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Lieutenant Governor Northam Urges Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to Avoid Offshore Drilling on Virginia’s Coast

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I’m very glad to see this from Lt. Governor Northam – thank you! Now we really need Gov. McAuliffe and our two U.S. Senators to come out against drilling for oil off the coast of Virginia. It’s a bad idea on basically every level. As Northam correctly points out, offshore oil drilling would pose a major risk to the enormous tourism and aquaculture industries in the Hampton Roads region, in addition to the military, NASA and the Chesapeake Bay. Plus, of course, increased fossil fuel use is driving sea-level rise, stronger storms, and other adverse effects of global warming. For all these reasons, as Northam argues, it “would be best to take a conservative approach and exclude Virginia from the proposed leasing program.”

RICHMOND – Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam submitted a letter today urging the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to avoid offshore drilling in Virginia. Currently, the Commonwealth is included in the draft proposed 2017-2022 Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and Gas Leasing Program.

“Over the years, I have witnessed the demise of the Chesapeake Bay and decided to run for public office in large part to work towards its restoration. Offshore drilling will not only put our environment at risk, but will also threaten some of the most important industries in Virginia – defense, agriculture and tourism. I urge the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to exclude the Commonwealth from the next iteration of the Five Year Oil and Gas Leasing Program.”

Read the Lt. Governor’s letter to BOEM.

The Speech President Obama Should Give in Announcing His Nominee

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It is presumably but days before President Obama goes before the cameras to do what presidents always do in nominating someone for an important position: giving us the name, describing why this person would be an admirable choice for the job, and introducing us to the nominee.

But this is not the usual situation, and what is extraordinary in this situation requires the president to deliver a speech that goes beyond what presidents usually do for this sort of occasion.

For while the President is doing what presidents have always done, the Republican-controlled Senate has declared its refusal to do what Senates have always done.

So instead of the usual process the Constitution calls for, the President faces a battle over whether the Republicans will honor that traditional process, or will reject it so as to cling to the power the loss of Justice Scalia would otherwise legitimately entail for them.

The president has already admirably articulated his intentions with regard to choosing a nominee (“A sterling record. A deep respect for the judiciary’s role. An understanding of the way the world really works. That’s what I’m considering as I fulfill my constitutional duty to appoint a judge to our highest court.”).

In that statement, he makes no mention of those who are making war on his rightful powers. But it is greatly to be hoped (though not all the signs are encouraging) that -as the responsibility gets passed to the Senate — the president will not shrink from the confrontation that has been thrust upon him.

For much is at stake in this battle the Republicans have forced upon the nation. It is a battle that must be fought and won, and one that is the president’s job, above all, to lead.

Here is what I’d have him say:
………………………….
It is my pleasure today to introduce to the American people the outstanding person I am nominating to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court.

But, unfortunately, before I get to that introduction, I need to talk about the threat that hangs over this confirmation process – and indeed over the integrity of our constitutional system – as a result of the announcement by the Republicans in the Senate that they will refuse to do what the United States has always done in this situation.

Never in the more than two centuries of this nation’s history has a Senate refused categorically to consider any nominee they receive from the person who is president when a vacancy opens up on the Supreme Court. Never.

You would think that genuine conservatives would be the last people to do the unprecedented, and to trample on long-standing American political norms and traditions. Aren’t real conservatives the people who are most likely to understand that the traditions are there for a good reason, and to hesitate to just sweep them aside.

There is no excuse – no valid justification – for what they are threatening to do.

It’s quite clear what the framers of our Constitution had in mind in setting up a system in which “The President…shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint…Judges of the supreme Court..” And until this moment, the United States Senate has always honored what the framers had in mind.

Yes, the Senate has on occasion rejected particular nominees, for one reason or another. But it has always ended up confirming a nominee from the president.

