Screenshot from Wallen Lake School District's website calling parent's to action.

Like many schools throughout the state of Michigan — and around the country for that matter — Walled Lake Consolidated School District in Oakland County, Mich., has suffered budget cuts. With that it has called upon parents of its students to write letters to legislators and Gov. Rick Snyder’s office in protest of the cuts — but parents aren’t the only ones doing the letter writing. According to Michigan Capitol Confidential, a news service from the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, elementary school students spent class time writing letters voicing their dissent over the cuts to the elected officials — and some parent’s aren’t happy: Walled Lake parent Ernie Hughes said he didn’t think the assignment was appropriate. “Don’t bring politics into the school and use the kids as pawns,” Hughes said. Michigan Capitol Confidential has more on the letter writing, which was confirmed by the school on Thursday: The students were told the best letters would be forwarded to the governor. One parent said the teachers prepped the students with what the budget cuts entailed because some weren’t aware. Students also were asked to speak in front of their classmates about why they didn’t like the budget cuts. Parents’ weren’t the only ones disagreeing with the use of classtime to write such letters: District Spokesman Judy Evola said in an email it wasn’t appropriate for the elementary age students to write the letters. “The District neither supports this writing assignment or believes it was age appropriate for elementary students,” she said. “Further, Walled Lake Schools does not blame the governor for the decisions to cut positions and programs in the district for the current year or for the past five years.” “It’s completely inappropriate to use students in this way,” [Michael Van Beek, director of education policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy,] wrote in an e-mail. “But if teachers are going to force them to write letters, maybe they should address those letters to union bosses and school board members who maintain and defend an unsustainable cost structure that forces schools to reduce the level of services they can provide to students and taxpayers.” Here are a few comments on the article: The Michigan Capitol Confidential reports that the school district did have to layoff some teachers due to the budget cuts but Evola is reported as saying the school is committed to “living within our means.” Still, as the publication points out, the school’s website says that cutting funding is “not acceptable” and that the district will be taking action “either by calling or emailing” to protest current and prevent proposed cuts. At the same time, Snyder announced earlier this week that with some surplus state money, he wants schools to compete for more funding — a growing trend — based on performance. With Michigan heading into a new budget year without the chronic deficits that plagued it for the past 10 years, Snyder wants to reward schools for how well they educate, not for merely having the best and brightest students. Several states have tied financial incentives to standardized test scores, but Snyder’s plan is somewhat different. “This year we had a surplus, so we had a lot of requests for funding,” Snyder said. “But good budgeting isn’t about taking that surplus and giving everyone a little bit more money … (it’s about) rewarding success and results.” While critics praised Snyder for spending more on education, they argued his plan leaves schools without the resources to make the improvements he wants. “Any money that will be funneled back to our schools is, of course, a step in the right direction,” said state Rep. Ellen Cogen Lipton, the top Democrat on an education spending subcommittee. “However, these funds will only provide the bare minimum in restoring the drastic and unnecessary attack on our children’s education that left our schools to increase class sizes and without money for books, teaching materials and support staff.” The Associated Press contributed to this report.  Do you think students should be allowed to use class time to write letters to legislative officials?

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Appropriate? Mich. School Students Write Letters to Gov. During Class Time About Budget Cuts

Are We Due for a Surge for Rick?

On February 6, 2012, in Uncategorized, by McneeLanding461

If Rick Santorum surges in the the next few states (Colorado, Minnesota, and Missouri’s nonbinding “beauty pageant,” where Newt Gingrich will not appear on the ballot), it’s not that unthinkable that he could end up the premier challenger to Romney. It’s a surprising thought, because since Iowa, Santorum has finished fourth, third, third and fourth. But for whatever it’s worth, Public Policy Polling has Santorum leading Romney slightly in Minnesota and eight percentage points ahead of Gingrich in Colorado for second place. And Romney isn’t competing in Missouri, dismissing the value of a nonbinding contest that amounts to a poll ( albeit one that will cost the state $7 million to administer ). Keep reading this post . . .

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Are We Due for a Surge for Rick?

