
Friday, February 25, 2011
Which Audrey?
Posted by Bob Campbell, Communicator IAM Local Lodge 731
Voters of Jacksonville, do not be fooled by this sign. To many people in Jacksonville, when you hear the name Audrey you immediately think of Audrey Gibson, our Florida House Representative, District 15.
SHE IS NOT RUNNING FOR MAYOR OF JACKSONVILLE.
This is the campaign sign of Audrey Moran. I only wish that she had used her first and last name on the sign. (Yes, at the very bottom it does say Audrey Moran, Republican for Mayor of Jacksonville). But who reads the small, fine print? Not Every Voter! The voters only see Vote Audrey for Mayor. How many Audreys are there, if you do not read the small, fine print? These signs are posted throughout Jacksonville.
I personally believe the sign to be very misleading to voters, especially to the constituents of Audrey Gibson, who may not realize that this is not their Audrey.
AUDREY L. GIBSON
FLORIDA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, DISTRICT 15
Audrey Moran, Jacksonville mayoral candidate, 2011
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Assault on Unions Is an Attack on Basic Civil Rights
Rev. Jesse Jackson
Civil rights activist
Posted: February 22, 2011 06:15 PM
It looks like "Cairo has moved to Madison," said conservative Republican Rep. Paul Ryan, as 50,000 citizens took over the state's Capitol building. He got the spirit right, but the location wrong. In Madison, folks wearing Packers jerseys stand together with folks wearing Bears colors. Madison is this generation's Selma, the epicenter for the modern battle for basic human rights.
In 1965, the drive for basic voting rights was stalled in the U.S. Senate. President Johnson pushed Martin Luther King to stop demonstrating. Instead, Dr. King went to Selma. Selma was not a big city, but it held a mirror to the nation. There, on Bloody Sunday, peaceful demonstrators were met with dogs, clubs and hoses, and touched the conscience of a nation. Two days later, Johnson, invoking the famous words, "We shall overcome," introduced the Voting Rights Act. Five months later it was signed into law.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker Warns Of 'Dire Consequences' If Budget Bill Fails To Pass
AP/The Huffington Post
Posted: 02/22/11 07:58 PM
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker says failing to pass a bill stripping union rights for Wisconsin public workers would have "dire consequences."
Walker said in a speech broadcast live statewide Tuesday evening that if lawmakers don't pass the bill up to 1,500 state workers could be laid off by July with another 6,000 forced out of work over the next two years.
Top Obama Economic Aide: Social Security Reform Not A Part Of Discussion On Fiscal Future
February 22, 2011
HuffPost Reporting
stein@huffingtonpost.com
WASHINGTON -- Lost amid the budget battles in Congress and the anti-union legislation being considered in several states has been the White House's deliberate decision to take the topic of Social Security reform off the deficit debate menu.
The latest move in that direction came on Tuesday, when Jason Furman, deputy director of the President Barack Obama's National Economic Council, insisted that talk of Social Security reform "is not one you care about" if "you are worried about our long-run fiscal future."
HuffPost Reporting
stein@huffingtonpost.com
WASHINGTON -- Lost amid the budget battles in Congress and the anti-union legislation being considered in several states has been the White House's deliberate decision to take the topic of Social Security reform off the deficit debate menu.
The latest move in that direction came on Tuesday, when Jason Furman, deputy director of the President Barack Obama's National Economic Council, insisted that talk of Social Security reform "is not one you care about" if "you are worried about our long-run fiscal future."
Wisconsin Fight Goes to Core of ‘Who We Are as a People and Country’
by Mike Hall, Feb 22, 2011
Michael Peck, a board member of the Apollo Alliance, writes that the Wisconsin workers who have been in the streets and the Capitol Rotunda in Madison for more than a week:
are fighting for more than balancing a budget and even more than the
right to bargain collectively for our own welfare. Indeed, the stakes
are much, much higher and go to the core of who we are as a people and
country.
Poll: Public Opposes Taking Away Freedom to Bargain
by Tula Connell, Feb 22, 2011
A new poll shows the public strongly opposes laws taking away the collective bargaining power of public employees to address budgets. Some 61 percent of the public say they would oppose a law in their state similar to one being considered in Wisconsin, compared with 33 percent who would favor such a law, according to poll out today by USA Today/Gallup.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott, widely perceived to be on the verge of attacking the rights of public employees to bargain for middle-class jobs, already figured that out. Scott said today he would not consider taking away bargaining rights from public employees. Instead, Scott said in an interview:
as long as the discussion is honest about what benefits employees are
getting, he has no objection to public employees being members of
unions.
Locked Out of Capitol, Ohio Workers Sing ‘God Bless America’
by Tula Connell, Feb 22, 2011
Ohio workers today, locked out of their own statehouse today as they tried to rally for the freedom of public employees to bargain for middle-class jobs, stood outside the capitol building singing, “God Bless America” (video). This from the ground in Columbus:
Republican Governors Desert Wis.’s Scott Walker
by Tula Connell, Feb 22, 2011
Memo to Gov. Scott Walker: Your allies are deserting you. They know something you don’t seem to: the public supports the freedom to bargain for good middle-class jobs.
Republican Florida Gov. Rick Scott:
My belief is as long as people know what they’re doing, collective
bargaining is fine.
Republican Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbitt:
We’ll begin negotiations with the public-sector unions and anticipate
we’ll conduct those in good faith.
Solidarity for Workers’ Struggles Grows
by Mike Hall, Feb 22, 2011
From California to North Carolina to Poland, workers, community and faith activists are standing in solidarity with workers in Wisconsin, Ohio and around the nation in their fights against a coordinated attack on middle-class jobs.
In a letter of support to Wisconsin workers, Piotr Duda, President of the Polish Trade Union Solidarnosc, writes:
Indiana Gov. Daniels (R) Urges GOP Lawmakers to Drop ‘Right to Work’ Bill
by Mike Hall, Feb 22, 2011
Here’s some great and startling news out of Indiana. The Indianapolis Star reports that Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) says that Republican legislators should drop the so-called “right to work” bill so lawmakers can get on with important state business.
Earlier today, Democratic members of the House headed out of state in order to block action on the bill. Reports the Star
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