November 2011

I’ll admit I’ve spent more time writing about Neil Livingstone’s peculiar campaign for governor than I have looking at the other candidates, but this tidbit from the latest PPP poll is just too hard to overlook:

In the Montana Gubernatorial primary Rick Hill continues to be the early front runner with 37% to 10% for Ken Miller, 5% for Jeff Essmann, 4% for Jim Lynch, 3% for Neil Livingstone and Jim O’Hara, 2% for Corey Stapleton, and 1% for Bob Fanning.

Compared to the last time we polled this contest in June Miller’s up 4 points and Hill’s up 2 points, while Livingstone is down 12 points and Essmann is down 6 points.

Somehow, Dennis Rehberg’s preferred prohibitionist candidate from Billings, Jeff Essman, has managed to lose six points in the polls since announcing his candidacy.

That takes a special kind of talent as a candidate. Perhaps relying on the Rehberg political machine (or working to overturn the will of the voters) wasn’t such a great strategy for Senator Essman, who is doing his best to make Ken Miller look like a legitimate candidate for statewide office.

The Helena Independent Record is reporting that the Helena School Board plans to address compensation for the next District Superintendent at Tuesday night’s meeting and I have a bit of advice: don’t increase the Superintendent’s compensation any more than you plan to increase compensation for every other employee group in the District.

By all accounts, Helena had an effective educational leader in former Superintendent Bruce Messinger, who received  compensation just under $145,000 when salary and benefits were combined.

If that salary was enough to retain an excellent Superintendent for fourteen years, surely it will be sufficient to attract qualified and energetic candidates to replace him. To argue that Helena needs to dramatically increase compensation for its next Superintendent will send the wrong message about our priorities as a district and community.

Being a Superintendent of a relatively large school district is certainly a challenging and time-consuming task, but so is teaching in our classrooms, cleaning our schools, driving our buses, and all the others tasks that go into educating children and preparing facilities for their work.

Missoula went through this recently, extending its Superintendent a ten per cent raise and increased benefits the same year teachers received a raise of less than one per cent. The Board justified the move, arguing that those at the top of the pay scale deserve larger raises than those in classrooms:

"We knew we were going to take heat for this," said board trustee Nancy Pickhardt. "But all I can say is that from our point of view, this is the trend in education. It’s performance-based pay and it starts at the top.

Let’s learn from Missoula’s move, which created animosity between employee groups and generated a great deal of negative publicity in the community. Now is certainly not the time to tell the people of Helena that $145,000 a year isn’t enough money.

Let’s compensate our next Superintendent well and let’s hire a dynamic, tireless advocate for schools and students, but do it within  a reasonable budget.

It’s always both disheartening and a bit amusing watching conservatives contort themselves to justify discrimination against GLBT Americans, especially when it comes to marriage equality. They couch their arguments in specious claims about judicial activism, but the truth is, their position rests on the bigoted idea that a group of people can be denied equal protection under the law simply because some people are uncomfortable with relationships that are different from their own.

The latest example? The media darlings and deep thinkers at Treasure State Politics.

When this is your argument, you’re in trouble:

I understand it is vital for every citizen, no matter their personal choices, to be guaranteed the same rights under our laws. Marriage isn’t a right, it’s a tradition. When a court begins to compromise the meaning of marriage that Montanans have overwhelmingly agreed on, the reverence of marriage can be quickly destroyed.

The Supreme Court has disagreed with the idea that marriage is not a right, most specifically in the 1967 Loving v. Virginia decision, which outlawed anti-miscegenation laws. As the majority wrote:

The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men …

To deny this fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis as the racial classifications embodied in these statutes, classifications so directly subversive of the principle of equality at the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment, is surely to deprive all the State’s citizens of liberty without due process of law.

Loving v. Virginia is an especially instructive example, as it illustrates the absurdity of relying on popular opinion to determine the right to marry. In the 1960s, the majority of Americans opposed interracial marriage:

A Gallup Poll indicated in 1965 that 42 percent of Northern whites supported bans on inter-racial marriage, as did 72 percent of southern whites.

