherry and Sierra Madre wind energy project in Carbon
County.
Group
agrees on combo enrollment process
A group of Natrona County
teachers, principals and administrative staff members will recommend a
combination of centralized and decentralized enrollment processes for the
district.
City may approve program for transportation
improvements
The city council may approve a
Transportation Improvement Program for 2009 through 2012 in its meeting tonight.
The program outlines future projects for roads, highways, public transportation
and pedestrian traffic. Many of the projects will be funded through local
governments, as well as money from the Federal Highway Administration and
Federal
...continue reading
-
08/04/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 4, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
1 comment
Login and comment
Letters to the Editor supporting Republican candidates have been
surfacing all across the state. We need to be prepared to support our
candidates in the news and other creative ways as well once the Democratic
Primaries are complete.
ACTION ITEM: I am looking for volunteers, so please
get in touch if you are ready and willing to author a LTE in the very near
future!
Don’t forget to watch the Debates TONIGHT! Wyoming Public
Television, Wyoming Public Radio and the Wyoming Business Report are
cosponsoring the three consecutive debates scheduled to begin Monday evening,
August 4, at 7:00 p.m. in the Little Theater on the campus of Central Wyoming
Community College in Riverton. The debates will be broadcast live on Wyoming
Public Television and Wyoming Public Radio and will be streamed on the Internet
via www.WyomingPublicRadio.net .
ACTION ITEM: Be alert for
...continue reading
-
08/02-03/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 3, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Letters to the Editor supporting
Republican candidates have been surfacing all across the state. We need to
be prepared to support our candidates in the news and other creative ways as
well once the Democratic Primaries are complete.
ACTION ITEM: I am looking for volunteers, so
please get in touch if you are ready and willing to author a LTE in the very
near future!
Don’t forget to watch the Primary Debates
MONDAY, August 4th at 7 pm
Wyoming Public Television, Wyoming Public Radio and the Wyoming
Business Report are cosponsoring the three consecutive debates scheduled to
begin Monday evening, August 4, at 7:00 p.m. in the Little Theater on the campus
of Central Wyoming Community College in Riverton. The debates will be broadcast
live on Wyoming Public Television and Wyoming Public Radio and will be streamed
on the Internet via www.WyomingPublicRadio.net .
...continue reading
-
08/01/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Aug 1, 2008
Posted by Lauri Elbing
Login and comment
Casper
Star-Tribune
Editorial: Divert mineral revenue to help fund
highways
A legislative proposal to create a
new funding source for multi-lane highway construction in Wyoming should win
approval. The Joint Transportation, Highways and Military Affairs Interim
Committee has decided to sponsor a bill that would earmark a portion of
severance tax revenue to widen and expand some of Wyoming's busiest
highways.
Letter to the
Editor: Campaign efforts bespeak
leadership
“I've read a few letters in these
pages recently supporting Keith Goodenough and bashing Nick Carter for
supposedly not being a "real" Democrat….It is time for the people who have been
writing in to get real. Let's stop worrying about who is a real Democrat or a
real Republican and focus on who is a real candidate.”
Mental
injury bill moves forward
Legislation aimed at extending
coverage
...continue reading
-
07/31/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party Daily News Roundup
Casper
Star-Tribune
Billionaires bank on Wyo
wind
Wyoming's future role in wind
energy became a lot less speculative this week with the announcement that The
Anschutz Corp. plans to take over the TransWest Express Transmission
Project.
Pro Lummis LTE:
Candidate shows fiscal
responsibility
Pro Obama (response to McCain supporter spin)
LTE: Campaign hardens stubborn
viewpoints
Wyoming Public Radio
Enzi And Barrasso Will Keep Stevens Donations
WASHINGTON D-C (2008-07-30)
Wyoming's two senators, John Barrasso and Mike Enzi, are holding on to campaign
cash donated by indicted Republican Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska. Stevens'
political action committee has donated $6,000 to Barrasso since he was nominated
to the Senate in June 2007 and $10,000 to Enzi since 2001. Both
...continue reading
-
07/30/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party News Roundup
I f there is anything interesting,
controversial or relevant happening that the media is not reporting on, please
drop me a note ASAP. Thank you!
For July 30,
2008
Casper
Star-Tribune
Electrical
utility seeks rate hike
CHEYENNE -- The state's largest
electrical utility is asking for permission to boost its rates by about 7
percent, an increase company officials say is needed to cover the cost of
Wyoming's growing demand for power.
Council
chooses new members
A former state legislator and a
Casper Star-Tribune community news assistant will be the two new members of the
Casper City Council.
Government announces quarterly
borrowing
WASHINGTON -- The Bush
administration gave details Wednesday on how it plans to borrow the billions of
dollars it will need to cope with the soaring budget deficits. Those
...continue reading
-
07/29/2008 Wyoming Democratic Party News Roundup
Jul 29, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
For Tuesday, July 29,
2008
Casper
Star-Tribune
Two
Dems vie to challenge GOP incumbent
LARAMIE -- Two candidates who are
longtime residents of rural Albany County, and who have been unsuccessful in
previous runs for public office, are vying in the Aug. 19 primary election for
the Democratic nomination to represent south Laramie and south and west Albany
County in the state House.
Council
considers candidates to fill seats
A radio announcer, Presbyterian
pastor and a former state legislator are among seven Casperites vying to fill
two vacated Casper City Council positions.
Editorial : State does right with safety net for
vets
The Legislature and the governor
deserve credit for the effort. As Sen. Mike Massie, D-Laramie, put it: "It
didn't make sense to me that the wealthiest state in the country could not jump
in
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 24, 2008
Mar 24, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
4 comments
Login and comment
Back in the saddle again! And big
news while I was gone: Chris Rothfuss, who has a doctorate in chemical
engineering, announced his intention to run for the U.S. Senate seat now held by
Mike Enzi:
UW instructor launches Senate campaign against
Enzi
NOTE: Chris is an “instructor,”
but not a “professor,” at UW. This distinction probably doesn’t mean much to
most of us, but it’s important to those in the academic world. This will all be
moot in eight months, when the appropriate term will become
“Senator-elect.”
America's chief health educator
will make his first appearance in Wyoming this week, in Riverton, said first
lady Nancy Freudenthal:
Acting Surgeon General Steven Galson plans Wyoming
visit
Wyoming's justice system is
gradually becoming more accessible online. In February, the Wyoming Supreme
Court began offering its case schedule to the public on its Web site, said Judy
Pacheco, clerk of the
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 18, 2008
Mar 18, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Spring calls, and I listen. As
such, I’m taking a road trip over the next five days with my lovely wife to see
where the birds go for the winter and to see where the defending National League
champion Colorado Rockies go for spring training. Sadly, this means that there
will be no more news roundups until next Monday. In the meantime, here’s what’s
cookin’ for today.
Starting with John “100 years
war” McCain, whose um, “interesting” election strategy is to continue down the
Bush Administration’s path of one of this nation’s worst foreign policy debacles
(justified by 935 false statements ). Lame-duck Rep. Barbara Cubin
hits the campaign trail, begging Republicans to support the GOP
nominee-apparent, according to this Associated Press piece:
Cubin urges Republicans to support McCain
I can’t remember if I had this
one in yesterday’s news roundup or not. As Gov. Freudenthal puts it, “Be it my
old libertarian or populist bones, I
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 17, 2008
Mar 17, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The Gillette News-Record leads
off the news roundup today with this excellent piece on a wounded Marine’s
struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder as he tries to return to a “normal”
life in Gillette:
Slipping through the cracks
The Casper Star-Tribune is
examining our state’s workers’ compensation system in a series of stories this
week. Here are a few:
Do
injured workers get enough? What’s a leg worth?
‘They
turn their backs on us’ (a worker’s story)
Nowhere
to turn A smack in the head with a pair of tongs compressed rig worker
Richard Johnson's spine.
‘I’m blackballed’ (a worker’s story)
‘They
starve you out’ (a worker’s story)
Workers’
comp fraud difficult to measure
Evolution
of workers’ compensation in Wyoming (timeline)
In other news, Wyoming
Conservation Voters Director Jason Marsden writes on WyoFile.com
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 14, 2008
Mar 17, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Not too terribly much in the news
today. Maybe all the papers are saving their really good stuff for the weekend.
Or maybe it’s been a slow news week, after all the excitement of LAST week.
The U.S. Senate has passed an
amendment that would encourage – but NOT require – Congress to preserve states'
share of oil and gas royalties:
Senate
passes amendment to ENCOURAGE preserving Wyo’s share of royalties
Gov. Dave Freudenthal said
construction could start as soon as this summer on a coal research plant the
University of Wyoming is developing with General Electric:
Gov:
Coal plant work could begin in 2008
Declaring that Wyoming residents
have a right to defend their homes, Gov. Dave Freudenthal signed a bill Thursday
that spells out in statute that citizens may use deadly force on intruders:
Governor
signs ‘castle doctrine’ bill
The state of Wyoming took another
step Thursday in
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 13, 2008
Mar 17, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
After his first tour of duty in
Iraq in 2003, local soldier David Julian joined other veterans and servicemen in
dedicating a new Fallen Comrade monument in downtown Evanston. Sadly, now his
name will be added to the memorial statue:
Evanston
soldier dies in Iraq
The Jackson hole News & Guide
has this piece on Republican U.S. House hopeful Mark Gordon’s first campaign
stop in Jackson Hole on Sunday and Monday:
Gordon stops in
valley to campaign for House
The Laramie Boomerang reports
that three of Laramie’s state lawmakers attended a luncheon Wednesday to discuss
the progress that was made during the biennium budget session that ended last
week:
Legislative
session less contentious
Gov. Dave Freudenthal signed into
law Wednesday a measure that will allow counties to regulate large-acre land
developments -- but he said the law may not do enough to protect land
buyers:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 12, 2008
Mar 12, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
As exciting as our county
caucuses were last Saturday, unfortunately some people did not get to
participate because they were either not registered as Democrats by the Feb. 22
deadline or they arrived at their caucus sites late. We did our best to inform
people of these rules, and our friends in the media did an honorable job of
helping spread the word. The Casper Star-Tribune chimes in:
Voters have a duty to understand rules
The state's seasonally adjusted
unemployment rate fell to its lowest level in nearly three decades at 2.7
percent, according to figures released Tuesday by the Wyoming Department of
Employment, Research and Planning Section. It was the second lowest rate in the
nation, trailing only South Dakota at 2.6 percent, and at its lowest point since
June 1979 when Wyoming's unemployment rate stood at 2.6 percent:
Wyo jobless rate hits lowest point since ‘79
Wyoming's water is not currently
tested for the
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 11, 2008
Mar 12, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Frankly, it takes a great state
like Wyoming to command the attention of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. The
Comedy Central news parody program offers this report on our caucuses and an
accompanying analysis piece by Samantha Bee, complete with cute Cowboy State
graphics and other jokes. Warning: Enjoying these videos will require a healthy
sense of self-depreciating humor at times, but it’s still a lot of fun:
Wyoming 2008
Wyoming analysis
Now on to the real news, like
this Casper Star-Tribune wrap-up of the “stunning turnout” at our presidential
preference caucuses. “This was the biggest thing Wyoming has seen for years,”
said Natrona County Clerk Renea Vitto, a Republican. “That’s all people are
talking about.”:
Dems bask in caucus glow
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle reports
that our state shouldn’t feel bad that the presidential campaigns have left us
in their rearview mirrors while they move on to
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 10, 2008
Mar 10, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The moment we’ve all been waiting
for! And Wyoming Democrats turned out IN FORCE. We had more than 8,700 people
participate in our county caucuses on Saturday, for a record 15 percent turnout
of registered Democrats. By comparison, in the last presidential race four years
ago, 675 people voted across the state for a turnout of just over 1 percent. Oh,
and Sen. Obama won the day. Here’s the Associated Press story that appeared in
most of the nation’s papers:
Obama
defeats Clinton in Wyoming caucuses
Here are some on-site caucus
reports from:
Cheyenne: Barack
on (Wyoming Tribune-Eagle)
Laramie (two stories): Albany knows
who it likes (Laramie Boomerang); Sweet
dreams (Casper Star-Tribune)
Jackson: Obama
wins Wyoming behind avalanche from Teton County (JH Underground)
Green River: Clinton
wins big in Sweetwater County (Casper Star-Tribune)
Sheridan: Local Dems turn
out
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 8, 2008
Mar 10, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Too much fantastic news today not
to spread the word. Hope you don’t mind if I stick only to the campaign trail,
but really, that’s the theme of the day. First off, of course, is that our
party’s two magnificent candidates for president spent Friday traveling across
the state, talking to Wyoming Democrats and asking for their support in today’s
votes:
Obama, Clinton rustle up support in Wyoming (CNN)
Clinton
seeks Equality State backing for first woman president (Casper
Star-Tribune)
Obama
defends his readiness to lead (Casper Star-Tribune)
Clinton:
Wyoming has place in ‘clean’ energy future (Casper Star-Tribune)
Obama
endorses clean coal (Casper Star-Tribune)
Big
crowd greets Obama in Laramie (Casper Star-Tribune)
Hillary
cheers Casper crowd (Casper Star-Tribune)
Clinton stops in Cheyenne (Wyoming Tribune-Eagle)
Obama: ‘We’ll
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 6, 2008
Mar 9, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Yes, folks, the whole world
really is watching. I know this, because today, I fielded calls from Japan’s
largest daily newspaper, a French national news service, and a gentleman who
identifies himself as a “Spanish correspondent,” whose native language was
certainly not English. Every 24-hour news channel, all major television and
radio networks, and several of the nation’s most respected newspapers have all
been in touch in the past couple of days, along with, of course, the wonderful
Wyoming media. This level of activity on the Communications Desk has had the
effect of delaying your daily news roundup to this ridiculous hour, so with
apologies in tow and with no further adieu, here you go …
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL
Guess who’s coming to town!
Clinton,
Obama to visit
Clintons,
Obama to visit Wyoming
The Equality State is suddenly
ground zero in the hottest race for the Democratic Party presidential
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 5, 2008
Mar 5, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
Seriously, I never imagined when
I took this job that we would see the day when the two front-runners for the
Democratic presidential nomination would hold events in Wyoming on the eve of
our county caucuses. Not to mention the fact that one of them will almost
certainly be president a year from now. And as an added bonus, the greatest
president of the 21 st Century (so far) would be touring the state to
join in the fun. Breaking today from the Casper Star-Tribune:
Hillary Clinton to visit Casper
Barack Obama sets Casper, Laramie visits
Campaign
sets Wyo schedule for Bill Clinton
This is what it’s all about!
Although I’ve got to admit, it’s been all I can do to keep up with the volume of
phone calls today from nearly every national media outlet you can think of, and
of course our brave reporters in this state and region. For the most part,
they’re all interested in covering our county caucuses/conventions this
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 4, 2008
Mar 5, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Clearly, today is an important
day in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, with primaries in
Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont. CNN.com has this piece:
Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont hold contests
Tuesday
Casper Star-Tribune State Editor
Chad Baldwin reports that what happens today in Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and
Vermont could determine how much national attention our county
caucuses/conventions on Saturday will command, according to observers:
Wyo
Dems watch votes today
The Jackson paper reports that
Democrat Jim Roscoe, a Teton and Sublette county contractor, plans to run for
the House District 22 seat now held by Republican Monte Olsen:
Roscoe eyes state
House bid
FROM THE LEGISLATURE
Carbon
sequestration bill heads to governor (Gillette News-Record)
Gov.
Freudenthal signs dogfighting bill (Wyoming
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, March 3, 2008
Mar 4, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Let me be the first to tell you
–
since none of Wyoming’s print media seemed too keen on reporting – that
Saturday
night’s Nellie Tayloe Ross banquet will go down as one of the most successful
Wyoming Democratic Party functions in recent history, if not longer, by several
measures. Attendance at the dinner topped 200 people. My good friend Jason
Marsden (director of Wyoming Conservation Voters) told me he has been going to
the state party’s dinners since he was a teenager, and Saturday’s NTR banquet
marked the most people he has ever seen at such an event.
Our magnificent lineup of
speakers included the youngest woman in Congress, the first female lieutenant
governor in New Mexico history, the governors of Iowa and Wyoming, our state’s
brilliant first lady (Remember: “Jobs, health care, education and Wyoming’s
unique quality of life!”), and hopeful future Democratic members of
Congress.
We honored former Wyoming
Department of Employment
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 29, 2008
Feb 29, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Happy Leap Day! Since this is,
after all, a bonus day (there’s only supposed to be 365 days in a year, right?),
I’ll start off with a fairly important story I missed yesterday, because the
Casper Star-Tribune placed it on its “city” page.
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL
Democrat Keith Goodenough, a
Casper City Council member and former state legislator, is seeking his party's
nomination to run against Republican U.S. Sen. John Barrasso in the November
general election:
Goodenough
bids for U.S. Senate
Meanwhile, the race for the
presidential nomination continues to make headlines in Wyoming (while Gov.
Freudenthal expresses fondness for his friends but not for any specific
presidential candidate over another):
Dem hopefuls step up efforts
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle reports
that “It's been many years since we've seen a Wyoming Democratic caucus that was
this exciting:”
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 28, 2008
Feb 28, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
First up today: Another
WyoFile.com article on voter registration shows that we’re up more than 2,000
voters since Jan. 10. Viva Wyoming’s Democratic county caucuses and
conventions!
Dems, Libs gain voters; GOP drops
FROM THE LEGISLATURE …
Subdivisions
bill survives first House vote (Casper Star-Tribune)
Panel
backs gun confiscation bill (Casper Star-Tribune)
Slimmed-down
library endowment bill advances (Casper Star-Tribune)
Panel
backs stiffer DUI penalties (Casper Star-Tribune)
Parties
debate need for bill that cuts services to illegal immigrants (Casper
Star-Tribune)
‘Castle
doctrine’ bill heads to Senate (Wyoming Public Radio)
Senate
works on campaign finance bill (Wyoming Public Radio)
Carbon
storage bill stays afloat (Wyoming Public Radio)
IN OTHER NEWS …
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 27, 2008
Feb 28, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
FROM THE LEGISLATURE …
State senators working on CO2 storage bill (Wyoming
Public Radio)
Supporters expect heavier opposition to business fraud
bill (Casper Star-Tribune) The bill comes up Thursday before the
House Corporations Committee.
