Archive for June, 2020

Assemblyman Jones, Democrat and former corrections officer, thinks through NY police reform – North Country Public Radio

Photo from Assemblyman D. Billy Jones's facebook page

Jun 12, 2020 In the wake of sweeping police reforms passed by the state legislature this week, were checking in with our North Country lawmakers on how they voted. Assemblyman D. Billy Jones is a Democrat from Chateaugay who represents Clinton and Franklin Counties, and parts of St. Lawrence County. Hes also a former corrections officer.

Assemblyman Jones has been getting a life-long education in how our society thinks about crime and punishment.

"Im open minded and I am willing to listen to anyone at any given time, and certainly Ive learned a lot and have educated myself a lot on these issues."

He spent twenty years working inside New York state prisons, where a disproportionate amount of people incarcerated are black. And since getting elected to the Assembly, he says hes learned a lot from his colleagues about the communities many of those incarcerated people came from, and their relationships with police.

"And we do have to cure or try to cure the ills of our society. Racism, bigotry has no place in our society. And we must do things to stop that. And certainly the relationships in black and brown communities with our law enforcement need to be improved as well."

Jones says these reforms could be a big step toward healing those relationships: mandating the use of body cameras on officers, setting up a special prosecutor to investigate police misconduct, or banning chokeholds, and was proud to vote in favor of them.

But it was the reform thats getting the most attention right now, the repeal of 50-a the law which since the 1970s police have used to seal disciplinary records from the public that Jones couldnt get behind. He broke with most of his Democratic colleagues to vote against it, because he says the language of the bill doesnt adequately protect to officers from unsubstantiated claims.

"And I think theres gonna be some fallout from this. I think its going to lead to a lot of issues, not only for our law enforcement but for our community members, and I just wish we wouldve cleaned that up."

The bill does let a department redact parts of the record like personal information, or minor infractions, before releasing it. But Jones says thats not strong enough protection for the former colleagues of his who he says this law could alienate.

"I think a lot of them feel its us against the world mentality, and I know thats not good for communities either."

Back in his North Country office yesterday, Jones said he thinks theres still a lot more work to do, and that this recent package of bills has kept him hopeful.

"You need to be in this line of work and especially now. Because if you dont have hope, I would probably get done, the day that I dont believe we cant improve our society, that would probably be my last day on the job, so, I guess youll know when I lose a little bit of hope."

Governor Cuomo could sign the reforms into law any day now.

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Assemblyman Jones, Democrat and former corrections officer, thinks through NY police reform - North Country Public Radio

Here’s what’s happening at the Indiana Democratic state convention – IndyStar

There are two main candidates for the Indiana governor's race in 2020: Republican incumbent Eric Holcomb and Democratic challenger Woody Myers. Here's what we know. Indianapolis Star

Democrats will have their state convention all digitally on Saturday, a first-of-its-kind event in Indiana.

Originally scheduledto draw hundreds of party insiders to the Indiana Convention Center, the party decided to host the event virtually amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.

State delegates will vote on the party platform, formally accept Linda Lawson as the lieutenant governor candidate and select a nominee for attorney general.

The convention also is a chance for candidates to officially launch their campaigns for November. Rather than squander that opportunity on a weekend, Democrats split those speeches off into a prime-time pre-convention that was broadcast June 4.

Several party leaders, including gubernatorial candidate Dr. Woody Myers, Mayor Joe Hogsett and Pete Buttigieg,spoke during that event. Several are likely to speak again Saturday.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also will deliver a prerecorded message about the importance of the November election.

Here's what you need to know:

State Sen. Karen Tallian and Jonathan Weinzapfel, who is a former Evansville mayor and former state representative, are vying to be the attorney general nominee.

State delegates will vote by mail and the winner will be announced June 18.

Inside the race:Tallian and Weinzapfel both think theCurtis Hill is vulnerable.

During the June 4 pre-convention, Tallian touted her time in the Statehouse, saying she's worked to reform health care, mortgage foreclosures, marijuana and bail laws.

She said internal polling shows she can defeatembattled Attorney General Curtis Hillor any Republican.

