Scenes From An Iowa Democratic Campaign Event

West Liberty Free Public Library

Sunday we were in West Liberty for a candidate forum with Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate Zach Wahls and Josh Turek; IA-01 U.S. House of Representatives candidates Christina Bohannan and Travis Terrell and state and local candidates. It was a packed house at the Carnegie West Liberty Free Public Library.  As you know the Trump administration is trying to drown public libraries in the proverbial bathtub. No wonder, since local libraries are a community’s hub where neighbors of all political stripes gather together for the common good.

The West Liberty library is beautiful.  We are regular RAGBRAI riders and we try to visit  libraries in the towns across Iowa  when we stop for a break. The local libraries are always bustling and welcoming to cyclists, offering information, cold water, air conditioning, a place to hang out, recharge your phone and last but not least, indoor plumbing. Libraries are also one of the pillars of democracy. So a shout out to libraries everywhere and the West Liberty library for hosting Sunday’s event.

It was a great day, loads of positive vibe, fired up democrats, good speeches, stories and authentic moments. Josh Turek joined the group at our table after the candidates were done with their remarks. There were introductions and hand shaking.  My husband, a retired community college dean who oversaw disability accommodations during his tenure was chatting with a former co-worker who shared with Turek about working with disabilities in the community college setting.

Josh Turek visiting with attendees.

The candidate running for statehouse in HD 82, (seat currently held by Bobby Kaufmann),  James Behrman, spoke of hard times for his family. He had lost a grandfather to cancer and he himself has had cancer twice. He abandoned his prepared remarks and said, “I am not a politician. I’m a person that cares.”  He said he is running for office because he could not comprehend why no one was doing anything about Iowa’s cancer epidemic. He approached Turek to shake his hand. Josh gave him heartfelt words of encouragement and told him to let him know if he needed any help.

James Behrman, candidate for HD 82

Zach Wahlstwo moms were in the audience and Zach acknowledged them in his remarks. He spoke of family being about love. He gave a fiery speech and spoke of corruption and how the status quo isn’t working anymore. Making a case for term limits, Zach joked that as a new dad he now understands that “politicians are like diapers and should be changed frequently,” drawing laughter from the crowd.

Zach Wahls for US Senate

Josh Turek kept his remarks brief saying he preferred to spend the time listening to attendees’ concerns. He gave a scaled down, speedy version of his regular stump speech. He is the son of a Vietnam vet who was exposed to Agent Orange, causing Josh to be born with spina bifida. He spoke of the struggles – 21 surgeries by the age of 12 –  and triumphs, representing the U.S. in basketball at four Paralympics and earning 2 gold medals.

Josh Turek for US Senate

Christina Bohannan also gave fired up remarks. She impressed upon the room that taking back the House of Representatives starts in Iowa. She shared that her campaign was going to be holding volunteer canvassing trainings. She indicated that everyone was welcome at these trainings, even if they were supporting other candidates including her own primary opponent, Travis Terrel. Kudos to Bohannan for her leadership and recognizing we are all in this together.

Christina Bohannan for congress IA-01

Travis Terrel‘s speech focused on health care and lack of health care. He shared his mother’s story of needing a medication that will cost $1,000 per month. He said his mother is a low wage worker who could not afford to pay for the needed medication. He also spoke of work and said Democrats are the party of working people. He shared his belief that when our party stands up for workers they will come home to Democrats.

Travis Terrell for US Senate IA-01

The rest of the speakers shared common themes of taking back our country and fighting for public policies that will improve the lives and opportunities for regular people – health care, jobs, public schools, civil rights, access to clean water.

Nick Salazar and Michelle Servadio Elias are both running to represent HD 96, Muscatine county.

Nick Salazar for HD 96

Michelle Servadio Elias for HD 96

Tom Wieck is running for the Iowa Senate in District 41 to help make Iowa a better place for his children and grandchildren. He described a lifetime of hard work and community engagement. He is committed to prioritizing education, cost of living, water quality, and property rights.

Tom Wieck for Iowa Senate District 41

Everyone was on good behavior. There was no visible sign of inter-campaign snark between candidates or supporters.

I was proud to be a Democrat. Let’s go!

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Are Culture War Bills Prioritized By Iowa Republicans?