Bill
targets gang activity (Casper Star-Tribune)
Juvenile justice bill heads to Wyoming House (Wyoming
Public Radio)
Dogfighting
bill clears Senate panel (Casper Star-Tribune)
Legislative briefs (Casper Star-Tribune) Issues include
driver’s license fee increases and veteran tax exemptions
Bill
to recruit doctors passes House (Torrington Telegram)
Lawmakers scrutinize Douglas school expansion (Douglas
Budget)
IN OTHER NEWS …
Wyoming Public Radio reports that
the coal industry is doing some public relations work in reaction to the
industry’s coming under fire because of climate
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 26, 2008
Feb 28, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL …
WyoFile.com has this look at the
Clinton campaign’s announcement earlier today that it will have grand openings
Wednesday at campaign offices in Wyoming’s two largest cities:
Clinton to open
Cheyenne, Casper campaign offices
FROM THE LEGISLATURE …
Just the mention of new
regulations on private property can cause a stir in the Wyoming
Legislature:
Land reg bill advances
A health care reform bill moving
through the Legislature was created without the help of a state board charged
with addressing the cost, quality and accessibility of health care for Wyoming
citizens:
Group questions health care bill
The House passed a bill Monday
that would prohibit illegal immigrants in Wyoming from receiving state services
such as welfare, public housing and organ-transplant assistance:
House
OKs limits on services for
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 25, 2008
Feb 25, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
ON THE CAMPAIGN
TRAIL
Leading off today is this
Associated Press report on the Clinton campaign’s arrival in
Wyoming:
Clinton
to open two campaign offices in Wyoming (Corrected
link!)
Wyoming Public Radio, meanwhile,
reports on Obama staffers’ caucus training in Laramie:
Obama campaign explains caucus process to young
Dems
Beyond that, and because I just
can’t tear myself away from my journalistic roots, I am pleased to offer my own
report on some encouraging voter registration figures. I got this information
from the Secretary of State’s Office on Jan. 10, and I collected updated figures
Friday afternoon, Feb. 22, about an hour before the official deadline to
register to participate in our March 8 county caucuses/conventions. In that Jan.
10 to Feb. 22 time span:
Democratic registrations are up
1,711 voters.
Republican registrations are up
12 voters.
Libertarian
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 22, 2008
Feb 23, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL
What a wild, wild, wild, wild
week! This morning, I strolled down to the Laramie County Clerk’s Office with
Brodie Farquhar, managing editor of WyoFile.com , who is researching a story on new voter
registrations. Just because (*wink*). Laramie County Clerk Debbye Lathrop
counted all of the new Democratic Party registrations FROM THIS MORNING ALONE,
and we were approaching 80, and that’s just in under three hours. The numbers
are astonishing really. About 400 in Albany County this week. Another 368 in
Natrona County. Between 250 and 300 in Teton County. When you consider that
these are all the NEW people, to say nothing of those who were already
registered as Democrats from the last election, you can begin to get a picture
of what kind of turnout we could see at our March 8 county caucuses/conventions.
For more, here’s Brodie’s story:
County clerks report new registration activity
FROM THE
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 21, 2008
Feb 21, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL:
The Casper Star-Tribune has this
front-page story package on our county caucuses/conventions:
‘Once in a lifetime:’ Wyo Dems could make a
difference
Some superdelegates wait to commit
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle also
has a piece on our March 8 statewide spectacular:
Hordes of Democrats expected at caucus
The Buffalo Bulletin – yes folks,
the Buffalo Bulletin is online now! – has a piece on an upcoming event for a
presidential campaign and some details on our March 8 caucuses/conventions:
Obama rep coming to Buffalo today
And the Jackson Hole News &
Guide has this preview of a campaign event in that area:
Obama supports to rally in Teton village
FROM THE LEGISLATURE:
Self-defense bill stripped of amendments (Wyoming
Public Radio)
Lawmakers
debate
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 20, 2008
Feb 20, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I’m terribly sorry about getting
this out so late today, but every day keeps getting busier than the last as we
approach our county caucuses. And really, it’s another feather in my hat every
time some random guy calls me up and asks me what he needs to do to change his
registration from Republican to Democrat, because he registered as a Republican
last year to vote against Barbara Cubin in the primary, but now he wants to vote
in the March 8 caucus (true story). If someone had told me when I took this job
that my biggest problem would be that TOO MANY people would be eager to get
involved with Democratic Party politics in Wyoming, I would have jumped for joy.
In fact, I’d do that right now if I didn’t have to get you all a news summary,
so let’s get to it.
(By the way, don’t miss the total lunar eclipse tonight . I heard kick-off time
is 6:43 p.m. … so hurry!)
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL:
The Gillette News-Record has this
report on an Obama
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 19, 2008
Feb 19, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL:
This piece reminds everyone that
“robocalls” are prohibited in Wyoming, and it looks at their recent history
while mentioning that the Obama campaign also announced some legislative
endorsements yesterday:
State gets Obama calls complaint
This Jackson Hole News &
Guide reports on a local phenomenon that is actually taking place in many
counties across Wyoming – Democratic county parties are securing larger sites
for the March 8 county caucuses/conventions, in light of the record turnout
Democratic caucuses and primaries have seen all over the country in this wild
campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination:
Teton County Democrats choose bigger convention
site
Shifting gears a bit, the Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle has this piece on a former state legislators looking to return to
the State Capitol Building:
Pederson announces state House bid
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 18, 2008
Feb 19, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The Los Angeles Times leads us
off today with a story on superdelegates that features, among others, the
Wyoming Democratic Party chairman. The item sent in by alert reader John from
Cheyenne:
Who
are these Democratic superdelegates?
The state party has been able to
piggy-back on some of the coverage of the presidential race to broadcast our
very important Feb. 22 deadline for people to register as Democrats to
participate in the March 8 county caucuses. Here is a piece from the Laramie
Boomerang:
Democrats
open local Obama office
From what I understand, the
Clinton campaign will be bringing some people to Wyoming as well. I’ll send you
anything I find on that.
And one more purely political
story, from the Cody Enterprise, which reports that Mike Enzi still isn’t ready
to tell us if he’s running for re-election:
Enzi mum about third term
FROM THE LEGISLATURE:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 15, 2008
Feb 15, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
FIRST UP, PRESIDENTIAL
SELECTION:
The Jackson Hole News & Guide
examines the role of the Wyoming Democratic Party’s national committeeman, who
will be a superdelegate to our national convention and thus could
single-handedly determine the fate of the free world (and I’m only mostly
kidding about that):
Rep. Jorgensen part of super group
And tip-of-the-hat to Park County
Chair Margaret Whited, who forwarded me this recent story from the Powell
Tribune on our March 8 caucuses:
County Democratic caucus coming up
FROM THE LEGISLATURE:
Big news breaking this morning
from the Cheyenne paper:
Committee kills governor’s property tax relief proposal for
seniors
Wyoming Public Radio has a piece
on the complicated world of natural gas taxation:
Natural gas tax structure considered
Some Wyoming legislators want to
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 14, 2008
Feb 15, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I’d like to kick off today’s news
roundup with a look at a couple new online media offerings. The first one is
called WyoFile, which can be found at www.wyofile.com . A self-described “non-profit, public
service journalism enterprise, focused on politics and public policy issues in
Wyoming, for Wyoming citizens and news media,” WyoFile employs a handful of
insightful columnists and offers some different viewpoints than we usually find
in the traditional media. For today, I’ll just refer you to the WyoFile main page ,
and starting tomorrow I’ll add WyoFile to the list of sources I scan to compile
the news roundup.
The other one is a Casper
Star-Tribune legislative blog written by Jared Miller , the fine
reporter who now has my former job covering politics and state government for
the Casper daily. If you, like me, appreciate stories that are sometimes a
little off the beaten path and written in a more conversational tone than what
you will find in the
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 13, 2008
Feb 13, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Two Wyoming newspapers fully
cover the Legislature: the Casper Star-Tribune and the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle.
Unfortunately, the Tribune-Eagle posts three stories a day on its Website,
and they’re not always fit for this politics-and-policy news roundup. And worse,
today the Casper
Star-Tribune’s legislative Website has only one new story posted this
morning, and the defeat of the proposed community college tax:
House
rejects tax increases
I talked to the Star-Tribune’s
editor this morning about this, and he said he will try to get it fixed. So if
you’re really hungry for legislative news, and you don’t have a hard copy of the
Casper or Cheyenne papers, it might be worth checking back with the
Star-Tribune’s legislative Website later today.
So what do we do? Wyoming Public
Radio to the rescue! Here are the legislative stories posted by News Director
Bob Beck’s crew:
Property
tax relief bills killed, then
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 12, 2008
Feb 12, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Good luck finding the Casper
Star-Tribune’s legislative Website . I had to use the link I sent you
yesterday (also highlighted in the previous sentence), because the legislative
page is not otherwise displayed or advertised on the paper’s main news pages.
Still, the news roundup today will begin with a healthy dose of legislative
coverage from the Casper paper and elsewhere; other politics and policy news
will follow.
First up, a story on bill
introductions (the main item of business conducted on Day One). The two
highest-profile bills are strongly supported by the governor. One would give the
state Department of Environmental Quality authority over carbon injection and
sequestration, and the other would give surface owners rights to any subsurface
space that could be used for carbon injection:
Carbon bills win introduction
This Wyoming Public Radio piece
mentions a few bills that failed introductory votes:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 11, 2008
Feb 11, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Welcome to Day One of the 2008
Wyoming Legislature! Either late today or early tomorrow, I hope to post a blog
entry on the state party Website with a more in-depth look at the Legislature.
I’ll let you know when that’s up. For now, first up is this Associated Press
article on Gov. Freudenthal’s State of the State Address to legislators this
morning:
Freudenthal emphasizes strength of state’s
position
The Casper Star-Tribune has
created a Web page devoted to legislative coverage. For time’s sake, I won’t
list all of the stories on it today, but they have several articles from their
Sunday legislative preview on that site for your perusal. Here’s the link to
their legislative news page:
Wyoming State
Legislature 2008
The paper also offers this
editorial advice for state lawmakers:
Some helpful dos and don’ts for our legislature
In addition, here is a story on
health care bills
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 8, 2008
Feb 8, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
First up, for those of you who
haven’t seen it, here is a press release I sent out this morning on our county
caucuses:
Democrats release info on March 8 county caucuses
Here’s a look at the usefulness
Wyoming’s Republicans got out of their caucus, in which no one voted for McCain,
their apparent eventual nominee, and the people they did vote for – Mitt Romney,
Fred Thompson and Duncan Hunter – are all now out of the race:
Wyo GOP’s favorite, Romney, bows out
By the way, the Casper
Star-Tribune today also ran a short piece called “Wyo Dems expect attention” on
page A5, in which a reporter interviewed yours truly, but for some reason they
didn’t bother to make that story available online (just as they did with their
Jan. 4 story on our organizing efforts). Check it out if you come across a copy
of today’s Casper Star.
Not to be confused with the
presidential preference caucus, our Democratic
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 7, 2008
Feb 7, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Props to Democrats in Sheridan,
Albany, Laramie and Teton counties for holding public events on Super Tuesday,
and to anyone else who watched the returns that night with fellow Democrats. The
Sheridan Press did a nice front-page write-up of the event in my hometown, sent
in by alert county party Secretary Liz Howell, which I will use to lead off the
news roundup:
Sheridan County Dems hold Super Tuesday event
These kinds of events help us
stay energized. Front-page write-ups in the local paper send the message to
everyone in the area that local Democrats are active and excited, and they help
us to recruit activists – both Democrats who see that the party is vibrant and
independents who are finding out where the real action is.
Now on to other news. The
Gillette News-Record examines fuel tax proposals state lawmakers will address in
the upcoming budget session, which begins next week:
Gillette legislators differ on fuel
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 6, 2008
Feb 6, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
How about those elections
yesterday! Most observers believe that neither Clinton nor Obama gained an upper
hand. If this race stays close, or gets even closer over the rest of the month
as one analyst says it will , the Wyoming Democratic
caucuses on March 8 could attract more national attention than we could have
realistically imagined just a couple months ago. Stay tuned.
Now on to other news. A federal
plan to keep a bigger share of federal mineral royalties is designed to recoup
costs for paperwork and manpower required for collection and distribution of the
money, a federal Minerals Management Service spokesman says. Gov. Dave
Freudenthal, meanwhile, says the change is “an absolute crime”:
Governor again slams royalty cut
Another story on the FMR
split:
Bush plan cuts split for states
The Gillette News-Record has this
follow-up piece on a recent visit to California by several state leaders,
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 5, 2008
Feb 5, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Honestly, I’m giddy today to see
what happens with all the primaries nationwide. I’ll start today with the
following excellent analysis piece for those of you who (like me) really enjoy
tracking the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. I can justify this
by noting that there is a reference to our state, which, while technically
“tiny,” more importantly, may “actually matter” in this exciting election
year:
Is Obama’s mo’ enough?
Wouldn’t it be ironic if Wyoming
Democrats were to attract more national attention by playing by the rules and
holding our convention in March than our GOP counterparts received by breaking
their national party rules and sacrificing half their delegates just to get
attention?
Speaking of our friends across
the proverbial aisle, Wyoming Public Radio reports on the GOP delegates who
backed Fred Thompson or Duncan Hunter, both of whom have dropped out of the
race:
Wyoming Republican
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 4, 2008
Feb 5, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Campbell County Democratic State
Committeeman Nick Carter, a Gillette attorney, talks to the Casper Star-Tribune
about his exploration of running a U.S. Senate campaign for the seat now held by
John Barrasso. Meanwhile, former Wyoming House Speaker Randall Luthi ducks out
of the U.S. House race:
Democrat ponders Senate race
Gary Trauner has more than
$350,000 on hand to run for Wyoming’s open U.S. House seat, while most of the
Republicans in the race have just begun to ramp up their fundraising. Most of
his donations came from individuals. This news, along with the recent poll
showing him ahead of the Republican front-runner, demonstrates that his message
is connecting with people, who just might be ready to elect someone who will
think for himself and represent all of us instead of always doing the bidding of
special interests:
Trauner gets head start
Here’s the Jackson paper’s story
on Trauner:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Feb. 1, 2008
Feb 1, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
We’re leading off with a national
political story today, but only because it mentions Wyoming in the very best
sentence of the article, which I’ll repeat here in case you’re too busy to read
the whole thing: “As if it could get any worse (for the Republican Party), a
recent poll showed Democrat Gary Trauner, a second-time candidate, leading a
Republican who had been elected to statewide office by one point in normally
ruby-red Wyoming .” More here:
House Republicans face late exodus
U.S. Senators moved forward
Thursday with two bills promoting the capture and storage of carbon dioxide
emissions from coal-fired plants, but sharply questioned the administration's
commitment to developing such technologies:
Senators press carbon projects
Some legislators want to make
sure authorities won’t try to confiscate our weaponry in the event of a
disaster:
Bill targets seizure of guns
Two
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 31, 2008
Feb 1, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The Hill newspaper in Washington,
D.C., reports that Sen. Mike Enzi’s low fundraising numbers and the Senate GOP
leadership’s repeated snubs of his bid for a coveted seat on the powerful
Finance Committee have fueled speculation that the senator may leave Congress,
although some Republicans say he is raising just enough money to run a
race:
Enzi keeps GOP guessing about November
Another day, another Republican
running for U.S. House. This one’s name is Mark Gordon:
Buffalo rancher bids for house
The Laramie Boomerang makes a
foray into covering presidential politics by sending a reporter to Denver to
cover Barack Obama’s rally there:
Obama: Hope, unity and change
Gov. Freudenthal opposes a plan
sponsored by the Joint Education Committee to impose a statewide property tax to
fund community colleges, saying rising home values are already making property
taxes quite difficult for some
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 30, 2008
Jan 30, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Our “ representative ” in the U.S. House made a rare
appearance at work yesterday to cast a vote, this one against the bipartisan
plan to rescue the nation’s economy. Why? Because it helps poor people too
much . Gosh, we’re lucky to have her for the whole rest of the year. (It’s
the third story in this string of briefs):
Cubin votes against stimulus package
Here’s a look at the legislative
proposal to make it a felony to harbor or transport illegal immigrants, with
reports from a couple other states, including Oklahoma, where critics say a
similar law has terrorized Hispanics there and driven thousands of people --
documented and undocumented workers alike -- from the state:
Bill backers say Wyoming could become haven
The Casper Star-Tribune’s poll du
jour shows that 76 percent of Wyomingites think severe cases of animal cruelty,
including dogfighting, should be classified as felonies:
Poll:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 29, 2008
Jan 30, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Gov. Freudenthal leads us off
today with his op/ed piece on property tax relief for seniors. He takes issue
with the Joint Revenue Committee’s refusal to consider helping out elderly
people whose property taxes have in some cases doubled this decade, while the
panel also refused to subject helium to the same taxes as other minerals.
“The net effect of those two
decisions: Exxon avoids an estimated $3 million a year in taxes, and folks over
65 receive no meaningful property tax relief as a result of the committee's
decision to punt on both of the bills,” the governor writes. “I am taken aback
by the irony inherent in the committee's decision. … A break for Exxon and no
real break for Wyoming's seniors leaves me wondering whether the members of the
Revenue Committee shouldn't take another look at their action - or
inaction.”
Here is the full piece:
$3 million for Exxon, but what relief for Grandma?
The Casper paper
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 28, 2008
Jan 29, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The weekend's big news, of
course, was a new Casper Star-Tribune poll which says that, in a head-to-head matchup, Gary Trauner would get 41 percent of the vote,
while GOP front-runner Cynthia Lummis gets 40 percent. This is big news, because
there has been a false perception out there that a generic Republican would fare
better against Trauner than the unpopular Barbara Cubin did. Now we know that
Trauner does better against the current Republican front-runner! Or at least
statistically tied. Either way, this is surprising news to some, and it should
dispel the outlandish fantasy some partisan Republicans had about winning this
race solely due to party affiliation. Here is the link:
Trauner leads Lummis 41 to 40 percent in latest
poll
Really though, the Casper Star
confuses me. First of all, I understand that they polled Trauner against at
least a couple other candidates – and he polled better against them than against
Lummis – but that part was
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 25, 2008
Jan 25, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Don’t miss Sunday’s Casper
Star-Tribune. That’s all I’ll say. As for today’s news …
Our senior U.S. senator gets
passed over for a coveted finance committee seat by a guy
who has NO CHANCE of winning reelection . As his spokesman put it,
“Sen. Enzi is angry”:
Enzi doesn’t get finance seat
More on the new proposed federal
wolf management rule:
Feds loosen wolf rules
Groups object to wolf rule
Who says they never get anything
done in Washington? After 136 years, it looks like they’re on the verge of
amending the 1872 hardrock mining law:
Too much?