What they threaten, for example, is not like the Senate’s rejection of Robert Bork at the end of Ronald Reagan’s term. After the Senate rejected him (because they deemed him too far out of the mainstream of conservative jurisprudence), that same Democratic-controlled Senate confirmed another conservative judge nominated by President Reagan – Anthony Kennedy – by a unanimous vote, 97-0.

And this being the final year of my term of office is irrelevant, too. Democratic-controlled Senates have confirmed nominees from Republican presidents in the last year of their presidency three times just in recent decades.

Their unprecedented obstructionism – having no justification – stands exposed for what it is: a grab for power without regard for principle. This unprecedented obstructionism displays a lack of respect for our democratic system in which sometimes you win and sometimes you lose.

The Republicans have recently declared, in a public letter, that they will execute their “constitutional authority” to postpone filling this vacancy until – they hope – they can get their president in office.
I’m afraid “constitutional authority” is way too noble-sounding a name for what they are doing. No one believes that the framers of our Constitution intended for the Senate to use its role of “advise and consent” to nullify the president’s role of “nominate…and appoint.”

While the Constitution does not explicitly forbid this power grab, they are violating our American system nonetheless.

Not only is the sense of our founders about how the process should unfold quite clear here. But also, previous generations of American leaders have supported the Constitution by establishing traditions and norms to support the spirit of our founding document. The Republicans are transgressing against that spirit.

The Constitution does not and cannot forbid all kinds bad behavior; inevitably it must depend upon a healthy political culture, developed over the generations, being honored by the people in positions of responsibility.

Once again, we must marvel at how different is the conduct of these Republicans from what we have always understood to be the special strength of conservatives.

It has always been conservatives who have maintained that a good society is not just a matter of laws, that the laws have to be backed up by traditions and norms. The laws are the bricks that create our structures, but the norms and traditions are the mortar that hold it all together.

No, it cannot be said that these Republican Senators are using their “constitutional authority.” Rather, they are abusing their constitutional role of advise and consent.

There’s good reason why this Republican power grab is unprecedented: with their chiseling away at the mortar our forebears created to make our system of government work well for the nation – these Republican Senators are threatening to degrade the system of government that we have all taken an oath to protect, support and defend.

The Republicans have made their declaration. But that declaration is unacceptable, and I do not accept it. Neither should the American people. No one should be allowed to grab for power in a way that damages the system generations of Americans have fought to preserve.

I will insist that the Republicans relent and perform their duties as every other Senate in our history has done: play their proper role in the confirmation of a Supreme Court justice who has been put forward by the president whose job it is to nominate and to appoint. I will keep insisting until they fulfill their responsibilities, or until time runs out.

And I encourage my fellow Americans – liberal and conservative and in between – to speak out to insist likewise. If these Republican senators should persist in putting their own power above the integrity of our constitutional system, I will encourage the American people to impose on them the appropriate political cost, come Election Day.

And now that the Republicans have shown their hand, let me be clear about what is required of them. Given what they have told us about their intentions, we cannot be satisfied with their just going through the motions. They owe the nation more than a charade undertaken in bad faith, behind which they execute the same unjustifiable obstruction to protect their power at the expense of our constitutional order.

I will insist that, besides holding hearings and conducting a vote, they confirm a nominee who meets every legitimate criterion for the Senate to apply to a potential Supreme Court justice. And I have set about my responsibilities in this process to make sure I send to the Senate such an exemplary nominee.

I have previously expressed my determination to nominate someone who has “A sterling record. A deep respect for the judiciary’s role. An understanding of the way the world really works.” To which I will add: someone whose view of the law falls well within the American mainstream.

In other words, I have sought someone in whom the Senate will find no legitimate reason to refuse to confirm.

Which brings me to introduce to you, with great pleasure, …. who meets every legitimate criterion with flying colors.

[And then on to the nominee and his/her background/qualifications/character, etc.]

Thursday News: Bill Clinton in Alexandria Says “America never stopped being great…make America whole again”

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by Lowell

Here are a few  national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, February 25. Also, check out Bill Clinton in Alexandria yesterday, rebutting Trump in stating that “America never stopped being great; what we need to do is to make America whole again so it works for everybody.”

