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Time to Get Voter-Owned Submitted by Katie Schlieper on Thu, 01/10/2008 - 4:23pm.
As Portland, Oregon preps for another elections cycle with Voter-Owned Elections public financing available, Steve Duin at The Oregonian reflects on the results of the New Hampshire primary and the rhetoric of the campaign trail with a pause to note the importance of advancing Voter-Owned elections. The dispute is a better measure of the candidates than it is of the mood of moderates and independents. While voters are fed up with the incendiary, partisan fury that energizes the ideological wings of Amerian politics, they are equally disgusted that no one in the middle found the means to unite us in our frustrations, much less our problem solving. Darn right. Incidentally, the three front-runner candidates on the Democratic side that Duin discusses have all gone on the record in support of full public financing of campaigns.
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Next Up, New York? posted by Katie Schlieper on 08-27-2008 Depending on how the state legislative elections results shake out in New York come November we could be looking at much improved odds for passing a Clean Elections bill there in the coming year. New York Governor David Paterson (D) is certainly a supporter of Clean Elections, if not the most outspoken on the subject, and state activists are keeping up the drumbeat for movement on legislation -- see this letter to the editor in Binghamton. Published in: Clean Elections | New York Not This Time posted by Katie Schlieper on 08-27-2008 I'm sorry to report that Alaska's Clean Elections ballot initiative did not pass yesterday -- in fact, on the primary ballot where both Sen. Ted Stevens (R) and Rep. Don Young (R) faced primary challenges none of the ballot initiatives got much love. But as they say, Rome wasn't built in a day. This is only the beginning of Alaska's fight for Clean Elections. Published in: Alaska | Clean Elections | Don Young | Ted Stevens Currie Gets Ethics Heat posted by Katie Schlieper on 08-26-2008 Whether or not Maryland state Sen. Ulysses Currie (D) faces criminal penalties for failing to properly disclose his employment as a consultant with a company with business before the state legislature, his peers in the Senate will be looking in to his dealings. Senate President Mike Miller (D) has said an ethics investigation will be convened to assess Currie's potential violations of disclosure requirements. Published in: corruption | Maryland | Ulysses Currie Creative Commons
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