Ranchers operating around the
Bighorn National Forest say ongoing drought, tougher environmental oversight,
disputed monitoring techniques and growing legal challenges are making it
increasingly difficult to effectively use their federal grazing allotments:
Ranchers say they’re being
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 24, 2008
Jan 24, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Breaking this morning from the
Associated Press, details about the new proposed federal wolf management
rule:
States offered more latitude to kill wolves
The Green River Star tells us how
Rock Springs and Green River work to cope with massive growth:
Cities deal with growing pains
The Jackson paper reports that
the real estate business is thriving in Teton County:
Real estate tops $1.5 billion
Converse County is moving from a
three-member county commission to a five-member board:
’08 election to increase number on county
commission
The Gillette News-Record tells us
that, while coalbed methane production is still rising, indicators are that it
may level off or decline soon:
Methane production up
Two Casper Star-Tribune pieces on
the impacts – or lack of – of the national economic situation on us here in
Wyoming:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 23, 2008
Jan 24, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Monday was Martin Luther King Jr.
Day (or “Equality Day” in Wyoming), and here’s an AP piece on the annual march
in Cheyenne:
‘A dream deferred’
Gov. Dave Freudenthal has
recommended to the JAC that Wyoming spend the first round of money it stands to
receive from the federal Abandoned Mine Lands program on research into clean
coal technology and to build a road to a planned coal plant in Carbon
County:
Gov
presents AML proposal
In case there was still anyone
out there who thought this administration gave the slightest hoot about the
environment, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports otherwise:
Opposition reacts to losing forest planners
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle reports
that a state economist says that new employment figures suggest that a major
downturn in Wyoming's economy remains unlikely even as investors nationwide
remain nervous about the possibility of a recession:
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 16, 2008
Jan 16, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Just a heads up – I will be on
vacation tomorrow through Monday, so I don’t anticipate writing any news reports
during that time. I put in a requisition for an assistant about two-and-a-half
years ago (the day I started this job), so I’m hopeful that any minute now, we
can ramp this up to a full-time, round-the-clock service. Meanwhile …
Unexpected news from the
Associated Press: Rep. Barbara Cubin has returned to work after just about only
four months off. In that time, she has taken in over $50,000 in salary, and
Wyoming has had no voice in the people’s house:
Cubin casts first vote since October
However, the Washington Post’s
“congressional votes” database keeps records for the two-year term of each
congress, rather than the calendar year, securing Cubin’s notoriety as the
living member of the 110 th Congress with the worst voting record for
some time to come:
Congress votes database – vote missers
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 15, 2008
Jan 15, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Wyoming's average daily spot
price of $7.13 per thousand cubic feet at the Cheyenne Hub on Monday was just $1
behind the Henry Hub in Louisiana, which the industry uses as a market
barometer. A dramatic comparison could be made by listing low points of the
daily spot price of below $1 per thousand cubic feet for Wyoming gas -- even as
low as 10 cents -- recorded on some days in 2007, which represented a deficit of
$5 and more behind the national average at the time:
Natural gas prices recover
Rockies Express Pipeline
represents a lifeline for Wyoming's natural gas industry, which provides about
one-third of state government revenue:
Big pipeline gives Wyo a boost
In federal and state courtrooms
across the country, environmental groups are putting coal-fueled power plants on
trial in a bid to slow the industry's biggest construction boom in decades. At
least four dozen coal plants, including two in Wyoming, are being
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 14, 2008
Jan 14, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Twenty stories from today and the
weekend! Although at least half are from the Casper paper. Beginning with …
Gov. Freudenthal hosted the
"Building the Wyoming We Want conference, but he wants the participants to take
the lead in planning for the state's future:
Governor seeks bottom-up growth debate
Wyoming Public radio has these
two reports on the conference:
Zoning gets attention at governor’s conference on
growth
State geologist warns of greater energy demand
And these two come from the
Gillette News-Record:
Think regionally of strategies on impacts
Gillette used as an example of how to do things
right
Barbara Cubin apparently doesn’t
see any reason to let five hundred thousand people know whether they get
representation in Congress this year:
Cubin stays mum on her status
The Casper
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 11, 2008
Jan 11, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Nearly 500 decision-makers,
stakeholders and other interested people gathered in Casper yesterday for Gov.
Freudenthal’s “Building the Wyoming We Want” conference, intended to examine the
challenges and opportunities Wyoming faces in this current era of relatively
fast growth. The conference concluded this morning at Casper College. The Casper
Star-Tribune offered these reports:
Wyoming charts growth
Development conference addresses resource issues
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle has
this take:
Governor to create structure for furthering conversation about
growth
I did not see this coming:
Mike Enzi is claiming credit for part of Hillary Clinton’s health care
plan :
Enzi likes health care focus
Yet he is not yet ready to
outright endorse her for president:
Senators wait on presidential picks
The Tribune-Eagle tells us some
senators are
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 10, 2008
Jan 10, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Lotsa news today! To begin, Gov.
Freudenthal wants to generate ideas to answer this question: “ How do we continue to enjoy a thriving economy and still keep in
mind the kind of Wyoming we want our children and grandchildren to enjoy?” To
suggest some answers, the governor’s office is sponsoring the “Building the
Wyoming We Want” conference today and Friday at Casper College's Gertrude
Krampert Theatre. Topics will include roads, subdivisions, development patterns,
open spaces and wildlife, water, sewers and septic systems, and the increasing
costs for local governments:
Conference charts growth
‘Building the Wyoming We Want’ agenda
Meanwhile, the governor is among
three undecideds in this Associated Press story on where your five Wyoming
Democratic Party superdelegates stand on the 2008 presidential race (the other
two back Obama):
‘It’s too early’
The Jackson Hole paper reports
that action is
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 9, 2008
Jan 9, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
First up is this exciting news
from Rep. George Bagby, D-Rawlins, who reports that James Elliott Jr., a
Democrat from Saratoga, has been selected as the newest Carbon County
commissioner . Congratulations to Commissioner Elliott, and thanks to Rep.
Bagby!
Next, we have this piece from the
Jackson Hole News & Guide, which demonstrated to all the people of Teton
County just how out of touch their local Republican leaders are (I’ve included
the entire piece below, because it’s just two sentences):
GOP goals
Abolish the federal income and estate taxes, deport illegal immigrants
who are stopped by police, dissolve the Teton County Housing Authority, and
begin planning for another bridge over the Snake River to the west bank. Teton
County Republicans voted for these and other positions Saturday as they set
their platform for the upcoming election cycle.
The Casper Star-Tribune reports
that, by generally finding the
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 8, 2008
Jan 8, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Honestly, I don’t know all the
ins and outs of the GOP caucuses, but some people are clearly displeased with
the way it went down:
Some question Romney ‘victory’
Power to the people – that is,
only in situations that can be described as “ The people vs. {defendant’s name
here} ”:
Bill: Give prosecutors more power
The Wyoming Water Development
Commission plans to take public comments Wednesday in Casper on possible sites
for a dam on the Upper Green River:
Upper Green Dam gets another look
National Public Radio reports
that the governor is pleased with the changes the BLM has made to its
development plans for the Pinedale Anticline:
Freudenthal happy with BLM’s Pinedale plan
Public Radio also has a look at
the federal law that allows Wyoming residents to deduct the money they spend on
sales tax:
Wyoming worries about sales tax break
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 7, 2008
Jan 8, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The state GOP’s presidential
caucuses took place on Saturday, and the main issue seems to be whether the
Republicans’ controversial decision to break their own national party’s rules
and sacrifice half their delegates to their national convention was worth it. By
and large, most media outlets answered that question with a resounding “no.” The
Casper Star-Tribune notes that our state got virtually no national attention for
its early caucus, and no candidates bothered to come here and woo the Wyoming
delegates (well, not at least since superstar Duncan Hunter stopped by the first
week of December):
Is
anyone watching?
The Gillette News-Record,
however, apparently got this headline straight from Republican Party
headquarters (which I find odd, because as a former journalist, I’ve long
considered the News-Record to be among the top-quality papers in the
state):
Candidates’
visits a clear sign it worked
I’ve got to tell you,
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 4, 2008
Jan 4, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Something is wrong with the
Casper Star-Tribune’s Website today, and I can’t link to the THREE stories they
have on Wyoming politics, INCLUDING a nice story on the impressive Wyoming
Democratic Party organization and our upcoming house parties. So I scanned the
story on the Democrats. Check it out:
Democrats plan house parties, organize brilliantly
The Laramie Daily Boomerang
reports that state-shared revenue, loss of revenue from the food tax exemption
and a potential seventh-cent tax were at the forefront of Laramie’s lawmakers’
minds Thursday.
Lawmakers plan ahead for 2008
Here is the Gillette
News-Record’s look at Saturday’s GOP caucus. Apparently, there will be 14
Wyoming Republicans who would have been able to attend the national convention
if their state party played by the rules. I wonder if any of our esteemed media
outlets want to interview one of those people? Maybe we can find someone
to write that
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 3, 2008
Jan 3, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Sorry so late today! It’s been
nuts. Phone ringin’ off the hook, and a surprising amount of good news today. A
presidential candidate here (OK, it was his ballot access person), a newspaper
reporter there, a new inspiring candidate from way up there, etc. Anyway, let’s
start off the news roundup with the newest declared U.S. House candidate, the
lady famous for telling other Republican Party insiders that Gov. Freudenthal is
no gentleman:
Lummis makes it official
The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle,
meanwhile, takes a look at who’s running for what in Laramie County:
Who’s thrown their hat in the ring?
Wyoming Public Radio has this
analysis of the Wyoming GOP’s master plan (that guy from Law & Order has
virtually nothing on his schedule, but even he can’t make it out here):
Wyo gets little attention despite early caucus
The Gillette News-Record reports
that Pine Haven’s embattled mayor
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Jan. 2, 2008
Jan 2, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Happy New Year! This year, the
Casper Star-Tribune greeted us with a couple stories on the upcoming U.S. Senate
elections. This story notes that no one from either party has yet thrown
a hat into the ring to challenge John Barrasso or Mike Enzi:
Where are the races?
This companion piece examines the
history of Wyomingites who have been appointed to the U.S. Senate, as Barrasso
was last June:
Only one Senate appointee won election
The Laramie Boomerang reports on
an upcoming meeting of local officials and legislators to talk about the year
ahead:
Council, legislators to discuss 2008
Here are the Casper Star’s
endorsements in the presidential primaries. Notice how this right-wing newspaper
devotes about three times as much space to its favorites in the Republican
Party:
Romney, Obama should get party nominations
Wyoming Public Radio has some
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 31, 2007
Jan 2, 2008
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
First up is this important story
from the Casper Star-Tribune, which reports that the new Democratic Congress
has been quite productive . The Democratic-controlled 110 th
Congress was more active than its predecessor looking at the amount of time in
session, committee meetings, oversight of the executive branch, votes and
measures passed. "In terms of new laws enacted, it compares favorably with the
104 th Republican Congress which took office following the 1994
elections," said congressional expert Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution,
a Washington think tank. "The latter failed to enact all but one provision of
the 'Contract With America' during its first year. By contrast, most of the
items on the Democratic new direction agenda found their way into law ."
(Emphasis added):
‘It
looked worse than it was’
It’s that time of year: The
Wyoming Tribune-Eagle announces its top 10 stories of the year:
10
biggest newsmakers of
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 28, 2007
Dec 28, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Top story today (or tonight, as
the case may be) comes from the Riverton Ranger, whose interview with Fremont
County Chair Linda Barton provided the meat for this story (and might I add that
Linda did a wonderful job with the interview!):
State
Democrats prepare for 2008 presidential caucuses
The Casper Star-Tribune has a
follow-up story on Wyoming’s 2007 population boom (we grew by 2 percent, or
about 10,000 people):
Will Wyo keep growing?
Meanwhile, CNN.com looks at the
state’s population issue this way:
Why the West is booming
The Casper paper also has a story
on the Dec. 31 deadline for changing Medicare plan options. Apparently, most
people enrolled in Wyoming can save money by making changes:
Medicare enrollment deadline nears
The Laramie Boomerang reminds us
of a new law that will take effect Jan. 1. Fun Bill Luckett trivia fact: When I
was
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 27, 2007
Dec 27, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Let’s hear it for the Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle, for Cheyenne’s daily paper is featuring an Associated Press story
on the presidential race today. The Iowa caucuses take place Jan. 3, and less
than five weeks after that is Super Duper Tuesday, Feb. 5, when more than half
the delegates will be selected:
It’s getting confusing
The ninth-largest state in the
country (in area) was the ninth-fastest-growing state in the country in 2007
(this info came from my hardcopy of the Casper paper, which for some reason
included a sentence that I don’t see in this online version):
Wyoming population climbs
Wyoming Public Radio has this
related story that says the number of jobs in the minerals industry decreased
last month for the first time in four and a half years, but unemployment remains
below 3 percent and the number of jobs overall is up:
Mining-related jobs decline
The Jackson Hole News &
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 26, 2007
Dec 27, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Today we’ll begin with Gary
Trauner’s campaign for U.S. House, and two notable blog entries on the topic. I
want to call your attention to this first one, because the blog, hummingbirdminds , is written by
Wyoming’s own Michael Shay, an activist from Laramie County. Here’s his take on
the latest Trauner news:
Act
blue! Contribute to Trauner!
I told you a few days back that
the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee recently named Wyoming’s U.S.
House race as one of the most competitive in the country. Here is an article
posted Sunday on Daily Kos – the world’s most widely read politics blog – about
that development:
DCCC
goes on offensive, embraces netroots candidates
After that, the news is running a
little thin, which is par for the course for this time of year. However, there
are some fireworks in far northeast Wyoming. The Gillette News-Record tells us
that many residents of one of Wyoming’s fastest growing
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 21, 2007
Dec 21, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Not much at all today. To start,
the Sierra Club and the Powder River Basin Resource Council want a court review
of the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality's handling of an air quality
permit for the proposed Two Elk coal-fired power plant in southern Campbell
County. The groups have asked a district court judge to review of an
administrative decision by the Environmental Quality Council, which governs the
DEQ. They claim the agency reversed its own determination that the air quality
permit was invalidated for lack of meeting construction requirements and other
actions required to maintain the permit:
Groups challenge plant permit
Wyoming Public Radio reports that
the BLM in proposing allocating 2 million acres of public land in Wyoming,
Colorado and Utah for potential commercial oil shale
development:
BLM moves forward with oil shale plan
Public Radio also has this story
on the Pew Charitable Trusts’
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 20, 2007
Dec 20, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Some good stuff today! Roll Call,
the newspaper that covers Congress, reports that Gary Trauner’s race for
Wyoming’s U.S. House seat is on the short list for those across the country that
Democrats plan to win in November:
DCCC targets 40 GOP seats
Gov. Freudenthal just released
this opinion piece on the upcoming “Building the Wyoming We Want” conference,
scheduled for Jan. 10 and 11 at Casper College:
Building the Wyoming we want
The Cody Enterprise has more
evidence that the Wyoming Republican Party did the right thing in sacrificing
some of its delegates to its national convention by breaking its own party’s
rules and holding its presidential caucuses early. Hugh Cort – yes, THE Hugh
Cort, of Mountain Brook, Alabama – will be in Greybull for the Big Horn County
Republican caucus tonight:
He’s no Rudy or Mitt (or Obama or Clinton or Edwards or
Richardson, for that matter)
The
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 19, 2007
Dec 19, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Not too much today. First up is a
new story today in the Casper Star-Tribune on Chairman Millin’s recent letter to
the Denver Post:
Dem leader ruffles feathers
Sens. Enzi and Barrasso sound off
on the energy bill:
Senators don’t like energy bill
Mattoon, Ill., has been picked as
the location for the FutureGen power plant that will burn coal without emitting
greenhouse gases. This is the site Wyoming favored after a site in our own state
was knocked off the list:
Wyo’s favorite site wins plant
The Gillette News-Record has this
story about Wyoming being among a handful of states that have “critical gaps” in
its influenza pandemic preparedness:
Some states not stocking up on pandemic medicines
The Jackson Hole News & Guide
reports that 17 well pads proposed for the Hoback Rim
would put miles of new roads in one of the Bridger-Teton’s largest
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 18, 2007
Dec 19, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Casper-area lawmakers
sound off on the possibility of a statewide smoking ban:
Split opinion on statewide move
As the Casper Star-Tribune points
out, if state spending has increased too sharply for some people’s tastes, they
have only the Republican Party – which has controlled the Legislature for
decades – to thank:
Hey big spenders, stay away from Legislature
Wyoming Public Radio reports that
Rep. Colin Simpson, R-Cody, wants the state to have a database of everyone’s
prescriptions:
Simpson wants new database
WYDOT has determined that the
only way Wyoming could get intrastate air service is if the government were to
step in, according to the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle:
Wyoming air travel explored
Meanwhile, passenger boardings
are slightly down at Yellowstone Regional Airport, as reported by the Powell
Tribune:
Airport
numbers
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 17, 2007
Dec 17, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Here you can see that the Wyoming
Republican Party’s strategy to break its national party’s rules and hold an
early primary has reaped rewards – stacks of glossy messages from Ron Paul:
GOP activists get more attention
The Gillette News-Record has this
report on Campbell County Republican caucuses, held Saturday:
County GOP readies ideas for change
Has anyone else noticed that the
Casper Star-Tribune waited until Barbara Cubin announced her retirement before
the paper dared to complain that Cubin has completely refused to answer to the
people of Wyoming in any way, all year, while she continues to take a salary
that pays five times as much as the average Wyomingite and pretends to be
functioning as our representative in Congress?
How can we cover silence?
Here’s a news story on that very
issue that the paper published on Saturday:
Cubin misses more votes
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 14, 2007
Dec 16, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
A letter from Chairman Millin has
generated a story in today’s Denver Post which will hit the Wyoming media today.