At Wall Street Journal , “Welfare Lines Overflow: “Crowded Public-Assistance Centers Interrupt Services as Demand for Aid Grows” (via Google ): Growing numbers of New Yorkers seeking food stamps have created an unwelcome spillover effect at some of New York City’s job centers: overcrowding that in some cases has grown so severe, benefits were jeopardized. The crush of people grew so large at one Brooklyn center in November that the Fire Department intervened and prevented anyone from entering the building. That was an extreme example of the problem. But clients at many of the city’s 29 job centers—which manage public-assistance benefits, including food stamps—regularly arrive long before the doors open to wait in line. Advocates said people miss mandatory appointments, leading to a bureaucratic battle to reopen their cases, or abandon the process after growing discouraged. “It’s outrageous,” said Charles Leonard, a disabled 50-year-old who complained to 311 recently about a long wait and confusion at a center on Northern Boulevard in Queens. “It’s like everybody is running around with their head cut off, and no one cares.” Officials at the city’s Human Resources Administration, which runs the centers, acknowledged that serious overcrowding is a problem at five facilities. Advocates believe the problem is broader, affecting roughly 10 centers. “At best it’s benign neglect,” said Steven Banks, attorney-in-chief at the Legal Aid Society, which provides legal services to low-income New Yorkers. “At worst, it’s like the English poor laws, in which the aim was to make the seeking of assistance so miserable that people wouldn’t seek it.” HRA spokeswoman Connie Ress blamed the overflow crowds on rising numbers of people seeking food stamps. The number of New Yorkers getting the benefit has increased by 200,000 in the past two years, jumping to 1.8 million from 1.6 million in late 2009. At the same time, the agency has consolidated some facilities, Ms. Ress said. “We know that there are issues in a few of our centers throughout the city,” Ms. Ress said. “We are actively addressing it.” Continue reading at the Google link .

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Demand for Welfare Programs Overwhelms Public Assistance Agencies

Voters Looking for Best Candidate to Beat Obama

On December 29, 2011, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by WanderseeFontan338

According to the Los Angeles Times , ” Republican Campaign Hinges Less on Issues “: Reporting from Des Moines— Mitt Romney has a 59-point economic plan. Newt Gingrich promises “very big solutions.” But to a large and increasing extent, issues aren’t driving the fight for the Republican presidential nomination. With Iowans about to cast the first votes of 2012, issues have declined in importance as a factor in the campaign, according to a recent national opinion survey of Republicans. Instead, the GOP contest reflects an intensifying search by voters for the candidate they believe has the strongest chance of unseating President Obama next November. That’s a departure from some past elections, when policy positions split the party. “The striking thing about the Republican race is that there’s an incredible amount of unanimity,” said Yuval Levin, a domestic policy aide in the George W. Bush White House. Republicans currently regard Romney and Gingrich as the candidates best able to defeat Obama, according to the latest CNN/Opinion Research survey. Yet each man is picked by fewer than 1 in 4 GOP voters as the candidate that they are most likely to agree with on the issues they care about most. Even more notably, the salience of issues as a way of sorting through the crowded GOP field has declined sharply over the course of the pre-primary campaign. In June, Republicans said a candidate’s stance on issues was just as important as the leadership skills and vision a candidate would have as president, according to CNN/Opinion Research. By mid-December, a candidate’s stand on issues mattered to barely 1 in 3 voters. In the same poll, twice as many Republicans ranked leadership skills as more important. That shift reflects, at least in part, the influence of the 13 televised debates, in which the Republican contenders have largely failed to draw meaningful differences over issues or highlight new ideas, even when they have them. Instead of revolving around a galvanizing issue, the GOP race has been shaped by the overall tone of the debates and the perceived authenticity of the candidates as foes to Obama. RTWT. Economic issues matter. Social issues, not so much.

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Voters Looking for Best Candidate to Beat Obama

New Hampshire Is Low on Rick Perry’s List of Worries

On December 28, 2011, in Uncategorized, by alexasami1a1

On MSNBC a moment ago, Chris Jansing gave Rick Perry’s spokesman Ray Sullivan grief over Perry’s current standing at 1 percent in the most recent New Hampshire primary polls. (Okay, Rasmussen had him at 3 percent and Public Policy Polling at 2 percent.) A Texas governor emphasizing his social conservatism was never a likely frontrunner in the Granite State. You’ll recall that in 2000, another Texas governor, frontrunner George W. Bush, took his Iowa momentum into New Hampshire and promptly lost to John McCain by 33,000 votes, or 18 percentage points. Keep reading this post . . .

