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This week, the Supreme Court struck down Vermont's strict limits on
campaign contributions and expenditures by candidates. In a set of
fractured opinions in Randall v. Sorrell,
the Court did not put an end to all campaign finance limits but did put
a roadblock in the way of anything much more...
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Back in April, the Stateside Dispatch profiled successful job creation programs
where states not only invest in dynamic high-tech and inner-city
startup companies, but make money for the taxpayer from many of their
investments.
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We already knew that clean elections were good policy. In fact, we brought together over 100 policymakers and activists in New Hampshire to spread the word on clean elections (see the resulting Resource Sheet). Now, new polling data shows that clean elections are also good politics.
Polling...
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Recently, in our Stateside Dispatch
highlighting alternative strategies to raise wages around the country,
we highlighted a proposed ordinance with widespread support in Chicago.
That proposal -- which raises the bar on wages for large retailers --
has now passed through the city's finance...
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The City of San Francisco is taking steps to provide health care to all
of its 82,000 uninsured residents, paid for by a combination of public
money and assessments on employers that do not provide health care for
their employees:
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With the 2006 elections quickly approaching, a small group of highly energized right-wing activists are working hard to export a failed policy from Colorado to other states around the nation. The idea is known variously as the Taxpayers' Bill of Rights (TABOR), the Stop OverSpending Amendment (SOS...
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The Western Governors Association on Sunday acknowledged an
inconvenient truth. The bipartisan group of Governors from West Coast,
Rocky Mountain, and Great Plains states came together to unanimously
pass a resolution (PDF) that says that global warming is real, at least partially human-caused, and...
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Companies are required to calculate the risks to their businesses based
on a range of potential threats to their business models, but there is
currently no requirement that they calculate the potentially
catastrophic costs of climate change. A few U.S. companies do so
voluntarily, but most do not.
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The Washington Post details some of the changes states are making in the Medicaid program, party based on federal waivers and partly due to a new federal law passed last December that allows states to offer unequal benefits to different Medicaid recipients.
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New York Assemblyman (and Progressive States board member)
Adriano Espaillat has been doing more than his fair share to stake out
a clear progressive agenda on economic issues this year. From passing
legislation to extend union protections to home day care workers to
sponsoring a bill to hold...
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Morgan Carroll quickly gained a reputation with both legislators and lobbyists when she won election to the Colorado House. Fighting for health care reform left her with a passion for lobbying ethics rules, resulting in her recent aggressive push for new legislation and for an audit of current...
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When progressives have control of a legislative chamber, the measure
of their leadership is how they improve the lives of the residents of
their states. But when they are in opposition, the measure of
leadership is how they stand up for principle and highlight the abuses
of rightwing power.
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