The story can be found here (please give it a look):
Wyo Dem
chief: Clinton would hurt party
And a slightly different version,
with excerpts of an interview with John, can be found here:
Wyoming Democratic Party chairman says Clinton effect in the West
“a dirty little secret”
Please note that the
opinions expressed by Chairman Millin in the Denver Post article are his
personal opinions only, and they do not reflect any official
position of the Wyoming Democratic Party. The party remains neutral in all
Democratic primary elections, and the party will enthusiastically support our
presidential nominee. Every one of our party’s major candidates for president
would make a better president for this country than any one running on the
Republican side. As a state party chairman and
...continue reading
-
Daily news roundup, Dec. 13, 2007
Dec 13, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Here is a look at some of the
major Wyoming politics and government news from the state’s media and other
sources today:
First up, Gov. Freudenthal
announces that he will be joining us for the Democratic National Convention in
Denver next August, according to the Associated Press. We at the state party
remain very excited that the convention will be in Denver, and we’re delighted
that the governor will be there:
Gov relents on Dem convention
This next one is a delight:
apparently, some people in Kaycee, Wright and Midwest want to form a new county!
Let’s hope this doesn’t lead to another Johnson County War . The Casper Star-Tribune has the
details:
Seeking secession
In Congress, John Barrasso didn’t
get getting anywhere with a driver’s license bill aimed at illegal
immigrants:
Barrasso floats driver’s license bill, without
success
Meanwhile, Mike
...continue reading
-
Trauner-Cubin news updates
Oct 17, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
As promised, I have several links at the bottom of this post to different
stories on Gary Trauner's entry into the 2008 U.S. House race. Suffice it to say
people are excited. But first, here's
an encouraging story on Gary's fundraising report for third quarter
2007, which gives him a nearly 20-to-1 cash-on-hand advantage over the incumbent
($165,411 for Gary, compared to Cubin's $8,651, according to the FEC).
Here are some links to stories across Wyoming and the nation on Gary's
announcement that he is running for U.S. House:
Casper Star-Tribune: Trauner
tries again for House
Wyoming Tribune-Eagle: Trauner
retries Congress run
Jackson Hole News and Guide: Trauner to seek
House
New West: Trauner
announces bid for Wyoming's at-large House seat
Congressional Quarterly: Deja
vu contest for Wyoming House seat
The news is also splashed throughout the blogosphere. Let's make sure Gary
wins this time !
...continue reading
-
Gary Trauner's running for U.S. House!
Oct 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
It's official: Gary Trauner is the first Democrat to announce his
candidacy for U.S. House. Here's
a same-day story on his announcement - an announcement, by the way, which
has attracted nationwide attention. Among the national media that have contacted
state party headquarters today are Congressional Quarterly ( here's
the story ) and Roll Call. Meanwhile, at Gary and Sue Berchenbriter's house
in Casper today, all the major Casper-area news outlets were on hand, and
several others from across the state joined us by teleconference.
There's no doubt about it: Gary's candidacy for next year's race is already
drumming up a lot of excitement. I'll post some more links tomorrow when more of
the media across Wyoming and the nation have their reports available onine.
Meanwhile, it's never too early to help get Gary's
campaign started off on the right foot by contributing to his campaign . Or,
you can visit his Website at www.traunerforcongress.com . Let's
make sure that this
...continue reading
-
Gary Trauner plans exciting announcement
Oct 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Today, Gary
Trauner plans to make an exciting announcement about the 2008 elections.
Stay tuned for an update this afternoon after Gary tells us his plans for the
coming year. I have a feeling that this time, things are going to work out like
we hope.
-
Paper gives two good reasons to dump Cubin
Oct 11, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Two must-read pieces this week in the Casper Star-Tribune almost
perfectly capture the essence of why we need to get rid of Barbara Cubin.
The first piece, an editorial called "Cubin
should help override Bush veto," reveals a picture of a representative who
votes with the extremist fringe of her party, while the good people of Wyoming
suffer. The SCHIP program would provide health insurance for more
low-income children across the state. When faced with a choice of what is
best for Wyoming, and what the far right wing leadership of the Republican Party
tells her to do, Cubin ALWAYS caters to the far right. Never mind that she
didn't vote on the bill; the editorial explains that she has expressed support
for Bush's veto.
About that missed vote, the paper also ran a news article, "Cubin
misses nearly half of votes," which tells us that Cubin now had the poorest
attendance record of every living member of Congress. She is our state's only
representative in the
...continue reading
-
Gov warns: State revenue picture not as rosy as usual
Sep 21, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
For pretty much this entire decade, state leaders have enjoyed revenues that
significantly surpassed expectations. But Gov.
Freudenthal says that won't be the case this year . Quoth the governor: "I
don't believe that anyone should be expecting the kind of revenue in excess of
projections, or what people call a surplus, this year," he said. "It's going to
be a good, solid budget. But the kind of revenues over projections that we've
become accustomed to, it's not going to be there."
The story points out that the state had roughly a $1.13 billion surplus
heading into the 2006 budget session, a $1.5 billion surplus in 2004 and a $727
million surplus in 2002, according to Steve Sommers, budget and fiscal manager
for the state Legislative Service Office.
There are at least a couple reasons why this is important to people who
follow state government. First, obviously, is that if the governor's prediction
is right, we won't be spoiled like we have in recent years. There might not be
...continue reading
-
Good times in Sheridan
Aug 22, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I traveled up to Sheridan last weekend to join area Democrats to celebrate
the 150th of former Wyoming Gov. and U.S. Sen. John Kendrick. Despite
the rain and wind, about 50 Democrats from Sheridan County and neighboring
counties made it to the event, which is no small feat for a mid-August
event during a non-election year.
The dynamic duo of state party Chairman John Millin and freshman Rep. Lori
Millin made the trip up from Cheyenne and inspired the crowd with their insights
into legislative elections. Rep. Lori shared the tale of how she went from
citizen activist to legislative candidate running against an incumbent to newly
elected state representative in the span of less than a year. We only need to
win four seats in the state House for the Democrats to be able to sustain any
veto by Gov. Freudenthal, she said, and we can achieve that goal in 2008 if we
find enough good people to run.
Chairman John struck a similar chord in his speech. He noted that our
...continue reading
-
Another Democrat is born!
Aug 1, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I just got the word that Laramie County Democratic Party Chairman Mike Bell
and his wife Amy are the proud parents of a newborn baby boy! Details
forthcoming, but meanwhile, congratulations to Mike and Amy on the birth of
their son.
*UPDATE*
Wyoming welcomes Jonathan Thayer Bell, who entered the world on Aug. 1
weighing in at 8-plus pounds and measuring 21 inches.
Quipped the new father: "We're building the Democratic Party one baby at a
time!"
-
Point, counterpoint
Aug 1, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I'm a bit late with this post, but in case you missed it, I put together this
op/ed column for the Casper Star-Tribune on Saturday, July 21, in response
to the paper's disturbingly
misinformed editorial that had run Wednesday, July 18. The column I wrote
represents the valuable input of a few party officials and staffers,
and considering that it was half written by committee, I think it provides an
excellent counter-point to the fish-wrap journalism from earlier in the week. It
is a snapshot of some of our party's most high-profile leaders, some (but not
all) of our most important issues, and other reasons why Western voters have
increasingly supported our party in recent years. Your thoughts?
-
Media takes notice of our grassroots efforts
Jul 16, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Our chairman's and executive director's efforts to reach into every corner of
the state have garnered notice in the state's largest newspaper. Click
here for the Casper Star-Tribune's profile on the Wyoming Democratic Party ,
where we're at and where we're headed. The story by Jared Miller takes a look at
Chairman John Millin's 23-county plan, describes some of the party's
fund-raising successes, and explores the possibility of a Democratic majority in
Wyoming down the road.
That story, which ran on page A1 of the Sunday paper, was accompanied by this
sidebar by Noelle Straub examining the rejuvenation of Democrats in the West
through groups such as Democrats for the West, Project New West, Western
Majority Project and WesternDemocrat.com. These groups are indicative of the
momentum swing Western voters have given our party, evidenced by Democratic
gains in recent elections and the DNC holding its 2008 National Convention in
Denver.
It is an exciting time to be a Democrat in
...continue reading
-
Congratulations to new state Rep. Mary Hales!!!
Jul 9, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Congratulations to Mary Hales, Wyoming's newest state representative! The
Natrona County Commission has appointed Mary to fill the vacancy in state House
District 36 left by the resignation last month of Liz Gentile of
Evansville.
Mary has served the Wyoming Democratic Party as state party secretary for a
number of years, and she is a long-time local real estate agent. Now, the people
of Evansville and parts of east Casper will be able to enjoy the benefits of
Mary's service as we in the state party have for some time.
I also want to congratulate the other two finalists for the position -
Gretchen Wheeler and Penney Miller, who both showed over the course of the
selection process that they, too, would make fine legislators. Let's hope the
two of them will stay involved in politics and public affairs, as it is
clear that they both have a lot to offer.
Now, Mary can look forward to half-year's worth of committee
meetings and becoming acquainted with the
...continue reading
-
Natrona County Commission to pick HD 36 rep today
Jul 9, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The Natrona County commissioners plan to meet today at 1 p.m. to interview the
three finalists to fill the House District 36 vacancy left by the recent
resignation of Liz Gentile of Evansville. The meeting, which will be in room 115
in the Natrona County Courthouse, will be open to the public. By the end of the
day, we should know who are new representative is going to be (or, at the very
least, we should know WHEN we will know). We'll keep you up-to-date as
information becomes available.
-
Wheeler, Miller, Hales finalists for HD 36 vacancy
Jul 3, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Monday night, the Democratic precinct committee men and women selected
Gretchen Wheeler, Penny Miller and Mary Hales as our three finalists to fill the
state House District 36 vacancy left by the recent resignation of Rep. Liz
Gentile of Evansville. Now, those three names have been submitted to the Natrona
County Commission, and the commissioners have five days to appoint one of them
to fill the legislative seat. Apparently, they're planning to meet at 1 p.m.
Monday, July 9, for the purpose of interviewing the candidates and making their
appointment. Meanwhile, congratulations to our three excellent finalists, and
let's hope that all three will remain active in the party (Mary, our state party
secretary, has a great track record at that, as you well know) and consider
running for office in the future.
-
Seven strong apply for HD36 vacancy
Jun 29, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
We are pleased to announce that our party has seven quality candidates who
have applied to fill the House District 36 vacancy left by the resignation of
Rep. Liz Gentile of Evansville. Thursday night, the candidates introduced
themselves at the Natrona County Democrats' meeting and answered a few
questions, and all seven pledged to seek election in 2008 if appointed. Our
candidates are:
Bill Sisco, a Casper businessman
Dan Coey, a bricklayer and conservation activist
Gretchen Wheeler, a Casper College communications instructor
Mary Hales, state party secretary and real estate broker
Mel Hamilton, an education administrator
Penny Miller, a union office manager
Zach Gentile, the Evansville police chief
Natrona County Democrats spent nearly two hours last night getting to
know the candidates, and to a person, each came across as strong legislative
material. While we don't know yet who our new House member is going to
be, it's safe to say at this
...continue reading
-
Wyoming Democrats look to fill House vacancy
Jun 25, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
The Wyoming Democratic Party is seeking applicants to replace state Rep. Liz
Gentile of Evansville in the Legislature. Gentile resigned to pursue carer
opportunities. The party is accepting expressions of interest through 5 p.m.
Thursday from people interested in filling out the remaining year-and-a-half in
Gentile's term, representing House District 36, which includes Evansville and
parts of East Casper.
Interestingly, as Republican John Barrasso resigned his state Senate seat for
his new U.S. Senate position, the residents of House District 36 find themselves
without either a state senator or a state representative, as Barrasso's Senate
District - SD 27 - includes HD's 35 and 36. But state law requires the positions
to be filled within 20 days, so the good people of east Casper and Evansville
won't have to go to long without legislative representation.
-
Barrasso sworn in to U.S. Senate
Jun 25, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Gov. Freudenthal on Friday chose state Sen. John Barrasso of Casper to represent
Wyoming in the U.S. Senate, to fill the vacancy left by Craig Thomas' death
earlier this month. Monday, Barrasso was sworn in to his new job. State law
required Freudenthal to choose one of the three names submitted by the
Republican Party, as that was the party to which Thomas belonged. This story looks at
Barrasso's background and possible committee assignments.
-
Senate applicants list finalized; three finalists to be named Tuesday
Jun 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Although the procedure to replace the late Craig Thomas in the U.S. Senate is
restricted almost entirely to the other party, there is understandably
considerable interest across the political spectrum in who that person will be,
so I thought I'd note it here in our blog. There are 31 applicants for the
position, a field that will be whittled down to three when the Republican state
central committee meets at the Ramkota Inn in Casper at 8 a.m. Tuesday,
June 19. That meeting will be open to the public. There is also a candidate
forum scheduled for 1 p.m. Sunday at Krampert Theater at Casper College, and the
fourm will be broadcast on Wyoming Public Television. A list of the candidates
is on the Wyoming Republican Party's Website, which I will not link to for
several reasons. But for some good background info and comments from some of the
candidates, you can read today's Casper Star-Tribune story here .
Once the GOP names its three finalists, state law gives Gov. Freudenthal
...continue reading
-
Fun(draising) in Converse County and a visit to Campbell
Jun 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
Reflections on a couple of road trips: First, the Converse County Democrats
held a fundraiser on June 2, in conjunction with Jackalope Days in Douglas. The
fundraising idea was a chilling (literally) concept affectionately called
Dunk-A-Democrat. Among the dunkees were recent (and hopefully future) U.S. House
candidate Gary Trauner, state Rep. Lori Millin, local activists Sissy Goodwin
and Jay Wright, and yours truly. While I was hoping for a 90-degree day, the
temperature barely cracked 70, and it didn't help that the dunking booth was
sitting in the shade. Still, it was for a good cause, and the Converse County
party raked in more than $400 on the event. I've got a couple wonderful pictures
of Gary Trauner going into the water, so as soon as I can get those posted, I
will update this post.
On June 12, Executive Director Brandon Owens, Field Director Tom Schwarz and
I drove up to Gillette for dinner with a few activists and to attend a
county party meeting. Considering that
...continue reading
-
New executive director, field director on board
Jun 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
Just a quick announcement about some new faces at party central. The state
party Executive Committee has hired a new executive director and new field
director, both of whom started working for the state party on June 1.
Executive Director Brandon Owens brings extensive experience in rural
politics to the position, having served as the campaign coordinator for the
Alabama Democratic Party during the 2006 election cycle. He has over 10 years
working for Democratic candidates and causes in the Southeast. Brandon worked
with the Alabama Restaurant Association and founded the Alabama Beverage
Licensees Association to lobby the state legislature and municipalities. He has
also handled legislative matters for the speaker of the Alabama State House and
the chamber's Ways and Means Committee. Brandon attended Auburn University as an
undergraduate and taught classes on state and local government at the University
of Alabama while completing graduate coursework. But to be sure, he is an
...continue reading
-
Wyoming's U.S. House seat remains on national radar
May 10, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
28 comments
Login and comment
National political analysts are keeping Wyoming's lone U.S. House seat on
their radar. Congressional Quarterly just published this
story predicting a possible rematch between 2006 Democratic nominee Gary Trauner and incumbent
Republican Barbara
Cubin . The story generated some excitement in the form of this post
on the popular political blog DailyKos, which took note of some of Gary's
recent public activities. Such activities include these
regular contributions to the New West Network, which focuses on the politics
and culture of the Rocky Mountain West.
I've talked to Gary a few times since he came within an eyelash last fall of
vastly improving Wyoming's representation in Congress. He is definitely
considering running again for the seat, but he has not yet decided what he will
do. I do know that if he runs again this year, we're going to have another
exciting race on our hands, only this time, Gary will have the experience of a
statewide campaign
...continue reading
-
Rove: Cubin is in trouble.
Mar 30, 2007
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
A White House PowerPoint presentation from January lists Barbara Cubin
as one of the 20 most vulnerable Republican incumbents in Congress.
When Karl Rove says that the Wyoming Republican is in trouble, you
know that Cubin has to be getting worried.
This week, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
has been holding a series of hearings to investigate allegations of misconduct at the the
Government Services Agency . The scandal involves GSA chief Lurita Doan and
Rove's deputy, Scott Jennings.
In January, General Services Administration chief Lurita
Doan and Karl Rove deputy Scott Jennings held a video conference with
top GSA political appointees, “who discussed ways to help Republican
candidates.” Jennings, the White House’s deputy director of political
affairs, gave a PowerPoint presentation on Jan. 26 of polling data about
the 2006 elections. When Jennings concluded his presentation to the
GSA political appointees, Doan
...continue reading
-
Visiting with County Parties
Mar 27, 2007
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
22 comments
Login and comment
As you probably already know, county parties across the state meet
during the month of March in odd-numbered years to elect their officers
who will serve for the next two years. These get-togethers also give me
an opportunity to drive around Wyoming meeting activists and finding
ways for the state party to help build and strengthen our party’s local
presence. I thought that I would take a few minutes to tell you about
some of the people that I’ve met and the exciting things happening at the
grassroots level.
Sweetwater County
Last month I drove to Rock Springs to lead a training on precinct
organizing at the White Mountain Library. With the present boom, Rock
Springs is a town that seems to have grown every time I’m there, and
what was great about this meeting were the new people getting involved
with the party and the number of ideas for bringing even more people
into the party. We had a great conversation about outreach and
registering new
...continue reading
-
2007 session wrap-up
Mar 19, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
140 comments
Login and comment
Here is a look at some of the major pieces of legislation lawmakers passed
this year:
Sales tax on groceries (House Bill 93) - Legislators built on last year's
success, when they took this tax off the books for the first time ever. Last
year's action only lifted the tax for two years, and this year, they voted to
make it permanent. This is real tax relief for all the people of our state, and
it helps our poorest citizens the most. However, legislators did not provide
reimbursements for cities, towns and counties for the tax revenue they would
lose, beginning in July 2008, so they will spend the next year working to find a
method to make sure local governments are held harmless.
