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Building a Progressive Majority: Policy Options for 2008
http://www.progressivestates.org/dispatch
Monday, August 6, 2007
Building a Progressive Majority: Policy Options for 2008
EVENT at NCSL
If you are attending the NCSL conference in Boston, join Progressive States Network tomorrow night (Aug. 7th) at 6:30pm to celebrate this year's many progressive legislative victories at a reception at the Westin Copley Place.
RSVP at http://tinyurl.com/2qx3o3
We are happy to sponsor this event with our partners the AFL-CIO, American Federation of Teachers (AFT), AFSCME, Center for American Progress Action Fund, Center for Policy Alternatives (CPA), International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), National Labor Caucus of State Legislatures, and the Teamsters (IBT).
We are also pleased to have Robert Kuttner, columnist for The Boston Globe and co-editor and co-founder of The American Prospect, deliver his perspective on the current state of the country and how states can bring about the reforms we need. Bob Kuttner writes regularly for The American Prospect on political and economic issues, and he has just completed a book, to be published in 2007, on the connection between political and economic inequality and systemic risks facing the economy.
Building a Progressive Majority: Policy Options for 2008
Last November, we saw voters taking the first steps to repudiate the
right-wing ideology and institutions that have long dominated much of the
political landscape in our states. For too long, we have seen right-wing
politicians, backed by corporate money and by conservative think tanks,
blocking communities from improving wages, impeding expansion of health care,
and auctioning off public assets and public contracts to big monied interests.
In 2005, a group of legislators, non-profit leaders and advocates formed the
Progressive States Network (PSN) to provide day-to-day support to state
legislators and community organizations in each state to help make that
happen. The efforts of PSN and the progressive allies we work with in the
states are beginning to bear fruit, as we detailed in our recently
published Taking
the Lead: A Report on State Legislative Successes in Enacting Progressive
Policy.
But these achievements are only the beginning. The need for bold progressive
leadership has never been greater as our states confront challenges of
stagnant wages, global warming, exploding health care costs, and civic disgust
with elections dominated by monied interests.
This week, the Progressive States Network is releasing its policy options
package:
For an HTML version of the report, click here.
This package of reforms for 2008 provides a range of options progressive
legislators and allied advocates can use to build an enduring progressive
legacy in our states. Although these are obviously not exhaustive of the
issues that embody the progressive agenda, the issues detailed in this set of
policy options reflect opportunities where progressives can make some of the
most serious political inroads in the present environment.
Publication
Introduction
Even with last November's victories, progressives confront a political
landscape shaped by a well-organized right-wing network that has worked for
decades to establish political power in the states.
As we outlined in our February 2006 report,
Governing
the Nation From the Statehouses: The Rightwing Agenda in the States and How
Progressives Can Fight Back, groups like the American Legislative Exchange
Council (ALEC) and other allied right-wing groups have often hijacked public
policy in the states. Tens of millions of dollars of corporate money have
poured into local research think tanks and lobbying organizations to create an
"echo chamber" around their issues, promoted policies that have often wedged
progressive groups against each other while cementing a coalition around a
rhetoric of tax cuts and right-wing social issues.
Yet as we have seen, new opportunities have opened up for bold, progressive
leadership. Even most social conservatives in polls complain that power is too
concentrated in the hands of large corporations and support stronger
environmental protection, better labor laws, and health care for all. And the
rising number of young voters are more progressive on both social and economic
issues. Where progressives have often failed is where voters don't actually
know where their leadership stands, but where voters see progressive leaders
standing up strongly for working families, progressives can win, making good
policy good politics.
The key is to create a strong narrative around multiple issues that highlights
the values for which progressives stand: Rewarding Work, Valuing Families,
Promoting Justice, Growing the Economy and Increasing Democracy. The political
power of any issue then expresses the values that connect that policy to
peoples' lives and to other issues that also matter to them. Within this
framework of values, Progressive States is initially providing legislative
support for seven key issue clusters. Although these are obviously not
exhaustive of the issues that embody the progressive agenda, the issues
detailed in this set of policy options reflect opportunities where
progressives can make some of the most serious political inroads in the
present environment:
The following sections outline the policies that can make these goals a
reality and the full report includes greater detail, updates on recent
developments in the states, and additional resources to support policy in each
policy area.
