Progressive Breakfast: Kentucky Teachers’ Walkout Catalyzes More Advocacy

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MORNING MESSAGE

Jeff Bryant

Kentucky Teachers’ Walkout Catalyzes More Advocacy

Headlines about teachers’ strikes may have moved on from Kentucky to Arizona and Colorado, but the uprisings these wildcat teachers started have not, according to numerous sources I’ve spoken with in Louisville – Kentucky’s largest school district. Kentucky’s teachers now have a new rallying cry, “Remember in November” – as they look to the ballot box as voters, advocates and candidates.

Teacher Protests Spread To Arizona, Colorado

Teacher protests spread to Colorado as Arizona strike begins. NYM: “The strike announced by Arizona teachers last week formally began today with no clear signs of any resolution of their dispute with Republican lawmakers in sight. And teacher unrest has spread to Colorado, where an estimated 10,000 teachers are using personal leave today and tomorrow to go to the state capitol to lobby for better pay and restoration of education funding cuts, leading to widespread school closings… Colorado’s teacher action is not, the Colorado Education Association (the state’s NEA affiliate union) makes clear, any sort of formal strike; under the state’s decentralized teacher employment system, a strike could lead to serious legal consequences for those deemed to be in violation of their contracts. But that could change with provocations from hostile Republican legislators, two of whom have introduced legislation imposing sanctions and even jail time for teachers who strike or try to organize a strike.”

Opioid Crisis Bills Advance Without Funding

Democrats, public health experts highlight lack of funds as opioid bills advance. Morning Consult: “Mmembers of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions and the House Energy and Commerce committees advanced legislation that would make wide-ranging changes to fight the opioid crisis, including encouraging research into nonaddictive painkillers, imposing new prescription limits on opioids and expanding medication-assisted treatment. The legislative efforts have mostly bipartisan support, but some Democrats and public health experts argue that the measures won’t have a significant effect on preventing or treating opioid addiction, because they exclude a key component: a continuous stream of funding dedicated to the opioid crisis.”

Senate Confirms Pompeo As Secretary Of State

Senate confirms C.I.A. chief Pompeo to be Secretary of State. NYT: “The Senate easily confirmed Mike Pompeo on Thursday as the United States’ 70th secretary of state, elevating the current C.I.A. director and an outspoken foreign policy hawk to be the nation’s top diplomat. In the end, the 57-to-42 tally lacked the drama of other nail-biting confirmation votes in the Trump era. This week, Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, the nominee’s main Republican antagonist, bowed to pressure from President Trump to drop his objections. Ultimately, seven members of the Senate Democratic caucus — five of whom face re-election this year in states that Mr. Trump won in 2016 — joined a united Republican conference to support Mr. Pompeo’s confirmation. Shortly after the vote at the Capitol, Mr. Pompeo went across the street to the Supreme Court, where he was sworn in by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. Mr. Pompeo then dashed to Joint Base Andrews, where a plane was waiting to fly him to Brussels for a meeting of NATO allies. Senior staff on the plane greeted him with applause. Over the next three days, he will also travel to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Jerusalem; and Amman, Jordan.”

Democrats Seek To Cull Progressive Candidates

Pelosi defends leadership effort to cull Dem primary. The Hill: “House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Thursday defended Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) following revelations that the minority whip pressed a Colorado liberal to drop out of a primary race in a highly contested Denver suburb. Pelosi said such pressure campaigns are simply a pragmatic way to narrow the primary field for the sake of increasing the party’s chances of picking up Republican-held seats in November’s midterm elections. According to a recording obtained by The Intercept, Hoyer late last year pressed Levi Tillemann to drop out of the Democratic primary race to challenge Rep. Mike Coffman (R-Colo.) in November. Tillemann is a former Obama administration official who’s running to the left of leading candidate Jason Crow, an attorney and Army veteran. The seat is a top target for Democrats.”