Quality child care (HBs 95 and 96) - This is sort of a mixed bag. On the
bright side, lawmakers created a quality child care initiative that provides
education grants to child care providers, education programs for parents,
technical assistance for providers, and family strengthening programs. On the
...continue reading
-
Legislature passes quality child care bills
Feb 27, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The quality child care legislation, House Bills 95 and 96, are heading to
Gov. Freudenthal's desk after the House on Tuesday concurred with Senate
amendments to the legislation. The bills cleared third reading in the Senate on
Monday. This
story describes some of the details of the legislation. The main thing is
that our state government is finally going to take some concrete steps to
address one of the most pressing needs facing thousands of Wyoming families, the
affordability and availability of quality child care. These bills and this
program, well over a year in the making, have enjoyed the unanimous support of
legislative Democrats and Gov. Freudenthal. A significant
amount of opposition to the legislation has come from the
extreme right, people who preach that a woman's place is in the home. The
passage of these bills this week is a tribute to mainstream governing. Sadly,
legislators cut a large share of the money out of the original legislation, so
it will
...continue reading
-
Wolves, quality child care, and a look at the budget
Feb 26, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
As we head into the Legislature's final week, those pesky wolves have once
again taken center stage. This
story takes a look at House Bill 213, which is scheduled for its initial
debate and vote on the floor of the Senate today. The bill has already cleared
the House and the Senate Travel, Rec, Wildlife Committee.
Meanwhile, the quality child care bills, House Bills 95 and 96, are up for
third reading in the Senate today.
On Friday, both chambers OK'd the compromise version of the budget bill ( story
here ), so now it awaits action by the governor. The budget conference
committee simply split the difference in the spending proposals of the House and
Senate, for the most part. That is not usually how the budget conference
committee works, but it helps explain why the committee got its work done in
just a couple of days, and why both chambers voted to approve the compromise
version of the budget bill. Gov. Freudenthal has until Tuesday to sign the bill
into law or veto parts of
...continue reading
-
Friday update: food tax, same-sex marriage, wolves, etc.
Feb 23, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Moments ago, the Senate passed House Bill 93, the bill to permanently
eliminate the sales tax on food, on third and final reading. However, after
passing an amendment Thursday to reimburse cities, towns and counties for their
lost sales tax revenue, senators on Friday deleted the amendment. Many want to
spend the next year coming up with the "right" formula to properly reimburse
local governments. Some, obviously a minority, wanted to get at least something
in the law this year to assure local governments that they will be reimbursed
one way or another. But it looks like the locals will have to wait until next
year to see how, and if, they will be reimbursed.
Meanwhile, Thursday morning, the House Rules Committee killed Senate File 13,
the bill that would have allowed Wyoming to void other states' same-sex
marriages. House Speaker Roy Cohee, R-Casper, cast the deciding vote to kill the
bill, which came as a pleasant surprise to this observer. Story
here .
The Senate also passed
...continue reading
-
Updates on major legislation
Feb 21, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Many of the high-profile pieces of legislation are still working their way
through the legislative process at the Legislature heads into its last week of
the 2007 general session. Here is a look at some of those bills and where they
stand now (Note: every bill still alive at this point in the session has cleared
third reading in one legislative chambers and is currently moving through the
second chamber):
House Bills 95 and 96, quality child care: The meat of the legislation, HB
95, is up for a debate and vote in the Senate Committee of the Whole on Thursday
after clearing committee. HB 96, the companion bill, is also on its way to the
Senate floor within another day or two after the Senate Appropriations Committee
stripped some funding from the bill.
HB 93, food sales tax exemption: Cleared Committee of the Whole in the Senate
on Wednesday. The bill still does not include a mechanism to reimburse local
governments for lost revenue from the tax break.
HB 124, eminent domain:
...continue reading
-
Legislature back from break
Feb 20, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
4 comments
Login and comment
The Legislature has returned after a three-day President's Day weekend for
the final two weeks of the 2007 general session. Among the hot topics this week
will be wolves and same-sex marriages, according to this
Casper Star-Tribune story . For more on the wolf issue, click
here .
Also this week, the House speaker and Senate president will each appoint five
members of the joint conference committee on the supplemental budget bill. They
will try to reach a compromise between the two versions of the bill. Then, each
chamber will then have to sign off on the compromise version before the bill
heads to Gov. Freudenthal.
Meanwhile, here's
a story on this year's class of freshman legislators, a class characterized
in part by its members' eagerness to participate in debates.
...continue reading
-
New report: President's policies fail rural Wyoming residents
Feb 16, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
President Bush's budget would severely and negatively impact the quality of
life of rural Wyoming residents, according to a new
report issued by the Democratic Policy Committee . Since 2001, the committee
has issued reports on the failure of the president's policy to address the
issues important to rural Americans. The report confirms that the president's
cuts in funding for law enforcement, health care, education, and economic
development will have a harmful impact on working families, farmers, ranchers,
small businesses and local economies across the West. At the same time, the
budget would put affordable health care further out of reach for many working
Americans in Wyoming. Furthermore, the president's budget would underfund
children's health care and do nothing to reduce the ranks of Wyoming's 14,000
uninsured children.
"President Bush is engaging in gimmickry in order to justify his misplaced
priorities such as tax cuts at expense of rural Wyoming residents," said Wyoming
...continue reading
-
Updates on budget, quality child care
Feb 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The budget bill has made it through second reading in both chambers this
week, with third reading tentatively scheduled for tomorrow (Friday). Read
here for news on some of this week's budget action. There's some good news
in there for highway funding and the Wildlife Trust Fund. As a reminder, all of
this week's budget amendments will set the stage for the work of the budget
conference committee, which will reconcile differences in the versions of the
bill that pass the House and Senate.
Meanwhile, more
good news for the quality child care bills, House Bills 95 and 96, which
cleared the Senate Labor Committee on Wednesday. As they stand now, there would
be no rating system for child care providers, thus limiting the "quality" aspect
of the legislation. Still, child care in general is scarce in many parts of the
state, and this legislation is a step toward improving the situation, so it's
good to see the bills still making their way through the process.
...continue reading
-
UW Democrats on the move!
Feb 12, 2007
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
The Rocky Mountain Democrats at the University of Wyoming have been actively
engaging the campus community and building an energetic organization. Earlier
this month, three members of the group were in Washington, DC for the College
Democrats/Young Democrats Leadership Summit. While they were there,
incoming UW College Dems President Samy Tolsted and Vice President Martha
Tate went to a rally for Sen. Barack Obama at George Mason University. You can
read more about the rally ( and see Samy and Martha greeting Sen.
Obama ) on the New York Times political blog.
-
It's finally budget week
Feb 12, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
You wouldn't know it, but our legislature technically meets once every two
years to craft the state's biennial budget. This is not one of those years. Yet,
for most of the past decade, state government has enjoyed substantial surplus
revenues, and figuring out what to do with those revenues has become pretty much
an annual, rather than biannual, tradition.
The budget "mirror bill" - so-called because identical bills will be
introduced on the House and Senate floors - hits the chambers today for the
first of three readings before the full House and Senate. In this
article from Sunday , Gov. Freudenthal discussed some of the rationale for
investing in such areas as local governments, water development and wildlife.
Our state highway system also has massive needs that the governor wants the
Legislature to address. Meanwhile, there remain some lawmakers who would rather
stash as much extra money as they can into long-term savings instead of take
care of today's pressing needs. As
...continue reading
-
Budget work starts NEXT week; gambling legislation update
Feb 7, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
First, a correction from yesterday's blog. Lawmakers are scheduled to begin
their work on the supplemental budget bill next week, not this week. I
was misinformed. This is a good exemple of the constant state of flux that
governs the legislative session. What ever the plan may have been five days
ago is not necessarily the plan today, and things may be entirely different
again tomorrow. But as of right now, the tentative plan is for the
budget bill to hit the House and Senate floors on Monday.
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, one day after killing the state lottery bill, the
House took a more relaxed position on another
gambling measure , Senate File 23, which would re-open the door to holding
poker tournaments in bars, among other things. A Wyoming attorney general's
opinion from a few years ago declared that such tournaments and other gambling
activities - a friendly game of dice or cards with financial stakes - violated
state law, because the businesses that hosted them
...continue reading
-
Budget work begins; updates on some bills
Feb 6, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The major legislative news this week will be the supplemental budget bill.
Last year, lawmakers crafted the state's budget for fiscal years 2007 and 2008.
This year, they will work on a supplement to that spending measure. Some of the
main topics of discussion will be money for infrastructure, especially state
highways, and funding for local governments.
Meanwhile, a few bill updates are in order. The quality child care bill,
House Bill 95, made it through the House on third reading Friday, so it will
head to the Senate for more work. The bill to make the sales tax exemption
on groceries permanent has cleared the Senate Revenue Committee, and its next
stop will be the floor of the full Senate. The proposal, HB 93, still does not
include any method of reimbursing local governments for the sales tax revenue
they will lose beginning in July 2008. A bill that would have opened the door to
a lottery, HB 128, in Wyoming died Monday on the House floor by a slim
31-27 margin. The
...continue reading
-
Quality child care bill passes first test in House
Feb 1, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
1183 comments
Login and comment
House Bill 95, the quality child care bill, cleared
a significant hurdle Wednesday afternoon when the bill made it through its
first vote before the full House. Unless the bill's progress gets delayed for
some unusual reason, we should know by the end of the week whether the bill will
clear all three readings in the House and move over to the Senate.
The bill has been tweaked somewhat since it was first introduced, mainly to
satisfy some legislators who are concerned that the quality child care
initiative doesn't become an expensive social program that doesn't make real
differences in people's lives. The bill now emphasizes education and money for
providers, staff and parents, and it increases the emphasis on parental control.
At least a couple Republican legislators called HB 95 a "conservative bill"
Wednesday. House Labor, Health and Social Services Committee Chairman Jack
Landon, R-Sheridan, made a particularly lengthy and passionate plea for his
colleagues to pass the bill.
...continue reading
-
Newspaper stands up against ideological extremism
Jan 30, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Slithering their way through the legislative process this week are two bills
we can all do without. House Bill 144, misleadingly labeled "women's right to
know," would require Wyoming doctors who perform abortions to tell their
patients about alternatives and inform them of potential risks and side effects
before performing the procedure. I don't know very many people who think
politicians should make it their business to decide what kinds of conversations
they are going to have with their doctors, but apparently, some politicians
think it's their business. Meanwhile, Senate File 13, "same sex marriages,"
would give Wyoming the authority to void other states' gay marriages, this
year's attempt to legalize discrimination against gay people.
The Casper Star-Tribune chimed in on these issues in this
editorial , wisely suggesting that we expect our legislators to work on
issues of real importance instead of engaging in this kind of divisive culture
war. "If lawmakers truly want to
...continue reading
-
Feds delist some wolves, but not ours
Jan 29, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The federal government, in its infinite wisdom, has concluded that wolf
populations are rebounding successfully enough that the feds announced they
would remove wolves from the endangered species list in the Great Lakes region
(Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin) in about a month and possibly take the same
action for the wolves in the Rocky Mountain region (Wyoming, Montana and Idaho)
in about a year. Story here .
Gov. Freudenthal welcomed the news, although he pointed out that the
real issue is whether Wyoming will ever be able to manage wolves to
protect our wildlife. Here
is his statement on today's news. It remains to be seen what impact, if any, the
feds' decision will have on the wolf management bills moving through the
Legislature (stories here
and here ).
...continue reading
-
Food tax exemption clears House; eminent domain bill moving
Jan 26, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
House Bill 93, the bill to make the sales tax exemption on food permanent,
cleared third reading in the House on Thursday and now heads for the Senate. For
most Democrats, they had to hold their noses a little bit when they voted for
the bill, because while everyone favors removing the sales tax on food for good,
most of them want to include a provision to reimburse local governments for the
lost sales tax revenue. Right now, the bill does not have any way to provide
this "backfill" to cities, towns and counties. However, the local governments
will be OK until July 2008 (because the two-year food sales tax exemption now in
the law allocated $46 million for backfill), so technically, "no harm done" as
long as the Legislature comes up with a backfill provision over the next year.
Still, Democrats would feel better supporting the bill if it guaranteed local
governments they will be held harmless. We'll see if the Senate can amend the
bill to take care of local governments.
The House
...continue reading
-
Food tax exemption cruising; child care debate looms
Jan 23, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Today, updates on two major bills. First, House Bill 93, the bill to make the
sales tax exemption on food permanent, sailed through the House in Committee of
the Whole on Tuesday. There were no amendments offered, and observers report
that the discussion on the bill was very short. Second reading is currently
scheduled for Wednesday, and if all goes well, it should be up for third and
final reading in the House on Thursday, and if it passes, it will head over to
the Senate.
A more controversial bill is House Bill 95, the quality child care bill. The
House Labor, Health and Social Services Committee took testimony on the bill
Monday and began working on the bill Tuesday morning. For now, the panel plans
to continue working on the bill for at least one more meeting later this week or
early next week. Here
is the Casper Star-Tribune's report on the public comment session from
Monday.
...continue reading
-
Food tax exemption ready for another chance
Jan 22, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
8 comments
Login and comment
So, the
food sales tax exemption bill will head to the House floor again , this time
without any mechanism for reimbursing local governments for the sales tax
revenues they will lose. Last year, when the Legislature first passed the
exemption, but only for two years, they allocated $46.6 million for state
payments to local governments to keep them "whole." It seems like lawmakers
could just keep the system they have in place now for reimbursing local
governments, if nothing else. Plus, no matter what happens to the food tax bill
this year, the existing food tax exemption won't expire until June 30, 2008, so
the Legislature has one more year to figure out how to reimburse local
governments. We'll see what happens when the bill, House Bill 93, hits the House
floor this week.
Meanwhile, as the
Casper Star-Tribune reported Sunday , there seems to be widespread support
for Gov. Freudenthal's agenda on how the state can best invest its surplus
revenues. K-12 education was atop the list
...continue reading
-
House on food tax exemption: Try again
Jan 17, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The House Revenue Committee made such a complicated mess out of the food
sales tax exemption bill that the full House on Tuesday voted to send the bill
back to committee for more work. House members' frustrated reactions to the
measure, House Bill 93, prompted House Revenue Committee Chairman Rodney "Pete"
Anderson, to apologize for bringing it to the floor is the shape it was in. He
said the committee will probably rework on the bill on Friday. More here .
It is extraordinarily rare for a legislative chamber to send a bill back to a
committee. Normally, the chamber would simply kill the bill if it is in bad
shape. But there is such a high level of interest in the food tax exemption that
the House isn't ready to give up on HB 93 just yet. Frankly, if House Revenue
Committee members are serious about wanting to make the food sales tax exemption
permanent, they could accomplish that with the most simple piece of legislation
you can imagine. However, some of them are interested in
...continue reading
-
Lawmakers work on food tax, open containers, eminent domain
Jan 15, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
It looks like the state House is going to take on the food sales tax
exemption this week. House Speaker Roy Cohee, R-Casper, said he expects House
Bill 93 to come up on the House floor either today or Tuesday. That bill is
sponsored by Rep. Rodney "Pete" Anderson, R-Pine Bluffs, who last year was one
of the staunchest opponents of exempting food from the sales tax. Anderson's
bill would make the food sales tax exemption permanent. Under current law, the
exemption will expire on June 30, 2008.
Another measure to exempt food from the state sales tax, House Bill 154, is
sponsored by 14 different lawmakers representing both parties and both chambers
of the Legislature. That bill would exempt food from the sales tax through 2013.
However, the House Revenue Committee, which Anderson chairs, voted Friday to
send his bill to the House floor and did not vote on HB 154. Presumably, if
Anderson's bill doesn't make it through the legislative process, HB 154 could
still be sent out to the
...continue reading
-
Harmony defines Legislature's opening week
Jan 11, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
32 comments
Login and comment
Just a quick note on Wednesday's State of the State address: Republican
legislative leaders conspicuously did NOT hold a "Republican response" press
conference after Gov. Freudenthal's speech. That was a fairly visible example of
events that are contributing to a general feeling of bipartisanship in Cheyenne
as the 59th Wyoming Legislature goes to work.
Several reporters noted that this is the first time since Freudenthal has
been governor that the Republicans have not offered a coordinated response to
his yearly adress. Some suggested that the governor has a particualrly good
working relationship with the Republican leaders - Senate President John
Schiffer of Kaycee and House Speaker Roy Cohee of Casper. Of course, Schiffer
and Cohee did individual interviews with reporters Wednesday afternoon, but even
in those interviews, the leaders mainly agreed with most of the governor's
priorities, as you can see in this
story from the Casper Star-Tribune.
Aside from that,
...continue reading
-
Freudenthal encourages Legislature to invest in Wyoming
Jan 10, 2007
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
In his State of the State address today, Gov. Freudenthal urged legislators
to invest in Wyoming's future as they pore over the dozens and dozens of issues
they will face over the next eight weeks. Among the several initiatives the
governor specifically identified, he asked lawmakers to make the food sales tax
exemption permanent, to make sure "fair market value" is a key component of any
eminent domain bill they pass, to ban all open containers of alcohol in cars on
state highways, to implement a "two strikes and your out" bill for sexual
predators, and to consider greater state funding for local governments - cities,
towns and counties - as well as allow tribal entities to share in such local
government funding.
He spoke at some length about budget philosophies, and he warned legislators
against propagating the false perception that Wyoming residents can become
"trust fund babies" if state government keeps stashing money into the Permanent
Wyoming Minerals Trust Fund. It is
...continue reading
-
Trauner awaiting vote certification process
Nov 9, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
At a press conference Thursday afternoon, Gary Trauner announced that he will
let Wyoming's election certification process run its course before he concedes
the election or claims victory. Gary said provisional ballots are still being
counted in some counties, though he's not sure exactly which ones. As of
Wednesday, Gary trailed Barbara Cubin by 970 votes out of more than 190,000 cast
statewide in the U.S. House race, or one-half of one percent. If the provisional
ballot count or any other adjustments to the current totals add a net of 38
votes to Gary's total, that event would trigger an automatic statewide recount
of the votes in the U.S. House race. Gary said he believes Wyoming's election
certification process is an important tool to protect the integrity of democracy
in Wyoming, and he will let that process play out before declaring an end to the
election.
Gary also noted that running the positive, issues-oriented campaign that he
ran is no easy task, but he did it because he
...continue reading
-
Election results
Nov 9, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
By all accounts, this was a good election for Democrats. Our party has taken
control of both houses of Congress; Gov Dave Freudenthal won re-election by one
of the largest margins in the nation; and we won a net total of three seats in
the Wyoming House of Representatives. It remains to be seen what will happen
with the U.S. House race in Wyoming. But we have cause for celebration, and we
must keep in mind that at the end of the day, it's not what's best for any
particular party. It's what's best for the working people of this state and this
nation. The next two years should be fairly interesting. Let's keep focused on
the needs of the people, and we will continue to make headway with Wyoming's
voters.