A panel of experts provides updates on Iowa statehouse happenings followed by Q & A.

Melissa Peterson, ISEA
Damian Thompson of Iowa Safe Schools
Luke Elzinga (he/him) DMARC – Des Moines Area Religious Council
Keenan Crow, One Iowa
Kyrstin Delagardelle, Planned Parenthoood Advocates of Iowa

Follow the Interfaith Alliance of Iowa YouTube channel.

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Shadow Workforce Revisited

Photo by Mad Knoxx Deluxe on Pexels.com

The rise of a shadow workforce—workers who perform essential labor without full rights or protections—is not a side issue in the American economy. It is rapidly becoming the model that reshapes work for everyone.

During an April 2020 interview with Kimberly Graham about her U.S Senate race, she laid a framework,

We are some of the hardest working people on the planet. Americans are very productive. We work hard but we are not seeing the rewards of that. We are falling further and further behind financially. More of us are hurting financially. We may have jobs, but yeah, we have two jobs because we can’t make it on one. There’s all the gig economy. We have fewer and fewer unions, fewer and fewer union jobs that come with benefits and come with a pension and all of that. (Blog for Iowa, Kimberly Graham – A Voice For ‘Us,‘ April 2, 2020).

Not much has changed for the better since Graham said this. Increasingly, a shadow workforce performs work, yet are not counted as employees on payrolls. This includes legally present independent contractors, freelancers, gig workers, temporary agency workers, and part-timers. It also includes undocumented workers who are not legally in the country. The work they do is real, yet legal protections are partial, inconsistent, or absent. There are risks in this.

In a discussion with local writer Joel Wells, he said in an email, “We are actively allowing the creation of a permanent underclass of workers with fewer rights, fewer protections, and no real voice. That is not speculation; it is already happening.”

Businesses are designed primarily to generate profit not jobs. That is why public policy must set the rules that protect workers.

Democrats must take the mantle in establishing and maintaining worker protections through policy. What is needed is a clear, understandable framework that voters can grasp and defend. Things like health insurance, retirement contributions, child care, and paid leave are a beginning. There should also be strong penalties for wage theft, labor standards enforcement regardless of immigration status, and whistleblower protections for vulnerable workers. Democrats should bring these issues to the forefront of policy discussions. Since FDR, Democrats have stood firmly with labor. That relationship needs revisiting.

If neglected, the shadow workforce can be normalized, lowering standards for everyone. It has begun to spread… to everyone.

When work is pushed into the shadows, rights disappear first—wages and standards follow. Bringing that work back into the light is not just about fairness for some workers. It is about protecting the future of work for all.

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Defending Libraries And Museums Matters

Boone, Iowa Public Library.

When politicians come after public libraries it gets my dander up. Libraries have become part of who I am and without them we would all be something less. The administration, which doesn’t give a fig about me and what I think, is at it again.

The president’s proposed budget seeks to eliminate funding for the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS). It may sound familiar: in 2025, the administration, working with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), attempted to drastically shrink or effectively dismantle the agency—placing staff on leave, freezing or cutting grants, and issuing an executive order to reduce it to a “minimum presence.” In response, people across the country and across the political spectrum took the fight to court, where federal judges blocked most of those efforts. The outcome underscores a simple truth: public libraries and museums continue to matter deeply to both rural and urban communities.

Mine is a simple question: Why can’t the fact that we love our public libraries and museums be enough to ensure their persistence?

What does IMLS do? It is the primary source of federal support for the nation’s 123,000 libraries and 35,000 museums. IMLS provides grants to libraries that need to replace technology and infrastructure. Among other things, they are directly involved with funding Inter-library Loans, Books for the Blind, preserving veterans’ stories, funding resources for those associated with people who are autistic, providing disaster preparedness for libraries and museums, sustaining Native American libraries, and more. Could we live without these services? Maybe, but not as well.

I read the Republican arguments about ending federal funding for libraries and museums, saying they should be managed by the states. If IMLS goes away, as the administration’s budget proposes, it would affect a number of local museums that rely on project-based grants to fund operations. These museums include the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, the African American Museum of Iowa, and the Iowa Children’s Museum. All of these are sources of pride in the community.

Yes, our federal elected officials may tire of us calling so frequently. However, our public resistance is how we tell them we care about our libraries and museums even if politicians don’t.