Ryan Fires Jesuit House Chaplain

Ryan dismisses House chaplain, leaving lawmakers demanding answers. WaPo: “House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) dismissed the Rev. Patrick J. Conroy this month as chaplain of the chamber, an unusual decision that angered some of the Jesuit priest’s allies in Congress… the issue blew up in recent days as lawmakers began to speak to the chaplain, whose public role is to offer the opening prayer each day the House is in session — but whose private role, far more importantly, is to serve as pastoral counsel to the entire community on the House side of the Capitol. In his letter of resignation, Conroy made clear that he was leaving at Ryan’s request… Reps. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.) and Walter B. Jones (R-N.C.) are circulating a letter to Ryan that will ask for an explanation, trying to gain signatures from both parties and from all denominations. ‘Is this a content judgment? We have no answers,’ said Connolly, also a Catholic. ‘The House deserves better than that.'”

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Progressive Breakfast: HUD’s Carson Offers Tenants Insults, Not Solutions

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MORNING MESSAGE

Tara Raghuveer

HUD’s Carson Offers Tenants Insults, Not Solutions

75 low-and moderate-income tenants and manufactured homeowners repeatedly disrupted Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson at a speech in Las Vegas on Wednesday, asking, “where will we go?” Carson’s response? Instead of offering solutions, he insulted them. The disruption took place on the same day Carson announced HUD wants to as much as triple rents for those in public housing. The group told Carson that he needs to do his job to faithfully execute the mission of his department, and advocate for the needs of poor tenants with a radical rethinking of the HUD budget to meet one hundred percent of our community’s housing needs.

HUD Wants More Rent, Work Rules For Poor Tenants

HUD wants low-income families on housing assistance to pay more rent. CNN: “Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson announced Wednesday a proposal that would increase rent payments for more than two million of the nation’s poorest. The new low-income rent reform would require households that receive federal housing assistance to pay 35% of their gross income in rent, up from the current requirement of 30% of adjusted income. Also, it would triple the minimum monthly rent these families must pay — from $50 to $150. Roughly 712,000 housing assistance recipients currently pay less than $150 a month… The proposal dubbed “The Making Affordable Housing Work Act” is a bill Congress would have to approve. HUD cannot unilaterally change the rent rules. The overhaul would also allow housing authorities across the country to require residents to work. The move is in keeping with the Trump administration’s efforts to mandate work for Americans who receive public assistance. President Donald Trump last week issued an executive order directing agencies to promote employment for those who receive government benefits. Already, federal agencies are instituting or expanding work requirements for those on Medicaid and food stamps.”

Muslim Travel Ban Faces SCOTUS Test

Key justices seem skeptical of challenge to Trump’s travel ban. NYT: “A 15-month legal battle over President Trump’s efforts to impose a ban on travel to the United States from several predominantly Muslim countries reached a final stage on Wednesday at the Supreme Court, with its five-member conservative majority signaling it was ready to approve a revised version of the president’s plan. The justices appeared ready to discount Mr. Trump’s campaign promises to impose what he repeatedly described as a “Muslim ban,” while giving him the benefit of the doubt traditionally afforded to presidents. Some expressed worry about second-guessing executive branch determinations about who should be allowed to enter the United States.”

EPA’s Pruitt Faces Ethics Scrutiny

EPA chief Pruitt faces tough questions on Capitol Hill. NPR: “Scott Pruitt was supposed to spend today on Capitol Hill discussing the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget. That may seem an easy task compared to the grilling he’s likely to get instead over myriad allegations of improper spending and ethics violations. It’s the first time Pruitt will appear before lawmakers since weeks of accusations prompted a string of investigations — by the EPA Inspector General’s office, at the GAO, and in Congress… Try as he might, Pruitt hasn’t been able to make these issues go away. ‘New information continues to come out about behavior at the EPA,’ says Jerry Taylor, president of the libertarian Niskanen Center. ‘All of it is incredibly disturbing and utterly unprecedented.'”