-
VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE!
Nov 7, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Vote today! Bring three people with you. Then call everyone you know and make
sure they have voted. Keep alert for anything fishy at the polls or on your
phone - and let us know if something seems amiss (800-SAY-DEMS). Today is the
day when we can take control of our future and enact the kinds of changes we
need in Wyoming (in the case of our congressional representation) or keep our
state on the right track (by re-electing Gov. Dave Freudenthal and sending more
Democrats to Cheyenne for him to work with).
The Internet's No. 1 independent politics site, DailyKos.com, has this 11th-hour
report on Gary Trauner's election-ending tour across western Wyoming . Gary's
campaign has excited and inspired a lot of people, people from all over who
thought Wyoming voters would never oust an incumbent Republican from Congress,
no matter how poor of a job she has done. But voters can see that Gary
Trauner offers exactly what Wyoming needs: someone who vows to
represent regular people
...continue reading
-
Star-Tribune endorses Trauner, Freudenthal; party rallies in Rock Springs
Nov 5, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
The state's largest paper has endorsed both Gov. Dave
Freudenthal AND future U.S. Congressman Gary Trauner on its editorial page
today. If you recall, the Casper Star-Tribune inexplicably endorsed Cubin in
2004, so their endorsement of Trauner is especially good news.
Troubling note: I'm in Wamsutter today, and one of the convenience stores
reported that they didn't get their Casper Star-Tribune deliveries today. I was
unable to contact anyone at the paper to find out how extensive this
paper-delivery problem is. I'm just concerned that as many people as possible
can read the paper's endorsements, so please, feel free to share the link with
people you know: http://www.casperstartribune.net/editorial/
Meanwhile, I dropped by the Sweetwater County Democratic Party rally in Rock
Springs last night, which was a rollicking good time. Among the speakers
were Trauner and state auditor candidate Bill Eikenberry, and the event was
headlined by Gov. Freudenthal and first lady
...continue reading
-
More good signs for Gary Trauner
Nov 3, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
As we head into the last weekend before Election Day, national
political observers keep finding good news for Gary Trauner. First, the
nation's premier politics Website, DailyKos, reports that Gary was greeted
enthusiastically in Cheyenne while going door-to-door this week . The article
includes a telling look at both of the personalities in the U.S. House
race. Check it out.
Meanwhile, Congressional
Quarterly has moved the race into the toss-up column , after taking into
consideration the events of the past couple weeks. CQ joins the
Cook Political Report in declaring the race to be too close to call at this
point. Both of these changes in the race predictions show that Gary has all the
momentum with four days left to go.
Finally, don't forget to tune in to the rebroadcast this Saturday of the Oct.
15 debate among the House candidates. It will air at 6 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, on
KCWY, Casper's channel 13. This is the debate where Gary points out that
...continue reading
-
Trauner offers change from negativity, partisan bickering
Nov 1, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
In this
Associated Press feature on Gary Trauner's campaign , he offers a simple and
compelling choice to voters: You can vote for change, or you can vote for
continued negativity and partisan bickering which has poisoned politics for such
a large share of the people. And, if Trauner fails to deliver the promised
change, voters can hire someone else at the end of his term.
I particularly like this Trauner quote: "You know
it's hard when you're 13-year-old son calls you up and says, 'Dad, I just saw a
TV ad, and they're saying things about you that aren't true.' I mean what do you
do, and how has our system come to that?" he said. "That's a really difficult
thing to have to deal with."
Wyoming must elect this man.
-
Trauner-Cubin race officially a toss-up
Oct 31, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
For the first time since probably the 1970s, the race for Wyoming's only U.S.
House seat is now officially considered
a toss-up by one of the nation's foremost political analysts. Many experts
have changed their rating of the race to indicate that it's close, in the wake
of Gary Trauner's fine debate performances, Cubin's recent bizarre behavior, and
Gov. Freudenthal's endorsement of Trauner. But the Cook Political Report -
widely regarded as one of the best prognosticators in the business - is the
first one to declare the race to neither side has the edge heading into the Nov.
7 election.
Cook relies heavily on something called the "partisan voter index," which
takes into consideration party registration and past voting habits, and in our
state, that of course tilts heavily Republican. But this year is unique in that
voters across the board, regardless of party, are beginning to realize that it
is time for a change in our U.S. House seat, and they can see that Gary
Trauner
...continue reading
-
New poll: Trauner is catching Cubin
Oct 29, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Gary
Trauner is statistically tied with Barbara Cubin in a new independent poll.
The survey conducted by the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle shows Trauner at 40.4 percent,
Cubin at 44 percent, Libertarian Thomas Rankin at 5 percent, and 8 percent of
the voters undecided. The 3.6-point difference between Trauner and Cubin is
within the poll's 4.2-percent margin of error, which means the race is
considered a virtual dead heat. Only two weeks ago, Cubin's lead in another poll
was 7 percent (44-37). Trauner is gaining support; Cubin is not.
One important revalation from the poll is that news events of the past
week ( such
as Trauner soundly defeating Cubin in the Oct. 22 debate , Cubin's subsequent
bizarre
behavior , Gov. Freudenthal's endorsement
of Trauner , and Trauner's latest excellent TV ad) seemed to have boosted
Trauner's support. The poll was conducted from Oct. 18 to 25, so only a fraction
of the survey captures the impact of the Oct. 22 debate. Still, the poll
shows a
...continue reading
-
Experts acknowledge Trauner's momentum
Oct 26, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Wyoming's U.S. House race is trending toward a Gary Trauner victory on Nov.
7, according to national experts. Two of the country's foremost political
prognosticators have changed their official ratings of the race to reflect the
increasing likelihood that Gary Trauner will take Wyoming's only House seat
from Barbara Cubin. It's encouraging to see that the national experts are
finally catching on to something that those of us who know Gary and who know
Wyoming have known for a long time: Wyoming's people are ready to make a serious
upgrade in their congressional representation.
The Cook Political Report, an independent, nonpartisan, highly respected
political analyst, has changed its
rating of Wyoming's congressional race from "likely Republican" to "lean
Republican." Robert Novak, another one of the nation's most revered political
analysts, has upgraded
the race from "likely Republican retention" to "leans Republican."
Yet another respected outfit, Congressional
...continue reading
-
Gov Dave backs Gary Trauner: 'It's time for a change'
Oct 25, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Listen to
the press conference: Gov Dave backs Gary Trauner
Gov. Dave Freudenthal explained why he is supporting Gary Trauner for
Congress this year during a press conference Wednesday, Oct. 25, in the State
Capitol Building rotunda.
"It is time for a change, and the change did not occur in the Republican
primary," Freudenthal said. "Gary Trauner is passionate about serving Wyoming
and our citizens. If you have any doubts, simply examine the hard work,
openness, and statewide nature of his campaign. Gary Trauner is bright,
hardworking, business-oriented, and articulate. I believe Gary Trauner will make
us proud as our representative. If not, we can vote him out in a short two
years."
In response to questions from the press, Freudenthal praised Trauner for his
willingness to listen and travel the state. Trauner has visited more than 15,000
homes across Wyoming. "There's no better education than going door-to-door in
the state," Freudenthal said.
The governor also said
...continue reading
-
Cubin threat raises eyebrows nationwide
Oct 24, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
After Sunday night's debate among Democrat Gray Trauner, Repubican Barbara
Cubin and Libertarian Thomas Rankin, Cubin
reportedly told Rankin, a wheelchair-bound multiple sclerosis patient, that she
would slap him if he weren't "sitting in that chair." This story was first
published on the Casper Star-Tribune's Website, but it quickly made waves across
the state and country. In the Jackson newspaper, Rankin called on Cubin to
resign . The Associated Press moved the story on its national
politics wire, and this morning, popular politics blog MyDD
posted this piece about the hullaballoo , and here is a
posting on popular politics blog DailyKos , as well as this
follow-up post . It is the Quote
of the Day on Taegan Goddard's Political Wire , and it has been mentioned on
several other political sites.
One thing I'd like to point out about this is that if she did not tell Rankin
she wanted to slap him, she clearly would have immediately denied doing
...continue reading
-
More debates
Oct 23, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
We are in the middle of the second round of debates among candidates for
statewide office. Sunday afternoon, Dale
Groutage and Craig Thomas squared off in the U.S. Senate race , and then last
night, Gary
Trauner, Barbara Cubin and Tom Rankin participated in the U.S. House debate .
Monday night, Gov.
Dave Freudenthal and challenger Ray Hunkins debated the issues in their
race , followed by superintendent
of public instruction candidates Michelle Hoffman and Jim McBride .
Tuesday night, candidates for state auditor (7 p.m.) and state treasurer (7:30
p.m.) debated at the Parkway Plaza Hotel in Casper, events that were
broadcast live on both Wyoming Public Television and Wyoming Public Radio. The
final event was an hour-long show featuring this year's proposed state
constitutional amendments and the races in general, beginning at 8 p.m.
As they did the previous week, Democrats Dale Groutage and Gary Trauner
clearly out-debated their
...continue reading
-
Trauner within striking distance
Oct 17, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
This week's big news is the
Casper Star-Tribune poll on the Trauner-Cubin race . It shows that Cubin is
leading 44-37 percent, with 15 percent still undecided and the other 4 percent
planning to vote for the Libertarian candidate. So the score here in the fourth
quarter is that we're down by one touchdown with just enough time to catch up
and win. It's going to take a lot of work, but we can do it, and we have several
reasons to be optimistic.
First of all, everyone knows who Cubin is, but after 12 years in office, only
44 percent of the voters still think she deserves to be sent back to Washington.
The fact that she is that far under 50 percent this late in the game, when
everyone knows what she is all about, shows us that it is unlikely she will get
a majority of the votes on election day.
Meanwhile, half of the people surveyed are still forming their opinions about
Gary Trauner. Gary has the resources to get his message to these voters over the
next three weeks - which is
...continue reading
-
Wow, what a weekend!
Oct 16, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
What an exciting weekend full of Wyoming political news! We've got debates,
we've got polls, we've got endorsements. First off, we had the debates in Casper
yesterday among the candidates for governor, U.S. House, and U.S. Senate. Here
are the links to the news articles that the Casper Star-Tribune published about
the debates:
- Governor
debate: Gov. Dave Freudenthal talks about his impressive record of
earning bipartisan support for accomplishments that move Wyoming forward, both
today and for our future, including the Hathaway Scholarship program, the
Business-Ready Communities program, the Wildlife Trust Fund, and school capital
construction, to name a few. Meanwhile, his opponent exposes himself as one of
the few people across the state who just doesn't get it.
- U.S.
House debate: Gary Trauner offers the state a MUCH-NEEDED CHANGE from
politics as usual in our congressional representation, while the crowd can't
contain its laughter at Barbara Cubin's ridiculous
...continue reading
-
Groutage: People want their government back
Oct 13, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
The Casper
Star-Tribune has a nice story today on Dale Groutage's campaign , in which a
reporter followed him around while he campaigned in Cheyenne recently. Dale
raises several issues people need to keep in mind this campaign season:
- Our country is off-course.
- Our government is dysfunctional.
- A culture of corruption controls Congress.
- The federal government represents special interests, not you and me.
The bottom line: People want a change. And this year, that is exactly what
our party has to offer.
-
Cubin campaigns on taxpayer money, Trauner talks sense
Oct 13, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Barbara Cubin and a fellow congressional Republican visited F.E. Warren Air
Force Base to campaign for Cubin yesterday, presumably at taxpayer expense,
during something billed as "an official congressional delegation visit," according
to this story in the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle . The story points out that
Cubin's traveling partner, Rep. Terry Everett of Alabama, took a Nancy Pelosi
quote out of context. Trauner rightfully pointed out that people don't spend
time worrying about who the next House speaker will be, but they DO care about
the war in Iraq, health care, and the price of gas. Then, Cubin makes the
prepostrous statement that people are not interested in and don't want to
hear about the war in Iraq, to which Trauner replies that it makes no sense
to say people don't care about a war our country is actively engaged in. Oh,
Cubin also wrongfully claims she has voted for every possible bill to benefit
our troops, but the Tribune-Eagle reporter notes that she indeed skipped a
...continue reading
-
Wyo congressional delegation no friends of environment
Oct 12, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Our state's current U.S. senators and representative earned a notorious
distinction this week by being ranked the
worst congressional delegation in the United States when it comes to protecting
our environment . Despite the fact that pretty much everyone who lives here
says Wyoming's uniquely beautiful environment is one of the main reasons why
they like living here, Barbara Cubin, Craig Thomas and Mike Enzi do not seem to
share our values. I hope this message gets through to enough people to make some
changes in our delegation this year.
-
Of wolves and men
Oct 11, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I didn't notice a lot of politics news skimming through the papers today, so
I'll link to the Associated
Press story on Wyoming's new lawsuit over wolf management . It sounds like
the state may yet one day get its day in court over whether the feds had the
right to reject our wolf management plan. My concerns about the success of the
wolf reintroduction program were put to rest one night a few years ago when I
heard one of the nation's top wolf scientists speak on the issue in Cheyenne. He
was one of those the federal government had hired to review Wyoming's plan.
Almost every scientist said our plan, in conjunction with Montana's and Idaho's
plans, was a scientifically sound strategy for wolf recovery, including the guy
who visited Cheyenne. He said three things that stick with me. 1) He didn't
personally like Wyoming's plan, because he is a fan of wolves and wants them to
recover as quickly as possible. 2) In his work for the federal government,
despite his personal feelings about
...continue reading
-
GOP issues bizarre press release
Oct 10, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Wyoming Republican Party leadership provided
further evidence Monday that it is totally bereft of useful ideas by issuing
a press release stating that Gov. Freudenthal is a Democrat. This is so inane on
so many levels it's hard to know where to start. Apparently, the Wyoming GOP
leadership's approach is to insult the intelligence of Wyoming's voters by
assuming that they will blindly vote for everyone with an "R" next to their name
on the ballot, when the fact is that Wyoming's voters have a proud history of
independence and voting for the best candidate in every election. The GOP's
press release then launches a "criticism" of Gov. Dave by reporting that he has
given money to past respected state leaders like former Gov. Mike Sullivan and
former Secretary of State Kathy Karpan, as well as Democratic presidential
candidates. At the same time, as the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle reports,
gubernatorial challenger Ray
Hunkins has also donated money to Guv Suv and Kathy Karpan , leaving
...continue reading
-
Freudenthal, Hunkins debate on Public Radio tonight
Oct 10, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Wyoming Public Radio will broadcast a debate tonight at 7 p.m. between Gov.
Freudenthal and challenger Ray Hunkins. The debate took place in real time
Monday night at a convention of Wyoming's travel, hospitality, merchants
and liquor dealers' associations in Cody. Public Radio's Renny MacKay is the
moderator. This
Casper Star-Tribune article lists the frequencies for Wyoming Public Radio
across the state, if you want to tune in.
-
Trauner, Cubin discuss Foley scandal
Oct 6, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Here are the first extended public comments
from Gary Trauner and Barbara Cubin on the Foley scandal and the House
Republican leadership's handling of it. Trauner is right: this situation needs
to be investigated, and anyone who knew what was going on and failed to fix the
problem needs to be held accountable. This is a serious issue that should not be
politicized, yet some are trying to do just that by suggesting that this
information was released for political reasons. The facts so far are that the
only people who were aware of the problem were House Republican leaders, and
they covered it up - pointedly not sharing this information with any Democrats.
For them now to blame someone else for blowing their cover-up is prepostrous. Here are
many more details of the story from CNN.com.
-
Judge restores access to Hawk Springs
Oct 6, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I don't know all the details of what is going on behind the scenes here, but I
bet 99 percent of the public is glad to see that Wyoming
8th District Judge Keith Kautz restored public access to Hawk Springs
Reservoir in south Goshen County. This isn't exactly an election story, but
it's a pretty interesting political one. As Gov. Freudenthal points
out, "Hunters, anglers and everyone who enjoys the outdoors have every right to
access a public recreation site that was purchased and maintained with their tax
dollars."
-
Hot Week for Dems in Fremont County
On Thursday October 12, the Fremont County Democratic Party is
hosting a volunteer rally at the Lander Arts Center on Main
avenue. Live music, catered food, and speeches from Gary Trauner for
US Congress and Dale Groutage for US Senate.
The Fremont County Democratic and Republican party have set a new precedent
of bi-partisan cooperation by co-hosting a forum with county commissioner
candidates. To be held on Wednesday October 11 at The Inn Lander
Best Western, 200 Grand View Avenue, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Come out from the mountains wilderness lovers. Join the energized
Democratic Party in Lander, and help make a difference in America.
-
Thomas promises more partisanship
Oct 4, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Craig Thomas gave
the Casper Star-Tribune this insight into the kind of litmus test he thinks
we need to govern our country by vowing to use his power to assure that no
Democrat will be appointed to the seat on the U.S. District Court bench being
vacated by Judge Clarence Brimmer.
By contrast, remember Gov. Dave
Freudenthal's thoughts on similar matters , which he shared with the
audience when he announced his reelection bid in May:
Governor Freudenthal stressed that during the past four years he put
partisanship aside and emphasized participation and progress when working with
the Republican dominated Legislature. He also emphasized that "seldom do I know
and never care how someone is registered when I read their letter or talk with
them. Problems and opportunities do not come labeled as Republican, Democrat,
Libertarian, Independent, or unregistered. Whether appointments to state
agencies and boards or task forces, the key has been to look for people
...continue reading
-
As promised, debate details
Oct 3, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
3 comments
Login and comment
I've managed to gather some of the details of the major debates taking place
this campaign season. There seem to be two big ones. The first will be held
Sunday, Oct. 15, in Casper, sponsored by the Casper Star-Tribune and KCWY-TV,
Casper's Channel 13. In addition, Wyoming Public Television is sponsoring a
series of debates Sunday, Oct. 22, through Tuesday, Oct. 24. More details:
The Star-Tribune/KCWY debate will be held in the Gertrude Krampert Theater at
Casper College on Oct. 15. The event will be open to the public. The tentative
schedule is for the gubernatorial candidates to start at noon, the U.S.