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New Hampshire Is Low on Rick Perry’s List of Worries

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Newt Gingrich has hit Mitt Romney where it hurts. Right in the Liberalus Maximus . In an intervie w with The Transom on Friday, Gingrich was asked about Romney’s lack of support for the Contract with America, a list of public policy goals Gingrich crafted that spurred the Republican Revolution in 1994. “That’s not totally fair,” Gingrich said. “He was running to the left of Teddy Kennedy in Massachusetts in 1994. He said flatly, he wasn’t for the Reagan-Bush policies, he was independent. And he couldn’t possibly have been for the Contract because, how do you run to the left of Teddy Kennedy in Massachusetts favoring a Gingrich contract?” h/t Yahoo News

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Gingrich says Romney was more liberal than Ted Kennedy

Gingrich Leads Republican Rivals in Iowa

On December 8, 2011, in Uncategorized, by JuanGetalty

At New York Times , ” In Iowa, Gingrich Is Gaining Favor, New Poll Shows ” (via Memeorandum ): DES MOINES — Newt Gingrich enters the final four weeks of campaigning before the Iowa caucuses with Republican voters in the state viewing him as more prepared to be president than Mitt Romney, more attuned to their concerns and just as capable of defeating President Obama, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll. Mr. Gingrich is rated more favorably than any of the other six remaining candidates in the race among voters who say they are likely to attend the Republican caucuses in Iowa. He would be supported enthusiastically as his party’s presidential nominee by more voters than any of his rivals, the poll found, and is leading in the head-to-head competition as the campaign here builds. But two-thirds of likely voters remain open to changing their minds, the poll found, with even more saying they are willing to embrace a candidate who is less conservative than they are in order to win the White House. And a large majority of voters say economic concerns are more important than social issues or immigration, suggesting that Mr. Romney has ample opportunity to make his case to voters. A presidential race that has seen candidates abruptly rise and sharply fall is still remarkably unsettled here in Iowa, where the Republican nominating contest opens on Jan. 3. The outcome of the caucuses is likely to trim the field of candidates and help shape the contours of the primary race as it moves to New Hampshire, South Carolina and beyond. As the campaign intensifies through television advertising and get-out-the-vote efforts, the contest is hardly a Gingrich-Romney duel. Representative Ron Paul of Texas is essentially tied with Mr. Romney for second place, creating a combustible atmosphere as he and other rivals urgently work to slow the rapid ascent of Mr. Gingrich. The voters who will render the first judgment on the Republican field have been carefully following the race — 7 in 10 say they have watched recent televised debates — and appear unified around the pursuit of beating Mr. Obama. Of the nearly 4 in 10 likely caucusgoers who say they get most of their information from Fox News, Mr. Gingrich is the overwhelming choice. You know, we’re still just shy of a month out from the Iowa caucuses, and it’s not too late for Gingrich to peak. It’s been a roller coaster for GOP candidates all year, so maybe it’s Newt’s turn. We’ll see, either way. For now, though, he’s in the driver’s seat. See WSJ , ” Gingrich Clocks Huge Gains in All Early Voting States ” (via Memeorandum ). And at Time Magazine , ” CNN/TIME/ORC Poll: Gingrich Posts Massive Gains in Key Early States .”

