In the Know: July 16, 2018

29 days until the Aug. 14 primary
67 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
113 days until Election Day

2016 Election
Moscow now accused of US election meddling in indictment, Star Tribune
Secretary of State Steve Simon has 10 days to hand over voter information, a judge has ruled, Star Tribune

Three immediate political ramifications from the Russian intelligence official indictments:

It lands at an inopportune time for President Trump: He is days away from meeting one-on-one with Russian President Vladimir Putin. That meeting was already controversial, and now Trump could be forced to do something he’s been reluctant to do: confront Putin about election meddling.

It lands at a pretty good time for Trump’s critics: They are fresh off finding a new figurehead, beleaguered FBI agent Peter Strzok, to argue that Republicans are trying to undermine the Russia investigation. Continue reading “In the Know: July 16, 2018”

In the Know: July 13, 2018

33 days until the Aug. 14 primary

72 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election

118 days until Election Day

2018 Election — Primary

Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse or government center. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

2018 Election — General

Navigator Research poll:

  • Across party lines, Americans are most concerned about maintaining Affordable Care Act (ACA) coverage for patients with pre-existing conditions.
  • Although the next Justice’s support for abortion rights is important to a wide majority of Americans, they also care deeply about other issues, like gun laws and protecting the ACA.
  • Many Americans are concerned that a Trump-appointed Justice will create a tilted, partisan Court that won’t hold Trump accountable for his abuses of power.
  • Crucially, many Americans need facts and context on what’s at stake in the Supreme Court debate. For example, rather than simply citing Citizens United, explaining the implications of the case can go a long way toward making an effective argument.

Continue reading “In the Know: July 13, 2018”

In the Know: July 12, 2018

34 days until the Aug. 14 primary
73 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
119 days until Election Day

2018 Election — Primary
Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse or government center. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

University of Minnesota students unionize while working political campaign, KSTP Continue reading “In the Know: July 12, 2018”

In the Know: July 10, 2018

36 days until the Aug. 14 primary
75 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
121 days until Election Day

2018 Election — Primary

Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse or government center. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

2018 Election — General

 

America’s Enduring Failure to Prevent Food-Borne Illness, The New Republic

Congress
Half of Minnesota’s U.S. House races are competitive this year – do we have the courts to thank? MinnPost
Ryan campaigns with Paulsen, Lewis, MPR

Environment
Minnesota sweetens the pot to shift cropland to conservation, MPR Continue reading “In the Know: July 10, 2018”

In the Know: July 9, 2018

37 days until the Aug. 14 primary
76 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
122 days until Election Day

2018 Election — Primary
Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse or government center. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

Continue reading “In the Know: July 9, 2018”

In the Know: July 6, 2018

40 days until the Aug. 14 primary
79 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
125 days until Election Day

2018 election — Primary
Early take on early vote? First week stats show interest, MPR

Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse or government center. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

2018 Election — General
This week in campaign coverage: The nation turns its lonely eyes to you, Minnesota, MinnPost

Congress

Economic Inequality
Plight of the very poor is an American tragedy, Star Tribune

Immigration Crisis
U.S. to reunite migrant families as immigration politics boil, MPR

Minnesota Legislators
Minnesota senator tells ‘whining government officials’ they should be approachable in public, The Hill

Pruitt, Scott

  • After all, Pruitt is — or, maybe was — the subject of 14 separate probes into his conduct as EPA administrator. Fourteen! Separate! Probes! From almost the moment he was sworn in to lead the EPA, Pruitt has been caught — time and time again — apparently trying to enrich himself (and his wife and everyone else he knows) using his office. And yet, day after day, terrible headline after terrible headline (after terrible headline), Pruitt stayed in the job. Here are four theories aimed at answering the “what took so long?” question.
  • Pruitt did exactly what Trump wanted. Trump campaigned on the idea that the EPA has turned into liberals’ dream of overregulation of average people. He picked Pruitt to undo many of the regulations the Obama administration had put in place on things like coal and water. According to an analysis by Politico of Pruitt’s first year in office, the EPA either withdrew or delayed regulations 47 times — a massive increase from the 14 withdrawals/delays in the first year of the Obama administration. Pruitt was effectively deconstructing the regulatory state.
  • Trump saw some of himself in Pruitt. Pruitt is brash and unapologetic about his views and his conduct.
  • There were so many problems, they canceled themselves out. There are so many problems, so many ethical issues, so many bad stories that they all sort of cancel each other out. As in: No one could follow all of the various transgressions he committed.
  • Trump is a contrarian — in this and all things. When the news of Pruitt’s “resignation” hit the White House, there was reportedly cheering from some of the staff. Trump views himself as at his best when he is going against the crowd, bucking the conventional wisdom. If everyone is saying “X,” Trump is naturally drawn to “Y” — even if, in a vacuum, he would choose “X.”

Schultz, Ed
Television and radio personality Ed Schultz dies at 64, MPR

State of Emergency
Dayton declares State of Emergency in 36 storm-hit counties, Indian Reservation, Pioneer Press

Trade War
Just after midnight tonight [July 5] the Trump administration is set to impose tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese goods, escalating a global trade war that has pitted the U.S. against trading partners around the world.