Senate candidates to start at 1:15 p.m., and finally the U.S. House candidates
at 3 p.m. Moderators will be Star-Tribune Editor Clark Walworth and KCWY News
Director Shauna Bales. The newspaper and TV station will run subsequent
news reports on the debates, but Channel 13 will also tape them and
show them in their entirety over the next three Saturdays. KCWY
...continue reading
-
Star-Tribune editor sheds light on negative Cubin ad
Oct 3, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Casper Star-Tribune editor Clark Walworth recently offered this explanation
for how Gary Trauner said something in July, the newspaper printed
its version of his comments, and the Cubin campaign has misconstrued them
( I
found this online here but not in the actual pages of the paper):
A July story in the Star-Tribune regrettably has lent confusion rather than
clarity to the U.S. House race. TV ads from Rep. Barbara Cubin accuse Democratic
challenger Gary Trauner of advocating higher taxes and lower military spending.
Trauner's campaign says that's not accurate. I wish I could give you a
definitive explanation. But, like so much in politics, this issue swims in
nuance. And our story, I'm sorry to admit, was less clear than it should have
been. According to our story, Trauner held a press conference in which he
called for making taxes "fair" to all economic classes. The story continued, "He
said reversing a tax cut is not increasing taxes if the cut 'shouldn't have
...continue reading
-
Channel 5: Negative Cubin ad doesn't check out
Oct 2, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The recent negative ad from Barbara Cubin's campaign doesn't square with
reality, according to this report from
Cheyenne's NewsChannel 5. The TV station did some quality research last week
and concluded that the negative Cubin ad "doesn't check out." Her ad draws
from a Casper Star-Tribune article that mischaracterizes Gary Trauner's position
on the Bush tax cuts and military spending. This is, sadly, not a new practice
for the Cubin campaign. In her first race for Congress in 1994, the campaign ran
a television ad accusing her opponent, an attorney, of having once represented a
certain notorious character. When her opponent denied that he had represented
the notorious character, AND the notorious character's real attorney
affirmatively stated that Cubin's opponent had nothing to do with the case,
the Cubin campaign said they stood by the ad, although it had been
proven conclusively that it was false. If Cubin intends to run her
campaign that way again this year, we must make
...continue reading
-
Couple of pieces on governor's race
Sep 29, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
There have been a couple news items relating to the governor's race in the
past few days, so I thought I'd mention them here. The newest one comes from
yesterday regarding the candidates' positions on abortion. The Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle published this story , which is about the same as the AP's
story here (from the Casper Star-Tribune). Ray Hunkins, understandably
overcome with emotion at the birth of twin granddaughters, decided he wanted to
make a statement about his pro-life position, but as the stories point out, he
refused to say anything about what that would mean to his governorship. So
really, what was the point? By contrast, Gov. Freudenthal pointed out the
obvious fact that a candidate's stance on the issue is irrelevant unless voters
know what that candidate might do with it from the standpoint of governing. Gov.
Dave added that Wyoming's current laws "are a fair compromise on strongly-held
beliefs in the state," and he advocates leaving them the way they are.
...continue reading
-
Groutage argues for ESA reform, seeks debates
Sep 28, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Senate hopeful Dale Groutage held a press conference yesterday in Cheyenne
and got a couple of good pieces of news coverage out of it. Although Dale's
press conference was intended primarily to shed light on the fact that Craig
Thomas is trying to avoid debating him, the Associated Press seems to have been
in a wolfish state of mind, so
they ran this story, spreading Dale's message on Endangered Species Act
reform. Part of the story hits on a recurring theme of this election year:
Do you ever notice that the Republicans are constantly blaming Democrats for the
fact that the Republicans haven't gotten anything done in Congress, although the
Republicans control both chambers as well as the White House? It is time for
voters to hold them accountable.
Meanwhile, the Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle printed this story , which focused on the initial topic of
Groutage's press conference, namely that Craig Thomas is doing everything he can
to keep from debating Groutage. And Barbara Cubin is
...continue reading
-
USA Today: Dems gain momentum out West
Sep 27, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
This week, USA Today
published this story about the gains Democrats have been making in the West
over the past few years. It notes Gov. Freudenthal's win in 2002 and Gary
Trauner's strong U.S. House run this year. It also lists a few other races this
year in which Democrats are looking good in the Rocky Mountain region.
In semi-related news, the popular blog Daily Kos has entries on Wyoming's
House race here and here . In the
second one, blog author Markos points out some of the issues on
which Republicans in Congress are losing support of conservatives, such as
the budget deficit, government growth, states' rights and congressional pay
raises. These are NOT the same people who took control of the U.S. House in
1994. They've changed.
-
Trauner scares Cubin, exposes her deceptions
Sep 26, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Two good pieces of news reported in the Casper
Star-Tribune (via the AP) , the Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle , and various newspapers, radio stations and TV stations across
the state. First of all, Barbara Cubin is running scared in the U.S. House race.
She admitted in a letter to Republicans that she's nervous. As such, she has
decided to start spreading falsehoods about Gary Trauner's positions,
both in the letter and quite possibly through a "push poll," a tactic in which a
candidate conducts telemarketing to spread false rumors about one's
opponent.
Two things about these stories are telling. First, the Cubin campaign is
intentionally trying to deceive the public about Gary's positions on the issues,
such as gun ownership and tax cuts. The thing is, when the Cubin camp is caught
trying to deceive people, they won't rescind their deceptive comments. It's as
if they can't handle the truth, because the truth will put Gary Trauner in
Congress, so they try to continue living in
...continue reading
-
What ticks you off? What can we do about it?
Apr 25, 2006
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
2 comments
Login and comment
We want to hear what ticks you off. And we want to know how you would fix it.
As a community, what can we do to make Wyoming a better place?
Jennie Blackton will be in Southern Wyoming during the first week of May to
lead workshops for Democratic grassroots activists. Jennie is a nationally
recognized trainer, who coaches political candidates in public speaking. She’ll
help us organize to strengthen our community.
Laramie Workshop - Monday, May 1, 2006
Albany County Public Library
8th Street and Grand Avenue
Monday, May 1, 2006
7:30 PM (follows monthly county central
committee meeting at 6:30 PM)
Rock Springs Workshop - Wednesday, May 3, 2006
Room 1005
Western Wyoming Community College
Wednesday, May 3, 2006
7:00 PM
You don’t need to be a candidate to attend this workshop. Whether you’re
running for office or just hoping to make a difference, you’ll gain new tools
and have fun. So come join the Wyoming
...continue reading
-
Trauner campaign generates national buzz
Apr 24, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Gary Trauner's U.S. House campaign is making waves on the national political
scene! That's no small feat being a Democrat in a "red" state running against a
Republican incumbent. First, here's a story from Congressional
Quarterly from over the weekend: http://www.cqpolitics.com/2006/04/wy_atlarge_wellfunded_trauner.html
And then today, the Democratic National Committee, which doesn't exactly
spend a lot of time, energy or resources focusing on Wyoming, put this on the
front page of its Website today (Monday): http://www.democrats.org/ If that page doesn't
still feature Gary, the full story is at: http://www.democrats.org/a/2006/04/wy-at_large_con.php Nice to
start off the week with some good news as our activists across the state gear up
for this Saturday's Democratic
Vision Canvass . It sure feels like the momentum is swinging our way in so
many different areas right now. Let's hope we can keep it up through
November!
...continue reading
-
Newcastle refreshes party organization
In Newcastle over the weekend, 30-40 Weston county democrats gathered to visit
with Governor Dave, who took time to answer their questions on topics
ranging from healthcare to wildlife. State party officials stayed on
with the Weston dems to discuss supporting their organization. The
group decided that Kaydee will soon return to Newcastle to help them
organize a door to door canvass as outreach to the 900 registered
democrats in the area.
-
Freudenthal kicks off re-election campaign
Apr 3, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Just as he did four years ago, Gov. Dave Freudenthal held press conferences
Monday in his hometown of Thermopolis, Casper and Cheyenne to formally announce
his intention to seek another four years in office. I attended the Casper
announcement at the Parkway Plaza Hotel, and there were more than 100 people
there to show their support for "four more years," as some of them periodically
chanted.
The governor began his remarks by noting how many people in the audience have
"picked up the oar and helped move Wyoming forward," stressing that he couldn't
have accomplished very much without the active involvement of so many other
people.
He recalled several of the issues he focused on in his first campaign for
governor four years ago. Among those were open government, water storage, a
wildlife trust fund, a Business Ready Communities program, increased tourism,
economic diversification, strengthening environmental protection agencies, and
increased commitments to education and to
...continue reading
-
Quality child care bill passes on last day of session
Mar 15, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
In my elation that the legislative session has ended and the post-session
work that ensued and the Wyoming Cowboys' Mountain West Conference tournament
championship basketball game Saturday night (what a heart-breaking loss!), I
somehow forgot to post a blog entry on Saturday's activities. So I'll update you
now.
I began the morning at the Laramie County Democratic Party Convention at the
Hitching Post. The first part of the morning was dedicated to candidate
speeches. We heard from first lady Nancy Freudenthal, on behalf of the governor,
who has not yet made his candidacy for a second four-year term official. We also
heard from U.S. Senate candidate Dale Groutage and some potential local
candidates, and we saw a video presentation from U.S. House candidate Gary
Trauner.
Mrs. Freudenthal talked about the legislative session and many of the good
things that happened this year thanks to the work of Democrats. She said it is
sad that legislators had to be backed into a corner,
...continue reading
-
Field Update
Over the past week I attended the Sheridan and Fremont county conventions,
both well-attended by active and concerned local citizens. The platforms
of the county parties were thoughtfully deliberated, as people sought to
define and refine government procedure, articulate their values, and
outline their vision.
I am currently working on the field strategy by inputting all grassroots
volunteer information into our central PT database, for future use in
activities, canvassing, and campaign targeting. This week I will also mobilize
and assist those precinct leaders inclined to take leadership roles
over teams of volunteers.
-
Quality child care bill lives; lawmakers override legi-communications veto
Mar 10, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Well, THIS was a laid-back day, legislation-wise, though not entirely without
drama. That's to be expected, as we're into the tail end of the session, but not
yet at the tip of the tail. That is to say, the leadership finally decided they
will meet again tomorrow (Saturday) for what I am confident will be the last day
of the 2006 budget session (and, barring a special session between now and
January, the last day of the 58th Wyoming Legislature). Lawmakers spent a lot of
time taking breaks today, some of which were filled with entertainment. In
between, they carried on with the signing of enrolled acts (bills that passed
both chambers), votes on conference committee reports (compromise versions of
bills), and one veto override.
The main thing I was waiting for today didn't happen - not completely. The
compromise version of House Bill 92, the quality child care bill, came up for a
vote in the House (it passed), but not in the Senate. I spent the day on the
Senate side. It appears to
...continue reading
-
Freudenthal issues first veto, panel ponders quality child care bill
Mar 10, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Sorry for this oh-so-brief and oh-so-late blog post, but somehow my life is
getting busier as the budget session is starting to wind down.
Among the biggest news of the day was that Gov. Freudenthal issued his first
veto of the session Thursday. He vetoed Senate File 5, which would specify that
legislators' communications with their staff, constituents and consultants don't
have to be disclosed.
In his message accompanying his veto, the governor said the measure "creates
curtains of secrecy at the expense of the average citizen. ... We are all proud
of the privilege of service granted us by the citizens of Wyoming. Why then
should that honor be exercised in secret? This bill suggests that in a
democracy, the citizen operates on a need-to-know basis and each legislator
decides what they need to know."
We'll see today (Friday) if the Legislature attempts to or succeeds at
overriding his veto. Lawmakers need two-thirds support in both houses to force
the bill into law without
...continue reading
-
Budget sails, Senate reshapes quality child care bill
Mar 8, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
First things first: the compromise version of the budget bill easily passed
both chambers of the Legislature today and has headed to Gov. Freudenthal's
desk. My understanding is that he has told lawmakers he will try to take action
on the bill by Friday, so the Legislature doesn't have to remain in session on
Saturday to find out whether the governor vetoes any part of the budget. I
haven't received any indication that he plans to use his line-item veto on
anything in the bill, but we should know for sure sometime on Friday.
House Bill 92, the quality child care bill, barely cleared third reading in
the Senate, 17-13, but only after senators adopted several amendments that
leaves the legislation in rather odd shape. Last week, the House had scaled back
the program to spend a year and $1.4 million setting it up and postpone its
implementation for a year, which restricted the other $12.9 million in the bill.
But today, the Senate moved the program from the Department of Family
...continue reading
-
Budget compromise reached
Mar 7, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
The 10 budget conference committee members finally wrapped up their work
about 5:30 p.m. this evening after starting their day at 8 a.m. So tomorrow,
both chambers will cast votes on the compromise version of the budget bill. If
either side votes not to adopt the compromise version, another conference
committee will be appointed, a "free committee," which will be able to change
any part of the budget in hopes of coming up with something that will pass in
both chambers. But I don't see anything in the compromise budget version that
should imperil the budget in either chamber. Plus, legislators want to go
home.
Yesterday, there was talk of extending the session into Saturday, the idea
being that lawmakers would get the budget bill to Gov. Freudenthal's desk
tomorrow (Wednesday), he would have three days to act on it, and the Legislature
would have a chance to override any line-item vetoes he might issue. But
apparently, the governor told the legislative leadership that he
...continue reading
-
Highlights from the Nellie Tayloe Ross Banquet
Mar 6, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Just a quick note to say that our Nellie Tayloe Ross Banquet on Saturday at
the Hitching Post was fabulous.
Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack gave a wonderful keynote address, talking mainly about
the importance of community. "The current policies of our national government
are undermining our sense of community," Vilsack said. He pointed out how our
nation is at war, yet we aren't making any sacrifices. In fact, the richest
people in our country are paying less in taxes now than they were before 9/11.
"Americans know this is not right," Vilsack said. Our nation needs leadership
with integrity. We should be the safest place on earth. We need a healthy,
self-reliant economy, and we should feel no fear of sharing, to increase our
sense of community. Those were among Gov. Vilsack's comments. His speech got
rave reviews from many of the people who heard it.
His biggest line of applause came when he said Congress should not take
another pay raise until our representatives there balance the
...continue reading
-
Budget compromise begins, HB 92 survives
Mar 6, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Today, the budget conference committee began its work. Members got about
halfway through the budget, and they continue tomorrow (Tuesday) at 8 a.m.
Highlights from the first day included the Wildlife Trust Fund and the food tax
exemption.
As for the food tax exemption, it went like all the other identical
amendments that cleared both chambers. All of those were adopted, so that means
the grocery tax exemption will be in the budget version that goes back to both
chambers. So far, so good.
As for the Wildlife Trust Fund, the budget conference committee basically
took a compromise position on that. The Senate had voted to put $36.5 million
into the trust fund, $3 million on which was for a "challenge" account that
would match donations from private donors. The House position was $23 million,
with $3 million for the challenge account. The conference committee went with
$28 million, $3 million of which would be for the challenge account. Gov.
Freudenthal had requested $35 million for
...continue reading
-
Budget clears both chambers
Mar 3, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The budget bill cleared both chambers of the Legislature today on third
reading, setting the stage for the next step in the process: the budget joint
conference committee. More on the conference committee in a moment.
One of the biggest stories of the budget's final reading in the House and
Senate was what DIDN'T happen. Neither chamber amended the language that takes
the sales tax off groceries for two years. So the conference committee will
quite likely approve that language in its compromise version of the budget that
the committee will create next week.
As was the case Thursday, there were gobs of proposed budget amendments in
both chambers today, and both chambers worked past 5 p.m. to get through the
budget and some of the other work they had before them. I couldn't tell you -
there are probably not 10 people on earth who could - where each chamber's
version of the budget stands right now on every issue (although this information
can be gleaned from the Legislature's Web
...continue reading
-
House, Senate vote to remove food tax
Mar 2, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
3 comments
Login and comment
They did it! Both the House and Senate adopted budget amendments today to
remove the sales tax on groceries for two years. These votes took place near the
end of the longest day yet of the 2006 budget session.
The House voted first, after about 20 minutes of debate. Rep. Ann Robinson,
D-Casper, the primary sponsor of the amendment to remove the tax on groceries,
told her colleagues that the amendment offered them a genuine chance to improve
the lives of Wyoming's people.
"Tonight, we have a tremendous opportunity to pass legislation that will have
a truly positive impact on the very Wyoming families that we were sent here to
represent," she said. She added that the move would give a family of four
between $287 and $518 of tax relief per year, and if lawmakers lift the tax on
groceries, they will be able to tell their constituents that they listened to
them and did something to improve their lives. Rep. George Bagby, D-Rawlins,
also spoke briefly in favor of Robinson's amendment,
...continue reading
-
Food tax exemption remains in spotlight
Mar 1, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Eliminating the state sales tax on groceries is emerging as perhaps the
biggest issue of the Legislature's 2006 budget session, and tomorrow (Thursday)
will be a pivotal day for the idea. Casper Democrat Ann Robinson in the House
and Casper Republican John Barrasso in the Senate are planning to introduce
budget amendments tomorrow to lift the tax off food.
If the amendment succeeds in both the House and Senate, that will give clear
direction to the conference committee that will meet next week to work out the
differences between the versions of the budget that clear both chambers. That
scenario would give the tax cut an excellent chance of taking effect. If the
amendment passes in only one chamber but not the other, then it will be a
bargaining issue for the conference committee, and its chances of taking effect
are anybody's guess. If the amendment fails in both chambers, that will just be
depressing.
Tomorrow is a pivotal day for the issue, but by no means is it the last
...continue reading
-
Debate focuses on tax breaks
Feb 28, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
I think the big news today was the debate between the executive branch and
legislative branch over tax cuts. In case you haven't heard, our state
government is dealing with a massive budget surplus, enough to fund government
at its current levels and still have enough left over to pay for the state
General Fund share of state government for another two years.
Of course, Gov. Freudenthal's budget recommendations would use some of that
extra money to invest in the people of this state. He also proposed
substantial amounts of savings, including $415 million into the state's "rainy
day account," which is formally called the Legislative Stabilization Reserve
Account, which would bring that account's balance to $500 million. Another $600
million-plus will automatically flow into the Permanent Wyoming Minerals Trust
Fund.
In his State of the State address, Gov. Freudenthal asked legislators to make
good on a 11-year-old promise to reduce the state sales tax by a half of a cent
if
...continue reading
-
Budget work starts slowly
Feb 27, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Legislators began their budget work today, but it wasn't as exciting as it's
going to get. I focused on the Senate, where they had all of four amendments on
their first reading of the budget, and they were all "technical amendments,"
according to Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman John Hines, R-Gillette,
who sponsored all four amendments. That means the amendments weren't very
interesting as far as policy questions go.