No more pouting, my fellow Democrats. Let’s vote for people who can pass laws that will move the country forward into the 21st Century.

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by Dan from Nevada

Youthful enthusiasm is like young people, often late to the party. After Barack Obama’s historic 2008 victory, Democrats celebrated — and then went to sleep for four years.  Then in 2012, they awoke briefly and Obama won again. Then Democrats went to sleep yet again for another four years.  Now they are waking up to a country that has moved to the far right, and they are begging us to consider Bernie Sanders while lamenting the “establishment” candidate, Hillary Clinton, who they consider too conservative.  Some of them might not even vote this time if she is the Democratic nominee.  Are you freaking kidding me?!?

Barack Obama had a vision for America. He implemented everything he could in 2009 and 2010, and then he had to improvise the rest of his time in office. He focused so much on health care during those first two years that he left a lot of other issues on the table for future years. But after taking heavy losses in the 2010 elections (when many Democrats were asleep — great job, guys!), most of those issues remain unresolved.  He never closed Guantanamo Bay, he never addressed basic gun control laws (the laws that even majorities of gun owners agree on), and he never addressed immigration reform.  He had to fend off multiple government shut downs and Republican threats to default on our nation’s debt. He never addressed government spending being out of control because he couldn’t sit down and develop a comprehensive plan with the “we want Obama to fail” Congress.

This isn’t the Republicans fault. They are simply right wing a-holes; it’s in their nature to be disruptive. They are like the villains in a Bond film; they just want world domination and James Bond is in their way, so they try some elaborate way to kill him, and they keep failing because they are out of touch with reality.  When your dog tries to eat poop left on the road; you let him know that isn’t acceptable behavior, and if he does it again, he won’t get to lick your face.

That’s what we have to do with Republicans. They are throwing us dog-s*** ideas and dog-s*** laws, and we have to respond by voting for somebody else.

But what happens when we don’t vote? What happens when we decide that our integrity disallows us from voting for Democratic candidates who aren’t “pure” enough, who don’t believe in every single thing we believe in? Sure, we like the idea of having other political parties besides Ds and Rs, and we talk about getting rid of the two-party system, but despite all the talk the system doesn’t change.  We still get Democrats and Republicans.  And one of the biggest criticisms of Democrats is that they compromise with Republicans. But if there were fewer elected Republicans, Democrats could pass far more progressive legislation. Fortunately, Democrats can be pushed to adopt more progressive policies, even if they get a campaign check from a big Wall Street bank or an oil company now and then.

What is the alternative?  We’ve seen it. Government shutdowns, demands for less regulation of the banks and the fossil fuel industry. Then we get someone like Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder (R), who actually knew that one of his state’s largest (and poorest) cities was getting potentially unsafe drinking water and he didn’t do anything about it until it became a national outrage.

We used to vote people out of office for being uncaring, socially inept, and crooked.  Now we just throw up our hands and act like it’s just part of the system.

We need to vote for candidates who will oppose these right-wing Republicans, or we will have to deal with the extreme laws they pass. To date, the results of going to sleep between presidential elections have been tragic.  Police departments militarized.  Mandatory arbitration clauses standardized.  Women’s health care and reproductive rights limited.  Our history textbooks bastardized. Abstinence-only education imposed. Unemployment benefits reduced. Wages stagnated. These are the kind of policies we get when we decide to stay home from the voting booth.

In 2010 after averting a financial crisis caused by Republican policies and Republican lawmakers neglecting to deal with pressing problems (like the housing bubble), President Obama was rewarded for his efforts by Democrats losing the U.S. House of Representatives in a landslide, along with numerous state legislative seats. In 2012, Obama won reelection, but the Democratic Party failed to recoup its massive losses in 2010. As if that all isn’t bad enough, 2014 – another midterm election year – was an unmitigated disaster for the Democratic Party as well.