CFPB’s Mulvaney Wants Banks To Pay For Influence

CFPB Director Mick Mulvaney urges bankers to pay for influence. Fortune: “Mick Mulvaney, the interim director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is not shy about the relationship between money and politics. ‘We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress,’ Mulvaney, a former Republican representative for South Carolina’s 5th District, told 1,300 bankers and lending industry officials on Tuesday. ‘If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you,’ Mulvaney told attendees of the American Bankers Association conference in Washington. During his congressional campaigns, Mulvaney received nearly $63,000 from payday lenders. In the speech Tuesday, Mulvaney encouraged the financial services industry to make campaign donations, saying he was most responsive to constituents and lobbyists who contributed to his campaign when he was a congressman.”

National Lynching Memorial Opens In Alabama

New Lynching Memorial Is A Space ‘To Talk About All Of That Anguish’. NPR: “The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, opening Thursday, stands high on a hillside overlooking downtown Montgomery, Ala. Beyond the buildings you can see the winding Alabama River and hear the distant whistle of a train — the nexus that made the city a hub for the domestic slave trade. And that’s where the experience begins as visitors encounter a life-size sculpture in bronze of six people in rusting shackles, including a mother with a baby in her arms. ‘You see the agony and the anguish and the suffering in these figures,’ says Bryan Stevenson, founder and director of the Equal Justice Initiative, the non-profit legal advocacy group that created the memorial. ‘It’s people in distress,’ Stevenson says. ‘And I don’t think we’ve actually done a very good job of acknowledging the pain and agony, the suffering, the humiliation, the complete denial of humanity that slavery created for black people on this continent.'”

More from OurFuture.org:

Shareholders Join Activists to Say ‘Time’s Up, Wells Fargo!’ Xoai Pham: “It’s time for an end to Wells Fargo’s profits from shady lending, supporting the gun lobby and fossil fuels, trampling the rights of Native communities, unsuspecting borrowers and the environment. I was one of the hundreds of organizers, activists and shareholders who traveled to Des Moines, Iowa from all across the country to deliver this message to the bank’s executives at their annual shareholders’ meeting. Our struggle continues: Help shut down Wells Fargo by joining us to talk about next steps in this campaign to hold America’s worst bank accountable. ”

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Progressive Breakfast: Arizona’s Uprising Teachers Build Bridges, Not Walls

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MORNING MESSAGE

Jeff Bryant

Arizona’s Uprising Teachers Build Bridges, Not Walls

Arizona has joined the growing list of states whose teachers are rising up, under the banner of #RedForEd, to protest years of state-imposed financial austerity. They also bring Arizona’s diversity into the movement, and are finding new ways to build bridges with students, labor and the broader community.

Senators Introduce Bill To Block Mueller Firing

Booker, Graham introduce bill to protect Special Counsel from firing. Salon: “The Special Counsel Independence and Integrity Act, sponsored by Republican Senators Thom Tillis and Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senators Chris Coons and Cory Booker, would make federal law of Justice Department regulations stating that the special counsel can only be fired for ‘good cause.’ It would also require the Justice Department to preserve evidence from the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, as well as allow Mueller to challenge his dismissal in court. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley has said he will bring the bill up for a vote this week.”

WH Wants To End Health Supports for Transgender, Native Groups

Trump admin wants to roll back health rules for underrepresented groups. Axios: “The Trump administration has plans to reverse Obama-era health care rules that currently protect transgender individuals from discrimination and decades-old exemptions that shelter Native Americans from certain burdensome federal health requirements. Why it matters: These health moves would target two of the nation’s most underrepresented and vulnerable communities. he administration is planning to end a rule created under the Obama administration that prohibits doctors, hospitals and insurers from discriminating against transgender individuals, reports the New York Times. The Department of Health and Human Services is also considering enforcing Medicaid work rules for Native Americans in states that choose to implement work requirements to access Medicaid, Politico reports. Three states have already begun putting Medicaid work requirements in place and at least 10 others are expected to apply.”