Tomorrow (Tuesday), they'll continue with first reading of the budget in the
Senate. Most of what it involves is different members of the Appropriations
Committee describing each of the agencies' budget requests. So apparently, they
won't get to second reading of the budget in the Senate until Wednesday, which
is when we'll see the interesting amendments introduced for votes.
I didn't listen to the House work on the budget today, but I understand that
they didn't get very far either. However, unlike the Senate, the House
apparently is entertaining amendments
...continue reading
-
Ten days down, ten to go
Feb 24, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
We've reached the halfway mark of the 20-day budget session, and to tell the
truth, we haven't seen a lot of fireworks so far. Not that that's a bad thing.
When we see, as I said, "fireworks," what that means is that people's passions
and emotions can become larger factors in the decision-making process, and they
can wind up making different decisions than they might otherwise under calmer
conditions. We could consider ourselves lucky that we don't have doctors and
lawyers at each others' throats this year, and we don't have federal officials
holding emergency meetings about wolves while our legislative and executive
branch officials grow increasingly impatient. And mainly, we can be grateful
that lawmakers aren't strapped for cash just to keep the government afloat for
another two years. That situation can make things very intense and very
difficult for everyone involved in the session very quickly. Instead, part of
the public debate this year is over what kind of tax relief to give
...continue reading
-
Full House votes down 'heat and eat'
Feb 23, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
You've got to give Rep. Ann Robinson credit for trying. Thursday, the Casper
Democrat resorted to a rarely-if-ever used procedural maneuver to revive House
Bill 117, the "heat and eat" bill that would remove the sales tax from groceries
and home utility bills. After the House Revenue Committee voted 5-4 against
sending the bill forward to the full House, Rep. Robinson asked the full House
to trump the committee's recommendation and bring the bill back to life. And it
almost worked - "almost" being the key word. The House voted 33-25 against
reviving the bill. All 14 House Democrats voted to bring the bill back, but they
were joined by just 11 of the 46 House Republicans. Two Republicans were excused
from the vote. Because of the two excused absences, The bill needed 31 votes to
make it onto the floor of the full House, but sadly, it fell six votes
short.
Rep. Robinson said she is not about to give up on the idea. "We need to keep
the issue before the Legislature as often as we can,
...continue reading
-
New positions, and new life for "heat and eat"?
Feb 22, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Several pieces of legislation were the focus of much of the discussion during
the House Democrats' caucus today. Naturally, this being a budget session, part
of the talk focused on the budget. Specifically, the number of new government
positions in the budget, which is about 780.
Chris Boswell, a former House Democrat himself and now Gov. Freudenthal's
chief of staff, explained how the vast bulk of those positions are either A)
related to the opening of a new prison in Torrington (that's more than half the
jobs right there), or B) positions that already exist but, for technical
reasons, could not be listed in state agencies' "standard budgets," and so they
show up in the documents as new positions. About 50 more are related to
increased mineral development in the state, a development that makes our
communities - and state coffers - richer in many ways, but one that also
requires increased manpower to handle.
The point was that, at first glance, 780 new government jobs seems like
...continue reading
-
"Heat and eat" bill dies
Feb 21, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
I guess this will qualify as the first slightly depressing post I've made
this session (which is slightly odd). Today, Rep. Ann Robinson's "heat and eat"
bill, as several people around the Capitol Building were calling it, died on a
5-4 committee vote. This was House Bill 117, which would have eliminated the
sales tax on groceries permanently and would have suspended the sales tax on
home utility bills for two years. Both Democrats on the House Revenue Committee,
Reps. Mary Meyer Gilmore of Casper and John Hastert of Green River, voted for
the bill, but only two of the panel's seven Republicans joined them. I don't
know right off hand if there's another bill this session to drop the sales tax
on home heating bills, but I'm pretty sure this was the only chance lawmakers
will get this year to remove the sales tax from food. And, as they do every
year, they decided against it.
Wyoming is one of only about 12 states that tax groceries. For years,
Democrats have fought in vain to remove
...continue reading
-
Ahh, the joy of committees
Feb 20, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
2 comments
Login and comment
This is just part of the "fun."
Sen. Kathryn Sessions, D-Cheyenne, specifically invited me to the Senate
Judiciary Committee meeting this afternoon to see how the panel handled her bill
on registration of sex offenders. Obviously, she was excited about her bill,
which she and Attorney General Pat Crank said also had the support of the
governor.
Have you ever been to a legislative committee meeting? They can be a little
trying. There were four bills on the agenda this afternoon. Sen. Sessions' bill
was fourth. Third on the list was another sex offenders' registration bill,
sponsored by Sen. Bruce Burns, R-Sheridan. And the first two were unrelated.
Here's how it went.
First up was a highly unexciting bill sponsored by Sen. Jayne Mockler,
D-Cheyenne. It was about criminal background checks for firefighters and related
emergency workers. I'll spare you the details, except to say that the FBI had an
issue with a recent law the Legislature passed, so this was kind of a
...continue reading
-
Cheney address highlights Day Five
Feb 17, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
1 comment
Login and comment
Vice President Dick Cheney's address to the Legislature today struck a
positive and bipartisan tone by all accounts, and it was well received by all of
the Democrats in attendance who I talked to later in the day.
Cheney began by expressing his appreciation for the warm welcome six days
after his hunting accident that has been the main national news story all week,
and he reported that his hunting partner's recovery is going well.
"It's a wonderful experience to be greeted with such warmth by the leaders of
our great state," Cheney said. "That's especially true when you've had a very
long week. Thankfully Harry Whittington is on the mend and doing very
well."
Rep. Bill Thompson, D-Green River, said he led the applause when Cheney
shared the good news about Whittington. Thompson also said a lot of people in
Wyoming who hunt and fish may have had close calls, and they recognize the
inherent dangers in those kinds of activities. Thompson also said it's time for
an end to people
...continue reading
-
Relief for the people and Cheney's visit
Feb 16, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
Let me start off with just a tad about today's legislative business before I
get into the REAL talk of the town: the vice president's visit. Some of this
year's more eagerly anticipated votes for introduction took place today on a
swarm of bills that could give people relief in the form of tax breaks or
expanded financial assistance in this era of massive state government surplus
and massive utility costs. A good number of these bills received the required
two-thirds support to get introduced into the budget session.
One of these bills is House Bill 105, low income energy assistance program,
sponsored by Cheyenne Democrats Wayne Reese in the House and Kathy Sessions in
the Senate. It would expand eligibility for the program to people with incomes
at or below 250 percent of the poverty level. Democrats have supported ideas
like this for years, but now that energy costs are hitting record highs, this
may be an idea whose time has come.
Another bill, HB 117, consumer tax relief, is
...continue reading
-
Session pace picks up
Feb 15, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
The budget session is beginning to hit its stride. Enough bills have now been
introduced that most of the committees have enough work to keep them busy during
their scheduled meetings. And Wednesday was the first day that the full House or
Senate got their first looks at some bills that have made it out of committee.
These weren't exactly what you would call "high-visibility legislation." The
House discussed three bills related to workers' compensation, while the Senate
had eight bills on various topics (such as electrical board membership and
drivers' education course certification). This is not unusual. Legislators
generally start their sessions off with less controversial or difficult topics,
and they save the more heavy lifting for after they've had a few days to warm
up. Still, in a 20-day budget session, there always seems to wind up
being more work to do than human beings can do in that time, so things can
get quite intense by, say, the middle of Week Two. This is
...continue reading
-
2006 Legislature launches budget session
Feb 14, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
And we're off!
The 58th Legislature's 2006 budget session kicked off at 10 a.m. yesterday,
highlighted by Gov. Freudenthal's State of the State address. Speeches by the
governor and legislative leaders were the main events of the day, sprinkled with
some choral entertainment. By the day's end, legislators had begun
the laborious process of bill introduction, a topic that deserves its own
paragraph.
During budget sessions (even-numbered years), every bill except for the
budget bill needs to survive a two-thirds vote in either the Senate or House to
even be introduced into the session. The idea is that our lawmakers should spend
this session only on the budget bill and other issues that are of immediate
importance. The reality is that hundreds of bills are drafted, and each one
comes up for an introductory vote. This means that a bill sponsor or supporter
speaks in favor of the bill for a minute or so, and then there is a short time
allowed for one legislator to offer a
...continue reading
-
Exciting News
Feb 13, 2006
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
I have just returned from several days of meetings and training sessions
sponsored by the Democratic National Committee and the Association of State
Democratic Chairs. It has been exciting to hear about the grassroots energy
that state parties all across the country are witnessing. Almost every state
has stories to tell like Kaydee's. With growing numbers of activists and
volunteers spread out in precincts across Wyoming and the United States, 2006
really does look like a good year for Democrats.
I also wanted to tell folks who might be reading our blog about what's on the
horizon for the state party.
In case you haven't read it other places on the blog, let me mention that we
will be hosting our annual Nellie Tayloe Ross Banquet in Cheyenne on March
4th. The keynote speaker for the event, Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack, is
frequently mentioned as a potential 2008 presidential candidate. Vilsack was
twice elected as the Governor of Iowa. During that
...continue reading
-
House Bill 92
On Wednesday, February 1st, in Laramie WY on the UW campus, Deanna Frey of
the Wyoming Children's Action Alliance came to speak at the Grassroots meeting
on behalf of House Bill 92, "Quality Childcare."
The Federal Reserve Bank conducted a multi-year research on economic stimuli
that are most effective in spurring and sustaining a vibrant economy. Art
Rolnick concludes that investment in early child development is the single
wisest investment for economic growth.
House Bill 92 contains the following items:
1) rate all of the early child-care providers across Wyoming according to a
five-star system
2) Invest in training and education of early child-care providers
3) subsidize the early child care programs up to the national standard of
"quality" childcare.
House Bill 92 is asking for 14 million during the upcoming budget session.
They will have to negotiate money with the competing education proposal of the
Hathaway scholarship.
At the conclusion of last
...continue reading
-
Poll contains good news for Democrats
Feb 8, 2006
Posted by Bill Luckett
Login and comment
You may have noticed that the Casper Star-Tribune is publishing the results
this week of major polling the paper conducted recently, and there is plenty of
good news in there for Democrats to celebrate. First, Gov. Dave Freudenthal's
job performance was rated as good or excellent by 81 percent of the people
surveyed. This is in line with the tracking poll of SurveyUSA.com, which shows
the governor's job approval rating consistently in the mid-60s for the bulk of
the past year. Meanwhile, Democratic U.S. House candidate Gary Trauner and U.S.
Senate candidate Dale Groutage, who are just at the beginning of year-long
campaigns against incumbents, are starting out with solid bases of support, and
we can only expect that support to grow as people learn more about Gary and Dale
while they travel the state to meet with voters.
The poll also shows that education and the economy are the top two issues
people most frequently mentioned when asked what they thought the single most
important
...continue reading
-
Grassroots numbers more than double in Sheridan, Natrona, and Laramie counties
The grassroots meetings of January 23- 31 in Sheridan, Casper, and
Cheyenne saw the participation numbers more than double since the first meeting
in late 2005. Old party activists, new residents, young people; including
high school, college age, and young professionals. Even registered
Republicans turned out to listen to the Wyoming Democrats new grassroots
strategy.
Representative Mary Gilmore spoke about the legislative session to her
constituents in Casper, and Senators Mockler and Sessions, and Representatives
Reese and Esquibel addressed the plenary in Cheyenne. These Wyoming
legislators discussed the implications of saving more of the budget than
constitutionally required. They also spoke about energy and education
bills in depth.
The grassroots meeting further mobilized those present to
write letters to the editor. Dozens of participants pledged at the meeting
to write to the paper about issues they felt were important
...continue reading
-
Sheridan Grassroots Numbers Double
January 23 meeting in Sheridan: Participants in the grassroots meetings
more than doubled since the first meeting. High school and young
professionals began trickling into the field meetings. Participants openly
discussed their points of view in realms of local, state and and
national concern. Throughout the course of the meeting, participants
proposed to hold a community forum on points of pertinent political concern in a
central, community environment. The points of dicussion will primarily
concern the contested seats in the upcoming election.
-
Announcing: Sheridan County Upcoming Grassroots Meeting
*********** Grassroots Field Organization, Democratic Party: Phase
II Date: Monday January 23rd Time: 6:30 - 8 p.m. Where: Inner
Circle in the Fulmer Public Library 1.. "What's at Stake" in the
upcoming legislative session: analysis by State Executive Director Kyle
DeBeer 2.. Mini-workshop on writing effective
letters-to-the-editor 3. Identify leadership for Sheridan county
Young dems chapter 4.. Brainstorm on community service activities the
month of April 5. Political feedback and discussion among
participants
-
January 9 meeting in Jackson
The meeting with longtime party activists in Jackson was inspiring and
positive. Convened in front of a fire at Leslie and
Hank's beautiful home, former social workers, foreign correspondants,
environmental justice and conservation lawyers and scientists, substance abuse
cases caseworkers and founders of equality-inspired NGOs, all discussed what's
at stake for Wyoming and the nation. From this point, we will work to develop
active precinct teams, and foster a youth contingent.
-
Did I sign that? Barbara Cubin's latest excuse.
Jan 11, 2006
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
Last year, Rep. Barbara Cubin supported changes to the 1872 Mining Law, which
would have opened thousands of acres of public land to potential private
development. The proposed changes were roundly condemned by Western
politicians, including Wyoming Senator Craig Thomas, also a Republican.
Now Congress is considering another scheme that would force the sale of
millions of acres of the public lands managed by the Department of the Interior
(except for National Parks and tribal lands). Given her past positions, I
wasn't surprised to see Cubin listed a co-sponsor of the legislation. Now,
Cubin is seeking to distance herself from the bill. To that end, her spokesman
has offered a couple of different explanations.
First, he claimed that it was all a mistake:
WASHINGTON -- U.S. Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyo., said Monday that she is
mistakenly listed as a cosponsor of a bill that would sell off millions of
acres of public lands in the West to raise money
...continue reading
-
Field Program Launched in 2005, laying groundwork for exciting 2006
The first year of our field program targets seven counties. Those
include Teton, Natrona, Albany, Laramie, Sheridan, Fremont, and Sweetwater. As
of this week, I will have visited all of them for the introductory and
initiatory phase I. This month, I look forward to revisiting each county
for phase II, including an issue-by-issue discussion of the upcoming legislative
session, and a mini-workshop on writing letters to the editor. I have enjoyed
getting to know the active players and the local specificities in all seven
counties. I look forward to the growth of our meetings and projects, and
making new friends! I'll see you in your town!
-
What does Wyoming need in 2006?
Jan 3, 2006
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
That's the question that the Casper Star-Tribune recently posed to
their readers and 56 state leaders.
Some of us at the state party also wrote into the paper to offer our thoughts
on what Wyoming needs in the year ahead. Mike Gierau (our chairman) wrote
about
small business promotion. Nancy
Drummond (our vice chairman) focused on
equality in pay . And I commented on the
need to
help young adults who want to start a family
in Wyoming.
We would like to know what you think too. What does Wyoming need in 2006?
What should the state's top two or three priorities be? Tell us in the
comments section!
-
Vice Chair Nancy Drummond recognized for "chronic volunteerism."
Jan 3, 2006
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
If you've met Nancy Drummond, it won't come as a surprise that she was named
the 2005 Volunteer of the Year by the Sheridan Chamber of Commerce. (You can
find her bio here .)
Nancy gives an incredible amount of time and energy in community service. At
the moment, she is a member of her local school board. She delivers hot meals
to senior four days a week for meals on wheels. She has been a Chamber
Ambassador for over twenty years in Sheridan. And, of course, she is active
in the Democratic Party at the county, state, and national levels.
Congratulations, Nancy!
-
Welcome to the Wyoming Democratic Party's Blog!
Dec 21, 2005
Posted by Kyle DeBeer
Login and comment
Earlier this week, Bill Luckett (our communication's director), Kaydee Dahlin
(our field director), and I got together to talk about where the state party is
headed and what projects are on the radar for the start of the next year. One
thing that the three of us agreed on was the need to let people know what is
happening at the state party. To that end, we are starting this blog for
the Wyoming Democratic Party .
At least once each week, Bill, Kaydee and I will try to give you an insider's
view of state party politics. We'll tell you about the folks we meet as we
travel around the state and the projects that we're working on. Some of our
more recent posts will appear on the homepage of the party's website, and you
can read all of our posts by clicking on the link to the "Official Blog" on the
left-hand side of the homepage. We also expect to be joined from time to time
by members of the state party's executive committee, elected Democrats,
candidates,
...continue reading
-
Bush Record of Failure on Veterans: 3 Years of Broken Commitments
Washington, D.C. – On the eve of Memorial Day Weekend, Democratic National
Committee (DNC) Chairman Terry McAuliffe was joined at a press conference by
several Veterans to highlight George W. Bush’s plan to cut nearly $1 billion
from the Department of Veterans Affairs – should he win a second term in
November.
“This weekend, we as a nation will honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice
in their service to our country,” DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe said today. “And
while now more than ever, we should ensure that promises made to our Veterans
are promises kept, we discover that President Bush has a secret plan that far
from honors those who served. In fact, he actually has a secret plan to ambush
America’s Veterans if he wins in November.”
An internal White House memo surfaced yesterday revealing that the Bush
Administration quietly notified various government agencies that should Bush
win a second term he would cut spending for virtually all agencies in
...continue reading
-
America Under Bush: The State of Wyoming's Working Families
Since the Bush Administration took office, Wyoming's working families are worse
off. Here a few of the ways in which the failed policies of George W. Bush and
Barbara Cubin have hurt Wyoming's working families:
1,300 of Wyoming's workers have lost their unemployment benefits since
January 2004.
42 percent of Wyoming taxpayers will receive less than $100 from the latest
Bush tax cut in 2004.
Wyoming's families face a rising share of the national debt burden -
$20,449 over the next six years.
22,000 Wyoming children were abandoned by Bush and left out of the Child
Tax Credit.
86,000 Wyoming residents have no health insurance - up 11.3% under
Bush.
6,700 Wyoming seniors are worse off under Bush's Medicare Prescription
Plan.
The complete report, The
State of Wyoming Under President Bush , is available by clicking HERE .
...continue reading