The U.S. Capitol switchboard phone number is (202) 224-3121. You can call this number to be connected directly to any Senator’s or Representative’s office by providing your zip code or the name of your representative. Let them know how you feel about shuttering IMLS.

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Rob Sand At Iowa State Education Association

Watch Democratic gubernatorial candidate Rob Sand address the ISEA.  Check out his campaign website to volunteer or donate.

Follow Bleeding Heartland’s YouTube channel. https://www.youtube.com/@bleedingheartland9

“State Auditor Rob Sand, the Democratic candidate for governor, delivered these remarks to the annual meeting of the Iowa State Education Association in West Des Moines on April 11, 2026.  The ISEA (the largest labor union in Iowa) announced at the meeting that they are endorsing Sand in the governor’s race.”

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Iowa May Day Strong Events #NoKings #NoBillionaires

Iowa May Day Strong Events:  Click on the image to find events in Iowa

From our inbox: Here is an important word from May Day Strong about the next national day of action. There are already ten events scheduled in Iowa.  Click here to find out if your town has one scheduled or to host one.

In Chicago, Labor and community leaders called for an economic blackout on May 1. Communities across the country are ramping up for a Workers Over Billionaires national day of action—rallies, walkouts, teach-ins, and more—to demand an economy that works for all of us.

This May 1, 2026 we can stand together.

Can you turn up the energy with us by committing to host an action in your community? Hosting can look different depending on what makes sense for you and your network:

  • Organize a rally, march, or gathering
  • Lead a teach-in or community conversation
  • Coordinate a workplace or school-based action
  • Organize a neighborhood food or clothing drive
  • Fundraise for a local legal aid fund or mutual aid fund
  • Bring people together in any way that builds visibility and collective power

You don’t have to do this alone. We’ll provide: A host toolkit with planning guidance and materials (keep this shortlink handy: workers.fyi/mds-host); Graphics, messaging, and outreach templates; Support to help you plug into the broader May Day network & recruit more like-minded community members to your events!

This May Day is an important escalation in our collective fight against billionaires and corporations and for all our futures. We need as many actions as possible to deliver a powerful message to the billionaire class. Sign up to host an action here → [event link]


Calls to have on your radar as you prepare for May 1:

  • 💥📅 For our action hosts, event hosts, & partners leading actions on May 1st: a May Day host call on April 16th focused on messaging, materials, and public rollout.

Join Us Thursday, April 16th at 8pm ET / 5pm ET

  • 💪🔥For labor organizations & unions: We are convening all unions members and labor leaders to get into formation in time for May Day 2026 on Tuesday, April 21st at 8pm ET / 5pm ET.

Join Us Tuesday, April 21st at 8pm ET / 5pm ET

There’s a role for all of us in this moment. Hosting is one way to show our collective power.

In Hope & Solidarity,

May Day Strong


P.S. Text HOST to 58910 to stay up to date with resources & updates in the final days leading up to May 1st, 2026! 📲

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For Chuck Grassley That Was Then This Is Now

Ed Flaherty of Veterans For Peace addressing about 75 people gathered to protest the military action in Venezuela over the weekend.

This letter to the editor by our friend Ed Flaherty, a veteran and tireless peace activist, was originally published in Little Village April 13, 2026.

By Ed Flaherty, Iowa City

The Iran war is not going well for the U.S. And please call it war, not a conflict, not a military operation. This war began on Feb. 28, with no congressional approval and with no notification to the U.S. public. I believe Iowa’s senator Charles Grassley is uniquely situated to stop this U.S. war on Iran.

Senator Grassley is the oldest and longest-serving member of the U.S. Senate. He has the well-earned respect of his fellow Republican senators. His voice could be instrumental right now in putting an end to this ill-conceived, illegal, ill-fated war. He must vote FOR a proposed resolution that prohibits further U.S. military action in Iran. He must vote AGAINST any proposal authorizing additional spending for the war. He must REMIND the president and his fellow senators that any military action on Iran after April 25, unless specifically authorized by Congress, would be a violation of the 1973 War Powers Resolution.