SCOTUS To Hear Pivotal Immigration Case

SCOTUS to decide if ‘time stopped’ for Brazilian immigrant. WBUR: “The U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments Monday in Pereira v. Sessions, a case that, for thousands of immigrants, could mean the difference between staying in the country and being deported. At the center of it all is a Brazilian immigrant who overstayed his visa and for almost 16 years has lived on Martha’s Vineyard. It all started in 2006 when federal immigration officials sent Pereira what’s called a ‘Notice to Appear,’ charging him with overstaying his visa. By statute, this ‘Notice to Appear’ should have given the date and time of the hearing, but it didn’t. These missing details form the basis of the Supreme Court case and may very well determine Pereira’s future. Sarah Sherman-Stokes is an immigration attorney and associate director of Boston University’s Immigrants’ Rights and Human Trafficking Program. She says that once a proper Notice to Appear has been served, it ” ‘stops the time’ for a non-citizen who is trying to accrue 10 years of presence in this country.”

Dems Sue Over Russia Election Meddling

Democrats Sue Russia, WikiLeaks And Trump Campaign Over Election ‘Conspiracy’. NPR: “The Democratic National Committee filed an attention-grabbing lawsuit against the Russian government, WikiLeaks and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign that says they conspired to interfere with the 2016 U.S. presidential election. The suit — which faces legal obstacles because of the Justice Department’s investigation into Russia’s attack and the difficulties involved with suing a foreign government — develops a theory about alleged collusion between Trump’s campaign and the Russians. ‘The conspiracy constituted an act of previously unimaginable treachery: the campaign of the presidential nominee of a major party in league with a hostile foreign power to bolster its own chance to win the presidency,’ the DNC writes in the suit.”

Nixon Challenges Cuomo On Climate

Cynthia Nixon Gets Big Applause for Going Huge on Climate. Common Dreams:Challenging Democratic New York Governor Andrew Cuomo from the left, Cynthia Nixon received a ringing endorsement from one of the nation’s most respected climate action groups on Friday just after she unveiled a far-reaching plan to make sure the state is doing everything possible to transition off fossil fuels and towards a more sustainable and just energy future. ‘We need to make a bold commitment to invest in renewable energy, one that will get us off fossil fuels completely and provide thousands of new jobs — especially in the communities most impacted by pollution and climate change,’ Nixon said as she announced her Climate just platform. ‘We must transition from an economy based in toxic carbon emissions toward an economy that protects workers, our communities, and our planet,’ she added. ‘It won’t be easy. But we don’t have a choice.'”

More from OurFuture.org:

The Fake Frugality of the Fabulously Rich. Sam Pizzigati: “The myth of merit holds that the ultra rich among us owe their incredibly good fortune to good behavior of one sort or another. Either they work incredibly hard or perform incredible feats — or discipline themselves to lead fantastically frugal lives. As a society, in effect, we simply do not want to believe that our rich may have gained their riches through exploiting others or rigging our economy or just finding themselves in the right place at the right time. So we ascribe to our awesomely affluent rich noble qualities that make them ever so deserving of their wealth.”

Progressive Breakfast is a daily morning email highlighting news stories of interest to activists. Progressive Breakfast and OurFuture.org are projects of People’s Action.

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Progressive Breakfast: Why We Must Save The VA For Veterans

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MORNING MESSAGE

Chuck Tyler

Why We Must Save The VA For Veterans

As a ten-year U.S. Army combat veteran, I’ve felt my share of aches and pains following my service to my country. And I know firsthand how the Veterans Administration uniquely cares for returning war-fighters. That’s why I’m alarmed by the talk about privatizing VA healthcare. Trump’s pick to lead the agency – Dr. Ronnie Johnson, his personal physician – seems like a good guy. But he’s deeply unqualified to lead the agency, which is the second-largest in the Federal government and provides essential care to nine million veterans.

