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View Article  Progressive Agenda for Iowa (Very Very Early Draft)

Progressive Agenda for Iowa

(Very Very Early Draft)


By Sam Garchik

 

As Iowa Progressives, we propose not just to change our state’s policies, but even more important, to restore the bonds of trust between the people and their elected representatives.

 

That is why, in this era of official evasion and posturing, we look for a detailed agenda for state renewal, and a written commitment with no fine print.

 

This election offers the chance to bring to government a new majority that will transform the way our leaders work. That change would be the end of government that is too remote, too intrusive, and too easy with the public's money. It can be the beginning of a government that respects the values and shares the faith of Iowans across the state.

 

Like Henry Wallace, Iowa's foremost progressive, we believe that the political parties are of value only insofar as they make it possible to put into action certain principles of social justice."

 

To do so, we aim to restore accountability to Government, end its cycle of scandal and disgrace, and make us all proud again of the way free Iowans govern ourselves.

 

Iowans running for office in this need to support the following principles:

  • FIRST, support citizen access to government and media outlets;
  • SECOND, condemn the uses of the death penalty in all cases;
  • THIRD, support an unlimited access to abortion;
  • FOURTH, support open and verified voting systems;
  • FIFTH, condemn a constitutional amendment against same-sex marriage;
  • SIXTH, support development of proven alternative sources of energy;
  • SEVENTH, support responsible budgets, which include increased funding for education and social welfare programs;
  • EIGHTH, support greater cooperation between candidates and campaigns in Iowa;
  • NINTH, support increased uses of sustainable agricultural practices;
  • TENTH, consider peace as much an option as war in international dealings.

Candidates promising to uphold these planks must bring action on these items as soon as feasibly possible.

View Article  Progressive Promise

Progressive Promise


I got this from the Progressive Caucus website in the House of Reps. We can modify it to make it more specific to Iowa. Later today, I'll post something I was working on for Alta and a possible Democracy for Iowa statewide group. Feel free to comment on that here as well.

The Progressive Promise: Fairness For all

Update: Check out the
latest, revised Progressive Promise!

The Congressional Progressive Caucus offers the Progressive Promise for all. We believe in government of the people, by the people, and for the people. Our fairness plan is rooted in our core principles. It also embodies national priorities that are consistent with the values, needs, and hopes of all our people, not just the powerful and the privileged. We pledge our unwavering commitment to these legislative priorities and we will not rest until they become law.

1. Fighting for Economic Justice and Security in the U.S. and Global Economies
» To uphold the right to universal access to affordable, high quality healthcare for all.

» To preserve guaranteed Social Security benefits for all Americans, protect private pensions, and require corporate accountability.

» To invest in America and create new jobs in the U.S. by building more affordable housing, re-building America’s schools and physical infrastructure, cleaning up our environment, and improving homeland security.

» To export more American products and not more American jobs and demand fair trade.

» To reaffirm freedom of association and enforce the right to organize.

» To ensure working families can live above the poverty line and with dignity by raising and indexing the minimum wage.

2. Protecting and Preserving Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
» To sunset expiring provisions of the Patriot Act and bring remaining provisions into line with the U. S. Constitution.

» To protect the personal privacy of all Americans from unbridled police powers and unchecked government intrusion.

» To extend the Voting Rights Act and reform our electoral processes.

» To fight corporate consolidation of the media and ensure opportunity for all voices to be heard.

» To ensure enforcement of all legal rights in the workplace.

» To eliminate all forms of discrimination based upon color, race, religion, gender, creed, disability, or sexual orientation.

3. Promoting Global Peace and Security
» To honor and help our overburdened international public servants – both military and civilian.

» To bring U. S. troops home from Iraq as soon as possible.

» To re-build U.S. alliances around the world, restore international respect for American power and influence, and reaffirm our nation’s constructive engagement in the United Nations and other multilateral organizations.

» To enhance international cooperation to reduce the threats posed by nuclear proliferation and weapons of mass destruction.

» To increase efforts to combat hunger and the scourge of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and other infectious diseases.

» To encourage debt relief for poor countries and support efforts to reach the UN’s Millennium Goals for Developing Countries.

4. Environmental Protection & Energy Independence
» To free ourselves and our economy from dependence upon imported oil and shift to growing reliance upon renewable energy supplies and technologies, thus creating at least three million new jobs, cleansing our environment, and enhancing our nation’s security.

» To promote environmental justice in affirmation that all people have an inherent right to a healthy environment, clean air, and clean water wherever we live, work, and relax.

» To change incentives in federal tax, procurement, and appropriation policies to:

   (A) Speed commercialization of solar, biomass, and wind power generation, while encouraging state and local policy innovation to link clean energy and job creation;

   (B) Convert domestic assembly lines to manufacture highly efficient vehicles, enhance global competitiveness of U.S. auto industry, and expand consumer choice;

   (C) Increase investment in construction of “green buildings” and more energy-efficient homes and workplaces;

   (D) Link higher energy efficiency standards in appliances to consumer and manufacturing incentives that increase demand for new durable goods and increase investment in U.S. factories;

» To eliminate environmental threat posed by global warming and ensuring that America does our part to advance an effective global problem-solving approach.

» To expand energy-efficient transportation choices by increasing investment in synthesized networks, including bicycle, local bus and rail transit, regional high-speed rail and magnetic levitation rail projects.