Publication
Wage Standards and Workplace Freedom
Policies
to raise wages should be a linchpin of progressive leadership. A higher
wage is the best anti-poverty program and a key "pro-family" policy to allow
parents to work fewer hours and have more time with their families. It is also
one of the best local economic development tools, since workers earning a
higher wage will contribute to an increase in local
consumer spending.
Fundamentally, strong wage policies express the progressive value of the
dignity of work and that all labor deserves a reasonable reward.
Key
Policies:
-
Wage Standards: While raising the minimum wage is the most
basic headline wage standards issue, there are other campaigns to extend
even higher wage standards for other sectors of the economy that Use
Government Contracts to Raise Wage Levels, Leverage Economic Development
Funds and Leases, and Create Wage Standards in Specific Industries.
-
Enforcement: Progressives can bring a bit of "law and
order" energy to wage and discrimination laws that are on the books but too
rarely enforced in many industries through policies to Increase Penalties
for Violations, Expand Resources for Enforcement and Hold Employers
Accountable for "Fly-by-Night" Operations.
-
Protecting Workplace Speech and Freedom to Form Unions:
Protecting employee free speech serves both an enforcement function to
encourage employee complaints of illegal employer activity and to embolden
employees to act collectively to demand higher wages. Such policies should
Protect Employees from Free Speech Retaliation, Extend Union Rights to
Additional Employees and Increase Free Speech Access to Employer Property.
Publication
Balancing Work and Family
Helping
parents balance the demands of work and family underlines progressive
pro-family policies. With the rhetoric of "family values," the right-wing
has convinced large swathes of voters that gay marriage and other hot-button
social concerns are endangering the family, even as those same corporate
conservatives studiously downplay the real stresses on families, especially a
workplace that is unforgiving of parents trying to balance the demands of work
and home. A core challenge for progressives is to reclaim their image as
defenders of the family against the pressures of modern life and work.
Key
Policies:
-
Family Leave: States have moved beyond the federal Family
and Medical Leave Act to help more parents who need to take extended time
off to care for children or ill family members, including Strengthening
Unpaid Leave Laws, Providing Paid Leave and Promoting At-Home Infant Care.
-
Time to Care: States are taking action to help employees
gain the flexibility to take care of family needs with policies such as Paid
Sick Days, Promoting More Flexible Work Options and Prohibiting
Discrimination Based on Family Responsibilities.
-
Childcare, Pre-K and After-school Programs: Both to
strengthen investments in childhood education and to ease the burden on
working parents, states are increasingly expanding child care, pre-K and
after-school education options that Create Better Child Care Options,
Guarantee Pre-K for all Kids, Expand After-school Programs and Create
Quality Care and Career Ladders.
-
Access to Contraception: Progressives help parents plan for
children when they are best able to support them and prevent the need for
abortion by making conception more available through Contraceptive Equity,
Funding Contraception, and Emergency Contraception Availability.
Publication
Health Care for All
Solving
the health care crisis — rising costs for everyone and lack of access for tens
of millions of Americans — is a top priority for voters and progressive
leaders. While right-wing politicians,
supported by pharmaceutical, insurance and other self-interested corporate
lobbies have blocked many reasonable reforms in the past, progressive leaders
recognize that as they expand access to health care for families they can
build the base of support for health care for all of us. In fact, state
leaders are enacting innovative proposals that are models for reforming the
system that help extend quality, affordable health care to all our states’
residents.
Key
Policies:
-
Covering All Kids: Covering all kids, primarily through the
federal-state SCHIP program, is a good first step towards achieving health
care for all residents. Options for states include Improving Access to
SCHIP, Ensuring Funds for Kids Care, and Removing Financial Barriers to
Participation
-
Quality, Affordable Health Care for All Residents: The
overwhelming majority of Americans agree that the government should ensure
access to quality health insurance, which can be done through Expanding
Medicaid, Comprehensive Solutions, and Health Care Reform Commissions.
