INDIANAPOLIS —
Now that the dust has settled from the tumultuous 2011 session of the Indiana General Assembly, we can begin to assess the damage inflicted upon thousands of Hoosiers by one-party rule. From teachers and students to Hoosier workers, women, the elderly and the disabled, the spectrum of people hurt by the radical agenda forced upon Indiana by the extremist wing of the legislature is vast and diverse. There are a few bills we can point to as successes but the policies enacted this session were deliberately aimed at helping the rich and big corporations while leaving working families and small businesses behind.
One good thing that came from this session is that Hoosiers can clearly see the difference between the two directions ahead of Indiana from which we have to choose.
Tax Relief: Missed
the Boat
Our one-party legislature missed the boat on tax relief. They provided millions in tax subsidies for big corporations — bailing them out with our money — rather than providing some relief at the pump by cutting gas taxes. Our caucus called for a suspension of gas taxes (sales and excise) for the summer months between Memorial Day and Labor Day. This would have given Hoosier families a 40 cent cut per gallon in the price of gasoline.
Instead, the extremist wing of the Republican party that controlled the legislature shot down our tax relief plan, opting instead to collect these windfall taxes.
Job Creation
We set out this session with a solid job creation plan, more help for small businesses and more jobs for Hoosiers. Unfortunately, our plan for a small business loan program and a requirement that state-funded construction projects hire Hoosier workers were blocked by Republicans.
Instead, Republicans gave out more corporate welfare to companies with no requirements that they actually create jobs for Hoosiers. Republicans made it easier for companies to skirt the rules and pay less to Hoosier workers.
Education
Public education should be the great equalizer — providing a world-class education to all Hoosier children, regardless of the circumstances they were born into. But, this session we saw that principle eroded.
Teachers were demonized and stripped of their ability to fight for smaller class sizes and safer schools. Students will go to schools cut for the second straight budget cycle, this time by over $400 million.
Despite the war waged on public schools, the extremists running the legislature found ways to fund experimental education programs like charter schools and create the largest private school voucher program in the nation that will shift millions of tax dollars away from public and to private schools instead. They’ve also taken credit for funding full-day kindergarten, but that measure requires buy-in from school corporations already struggling to make ends meet from the cuts they suffered at the hands of the GOP majority.
Budget
The state budget is a marker of our priorities for the state and the Republicans sent a message loud and clear. They would rather the state hold onto over a billion taxpayer dollars than use some of that money to help get Hoosiers back to work — reinvesting that money in the same taxpayers from whom it came.
Working Families
House Democrats stood in opposition to the Republican assault on workers’ rights. Their agenda aimed at stripping collective bargaining rights to earn better wages, benefits and safety standards was mitigated by House Democrats. We don’t believe workers should be put on a march to the minimum wage.
House Democrats stood up for Hoosier workers and our public schools. Unfortunately, one-party rule won the day. Republicans did win the last election, but they didn’t campaign on this extreme agenda: stripping public education; taking away collective bargaining rights for Hoosier workers; using public money to fund private schools or giving a 25 percent tax cut to corporations while cutting Unemployment benefits to our fellow Hoosiers who find themselves out of work. Hoosiers will be feeling the impact of this session for years and decades to come, just not in the way we all might hope.
Flashpoint
FLASHPOINT: Dems hold dim view of legislative session
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FLASHPOINT: A legislative session of missed opportunities
Given the nature of politicians, grand claims of accomplishments and overblown rhetoric about “historic” efforts are to be expected at the close of any legislative session.
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FLASHPOINT: Again in 2013 General Assembly, middle class generally ignored
Last year, the people of Indiana entrusted the Republican Party with some of their most precious possessions.
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FLASHPOINT: Indiana lawmakers reinforced school safety mechanisms
Nothing is more important to me than the safety of my children. Every parent has felt that instant, apprehensive rush when their child plays too close to the street or falls down while playing soccer and it is our responsibility as parents to implement every safety mechanism we can muster to protect our kids.
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FLASHPOINT: Lessons from the legacy media — get it right, first
Enough mistakes and maybe we’ll learn: When in doubt, leave it out.
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FLASHPOINT: Hoosiers got steady hand in recent session
As the General Assembly began its work last November, as Speaker of the House, I pledged a renewed spirit of bipartisanship with legislators working together to solve our state’s most pressing challenges. As this year’s legislative session concludes, representatives from throughout the state — Republican and Democrat — have joined together to address those issues at the forefront of Hoosier minds: maintaining our state’s fiscal integrity, spurring job creation and expanding education opportunities for every Hoosier family.
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FLASHPOINT: Time has arrived for overhaul of TV news
Former FCC Chairman Alfred Sikes gave an address in 1992 in which he claimed television news was too superficial and too focused on visuals.