"I have built coalitions with diverse groups all over the state," she said. "I will walk into that office and clean house."

Weinzapfel said he would protect health care, including ending a lawsuit Hill has joined to overturn the Affordable Care Act.

"I'll protect our seniors," he said, "with more transparency in nursing homes, especially now (when) we need higher safety standards, and ... reform our criminal justice system, now. More fairness, more justice. In these tough economic times, I'll protect consumers and workers and make sure our small businesses have a level playing field."

The convention will give Myers and Lawsona second bite at the apple.

During remarks at the pre-convention June 4, Myers tackled his experiences with racism.

Myers, who is the state's first black nominee for governor, said his great, great grandfather, Arthur Myers, was a Civil War veteran from Kentucky who was the biological son of his slave owner, Joseph B. Myers, and of Heleary Clara, who was Joseph's slave.

"My aunt would tell me stories of what slave women would do to discourage the repeated sexual assaults from the slave master and his sons," Myers said. "Imagine also the angst of the brothers, sons and fathers of those girls and women, who were forced to stand by powerless to intercede.

Millionaire venture capitalist and former state health chief Woody Myers announces his bid for governor.(Photo: Chris Sikich)

"What my ancestors endured incenses me today as much as it did then."

Myers, who is a third-generation Hoosier, said his family moved north thinking Indiana was a land of hope. He said the stategovernment's intertwined history with the Ku Klux Klan a century ago, though, is not lost on him.

"I grew up in Indianapolis in the 1960s," Myers said. "As a boy the color of my skin was license for some to treat me with disrespect, instigate fights, falsely accuse me with theft and humiliate me in front of others.

"And I was lucky. By age 21 only once did I have a handgun pointed at me out of racial hatred. And I was never shot."

Myers, who has a medical degree from Harvard and an MBA from Stanford, said that childhood inspired him to achieve. He said he spent his life channeling his anger into passion.

"Experiences like mine are hard for many to understand," he said. "America is not yet the nation we could be. We promote the idea of liberty and justice for all, but we haven't finished the work necessary to make that a reality."

He said today's protesters are reacting with a force not seen since the 1960s. He hopes Hoosiers can work together for a more just future.

"George Floyd's death was a spark," he said. "Let's use today's energy to move forward with radically improved well-funded schools, affordable health care, effective economic polices and sustainable climate practices."

Lawson will have another crack of reaching a wider audience.

The choice of Lawson as a running mate May 8was somewhat overshadowed by the reopening of the economy. She also spoke at the pre-convention June 4, but much of the attention was on the protests that continueto rock Indianapolis.

Having never expressed interest in a run for governor or lieutenant governor, Lawson, 71, was a somewhat surprising choice. The first woman to join the Hammond Police Department, she rose to the rank of captain before retiring and moving to Nashville in Brown County, where she serves on the police merit board.

Linda Lawson, State Representative, at a meeting to discuss upcoming Indiana House and Senate bills that will seek to close the male and female wage gaps, Indanapolis, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018. (Photo: Robert Scheer/IndyStar)

Lawson knows what it's like to fight the system, saying she filed a challenge through the Indiana Equal Opportunity Commission in 1975 alleging discrimination when Hammond at first refused to hire her onto the police department. She won.

Lawson served in the minority in the Indiana House for much of the past decade and she indicated it's been painful to watch the GOP stamp out Democrat initiative after initiative.

She told IndyStar she wants to pick up the pieces.

"Therewere a lot of things that I cared a great deal about that never came to fruition (in the legislature)," she said.

A few goals come top-of-mind. She would raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. She would ensure utility companies can't charge Hoosiers for declining revenueamid the pandemic.

"We have a governor who is always putting businesses before people," she said.

She's concerned about families that don't have resources for childcare and the delay some Hoosier are facing in receiving unemployment checks. She worries that unemployment is much higher than 17% in many rural areas of the state.

"I don't think there are any plans out there for when COVID-19 is over," she said. "It's going to be different. We're going to have to train people (for new jobs)"

While it's challenging, she said she is working the campaign trail, just differentlywith phone calls, conference calls, Zoom meetings.