Dems Say No To VA Privatization

Dems see red line for VA nominee on privatization. CNN: “Democratic senators who have met with White House physician Ronny Jackson, the President’s pick to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, have made clear that privatization of veterans’ medical care is a red line for them. If Jackson, a rear admiral in the Navy, supports privatization, they won’t back his nomination. So far, they say, Jackson has signaled emphatically that he doesn’t support it. As of yet, no Democrats have publicly thrown their support — or opposition — behind Jackson, saying they still have unanswered questions and want to see Jackson show his spine and rebuff the White House on one of the President’s central campaign promises.”

Climate Change Denier Approved To Head NASA

Trump’s next NASA administrator is a Republican congressman with no background in science. Vox: “The US Senate on Thursday confirmed Jim Bridenstine, a Republican Congress member from Oklahoma, to be the next administrator of NASA… Bridenstine, 42, brings some odd qualifications to the job, and some controversy. Typically, NASA administrators are chosen from within NASA’s ranks, come up through the military, or have a background in science. Bridenstine has none of that… As a politician, Bridenstine has hedged on climate change, an issue NASA scientists study and track in many different ways. During his confirmation hearing in November, Bridenstine agreed that humans are the driving force behind climate change, but he would not agree with the assertion that human activity is the primary cause of it. It’s an odd position to hold as the leader of an agency that provides some of the most comprehensive data on climate change in the world. NASA has a staff of 17,000 and a budget of nearly $19 billion (not to mention the numerous contractors it works with). Bridenstine’s experience of managing a museum in Tulsa pales in comparison to the enormous complexity of NASA.”

Teachers Union Drops Wells Fargo Over NRA

National teacher’s union cuts ties with Wells Fargo over bank’s ties to NRA, guns. NPR: “The American Federation of Teachers said Thursday that it is cutting its financial ties with Wells Fargo as a result of the banking giant’s relationships with the National Rifle Association and gunmakers. The AFT, a 1.7-million-member national union, is dropping the bank as a recommended mortgage lender, to which it currently channels more than 20,000 AFT mortgages. The decision came after Wells Fargo dismissed the union’s request to cut lending ties with or impose new restrictions on firearms business partners following the mass shooting Feb. 14 that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.”

Nationwide Student Walkout To Protest Guns

National School Walkout renews calls for gun safety. CNN: “Students from more than 2,500 schools across the country will stream out of class Friday as part of a National School Walkout to demand action on gun reform. The event held on April 20 also marks the anniversary of the 1999 Columbine High School massacre in Colorado, when a gunman killed 12 students and a teacher. In the wake of the mass shooting at a Florida high school, many students – including current Columbine students – say not enough has been done to help prevent mass shootings. During the walkout, which starts at 10 a.m. in each time zone, students will leave their classrooms and observe a moment of silence for shooting victims. Other actions during the day will include marching to a local lawmaker’s office, allowing open-mic time for students to share concerns and helping register those who are eligible to vote.”

AZ Teachers Vote For Statewide Walkout

Arizona teachers vote in favor of statewide walkout. NBC: “Arizona teachers have voted to walk off the job to demand increased school funding, marking a key step toward a first-ever statewide strike that builds on a movement for higher pay in other Republican-dominant states. A grassroots group and the state’s largest teacher membership group said Thursday that teachers will walkout April 26. The vote was held following weeks of growing protests and an offer from Republican Gov. Doug Ducey to give teachers 20 percent raise by 2020. Many teachers kept up the pressure at schools and on social media, saying the plan failed to address much-needed funding for classrooms and support staff. ‘The worst possible thing we could do is not take action right now,’ said Noah Karvelis, an organizer for Arizona Educators United.”