The “logic” offered at Treasure State Politics must, therefore, endorse the position that the Supreme Court was wrong to strike down inter-racial marriage laws in the United States. Surely, these future voices and current campaign staffers for the Montana Republican Party are not suggesting the Supreme Court should have left such an abhorrent remnant of Jim Crow laws on the books, are they?

They have to be—and that shows just how wrong the argument is.

Of course, the deeper issue is the bind the Republican Party finds itself in when it comes to the issue of gay marriage: in the short term, they have to take a hard line against equality for all Americans, because it plays well with their base. Long term, it’s not only a bigoted position, but one that’s a political loser.

This Pew Research Center chart shows that Americans are headed in the right direction when11-3-11-87 it comes to marriage equality, but equal access to rights shouldn’t depend on  either public opinion or what conservatives believe marriage means.

Equality under the law means equality under all laws, no matter how contorted the argument used to justify discrimination.

As a final note, the bloggers at Treasure State Politics might enhance their credibility if they didn’t write things like “the gay blog alienated the people it needed to convince.”  I don’t know what the hell a “gay” blog is, but it sounds complicated.

A Brief Defense of Max Baucus

by M. Storin on November 27, 2011 · 90 comments

in Montana Politics

Senator Max Baucus has had a bumpy ride with the left-wing of the Democratic Party for a good decade now.  His accomplishments are often dismissed for his failures – look at SCHIP and the Bush Tax Cuts, for example.

More recently, Senator Baucus is getting whacked from both sides for the failure of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to produce any results. “It’s Healthcare Reform deja vu.”

However, an important point is being missed in this telling of current events: Senator Baucus didn’t have to serve on the Supercommittee. In fact, he volunteered for the job. As others have pointed out, volunteering for the Supercommittee was a huge risk for Baucus.

During the debate over what would become the ACA (the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act), Baucus saw his poll numbers tank. It was just within the past year that his numbers had started to rebound. The smart political move for Max would have been to stay as far away from the Supercommittee as possible and, after it inevitably failed, throw stones.

I think it’s worth revisiting the recent criticism of Max. Too many politicians shy away from their duties as policy-makers in favor of  political safety. During the last three years, Max has done anything but.

Today, from the mind of our renowned economist and Representative, Dennis Rehberg:

The Fed was created to protect the value of the dollar. Since 1913, the dollar has lost 95% of it’s value. Time to #AuditTheFed

While it’s a laudable attempt to shore up the John Birch/Ron Paul wing of the Montana GOP, it’s not exactly sound economic theory.  At Matt Yglesias notes:

It’s difficult to know how to make sense of the claim that the combination of mild inflation and compound interest means currencies decline a lot in value over giant time scales. If you assume governments should put a very strong priority on the interests of people who want to save large sums of money in shoeboxes, I guess this is a damning statistic. But it seems to me that the relevant issue is that real income in the United States has increased enormously over the past 100 years and that we’ve done better in this regard than most countries.

It would seem Representative Rehberg would be better served sticking to frivolous lawsuits than economics.

Chamber of Commerce Attacks “John” Tester

November 25, 2011

I don’t know who the hell this “John” Tester is, but the wing of the Republican Party called the Chamber of Commerce sure is mad at him, running a dishonest attack ad on him here in Montana: There a pretty sloppy organization, since this ad follows an incredibly dishonest attack on our Senator, Jon Tester: [...]

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News Coverage and Livingstone Campaign Both MIA

November 25, 2011

Two things seem to be on life support in Montana: the futile Livingstone/Zinke gubernatorial campaign and a functioning political press. It’s apparent that Neil Livingstone has no intention to seriously contest Rick Hill’s bid for the Republican nomination. He hasn’t updated his campaign web page since August, has had few public events, and worst of [...]

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There’s a House Race in Montana?

November 23, 2011

There’s no disputing that the race to determine who will be Montana’s next Representative is the most ignored race in Montana. But it shouldn’t be that way. Sure, being Montana’s only Representative is a pretty lousy job. You represent the second largest district in America in terms land mass (Alaska coming in first, of course) [...]

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