-
Maintaining Employer Responsibility: too preserve employer
contributions to the health care system, states have begun holding employers
responsible for health care costs in a number of ways, including
Equitable Payroll-Based Financing, Employer Pay-or-Play Requirements,
and Disclosure Laws.
-
Health Care Cost Savings: To cut waste and free up
funds to cover the uninsured, states have identified reforms that increase
efficiency, improve quality, and eliminate health care industry
profiteering, including Prescription Drug Cost Controls, Ensuring High
Quality and Health Insurance Regulations.
Publication
Smart Growth and Clean Jobs
A
cornerstone of progressive policy should be a program to create jobs based on
clean energy and to promote smart growth in our communities. Rising
gas prices, fears of increasing involvement in unstable Middle East politics,
and a public desire to protect the environment all reinforce the appeal of an
energy independence policy based on alternative energy sources, energy
efficiency and decreasing wasteful sprawl through better transit and housing
development policies. Investing in these strategies will not only make America
safer and more secure, it will create hundreds of thousands of good quality
jobs in communities across the country.
Key
Policies:
-
Smart Growth Development: States are taking leadership in
smarter development to improve community life, cut energy use, and preserve
remaining rural and unspoiled areas with policies that Promote Better Local
Planning, Encourage Transit-Oriented Development, Create Affordable Housing
and Incorporate Broadband Deployment into Planning.
-
Fuel-Efficient Transportation: Cars are a root cause of the
US dependence on foreign oil, so states have taken leadership in policies to
cut energy use in our transit systems, including policies to Improve Transit
Options, Promote Low Emission, Fuel-Efficient Cars, and Fix Transit
Infrastructure.
-
Green Buildings: Energy use by buildings outstrips even
energy consumed in transit, so states are increasingly encouraging more
energy-efficient building design policies such as Energy-Efficient Public
Buildings, Tax Incentives and Revised Building Codes, Appliance Efficiency
Standards, and "Smart" Buildings.
-
Energy Supply Alternatives: Policy innovations to diversify energy
sources and link clean energy and jobs include Sun, Wind and Bio-Based
Power, Clean Energy Funding, Promoting Utility Decoupling, and Upgrading
Energy Infrastructure.
Publication
Tax and Budget Reform
In
a debate too often dominated by right-wing tax cut rhetoric, there is a real
opening for progressives to demand a fairer, more accountable tax and budget
system. State residents are
frustrated by governments that they believe tax low- and middle-income
residents too much and upper-income people and corporations too little. Hidden
economic giveaways to companies receiving tax breaks and government contracts
only add to voter distrust that state budgets serve those with money, not the
average taxpayer. In response, a range of reforms at the state level are
showing the way to creating more transparent tax and budget decisions,
transparency that can strengthen voter trust that their tax money will
actually go towards the important public services that they do support.
Key
Policies:
-
Tax and Budget Transparency: Greater sunshine on tax and
budget policies is the first step to a fairer tax system, better public
services and the end to special interest corporate deals. Options include
Disclose Who Pays for Taxes, Review Tax Expenditures, Document All
Contracts, and Disclose Economic Development Deals.
-
Making Taxes More Progressive: In order to reform income,
corporate, sales and excise taxes and lessen the burden on working families,
state leaders can Promote Fair Income and Estate Taxes, Reform Property
Taxes, Close Corporate Loopholes and Stop Right-wing Tax
Campaigns.
-
Reforming Government Contracts: The scramble for
government contracts often corrupts government and its agencies, so states
can take action to assure integrity in the contracting process and guarantee
that public contracts strengthen their states' economies through policies
that Force Contractors to Prove Privatization is Cost-Effective and Tighten
Contracting Standards.