Now after 7 years of economic growth, reduced unemployment, and increasing prosperity, President Obama is lambasted for doing a poor job, and for taking the country in the wrong direction. This is the same guy who, as a Presidential candidate, was absurdly attacked because his policies were supposedly going to lead to astronomical increases in oil prices and limited production of oil while sending our markets into disarray from overregulation. In 2008, the U.S. produced 5 million barrels of oil a day.  Now it’s 9 million barrels a day.  Oil prices were above $140 a barrel during the summer of 2008, now they’re under $30 a barrel.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined to below 7,000 points at the peak of the financial crisis in the fall of 2008.  It went to above 18,000 points last year, and continues to be strong despite recent declines. So much for all those predictions about doom under President Obama.

All this success, yet according to Politifact, “Democrats during Obama’s presidency lost 11 governorships, 13 U.S. Senate seats, 69 House seats, and 913 state legislative seats and 30 state legislative chambers.” But it gets worse: Democrats also  lost county officials, mayors, local city council members, public utility commissioners, judges, school board members, and sheriffs.

One of the saddest examples of this trend has been the failure of the Black Lives Matter movement – despite heroic efforts to do so – to garner support for candidates dedicated to changing the trajectory.  The events in Ferguson, Missouri during the summer and fall of 2014 raised awareness of not just police brutality, but also government corruption in the way police used small traffic violations as a way to fund their local government at the expense of their poorest and most vulnerable citizens.

Yet when the 2014 elections took place, Republicans somehow managed to demonize the Black Lives Matter movement in order to scare (white) people into voting Republican.  The exposure of a vast national trend of the mistreatment of poor people and even the execution of unarmed minorities, and the mostly peaceful protests aimed at raising awareness of this trend, was actually used against Democrats. Apparently, the Republicans’ racist “Southern Strategy” of Richard Nixon and Lee Atwater still works today, decades after it was first developed.

And who among the Democratic Party suggested that a way to address the concerns of the Black Lives Matter movement was through the voting booth, first and foremost at the local and state levels?  After all, voting is the best way to create change in a democracy.

We as Democrats need to come to the realization that a major problem with America today is that a minority of (angry) people who hold (far-right) ideological views are voting for the candidates who now, incredibly, make up a majority of elected offices.

Fantasizing about adopting the policies of Denmark or Finland or some other country that is much smaller, more homogeneous, healthier, and more educated than we are is counterproductive.  We have a candidate we can get behind. Hillary Clinton isn’t the lesser of two evils. She’s the smartest person in the room.  She isn’t perfect, but she’s malleable — she can be moved towards the left.  Republicans are intractable.  They won’t move, even if reams of evidence to the contrary (e.g., on climate science) exist.  Even if 90% of the electorate wants something like universal background checks, or increases in the minimum wage, Republicans look into the eyes of the Koch Brothers or Sheldon Adelson, and they have to say no.

No more pouting. Let’s vote for people who can pass laws that will move the country forward into the 21st Century.  And if you elect Democrats and they aren’t responding to your concerns, then call their offices and request they vote for issues you find important. At least they’ll listen.  Republicans already decided how they are going to vote, regardless of facts, reality, or evidence; if in any doubt, they just check with their wealthy and big corporate donors and ask them what they should do.

This election isn’t about Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, or Marco Rubio. It isn’t even about Mitch McConnell, or Paul Ryan.  It starts with your members of the General Assembly, your County Board or City Council member.  All politics starts in your backyard. To paraphrase the slogan of this blog, what you need to do is clear and simple: “think globally, act locally.” Get involved, not just every four years but EVERY year, and of course exercise your precious right to vote every time you can — not just in presidential years. In the end, that’s the only realistic way we’re going to get the “revolution” we want in this country.

They’ve Given Us a Great Battlefield. Let’s Mass for the Battle!

