Thursday, February 14, 2019

Posted By on Thu, Feb 14, 2019 at 11:47 AM

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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Posted By on Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 10:24 AM

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Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Posted By on Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 11:54 AM


Former Navy fighter pilot and retired astronaut Mark Kelly confirmed the rumors today: He’s running for U.S. Senate against Republican Martha McSally, who was appointed to her seat after being the first Republican to lose a Senate race in Arizona in three decades.

Kelly had a 25-year career in the U.S. Navy, but was drawn into politics when he married Gabby Giffords, whose own congressional career came to an end after surviving an assassination attempt during a Congress on Your Corner event in January 2011 that claimed the lives of six people.

After the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, Kelly and Giffords established Americans for Responsible Solutions to lobby for new laws to prevent gun violence. The organization changed its name to Giffords last year.

In an announcement speech on YouTube, Kelly credited Gabby for showing him how government could improve people’s lives.

“You know, I learned a lot from being an astronaut, I learned a lot from being a pilot in the Navy. I learned a lot about solving problems from being an engineer,” Kelly said. “But what I learned from my wife is how you use policy to improve people's lives. Arizonans are facing incredibly challenging issues in the years to come. Access to affordable healthcare, the stagnation of wages, job growth, the economy. I care about people, I care about the state of Arizona, I care about this nation. So because of that, I’ve decided that I’m launching a campaign for the United States Senate.”

Kelly’s entry into the race is McSally’s worst nightmare. She’s already lost one Senate race and only has her seat because she cooked up an insurance plan with Jon Kyl and Gov. Doug Ducey. Kyl, who took a break from his lobbying career to accept an appointment to the late Sen. John McCain’s seat, stepped down at the end of last year so McSally could have a consolation prize after falling to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema.

Team Kelly knows McSally inside and out. Many of his most trusted advisors are veterans of campaigns run by Giffords and Ron Barber, the former congressman who won the seat Giffords gave up in 2012 to focus on her recovery. Barber narrowly won a race against McSally in 2012 and lost one to her by a mere 167 votes in 2014.

McSally lost her Senate race because she went from Trump skeptic to Trump true believer in 2018. She hasn’t veered from that course, remaining a loyal foot soldier to Trump from her Senate perch. For example, while a handful of Republicans (including newly elected Utah Sen. Mitt Romney) voted alongside Democrats to end the government shutdown last month, McSally remained a team player, voting only for the GOP plan.

At this point, it’s gonna be hard for McSally to break up with Trump, who will remain at the top of the ticket in 2020. But even if she remains his loyal handmaiden, she’s still got problems with the Arizona Republican Party, which is now under the control of one of her political rivals, Kelli Ward, who lost to McSally in the 2018 GOP primary for Senate. And despite McSally’s allegiance to Trump, it’s entirely possible that she’ll have a primary challenge because many conservative Republicans still think she’s too lib.

Kelly does have to make it through a Democratic primary, though he’s the first one to announce a 2020 campaign. Sinema’s win had a lot of Democrats thinking about running in 2020. One dropped out last week: Newly minted Democrat Grant Woods, who served two terms as Arizona’s attorney general as a Republican in the 1990s. Woods, a close ally of John McCain who supported Sinema in 2018, has been dismayed by the direction of the GOP. He had hoped to follow Sinema’s moderate path to the U.S. Senate, but has been haunted by some of his not-exactly-woke comments he made about women when he hosted a talk-radio show in Phoenix after he left office.

Still considering the race is Congressman Ruben Gallego of Maricopa County, a rising star in the Democratic Party. Gallego is a veteran who would make a formidable candidate in the primary, but might not have the moderate appeal Sinema had in the 2018 general race against McSally.
And then there’s the matter of money. McSally knows how to bring in the dollars—so many dollars, in fact, that she can’t keep track of it all and is in regular trouble with the Federal Elections Commission. In her Senate race, McSally raised more than $20 million.

But Kelly can match that. He’s already has a fundraising base from his work with Giffords and will be considered one of the most competitive candidates in the country.

Stock up on popcorn. This is gonna be a race for the ages.