  • “Businesses are bracing for disruptions in sales and supply chains,” the Wall Street Journal reports, as a Chinese response could hit U.S. producers of “automotive products, farm crops and other goods.”
  • China warned that the U.S. is “opening fire on the entire world, including itself” while at the same time promising that it wouldn’t use the 12-hour time difference to impose retaliatory tariffs first.
  • What’s next: Already, several U.S. sectors are freaking out — soybean farmers losing business in China, aluminum metal companies hit inadvertently by tariffs, and GM, worried about soaring supply costs. Manufacturers fear the tariff war will prematurely cut short a renaissance triggered by low natural gas prices and tax cuts, reports Ed Crooks at the FT.
  • P.S. A freighter carrying U.S. soybeans is racing towards China to beat retaliatory tariffs, Bloomberg reports. If it arrives as scheduled at around 5 p.m. local time “it should be able to clear customs before the tariffs are imposed.”Axios

China retaliates with tariffs after US begins trade war, The Guardian

Unions

After union setback, teachers regroup at NEA conference in Minneapolis, Star Tribune

U.S. Supreme Court

Trump narrows Supreme Court shortlist to three – with two on the inside track, MPR

Upcoming Events

  • Today through August 13 — Primary early voting. More information here.
  • July 6, 12:00 PM — Stand Against Trump, SD40 DFL Treasurer John Schafer is holding a weekly hour of protest and resistance on Fridays from 12pm to 1pm at the corner of Brookdale & Xerxes in Brooklyn Park.
  • July 9, 7:00 PM — SD44 DFL Central Committee Meeting, Minnetonka Community Center, 14600 Minnetonka Blvd., Minnetonka, MN 55345
  • July 9, 7:00 PM — SD49 DFL Central Committee Meeting, 7001 Cahill Rd, Suite 21, Edina, MN
  • July 10, 7:00 PM — SD34 DFL Central Committee Meeting, Maple Grove Library, 8001 Main St N, Osseo, MN 55369
  • July 12, 6:00 PM — SD34 DFL Marching in the Maple Grove Days Parade
  • July 12, 7:00 PM — SD48 DFL Central Committee Meeting, Glen Lake Activity Center, 14350 Excelsior Blvd, Minnetonka, MN 55345
  • July 13, 12:00 PM — Stand Against Trump, SD40 DFL Treasurer John Schafer is holding a weekly hour of protest and resistance on Fridays from 12pm to 1pm at the corner of Brookdale & Xerxes in Brooklyn Park.
  • July 14, 10:00 AM — SD34 DFL at the Maple Grove Business Expo,  Maple Grove Community Center, 12951 Weaver Lake Rd, Maple Grove, MN 55369.
  • July 16, 7:00 PM — Brooklyn Park DFL Meeting, Brooklyn Park Public Library, 6500 W Broadway, Brooklyn Park, MN
  • July 20, 12:00 PM — Stand Against Trump, SD40 DFL Treasurer John Schafer is holding a weekly hour of protest and resistance on Fridays from 12pm to 1pm at the corner of Brookdale & Xerxes in Brooklyn Park.

In the Know: July 5, 2018

41 days until the Aug. 14 primary
80 days until no excuse absentee balloting opens for the Nov. 6 election
126 days until Election Day

2016 Election
Senate panel upholds finding that Russia backed Trump, contradicting House, The Hill

2018 Election

Primary — Early voting now open. Go to dfl.org/voteearly to fill out an application to vote by mail. You can vote in person at your county courthouse. Click here for a list of cities where you can vote early in person.

Continue reading “In the Know: July 5, 2018”

In the Know: July 3, 2018

No Excuse Absentee Balloting Happening Now through August 13
43 days Until the August 14 Primary
82 Days Until No Excuse Absentee Balloting Opens for the November 6 General Election
128 Days Until Election Day

 

2018 General Election
Minnesota Statewide Poll, Outstate.usa

  • Oustate.usa is the new venture of Stewart Mills who lost twice to Congressman Nolan.

A bad week for Democrats give rise to a big problem: Outrage could become an obstacle in the mid-term elections, Washington Post

58 percent of Democrats say are more motivated than usual to vote in this election while 38 percent say they are as motivated as usual. 41 percent of Republicans say they are more motivated than usual while 58 percent say they are about as motivated as always. Continue reading “In the Know: July 3, 2018”

In the Know: July 2, 2018

No Excuse Absentee Balloting Happening Now through August 13
44 days Until the August 14 Primary
83 Days Until No Excuse Absentee Balloting Opens for the November 6 Election
129 Days Until Election Day

2018 Election — Early voting open now
Ken Martin: Early voting opens June 29 for Aug. 14 primary, Owatonna People’s Press
What you need to know about early primary voting in Minnesota, Star Tribune
As early vote grows in popularity, candidates plan accordingly, Fox 9
Vote! Says DFL gubernatorial hopeful Erin Murphy in St. Cloud, St. Cloud Times
Election officials expect a big turnout for early primary voting, WCCO

Continue reading “In the Know: July 2, 2018”