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In a previous piece, I wrote that the Republicans’ shocking refusal to let President Obama fill the Supreme Court vacancy is an effort to steal from millions of Americans who helped re-elect this president won fair and square: namely, the right to have our guy shape the Court if the opportunity should arise.

It is understood by Americans on both the right and the left, I argued, that this is part of what is at stake in a presidential election. We won that power, and now we get to collect our winnings.

The Republicans are not just denying the president his rightful powers, still more fundamentally they are violating the rights of millions of American citizens under the Constitution.

And we are not going to stand for it—so I concluded.

That conclusion, actually, was really a hope expressed as a prediction. We on the liberal side have let these Republicans get away with so much, in recent years, without making them pay for their disgraceful conduct. But the Republicans have now handed us a most opportune moment to rise up, putting together a popular movement to fight the Republicans on this latest, most important form of obstructionism.

This Republican refusal to play their proper role sets up a battlefield we should be glad to fight on. There are two main reasons this fight is opportune:

1) The stakes – whether or not control of the Supreme Court can be shifted from the toxic domination of the right-wingers over to the liberal side – are so high that we would be wise to mobilize ALL our political resources to achieve victory.

The Conservative Five who have prevailed in various 5-4 decisions over the past decade have done great damage to America, and we cannot let this chance to take that power away slip by.

We can certainly hope that President Obama and the Democrats in the Senate will do their part to win this battle. But whether they rise to the occasion or not we the people should help keep attention focused on this issue and intensify the pressure on the Republicans to do the right thing or suffer the political consequences.

Victory either way: either getting the Court majority we’ve earned fair and square, or pummeling the Republicans in public opinion so effectively that they lose both the White House and the Senate, and we then get the Court majority anyway.

2) This latest Republican move opens a window into a whole world of the Republican darkness.

The Republican effort to prevent President Obama from performing the important role which the American people hired him did not, of course, begin with this Supreme Court vacancy. Their across-the-board obstructionism has not only been an affront to this particular president, but it manifests a contempt for the Constitution they’ve taken an oath to protect and defend. And their deliberate disabling of our political system – giving us the least productive Congresses in our history – represents a betrayal of the nation.

This latest move opens all that up to display to the American people. Their power play here about the Supreme Court reveals a political party that puts its own power above everything – no matter the cost to our nation, its political norms, and its most sacred values.

The battle they’ve chosen enables us to expose all that, and in a presidential election year, that could have a powerful impact.

What we should insist on is not just that hearings be held and votes be cast in the Senate. If that’s all we insist on, the Republicans are free to engage in a sham– going through the motions while holding fast to their determination to deny this president his right to name the next justice on the Supreme Court. If that’s all we insist on, they can grant our demands and leave us having won nothing, and allow them to get away with disgraceful conduct yet again.

We should demand not only that they conduct hearings and a vote, but also that they confirm any nominee who is clearly worthy by the traditional criteria: if the president nominates someone who: 1) shows high professional qualifications, 2) possesses good moral character and 3) is in the mainstream of American jurisprudence – the Senate is obliged to confirm.

That is the American tradition — and the implicit rule in the Constitution – regarding how the “advise and consent” role should be performed.

So we should insist not only on their going through the motions, but on their confirming a worthy nominee put forward by the president we elected to have the power to put his stamp on the Court, if an opening arose.

As luck would have it – bad luck for the right, good luck for those who supported the re-election of this president — the opportunity has arisen: their justice has died, while our guy is president.

Sometimes you win, and sometimes you lose. Accepting such loss is part of what is required to “protect and defend” the Constitution. The Republicans’ refusal to accept Barack Obama’s legitimate role as president is — in spirit — a violation of their oath of office.

Let us, as the grassroots, hold their feet to the fire. Let us have a popular movement arise to march onto this battlefield. (Perhaps people could begin organizing a Yuge March on Washington to converge on the Capital in the days before the Senate votes on an Obama nominee.) Let us bring all our forces to bear on this pivotal battle.