"We're keeping up with the times," she said, "wearing a mask, utilizing hand sanitizer, not shaking hands and kissing babies. We're doing our best. We're at it every single day."

Democrats think they have a real shot to win the open 5th Congressional District, so that race will receive a lot of attention Saturday.

State Rep. Christina Hale addresses the crowd following her nomination for lieutenant governor during the 2016 Indiana Democratic state convention at the Indiana Convention Center, Indianapolis, Saturday, June 18, 2016.(Photo: Jenna Watson/IndyStar)

Cheri Bustos, D-Illinois, chairwoman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, will speak to delegates.

That election will pit Republican state Sen. Victoria Spartz, who is a far-right candidate and staunch supporter of President Donald Trump, againstmoderate Democrat Christina Halein a historically Republican district that has shown signs it could be shiftingto the left.

The GOP state convention will be5:30 to 7:00 p.m. on June 18, broadcast live through a partnership with WISH-TV.

The convention previously had been scheduled for June 20 at the Indiana Convention Center, but like Democrats, the Republicans wanted to reach a wider weekday audience once the event went virtual.

Gov. Eric Holcomb and other party leaders will speak. Republican delegates also will conduct a mail-in vote for the attorney general nomination.

Hill is being opposed by former Congressman Todd Rokita,attorney John Westercamp and Decatur County Prosecutor Nate Harter.

Contact IndyStar reporter Chris Sikich at Chris.Sikich@indystar.com. Follow him on Twitter: @ChrisSikich.

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Here's what's happening at the Indiana Democratic state convention - IndyStar

In Big Cities, Democrats Have Failed to Reform the Police – City Journal

The death of George Floyd, an African-American, at the hands of a white Minneapolis police officer has sparked weeks of urban protestssome marked by looting and violenceacross the United States. It has also brought fierce condemnations of President Donald Trump. New York City mayor Bill de Blasio partly blamed the president for the unrest, noting theres been an uptick in tension and hatred and division since he came along, while Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot said that she had a message for the president: Its two words. It begins with F and it ends with U. The New York Times, meantime, excoriated Trump for what the paper described as a violent ultimatum issued to unruly protestors, and former vice president Joe Biden charged Trump with calling for violence against American citizens during a moment of pain.

Less anger, though, was directed at Minneapoliss political establishment. The Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (a merger of Minnesotas Democrats and the states Farmer-Labor Party) has run the city since 1975. Instead, the New York Times ran a mild piece observing that, for Democratic leaders of Minneapolis and other cities, the violent events were testing their campaign promises and principles. The protests, the paper opined judiciously, necessitated careful calibration of liberal leaders, between projecting empathy for the protesters and denouncing property destruction and theft. (The Times did acknowledge that the Minneapolis police department, currently run by a black police chief, has a long history of accusations of abuse.)

Floyds death was only the latest in a series of disturbing incidents that have fed a growing belief among African-Americans that theyre a target of abusive cops. For many, todays tragic events evoke the experiences of the 1960s, when blacks who had moved into northern cities clashed with hostile police departments, setting off similar destructive riots. To some Negroes police have come to symbolize white power, white racism and white repression, the Kerner Commissions 1968 report on the upheavals of that era declared. Nearly 50 years later, the Justice Department, in a report on the Baltimore Police Department in the aftermath of Freddie Grays death in police custody in 2015, concluded that the relationship between the Baltimore Police Department and many of the communities it serves is broken.

Though both reports conclusions were hotly contested, its indisputable that in each period, the principal controversies largely revolved around police departments in Democrat-controlled cities, with a few notable exceptions, like Ferguson, Missouri. Despite decades of Democratic Party governance and numerous promises of reform, these citiesBaltimore, Chicago, and Minneapolis are notable casescontinue to struggle with relations between the police and minority communities; in some cases, those relations have even regressed. The media rarely acknowledge this monumental failing of the party, and it seems to evoke little self-reflection among urban Democrats themselves.

The Democratic Party of the late 1950s and 1960s was principally a blue-collar political movement. It dominated northeastern and midwestern cities through powerful local political machines dispensing patronage to supportersincluding plum positions in police departments. Corruption was endemic, and it often occurred at the expense of black residents.