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FLASHPOINT: Fiscal cliff, Obamacare have already raised taxes enough
Our history is rich with stories of people who have immigrated to the United States for a chance at the American Dream. The American Dream, in its truest form, is the opportunity to achieve success by working hard and playing by the rules; to make it on your own and to say, “I earned this.”
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FLASHPOINT: Expanding Medicaid coverage makes sense for Indiana
Since last summer’s U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on the Affordable Care Act effectively gave states the option to expand Medicaid, policymakers across the country have debated if and how to extend health programs to millions of uninsured Americans.
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FLASHPOINT: Improve public education, stop experimenting with it
In January, the four of us who serve as the Democrats on the House Education Committee outlined our hopes for the 2013 session of the Indiana General Assembly, particularly in joining with Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz to offer common sense solutions to improve the quality of education for our children. With the halfway point of this session past us, we remain optimistic that positive steps can be taken … but that optimism is tempered by the reality that education policies are being directed by a legislative majority that has a radically different agenda.
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Healthcare law anniversary no reason for celebration
March 23 marked three years since the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed into law, yet this is not an anniversary that deserves celebration.
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FLASHPOINT: Defending state’s authority is attorney general’s obligation
The law of the land recognizes the authority of states to license marriage.
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FLASHPOINT: Stability key for state’s future
Hoosiers have the unique luxury of being the fiscal envy of the nation due to the sound fiscal policies of the last eight years.
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FLASHPOINT: House budget offers Medicaid solution for Indiana
This week, my U.S. House Budget Committee colleagues and I introduced a federal budget resolution for fiscal year 2014. Our budget is a responsible plan that stops spending money and balances in 10 years — largely through making key reforms to drivers of our debt like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.
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FLASHPOINT: Problem gambling in Indiana: A new understanding of community concern
The week of March 3 was designated as National Problem Gambling Awareness Week.
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FLASHPOINT: Eastern time in Indiana defies common sense
Nobody complains more than Hoosiers about changing their clocks. And there’s a valid reason — daylight-savings time in Indiana’s Eastern Time Zone is painful.
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Praying for civil resolution to debate over gun control
Guns are lively ammunition for passionate debate these days.
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FLASHPOINT: It’s not too late to expand health services
This week, state leaders euthanized the biggest, boldest Hoosier jobs proposal of the 2013 session of the Indiana General Assembly.
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FLASHPOINT: You can’t go back again — and that’s OK
Our progressive colleagues have been telling us for years that the 1950s were a horrid time.
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FLASHPOINT: The fierce urgency of now — nation needs to protect youth
The alcohol-fueled alleged serial rape of a 16-year-old Ohio girl by two of her similarly impaired classmates — not to mention the drunken videotaped commentary of others — points yet again to the imperative that adult America renews its commitment to address as a true national community those issues that most threaten the health, safety and forward development of youth.
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FLASHPOINT: A pastor speaks out against Sullivan’s ‘traditional prom’
I am a pastor in Sullivan, Ind., and I am outraged.
Recently, two young students applied to walk the Grand March together in the school prom in Sullivan. -
FLASHPOINT: 0wning firearms is a First Amendment exercise, too
Following the hysteria generated by gun prohibitionists in the wake of the Sandy Hook tragedy, a nationwide rush on gun stores began as citizens bought semiautomatic modern sporting rifles, handguns and ammunition, in effect “making a political statement” about proposals to ban such firearms.
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FLASHPOINT: Maintaining the priority
Recently a newspaper article has been written about a change in the by-laws of the Indiana High School Athletic Association which speaks directly to attempted undue influence exerted upon students below the level of grade nine and their parents.
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FLASHPOINT: The fairness of marriage
What is the current Indiana law concerning marriage? Our state defines marriage in a singular way — between a man and a woman.
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FLASHPOINT: We ask state legislators to abide by their oath of office
All of us relish giving unsolicited advice to our elected representatives.
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FLASHPOINT: Mentoring is having major impact on public education
While managing local utility services, Mike Martin found a new way to energize his community, and students are starting to benefit.
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FLASHPOINT: Common Core standards should be common sense
Years ago, when state officials and education experts came together to create new model standards for schools, they probably never expected it to be controversial.
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FLASHPOINT: Milestone year for Rose-Hulman
The Rose-Hulman campus traditionally quiets down this time of year, yet for me I sense a renewed energy from the phenomenal year just closing.
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FLASHPOINT: ISU’s reasoning flawed in flight school planning
ISU and the taxpayers of Indiana and Vigo County are being led down a path of deception once again.
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FLASHPOINT: Incessant attacks on Christianity by the ACLU
It is obviously apparent that the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is continuing its onslaught against religious freedom in the United States.
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FLASHPOINT: Americans deserve more value for their tax dollars
While traveling the 8th District and listening to fellow Hoosiers during my first term in Congress, I have reached the conclusion that many constituents do not believe they are getting value for the tax dollars that come out of their paychecks and are sent to Washington, D.C.
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FLASHPOINT: A legislative session of missed opportunities