The message of this movement should be: “You Republicans have a choice. Either honor your responsibilities under the Constitution, or we will tar you with this betrayal all the way to November when the American people will send you off into oblivion.”

Maryland AG May Join New York AG in Investigating Exxon; What About Virginia AG???

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Paging Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring! Paging Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring! 🙂

In response to a petition calling for an investigation of ExxonMobil, Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh said his office will “hold accountable any individuals and corporations who have intentionally contributed” to climate change.

Frosh made the strongly worded statement in an email to people who signed an online petition calling on his office and 15 other attorneys general to probe Exxon in connection with the company’s history of climate denial. While Frosh didn’t say an investigation is underway, some environmental activists and elected officials from other states said his wording suggested he is poised to take on the oil giant.

Exxon is already the target of an investigation by the New York State attorney general’s office. In November, investigators for Democratic Attorney General Eric Schneiderman issued a subpoena demanding that Exxon turn over documents related to its climate change studies and how the company represented the information to the public. California Attorney General Kamala Harris, another Democrat, has also been under pressure to probe Exxon. Legal experts say Exxon could be accused of violating shareholder and consumer protection statutes.

“I welcome any attorney general who joins the fight,” Schneiderman said after Frosh issued his statement. Exxon and other oil companies have an obligation to ensure that their disclosures to investors about climate risks are truthful and not misleading, Schneiderman said.

As I wrote back in October 2015 with regard to Climate Hawks Vote’s petition to 15 AGs, including lots from “blue” or “purple” states, but NOT Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring:

Note that one state not included on that list is our own Commonwealth of Virginia. I’m not sure I “get” that, given Mark Herring’s endorsement in 2013 by renowned climate scientist Michael Mann, but we’ll just assume it was an oversight. It’s also interesting to note that Virginia has its own RICO statute on the booksThis statute certainly should be looked at as a basis for state-level investigation and/or prosecution of fossil fuel companies based in, or with offices in, Virginia, who engaged in climate science denial. Note that ExxonMobil has had a major presence in Virginia for years, including its Fairfax “campus” acquired in 1999.

Also note that Virginia-based coal giant Alpha Natural Resources — a huge donor to Virginia Republicans, by the way — among other activities provided financial backing to one of the most despicable, notorious climate science denial groups in the world, the “Heartland Institute,” which “gained notoriety in 2012 for sponsoring billboards comparing those who believe in climate change to the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and cult leader Charles Manson.”

Finally, I’d point out that that Dominion “Global Warming Starts Here” Power has been a funder of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a group that works to protect fossil fuel interests, attack clean energy, and “thwart efforts to address climate change.”

This is just a short list, of course; I’m sure there are other fossil fuel companies either based in or with strong ties to Virginia who have funded and/or otherwise engaged in covering up the indisputable link between their products and global warming. As such, this should at the minimum expose these companies to investigation, and possible prosecution, under RICO statutes. I join the growing call for federal and state authorities – including our Virginia’s Attorney General – to aggressively pursue such actions. I also continue to urge Virginia to divest from all holdings in these companies – for strong moral, environmental, and now potentially legal reasons. With that, here’s the statement from Climate Hawks Vote.

As the months tick by, and as the urgency of the climate crisis only gets worse and worse by the day, I’m really losing patience with the reluctance of state AGs – including ours – to really go after these climate-science-denying, planet-killing companies. Is there any good reason why they wouldn’t? I can’t think of one.

Atif Qarni: Gov. McAuliffe Should Veto “Secret Police” Bill

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by Atif Qarni

The Virginia State Senate recently passed a bill which is being coined as “the secret police” bill. This legislation will likely pass the House of Delegates soon and will be sent to Governor McAuliffe. If signed into law, FOIA requests will not be granted to gain access to records of police officers at state and local levels, including any law enforcement who is responsible for the prevention and detection of crime and the enforcement of penal, traffic, or highway laws of the Commonwealth.