AZ GOP’s Lesko Copied Bills From ALEC Lobbyists

AZ GOP candidate Debbie Lesko copied and pasted bills written by ALEC lobbyists. The Intercept: “Republican candidate for Tuesday’s special election to Arizona’s 8th Congressional District, cut her teeth in the state legislature, where she has long served as the point person for corporate lobbyists to shape public policy. Lesko’s work attending to corporate interests was mainly carried out through her position as a senior member of the American Legislative Exchange Council, also known as ALEC… State legislative records show that Lesko, a board member of ALEC, routinely sponsored ALEC model bills, often without changing more than a few words. One ALEC model bill produced in 2013 suggested language to demand that the state produce a handbook to educate parents about so-called school choice. ‘The catalogue shall describe the educational choices available to students in the state,’ said the second section of ALEC’s model, ‘including but not limited to {as applicable} open enrollment, charter schools, private schools, homeschooling, tuition tax credit scholarships, vouchers, and education savings accounts.’ Later that same year, Lesko introduced a bill that read, in part: ‘The handbook shall describe the educational choices available to pupils, including open enrollment, charter schools, private schools, homeschooling, tuition tax credit scholarships and empowerment scholarship accounts.'”

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Progressive Breakfast: We Need A Housing Revolution Now

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MORNING MESSAGE

Richard Eskow

We Need a Housing Revolution Now

The word “revolution” has been overused, but it fits when we talk about our housing crisis. We need to radically rethink this, with policies built around people rather than finance. The vision of housing as a human right must become a fundamental part of the progressive vision. Citizens need to ask candidates at the national, state, and local levels to commit to this principle. It’s good policy – and candidates are likely to find that it’s good politics, too. More importantly, it’s a moral challenge. Our society can no longer ignore it.

SCOTUS Rules Against Deportation Law

Gorsuch joins SCOTUS liberals to Strike down deportation law. NYT: “The Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down a law that allowed the government to deport some immigrants who commit serious crimes, saying it was unconstitutionally vague. The decision will limit the Trump administration’s efforts to deport people convicted of some kinds of crimes. The vote was 5 to 4, with Justice Neil M. Gorsuch joining the court’s four more liberal members to form a bare majority, which was a first. Justice Gorsuch wrote that the law crossed a constitutional line. ‘Vague laws,’ he wrote in a concurring opinion, ‘invite arbitrary power.’ Justice Gorsuch had voted with the court’s conservative majority in February in a different immigration case, one that ruled that people held in immigration detention, sometimes for years, are not entitled to periodic hearings to decide whether they may be released on bail.”

Gun Violence Activist Calls For Boycott Of BlackRock, Vanguard

Parkland activist David Hogg calls for boycott of BlackRock and Vanguard. CNN: “One of the best-known student activists from the school shooting in Parkland, Florida is calling for a boycott of BlackRock and Vanguard. On Tuesday, David Hogg said on Twitter the giant investment management companies are ‘two of the biggest investors in gun manufacturers,’ and customers should take their business elsewhere. Both companies have faced pressure from gun control advocates to divest from gun stocks since the shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in February. BlackRock is the top shareholder in gunmakers Sturm Ruger (RGR) and American Outdoor Brands (AOBC). It’s the second-largest shareholder in Vista Outdoor (VSTO). Vanguard is the second-largest shareholder in Sturm Ruger, and the third-largest shareholder in American Outdoor Brands and Vista Outdoor.”

Starbucks To Close Stores To Address Bias

Starbucks to close stores for an afternoon for bias training. WaPo: “Starbucks, moving swiftly to confront a racially charged uproar over the arrest of two black men at one of its stores in Philadelphia, plans to close more than 8,000 U.S. stores for several hours next month to conduct racial-bias training for nearly 175,000 workers. The announcement Tuesday comes after the arrests sparked protests and calls for a boycott on social media. A video shows police talking with two black men seated at a table. After a few minutes, officers handcuff the men and lead them outside as other customers say they weren’t doing anything wrong. Philadelphia-area media said the two were waiting for a friend.”