-
Fixing Failed Tax Subsidies: With hundreds of billions
handed out in corporate tax subsidies and development deals, states can
better target money by passing legislation to Sunset Tax Expenditures,
Require Job Quality Standards and Other Reforms for Subsidy Recipients, and
Stop Tax Subsidy Bidding Wars.
Publication
Fair and Clean Elections
Election
reform and eliminating the corruption of money in politics is necessary both
to achieve progressive goals and to highlight progressive leaders as reformers
of a system with which voters are disgusted. In a post-Bush v.
Gore climate of outrage over election abuses where corporate "pay to play"
lobbying deals are constantly in the news, there is an opportunity to push
forward reforms that guarantee voting rights and promote elections where voter
support, not corporate money, determines the election outcome.
Key
Policies:
-
Lobbying Reform: While the problem of lobbyist influence is severe,
many state governments have been taking steps to improve the situation by
policies that Enforce Disclosure, Ban Gifts, and End the Revolving Door.
-
Clean Elections: Fundamentally, the only serious way to end the
general corruption of politics by money is to stop allowing corporate
interests to fund our elections, including policies to Ban "Pay to Play"
Campaign Contributions and Enact Public Financing.
-
Election Process Reforms: Many of the problems facing voters would
be eliminated through simplified voting systems, including Election Day
Registration, Early Voting, Vote by Mail and National Popular Vote Reform,
and Verified Paper Ballots.
-
Voting Rights: The core progressive principle should be that every
American should have the right to vote without intimidation or harassment,
guaranteed by Opposing Restrictive ID Laws, Fair HAVA Implementation,
Enacting Deceptive Practices Acts and Restoring Voting Rights to
Ex-Felons.
Publication
Broadband Buildout and Technology Investments
Why
High-Speed Internet Broadband Matters: In a wired world, communities that
are networked with broadband are more likely to attract the jobs and
industries that can build a 21st century economy. State leaders increasingly
see universal broadband deployment as a key component of increasing local
democratic participation, promoting local economic growth, creating "smart"
communities that are healthier and more energy efficient, and closing the
widening gap in economic opportunity.
Key
Policies:
-
Universal and Affordable Broadband: States are working to encourage
universal broadband access through a range of policies, including
Protecting Community Services, Mapping Access, State Broadband Investments
and Buildout Regulations.
-
Leveraging Broadband for Energy, Health Care and Broadband
Savings: Investments in broadband infrastructure will easily pay
for themselves when states use the technology to leverage cost savings
across the economy with policies such as "Smart Buildings," E-Medicine and
Distance Learning.
-
Local Technology Investments: State governments increasingly are
using public money to leverage local entrepreneurial use of technology
infrastructure to create jobs, including State Venture Capital Funds and
"Emerging Domestic Markets" Investments.
-
Promoting Media Justice: Beyond investing in physical
infrastructure, states need to invest in education and community media
infrastructure to overcome the digital divide, including Education and Job
Training, Funding Community Technology Centers and Supporting Alternative
Media.
Publication
Conclusion
As we outline in more detail in the full report, each of these issue
clusters are not only good policy for working families, but they each expand
and deepen the progressive coalition by appealing to disaffected, swing and
even many self-described conservative voters who nonetheless care about these
issues which express the value of work, family, justice, economic growth and
democracy.
Additional details on legislative models and other support materials will be
available on the website at Progressive States
(www.progressivestates.org) in
coming months.
We will also use the Stateside Dispatch to regularly updates state legislators
and advocates on policy proposals and victories (as well as defeats) across
the country on these and many other progressive issues as well.
Please have colleagues and friends go to
http://action.progressivestates.org/signUp.jsp
to sign up.
Masthead
The Stateside Dispatch is written and edited by:
Nathan Newman, Policy Director
Mijin Cha, Policy Specialist
Adam Thompson, Policy Specialist
John Bacino, Communications Associate
Suggestions
Please shoot me an email at jbacino@progressivestates.org if you have feedback, tips, suggestions, criticisms, or nominations for any of our sidebar features.
John Bacino Editor, Stateside Dispatch
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