The problem with this bill is that taxpayers will not be able to hold law enforcement agents accountable for any misconduct or wrongdoing while serving in their official capacities. This legislation takes a huge step backwards in providing transparency into taxpayer funded positions and any potential abuse of power.

The Virginia State Senate passed this bill 25-15, with all Republican Senators voted for it, along with four Democrats. I will not make this a partisan issue, but instead will focus on the potential negative impact this bill can have on our citizenry.

Our police officers put their lives at risk to serve and defend. They should be respected and protected. Having said that, law enforcement divisions do provide officers working narcotics or undercover with many protections. To my knowledge, law enforcement statistics do not show a rising rate of violence against police officers in the Commonwealth. In fact, violent acts against police officers nationwide have declined in the last few years, with 2015 seeing among the lowest number of violent acts against police officers in a quarter century.

So why do we need the “secret police” bill?  This legislation was pushed by police unions, and compelling testimony from police officers was provided. As a special interest group, of course it is their right to advocate for issues that are important to their members. Absent from these proceedings, however, were organizations advocating for civil liberties, such as the NAACP or ACLU.

I realize that elected officials in Virginia have to review hundreds of bills in a short period of time, and that they do so with very limited staff and other resources. I also realize that when counterarguments are not provided, a bill is deemed “noncontroversial,” and therefore it becomes easier for legislators to pass it. Nevertheless, sound judgement has to be displayed in cases like this, because the fine print does actually matter.

This bill, if it is signed into law, will create a system like Chicago. The majority of police officers, like many public servants, are decent, hardworking professionals. However, as in any workplace, there will always be a few who will bend the rules. Those individuals should be held accountable for their actions.  Yet if this bill is enacted, it will protect the identities of these bad actors and create a “cone of silence” that further erodes the trust that exists between law enforcement and the people they are sworn to protect.

If a police officer is officially written up for misconduct, police departments will file this report in the individual’s personnel record.  If this bill becomes law, these reports become sealed and inaccessible to the public, even if a FOIA request is made. If multiple reports of misconduct exist in a police officer’s personnel file, there will be little to no repercussion for Departments who have failed to take appropriate action to discipline the employee, as these files will be essentially sealed from the public.

Although there is no evidence of a rising rate of violent acts against police officers in the Commonwealth, there IS evidence indicating that people of color are being unfairly targeted, mistreated and disproportionately penalized by law enforcement officials. In Virginia, we cannot afford to create a situation where law enforcement and minority communities are fearful or suspicious of one another.

I have served on panels and participated in meetings with police officers from Fairfax County, Prince William County and Manassas City. One important goal has been to proactively build relations with the communities of color that the police serve. For example, the Security Resident Officer that is assigned to the middle school where I work has been a good ambassador and role model for the student population, which is predominantly African American and Latino. We need to continue to take proactive approaches to bring minority communities and law enforcement communities closer together, not further apart.

Friends in the General Assembly tell me that it is inevitable that this bill will pass the House.  The only way that we can stop this bill, then, is by appealing to the Governor to veto it when it reaches his desk. I urge people reading this post to to do that.  Governor McAuliffe’s efforts to work across party lines to get meaningful legislation passed have been admirable. However, this bill could set a dangerous precedent for further obfuscation of law enforcement activities and potentially jeopardize the integrity of our law enforcement system as a whole. It should not be signed into law.

Wednesday News: Cruz and Rubio Can’t Stop Trump, Who Takes on Glenn Beck in NV

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by Lowell

Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Wednesday, February 24. Also, how crazy is the far-right-wing, extremist freak show? Check out Donald Trump taking on Glenn Beck in Nevada. Bizarro!

Commonwealth Institute: Virginia is Exceptionally Unequal

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I got the following this afternoon from The Commonwealth Institute. How to fix this problem? How about we start by reversing almost every right-wing policy, from a tax code that massively favors wealthy individuals and powerful corporations (can we say “taxpayer-funded corporate welfare?”), to underinvestment in education, health care, public transit, and other human and physical capital crucial to fostering economic upward mobility? And to accomplish all that? How about we throw out Republicans (and economic conservadems) and replace them with progressives? Sounds like a plan to me; what the hell are we waiting for?