» To preserve prudent public interest regulations that encourage sustainable growth and investment, ensure energy diversity and system reliability, protect workers and the environment, reward consumer conservation, and support an expanding marketplace that rewards the commercialization of energy-efficient technologies.
View Article  Fallon's Speech at the State Convention

  Fallon's Speech at the State Convention


From Century of the Common Iowan

First, I want to thank those who supported me in the recent Democratic Primary. We sent a strong message that issues are important.

We sent a message that campaign finance reform and clean elections must become the law of the land.

We sent a message that it's unacceptable to put another band-aid on Iowa's ailing healthcare system when what's needed is universal reform.

We sent a message that economic development must be focused on small businesses, not on corporate giveaways, not on the kind of tax cuts for the rich that Jim Nussle supported in Washington, D.C. and wants to do here in Iowa.

There are two things I want all of you to know. One: there's still plenty of work to do. Two: I am not done fighting!

I want to thank Chet Culver, Mike Blouin and Sal Mohamed for running a spirited campaign, and I want to congratulate Chet for his victory on June 6th. Chet and I have been meeting to discuss issues, and I can assure you that all of us, in fact most Iowans, have a lot more in common with Chet Culver than with Jim Nussle. Jim Nussle must not become
governor.

How do Democrats win this fall? We win with grassroots organizing, by focusing on issues and by making it clear that Democrats support people over profits. A lot of folks became Democrats in this election because I made it clear that people have to come before profit. Let's keep these new Democrats in the Party by being the Progressive Populist People-Before-Profit Party. If we sound that theme, we will be the majority party in Iowa and nationally.

Let's show Iowans that Democrats care.

Let's show Iowans that Democrats care about the abuse of eminent domain. And if you don't think there is abuse, talk with the family of a 70-year-old woman here in Des Moines who was evicted from her home because the City needed her property "immediately." The trauma of the move was so significant that she died 6 months later - and her home was still standing.

Talk to Brad and Nate, who own a business in Des Moines' East Village and who have had to fight to keep that business from being condemned and turned over to a private developer.

Talk to the family of Delores Robins in Clarke County, who died prematurely last year, in part due to the stress brought on by fighting to save her farm from a lake.

Talk to my friends in Page County who have endured so much financially and emotionally while fighting to keep their farms from being taken by eminent domain.

Talk to the rural residents in Madison County, who are fighting to keep Doug Gross from flooding their property so he can have a lakefront home.

Talk to people in Mahaska, Dallas, Jefferson, Marshall, Johnson and many other counties. I've looked into the eyes and heard the cracked voices of far too many Iowans to not know that eminent domain is abused in Iowa. For their sake, and for the sake of many, many others, let the Iowa Democratic Party state clearly that when it comes to eminent domain, people come before profit.

Let's show Iowans that Democrats care about education, unlike Jim Nussle, who had the audacity to hold a press conference in front of Des Moines Area Community College recently. Nussle announced that he wanted to restore Iowa's prominence in education, and then prescribed more tuition tax credits, which would only further undermine Iowa's public education system.

Let's show Iowans that Democrats care about diversity, unlike Jim Nussle, who announced that our quality of life would be protected somehow if we prevented John and Mark or Susan and Betty from marrying. Give me a break!

Nussle wants to be the candidate of division. Fine. Let us be the Party of unity, of inclusion, the Party whose tent is so big that we welcome all who have had their voices ignored at the Statehouse. Our Democratic tent should be big enough for family farmers, rural residents, small business owners, gays, lesbians, working families, immigrants, minorities�all who are tired of seeing profit take precedence over people.

I want to close with a chant that I recommend you use to help motivate you in the campaign this fall. "Out-muscle Jim Nussle, out-hustle Jim Nussle, let's tussle with Nussle and win!" Thank you!

View Article  DFA-Link: An Underutilized Tool; Searching for a Group

  DFA-Link: An Underutilized Tool

(Searching for a Group)


By Alta Price

Today I’m going to tell you how to sign up for Democracy for Iowa (DFIA) at DFA-Link. I recommend joining DFIA to anyone interested in the Progressive Caucus, whether or not you want to join Democracy for America. You can also follow these directions to learn how to find DFA-Link groups without actually signing up for DFIA.

If you just want to sign up quick, without taking the time to learn how to use DFA-Link, go here.

Now that you have a DFA-Link account (see previous blog post – although I think it’s self-explanatory if you go to blogforamerica.com and click on DFA-Link and follow the directions), you are ready to find a group to join. On the first screen that pops up after you sign in, you will see a box labeled Quick Search. I’d ignore that. Instead, I use the little gray box at the top right. The gray box is exactly the same as the colorful tabs at the top. I just like the box. Anyway, click on Groups in the box or at the top.

The next screen has button for Search Groups at the top. Click on that. Under Basic Group Search, put in your zip code and click for groups within 25 miles. You can adjust the miles up to 100. I think DFIA will pop up because it is a statewide group. You will also see any other groups within the radius you have chosen. You can also use the Advanced Group Search button and put Iowa in as the state and find all of the DFA-Link groups in the state.

Once you find DFIA, click on View Group in the box on the right. You can read about DFIA, see the list of organizers, see a list of all group members, read the DFIA blog (not to be confused with Blog for Iowa!), and check out upcoming events. You can click on a group member’s name to reach a screen where you can send that person a message. Look around!

If you like what you see, click on the Join Group button at the top of the page. Welcome to Democracy for Iowa!

Alta Price altaprice@yahoo.com

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First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


Air America

*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


The Counterpoint

*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


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FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media