Trump Energy Adviser Resigns

Top Trump energy adviser resigns. The Hill: “President Trump’s top adviser for energy and environment policy is stepping down. Michael Catanzaro, who has headed domestic energy and environment issues at the White House’s National Economic Council (NEC), plans to leave next week and return to CGCN Group, the law and lobbying firm where he previously worked… Catanzaro was rarely the public face of the Trump administration’s policies, but he was a leading figure in the administration for carrying out Trump’s aggressive deregulatory and pro-fossil fuel agenda. He played a significant role in the ongoing rollback of the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan and its Clean Water Rule.”

Red States May Vote For Medicaid Expansion

3 red states could put Medicaid expansion on the ballot this year. Vox: “Medicaid expansion is back on the ballot. Organizers in Utah submitted signatures on Monday to put an initiative expanding Medicaid on the state’s ballot in November. They got 165,000 signatures, or about 50,000 more than they needed. State legislators are actually pushing a limited form of Medicaid expansion, but, as we covered before, the Trump administration seems unlikely to greenlight that proposal. The ballot initiative being submitted today would be a clean version of expansion. Medicaid expansion would cover about 150,000 low-income people in Utah, one of 18 mostly Republican-led states to refuse to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. A recent poll by the Salt Lake Tribune and the University of Utah found 62 percent of Utah voters support the ballot initiative. ‘People want more health care — not less,’ Jonathan Schleifer, executive director of the Fairness Project, a left-leaning economic justice group that is helping support the initiative, said in a statement. ‘They are done with politicians who are not addressing their top concerns, and they are taking action to do something about it.'”

Progressive Breakfast is a daily morning email highlighting news stories of interest to activists. Progressive Breakfast and OurFuture.org are projects of People’s Action.

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Progressive Breakfast: 7 Questions About the Syria Airstrikes That Aren’t Being Asked

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MORNING MESSAGE

Richard Eskow

7 Questions About the Syria Airstrikes That Aren’t Being Asked

“Mission accomplished,” says the President. What, exactly, was our mission? And what exactly was accomplished? The media’s job, we are told, is to ask skeptical questions about the people in power. That didn’t happen much in the runup to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and it’s not happening now. Here are the questions that should be asked – not just on the eve of a bombing attack, but every day we continue our disastrous and drifting military intervention in the Middle East.

Trump Orders ‘Pinprick’ Strike On Syria

The many things Trump didn’t accomplish in the latest Syria strike. WaPo: “After days of speculation, the United States took action Friday night to punish the Syrian regime for a suspected chemical weapons attack a week prior. French, British and American forces launched a salvo of more than 100 missiles against three Syrian regime targets, and U.S. officials claimed the attack significantly degraded the regime’s chemical-weapons program… There’s still uncertainty over what exactly was destroyed during this ‘pinprick’ strike, with some reports indicating that Assad’s ability to use chemical weaponry remains intact. Meanwhile, Assad’s supporters partied in the streets of Damascus on Saturday, waving Syrian flags and holding up pictures of their leader. The attack, my colleague Liz Sly wrote, was ‘interpreted in Syria as a win for Assad because the limited scope of the strikes suggested that Western powers do not intend to challenge his rule.'”

WH Seeks To Block Disclosure Of Cohen Files

Trump wants to review material seized from personal lawyer before federal investigators. WaPo: “President Trump asked a federal judge Sunday night to allow him to review documents that FBI agents seized from the office of his longtime lawyer before criminal investigators have a chance to see the material. The request underscores the high stakes in an ongoing legal fight in federal court in New York, where Michael Cohen, Trump’s lawyer, is also fighting to get a chance to review material seized as part of a criminal investigation of his business dealings. Trump’s request, in the form of a letter from other lawyers representing him, could further complicate a hearing set for Monday afternoon. During that session, lawyers for Cohen are expected to tell the judge overseeing the case how many legal clients he has and how many seized documents he thinks might be covered by attorney-client privilege. Cohen is set to attend the hearing. Also expected to be on hand is adult-film star Stormy Daniels, whom Cohen secretly paid $130,000 in 2016 to keep quiet the details of an alleged sexual liaison she had with Trump.”