Too many hard-working Virginians can’t seem to get ahead, despite working full-time. Turns out, there’s a reason for that.

Median wages in Virginia are actually lower now in real terms than they were five years ago, even as wages for those at the top have grown sharply. This means that even as a few Virginians get more and more, everyone else is left farther behind. One in five Virginia workers now makes less than $10.33. That’s less than $21,500 a year for someone working 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year.
Virginia is now the most unequal state in the country, and is more unequal than at any time on record. As of 2015, high-wage Virginia workers are being paid 6.2 times what low-wage workers make per hour, and 2.8 times what typical Virginians make.

Everyone wants their children to do better than they did, yet when wages for most people are stagnant or even falling that becomes more and more difficult. Many of us are proud of the hard work that helped us climb the ladder of opportunity and provide a better life for our families, whether it’s our own work, our parents’, or our grandparents’ But it’s harder to climb that ladder when the rungs keep getting further apart or are actually missing altogether.

We need to make sure everyone can make ends meet — we’re all better off when all families are financially stable and secure. And, beyond that, access to the American dream — being able to get ahead through hard work and sacrifice — should be for everyone, not just a few who have gotten more and more of the rewards of economic growth in recent years.

We need to grow the economy, and in ways that benefit all of us, not just some.

–Laura Goren, Research Director

 

“I don’t think the revolution’s going to come”

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I’m not particularly thrilled about quoting Jim Webb, but sad to say, I think he was on to something during his one (and only) Democratic debate appearance back in October when he said to Bernie Sanders, “I don’t think the revolution’s going to come.”

Why do I believe Webb was on to something? Let’s start with Sanders’ prescription for the revolution he believes is necessary to change American politics.

“I think what we need, when I talk about a political revolution, is bringing millions and millions of people into the political process in a way that does not exist right now.”

Unfortunately for Sanders, and arguably for America, that hasn’t happened, at least not at the polls so far (yes, it’s possible that turnout could crank up in South Carolina and the Super Tuesday states, but I’m not holding my breath for that, are you?). Check out turnout in the first three Democratic caucuses and primaries: Iowa (171k in 2016, down sharply from 236k in 2008); New Hampshire (251k in 2016, down from 288k in 2008); Nevada (84k in 2016, down from 118k in 2008). So yeah, Democratic turnout has been down in all three primaries and caucuses held so far, compared to 2008. That’s certainly no sign of a “revolution” in progress. In fact, if there’s a “revolution” happening anywhere, it’s frighteningly on the Republican side, with Donald Trump (as Catherine Rampall points out in today’s Washington Post, turnout is way up on the GOP side compared to 2012).

By the way, yesterday’s Washington Post story about how young voters are supposedly “failing Bernie Sanders, just as they’ve failed so many times before,” may have been needlessly harsh in tone, but the fact is that young voters are NOT turning out in “revolution”-level droves for Sanders this year. And that’s a huge problem both for Sanders’ chances of winning the Democratic presidential nomination, and more broadly for Sanders’ underlying idea – one I strongly agree with – that we need much higher levels of constructive citizen involvement  in our democracy (e.g., “an informed, engaged electorate” would be nice) if we’re ever going to get the kind of systemic change we so badly need.

Bottom line: Sanders is correct in many ways about what we need in this country. He’s also in many ways shifted the political conversation, bringing issues of income inequality, corporate power, the health of our democracy, etc, etc.. to the fore. But so far at least, Sanders has been incorrect that simply by forcefully calling for super-progressive policies and for a “political revolution” in this country, such a “revolution” will actually occur. For those of us who have been struggling for many years (and mostly failing) to get Democrats to show up in huge numbers for local races, state legislative races, Congressional races, etc, etc., let’s just say “we feel your pain, Senator Sanders.”