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Gingrich Leads Republican Rivals in Iowa

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Robert Reich: Occupy Democracy

On November 23, 2011, in Uncategorized, by Richard Riker

There’s so much that’s wrong with Robert Reich’s commentary. It’s like where to begin? Mostly, it’s the hypocrisy that’s bugging me. The guy’s hardly a money-grubbing occupy hippie. The author of numerous best-selling books, Reich has served three presidential administrations and was President Clinton’s Secretary of Labor. As a political economist his words have significance, but as a class warrior he’s pretty much fail. The fact that he’s Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at UC Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy makes me wonder if he’s in his right mind. Certainly the school’s benefactors have some issues with the widespread anti-Semitism of this movement, and Reich has been speaking up and down the state at these protests. I sense some desperation in the appeals as well. I mean seriously. “Money in politics”? Boy, that’s a new one! Reich’s boss — Bill Clinton — almost single-handedly turned “soft money” into a household phrase in the 1990s. It’s so stupid, really. Attacks on “money in politics” are really attacks on Republicans, which in the end is nothing but lies, considering the trail of Wall Street cash leading right to the current occupant of the White House, to say nothing of the pay-for-play Democrat Party politics that’s been SOP for decades. In any case, Lawrence Meyers had a lot along these lines last summer, at Big Government , ” What’s Wrong With Robert Reich .”

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Robert Reich: Occupy Democracy

This is amazing, at WSJ , “Cain Vaults to Lead in Poll” (at Google ): CONCORD, N.H. — Former restaurant-industry executive Herman Cain has catapulted to the lead in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, as GOP voters grow disenchanted with Texas Gov. Rick Perry and remain wary of former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll finds. Drawn by Mr. Cain’s blunt, folksy style in recent debates, 27% of Republican primary voters picked him as their first choice for the nomination, a jump of 22 percentage points from six weeks ago. Mr. Romney held firm in second place at 23%, his same share as in a Journal poll in late August, while Mr. Perry plummeted to 16%, from 38% in August. The poll of 1,000 adults, conducted from Oct. 6-10, comes as many Republican donors and officials have begun to rally around Mr. Romney as the party’s likely nominee, despite a continued lack of enthusiasm for him documented in the new poll. For Mr. Cain, the question is whether his newfound prominence, driven in part by his signature “9-9-9″ plan to overhaul the tax code, will be a lasting phenomenon in a campaign that has seen many others surge and then fade. Since the spring, conservatives have given short-lived bursts of support for a string of contenders, including Donald Trump, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and Mr. Perry. “Will I be the flavor of the week?” Mr. Cain said Wednesday in New Hampshire, where reporters followed him as he addressed the state legislature. “Well, the answer is an emphatic, ‘No,’ because Häagen-Dazs black walnut tastes good all the time.” Mr. Cain in many ways isn’t operating a traditional campaign. He was on tour promoting his new book in recent weeks, and he will make stops between Memphis and Nashville on Friday and Saturday, though Tennessee is unlikely to factor in the Republican nomination. He doesn’t plan to return to Iowa, site of the first nominating contest, for weeks, his aides say. Also at Public Policy Polling, ” Cain leads nationally ” (via Memeorandum ). Cain discusses the Wall Street protests around 10 minutes at the video. See also The Other McCain, ” Pundette Likes Herman Cain .”

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Herman Cain Surges Ahead in New Wall Street Journal Poll!

Herman Cain’s Mojo

On October 5, 2011, in Uncategorized, by ggallin

I mentioned that Herman Cain was catchin’ the big mo’ over the weekend. And he’s really got it going this week. At WaPo , ” Rick Perry slips, Herman Cain rises in bid for GOP nomination, poll finds “: After a quick rise in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, Texas Gov. Rick Perry has experienced an almost equally dramatic decline, losing about half of his support over the past month, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. Perry’s slide, which comes after several uneven performances in candidate debates, has allowed former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney to resurface atop the GOP field. But the most direct beneficiary of the disenchantment with Perry is businessman Herman Cain, who is now tied for second place. Also at Public Policy Polling, ” Cainmentum ” (via Memeorandum ). Cain’s rise could be temporary, and this sounds pretty accurate: The Republican race has always been pretty wide open, but never more so than it is now. The fact that Cain and Gingrich, pretty much given up for dead just a few weeks ago, could have this kind of poll surge is really indicative of how weak anyone’s support is right now- very few Republican voters are strongly committed to a particular candidate and most of them can shift in a heart beat. I’ll be pretty shocked if Cain is still leading our state polls a month from now but if there’s any lesson to be learned from the GOP race at this point it’s not to be surprised by anything.

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Herman Cain’s Mojo