CO Teachers Rally For Funding

CO teachers plan their own Capitol rally. CNN: “After seeing teachers in other states agitate for more funding, Colorado educators are taking their turn. At least 500 educators are expected to demonstrate at the state Capitol in Denver on Monday to push for more financial support, the Colorado Education Association says, in what will be just the latest in a wave of teacher protests at US state capitols this year That wave has notably seen teachers in West Virginia get a 5% pay raise last month after a nine-day strike. At least one Denver-area school district is closing Monday because so many of its teachers called in to take a personal day for the rally. ‘Our members are energized and fed up by the constant year-over-year chronic underfunding of our public schools,’ CEA President Kerrie Dallman told CNN. ‘Educators have been energized by what’s happened in West Virginia, Oklahoma and Kentucky and Arizona,’ she said, referring to teacher walkouts or demonstrations in those states.”

Nixon Wins NY Working Families Endorsement

Cynthia Nixon wins endorsement of progressive Working Families Party. Common Dreams: “The Working Families Party of New York (WFP) announced on Saturday its endorsement of Cynthia Nixon, at a meeting where the activist and actress called herself a candidate ‘who will stand with the people.’ The endorsement, was hinted at on Friday when two influential labor unions—the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the Communications Workers of America—announced they were cutting ties with the state party, signaling their support for incumbent Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Since announcing her candidacy in March, Nixon has attacked Cuomo for his close ties to wealthy corporate donors and for allowing the state legislature to be controlled by Republicans and Democrats who caucus with them. ‘It’s hard for some Democrats to do right when they’re getting millions and millions to do wrong,’ she said at a meeting of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) on Friday. ‘The time is up for corporate Democrats.'”

More from OurFuture.org:

North Carolina’s Public Reckoning of CIA Torture. Alexandra Moore: “What can a small group of committed citizens who oppose these practices do to push back? A commission against torture in North Carolina may serve as a model for how citizen-led initiatives can create transparency and accountability for abuses of power in government… The revelation about the CIA program angered a number of North Carolinians. They condemned the use of tax dollars to fund an aviation facility that was involved in what they believed was illegal and immoral activity. They wanted to end the state’s participation in torture and hold accountable those who were responsible.”

Progressive Breakfast: Fifty Years On, MLK’s Call for Economic Justice Rings True

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MORNING MESSAGE

Libero Della Piana

Fifty Years On, MLK’s Call for Economic Justice Rings True

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down fifty years ago today. In King’s final years, he turned increasingly to confronting the challenge of economic inequality: he called for a massive mobilization of Black, Native American, Latino, and low-income whites along with the labor movement to end business as usual in Washington, D.C. and put inequality at the top of the agenda. Fifty years on, King’s vision of a radical reshaping of the economy is more urgent than ever.

Progressive Breakfast: The Fight for Health Care: In It to Win It

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MORNING MESSAGE

Tim Wilkins

The Fight for Health Care: In It to Win It

Eight years: that’s how long we’ve had President Obama’s signature reform of health care, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which expanded coverage to 24 million people. People’s Action member organizations from Maine to West Virginia turned out to mark this moment and let lawmakers know they’re in this fight for the long run, to bring health care to all.

Progressive Breakfast: Is the ‘Liberal World Order’ Worth Saving?

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MORNING MESSAGE

Richard Eskow

Is the ‘Liberal World Order’ Worth Saving?

Order without justice is both unfair and unstable. The unfairness has been apparent for many decades; now we’re seeing the instability. It’s true that we are in a period of global change, and the loss of a governing world order brings instability, uncertainty, and risk. But the real causes of today’s political instability lie within the order itself. The current world order must fundamentally reform itself along democratic lines, both politically and economically, or it will fail.