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 9:57 AM

click to enlarge Revenge Of the Privatizers: Arizona, Oklahoma, West Virginia
Photo by Gage Skidmore
God, how they hated it!

Republicans control the Arizona legislature. They're determined to continue their anti-public school crusade by starving schools of funds, and they've been doing a pretty good job of it.

Then teachers donned their RedforEd T-shirts last spring and paraded in front of the Capitol, tens of thousands strong. Teachers won the media battle as well as the hearts and minds of voters. Republicans were forced to paste on smiles and talk about how much they respect teachers and love school children. Gritting their teeth, they voted to budget extra money for teacher salaries. It wasn't enough, but it was more than most people expected, and much more than Republicans wanted to give.

This session, some Republicans think it's time to take revenge on the teachers with legislation that would restrict teachers' speech during school hours, prohibit schools from shutting down during a walkout and allow any legislator to demand that the Attorney General open an investigation into a school district if the legislator alleges it has violated the state's law or the Constitution.

So far, the pieces of legislation have gone nowhere. So far. I dearly hope they will be ignored to death. I wouldn't be giving them this bit of publicity if Arizona was an isolated phenomenon. But two other red states hit by teacher activism have gone the same route: Oklahoma and West Virginia.

If it was only Arizona, well, that's Arizona. But when the same thing happens in three red states, it starts to look like a trend.

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 9:07 AM

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 8:11 AM

This morning, retired astronaut and former Navy fighter pilot Mark Kelly announced via Twitter than he plans to challenge Republican Martha McSally, who was appointed to the U.S. Senate after losing last year's Senate race to Kyrsten Sinema. 

Monday, February 11, 2019

Posted By on Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:16 AM


Remember back when getting rid of teacher tenure was a thing?

The reasoning was, if we don't give teachers tenure and put them all on one year contracts, principals can fire lousy teachers without having to jump through legal hoops. All those old folks sitting in the classroom crossing days off the calendar until retirement can be booted out, the reasoning went, and be replaced with new, excited, vibrant young teachers who can't wait to have classrooms of their own.

Of course, those were never the real reasons the privatization/"education reform" crowd, which was behind the anti-tenure movement, was pushing this so hard. It was just another way of attacking teachers unions' bargaining power and furthering the "failing teachers in failing schools" stereotype.

The anti-tenure movement had a few years of prominence starting around 2010, when some state legislatures passed laws restricting teacher tenure. But three years later, the new big education story was teacher shortages: too few teachers in the classroom, too few college students in the teacher-education pipeline. By 2015, people were calling it a crisis. In 2019, it's being called a nationwide epidemic.

When schools are desperate for teachers, it sounds ridiculous to say we should look for more ways to fire experienced teachers. Schools are begging teachers to stay. They're holding local teacher fairs and trying to lure teachers from around the country and from other countries.

In Arizona, we've lowered our standards so far, people who are willing to teach can get something called a Subject Matter Expert Standard Teaching Certificate with nothing more than a Bachelor's Degree. Actually, a high school diploma will do. Hell, a high school dropout with relevant work experience can get one of those credentials and begin teaching the next day.

Attacking tenure is a dead issue these days. The irony is, the push to end tenure is one of the reasons we don't have extra teachers hanging around we can afford to fire. It's one of many reasons teaching is looking less attractive to college students thinking about their careers, and why young teachers are leaving the profession in droves. Most of the reasons can be traced back to the privatization/"education reform" crowd which is doing whatever it can to harm public schools.

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Posted By on Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:49 AM

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Friday, February 8, 2019

Posted By on Fri, Feb 8, 2019 at 11:06 AM

Newly minted Democrat Grant Woods, who served as Arizona's attorney general as a Republican in the 1990s, announced today that he won't be seeking a U.S. Senate seat. Woods posted on Facebook:

Letting everyone know today that I will not be announcing for US Senate this year. My interest has been in getting Trump out of office along with his enablers. It is clear now that several Democrats will run for Senate. I have no interest in spending the next 18 months running against Democrats. They are not the problem.

Thank you to the people across the state who signed on to help me. The support was amazing and I will always cherish it.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Posted By on Wed, Feb 6, 2019 at 10:42 AM


Southern Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva was unimpressed with President Donald Trump's State of the Union.

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