Grassley, on Jan. 12, 1991, was the only Republican senator to vote against the first Gulf War. In 2018 he reflected on that vote. He said,

Make no mistake. It’s not easy to vote against the vast majority of your party and your president. Based on my feedback from Iowans and after many hours of deliberation, my gut told me to vote “no” against military action. I felt the people were not fully behind it. And I didn’t want to risk dividing the country like Vietnam.

Ironically, a Gallup poll a week before that vote indicated 57 percent of respondents agreed it was time to go to war, and 37 percent wanted more time for sanctions to work. In contrast, polling from early March to April 6 this year on the Iran war has consistently shown that 54 percent of Americans disapprove of the war, with 39 percent in favor. Other polls show similar results.

So, if Senator Grassley had the courage to vote against a war in 1991 that had a majority of public support, how much more should he feel it his duty to voice opposition to a war that the people do not want? Wars are easy to start. Witness the surprise and unauthorized beginning of the current Iran war. Wars are difficult to end, and the longer they go on, that much harder to end. Senator Grassley has the unique opportunity and obligation to use his voice and his vote to stop this war now.

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Contact Your Legislator Before It’s Too Late To Fight For Clean Water

Click on the image to take action

From our inbox:  Here is a water monitor action alert from Iowa Environmental Council:

IEC:

Thank you to everyone who continues to call and email your legislators about water monitoring. Keep it up! If you’ve already sent an email or Action Alert, but you haven’t heard back from your legislator, you can call them again and ask for a response. Or you can use our phone-calling script and call your legislator directly. Find the Action Alert and script by clicking here or the button above.

What We’re Hearing:
If your legislator has questions, please have them contact IEC so we can provide accurate, up-to-date information:

  • A bill in the House of Representatives (HSB 772) proposed to fund the real-time water quality monitoring system at $300,000 annually. However, that’s not enough to fund a statewide network. It is critical that the state fund the full amount: $600,000 in annual appropriations to run the system and a one-time allocation of $500,000 to replace aging equipment.
  • There has also been confusion about the bill because it specifies the funds are for “groundwater monitoring” instead of surface water monitoring. The appropriation language must specify funding for the Iowa Water Quality Information System operated by IIHR-Hydroscience and Engineering at the University of Iowa.
  • Some legislators and other decision-makers have said the Iowa DNR’s monthly water sampling is adequate — that the real-time water monitoring network is unnecessary. Let your legislator know that there is no other publicly available monitoring network in the state that provides water quality data at the same frequency and level of detail as the Iowa Water Quality Information System. Think about it like a smoke detector in your home: Would you rather have a smoke alarm that tests one time per month, or one that continuously monitors your home in real time?
  • In fact, some of the state’s own studies show that real-time sensors do a better job at calculating short-term and long-term nitrate loads than monthly sampling. According to a report by the Iowa DNR, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS), Iowa State University, and IIHR, the real-time monitoring system “provides researchers, agencies, and landowners with a valuable tool they can use to directly monitor the impact of land‐use strategies/changes on downstream water‐quality, enables watershed stakeholders to understand the fate and transport of nutrients in Iowa’s waterways, and helps in measuring the impact of the INRS [Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy] on water quality.”

Catch Up Quickly:

In 2023 the legislature removed funding from the water quality monitoring network, and as a result, the public stands to lose access to data from 60 real-time water quality sensors after June 2026. Without adequate funding, most sensors will be removed from Iowa’s rivers and streams, with coverage reduced to only a handful of counties, leaving much of the state without data to make informed decisions.

Learn more about the sensor network by downloading our fact sheet or watching a short presentation from IEC Water Program Director Colleen Fowle and the Iowa Farmers Union.

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Meet Candidate Rachel Burns For HD 7

Rachel Burns is running for Iowa House District 7. Check out her website at www.burnsforiowa.com

“Iowans deserve a choice, no matter where they live. ” – Rachel Burns

Follow Rachel Burns on social media:

Facebook  Instagram  Donate

 

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Small Modular Reactors And Iowa

Google Maps Image of Duane Arnold Energy Center
Google Maps Image of Duane Arnold Energy Center

A joke is circulating on the internet that SMR stands for Spending Money Recklessly. It isn’t funny because it is true, even if big money investors have a plan to recoup their investment in Small Modular Reactors with interest. Regular folks like me don’t want new nuclear power when renewable projects that include solar and wind power generation can meet much of our needs.

