Best monthly jobs report since the Great Recession began four years ago
AZ Democratic Party on Republican anti-worker legislation
The Scott Walker and Goldwater Institute connection: the ‘Kochtopus’
Posted by AzBlueMeanie:
John Nichols of The Nation was a guest on MSNBC's The Ed Show Thursday night to discuss his report on the connection between the Goldwater Institute, ALEC, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer, Arizona Tea-Publicans and the billionaire bastard Koch brothers. How Scott Walker and ALEC Plotted the Attack on Arizona's Unions | The Nation:
Two days after Ohio voters overwhelmingly rejected Governor John Kasich’s anti-labor agenda by a sixty-one to thirty-nine margin in a statewide referendum, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker jetted to Arizona to launch the next front in the national campaign to attack union rights.
After meeting with former Vice President Dan Quayle, Walker was whisked over to the Phoenician Resort in Scottsdale, where he briefed a thousand Arizona conservatives on how they could attack “the big-government union bosses.”
“We need to make big, fundamental, permanent structural changes. It’s why we did what we did in Wisconsin,” declared Walker, who at the annual dinner of the right-wing Goldwater Institute said that compromising with unions was “bogus.”
Comparing governors who have been attacking the collective-bargaining rights of public employees with the founders of the American experiment—“just like that group that gathered in Philadelphia”—Walker told his listeners: “We need to have leaders not just in Wisconsin but here in Arizona…”
If anyone missed the point, Walker said: “Tonight, you might say I’m preaching to the choir with a bunch of fellow conservatives.… I preach to the choir because I want the choir to sing. So tonight I’m asking you to sing. Tell the message in Arizona and all across America that we can do things better.”
Action Alert: Rally Against Anti-Worker Bills Today!
Boss Tweed: destroy civil service system before destroying public employee unions
Posted by AzBlueMeanie:
The Senate Committee on Government Reform approved four anti-worker bills on Wednesday on a party-line vote, bills that were introduced only on Monday by its chair, Sen. Rick Murphy, R-Glendale, and fast-tracked for swift passage in the Senate to limit public testimony and to not leave enough time for public opposition to build against these bills as occurred in Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan.
SB 1484 Paycheck Deductions
SB 1485 Unions; Public Employees; Prohibitions
SB 1486 Public Employees; Activities; Unions; Compensation
SB 1487 Government Employees; Union Dues; Withholding
These bills were to be fast-tracked for a full Senate vote next week.
But Gov. Jan Brewer, aka "Boss Tweed," wants her bill to destroy the civil service merit selection system acted upon first before our Tea-Publican legislature destroys public employee unions. And for this we are to be grateful? Brewer's ultimatum: State personnel reform or no union-busting bills – East Valley Tribune:
Gov. Jan Brewer is threatening to veto some union-busting bills unless lawmakers first give her what she wants: reform of the state personnel system.
And even then, she's not promising to sign anything.
Jeff Flake Exposed as Jet Setting Junketer (and Shirtless Hunk) by Wil Cardon’s New Ad
Posted by Michael Bryan
I actually don't know how much of this fact and how much is political puffery, but it's a well-done attack ad – and there is never anything I don't like about an attack ad on a likely Republican nominee by another Republican 🙂
Enjoy, right after the click…
President Obama on his housing plan
Posted by AzBlueMeanie:
President Obama has a "My Turn" guest opinion in the Arizona Republic today, Obama: Housing plan will boost economy:
In my State of the Union Address, I laid out a blueprint for an economy that's built to last — an economy built on American manufacturing, American energy, skills for American workers and a renewal of American values of fairness and responsibility.
Over the past decade we strayed from those values and we saw what happened. Millions of families who did the right thing were hurt when the massive housing bubble burst. Folks who shopped for a home they could afford, secured a mortgage and made their payments each month were hurt by those who weren't playing by the same rules.
Lenders who sold loans to people who couldn't afford them, buyers who bought homes they knew they couldn't afford and banks that packaged and traded bad mortgages to reap phantom profits.
These actions triggered the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes and the housing crisis remains the single biggest drag on our recovery.
It will take more time than any of us would like for the housing market to fully recover from this crisis, and government certainly can't fix the entire problem on its own.
However, it is wrong for anybody to suggest that the only option for struggling, responsible homeowners is to sit and wait for the housing market to hit bottom. I refuse to accept that, and so do the American people.
This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class and this housing crisis struck right at the heart of what it means to be middle class in America: owning a home. Homes are where we invest our nest egg, where we raise our family, where we plant roots in a community and build our memories.
The housing plan we launched a couple years ago has helped nearly 1 million responsible homeowners refinance their mortgages and save an average of $300 each month. But even with rates at historic lows, too many families are underwater and unable to refinance.
There are more than 10 million homeowners across the country right now who, because of an unprecedented decline in home prices, owe more on their mortgage than their homes are worth.
For those responsible homeowners, there are actions we can take right now to provide some relief.