Here’s the rub with my way of thinking: renewables are clean, cheap, and safe for the first 70-80 percent of meeting our electricity needs. Something needs to fill the gap so the grid can reliably deliver exactly the amount of electricity customers use. What fills that gap? Nuclear energy is a candidate for that, yet it is beset with problems, especially in the United States, like some I mentioned last week.

In her new book, Clearing the Air: A Hopeful Guide to Solving Climate Change in 50 Questions and Answers, author Hannah Ritchie has four on nuclear power:

  1. Q: Isn’t nuclear power dangerous? A: Nuclear power is not risk-free, but it’s one of the safest energy sources we have.
  2. Q: Doesn’t it take too long to build a nuclear plant? A: Nuclear plant in the West often have long delays., but some countries can build plants in six to eight years.
  3. Q: Isn’t nuclear power too expensive? A: Nuclear power is expensive, especially in the U.S. and Europe, but some countries are building it much cheaper.
  4. Q: What about radioactive waste? A: We know how to handle radioactive waste safely in deep geological sites, but countries need to prove it.

Ritchie points out there is almost no case for fossil fuels to fill the mentioned 20-30 percent gap in our electricity needs going forward because they are unsafe compared to other forms of electricity generation. When we recognize all their external costs, they are too expensive.

SMR stands for Small Modular Reactor. These nuclear reactors are designed to be factory-built and transported to the installation site as modules, allowing for streamlined construction, scalability, and potential integration into multi-unit configurations, according to Wikipedia.

According to Ritchie, one of the problems of U.S. construction of nuclear power plants is there are not enough experienced workers. We need to build a good number (maybe 10-12) of identical nuclear power plants to train workers in these jobs. Changing government regulations regarding nuclear power have created an environment where each plant is different and that variation is part of the reason construction is delayed. Controlling the design characteristics of Small Modular Reactors by building them in a factory could possibly address the worker issue by standardizing non-site specific differences between nuclear power plants.

As I write this, Eastern Iowa does not have a confirmed commercial SMR project, nor does anyone in the country. There is talk about installing one or more at the Duane Arnold Energy Center in Palo. By “talk” I mean there is policy activity in the Linn County Board of Supervisors, and discussion of existing infrastructure to handle nuclear materials at Palo. Last month, in both the Iowa Senate and House, legislation (HSB 767/SSB 3181) moved to provide sales and use tax exemptions for nuclear energy projects. If enacted into law, it would encourage development of nuclear power projects in Iowa. So far, Iowa is at jump street regarding new nuclear power.

The idea of implementing new SMRs in an environment where there are zero of them in commercial operation in the U.S., seems a bit unlikely. It would be if I were the investor. The role of the federal government is critical in advancing this form of electricity generation.

There is also the legacy to deal with. While nuclear power is safer, by orders of magnitude, than fossil fuel electricity generation, when a problem happens as it did in Fukushima, Chernobyl, or Three Mile Island, it receives global attention. There are other, real-world issues.

Any discussion of nuclear power in the U.S. carries the weight of our earlier nuclear history. Civilian nuclear reactors are distinct from weapons programs, but they share regulations, institutions, supply chains, and a legacy of radiation policy shaped during the Cold War. Uranium mining for both weapons and fuel exposed workers and nearby communities. Atmospheric testing at the Nevada Test Site spread fallout across the country, including in Iowa, and as far away as Rochester, New York, where radioactivity ruined film being produced by Kodak. These experiences led to compensation programs and continue to influence public trust, particularly when new projects or waste sites are proposed. The relevance is not technological equivalence between power generation and weaponry, but the role that historical exposure plays in how communities assess risk today.

One might ask, isn’t the president eliminating regulations to enable the nuclear power industry? Yes and no. While the administration shifted policy direction toward evaluating nuclear reactor proposals more quickly, reducing the regulatory burden, and treating nuclear power as a strategic national priority, it does not mean there are no regulations at all. In fact, the changing regulatory environment is one reason why it takes much longer to build a new nuclear power plant here than in other countries. Every regulation change demands design changes for accommodation. One expects post-Trump administrations to make more regulatory changes.

Small Modular Reactors are no silver bullet, although no form of electricity generation is without issues. Whether SMRs move from planning to commercial use is an open question in 2026.

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