Those conditions set the stage for some of the most explosive riots of that period. In July 1967, two Newark police officers arrested a black cab driver and dragged him into a precinct house, where he was beaten. Protests erupted and swiftly turned violent, lasting four days and costing 26 lives. Investigations in the aftermath uncovered widespread corruption. Newarks mayor, Hugh Addonizio, had returned from serving in Congress to run the city because, he reportedly said, Theres no money in Washington, but you can make a million bucks as mayor of Newark. The citys police department was tied to organized crime; mob bosses had helped elect Addonizio, and directly picked his police commissioner, a man widely disliked in the black community. That same summer, a Detroit police raid on an after-hours club hosting a homecoming party for two African-American Vietnam vets sparked five days of rioting that saw 43 people die in the city. As in Newark, black residents complained that the police were corruptfor example, taking bribes to ignore street crime. Reports issued after the riots showed that the department had strong ties to local organized crime.

The Newark and Detroit riots, and riots in more than 150 other cities, that summer brought sweeping political changes, including the election of a generation of new black urban Democratic leaders. But policing remained a glaring problem. In Detroit, voters elected radical labor organizer Coleman Young, an African-American, as mayor in 1974. He went to war with his own police department, slashing its ranks by 20 percent and installing a black police commissioner, with instructions to reduce enforcement in the city radically. Both strategieshiring more black police leaders (and officers, generally) and reducing police presencebecame common in major cities. Crime exploded in Detroit, and in most American urban areas; as middle-class residents, predominantly white, left for safer suburbs, poorer blacks, living in increasingly dangerous city neighborhoods, were the biggest victims.

The story only changed when a few criminologists, led by the Manhattan Institutes George Kelling, and visionary police leaders, like William J. Bratton, began to advocate for community-based policing, including enforcement of quality-of-life offenses, and the deployment of more sophisticated data to target crime hot spots, to bring order back to urban neighborhoods. After Bratton became New Yorks police chief under Republican mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1994, crime started to fall dramaticallyincluding violent felonies, which fell by 70 percent.

As crime declined, so did some key indicators of police misconduct. The New York Police Department keeps extensive records on how often officers fire their guns, and the numbers tell a powerful story. In 1991, at the peak of the citys crime wave under Mayor David Dinkins, officers discharged their guns 307 times. Ten years ago, in a much safer city, police fired their guns fewer than 100 timesand last year, they did so just 52 times, representing a greater than 80 percent decline from 1991.

About a decade ago, a narrative reemerged in America that police departments are deeply racist and single out minority residents disproportionately. The timing seemed unusual. America had just elected its first black president, which might have signaled that the countrys racist past was firmly behind itcertainly in the sense of systemic or institutional racism. And yet, with Barack Obama in the White House, individual conflicts between the police and African-Americans were not downplayed but amplified, at times by the president himself. Speaking about the case of Eric Garner, a New Yorker arrested for selling contraband cigarettes who died in police custody after resisting arrest, Obama said that the incident spoke to larger issues that weve been talking about now for the last week, the last month, the last year, and, sadly, for decades, and that is the concern on the part of too many minority communities that law enforcement is not working with them and dealing with them in a fair way.

New Yorks progressive mayor, Bill de Blasio, found larger meaning in the confrontation, explaining that he told his son Dante, who is half-black, that he faced extra danger when interacting with the police. With Dante, very early on, we said, Look, if a police officer stops you, do everything he tells you to do. Dont move suddenly. Dont reach for your cellphone, said de Blasio. Because we knew, sadly, theres a greater chance it might be misinterpreted if it was a young man of color. Obamas attorney general, Eric Holder, used his bully pulpit to argue repeatedly that police and public school officials disproportionately and unfairly targeted young blacks. Holder led federal investigations of several police departments and used the Department of Justice to force teachers and administrators to reduce suspensions of African-Americans students.

Though statistical evidence showed no disproportionate targeting of blacks, its clear that many African-Americans believed this narrative of the Obama years. And the rhetoric surrounding the 2020 unrest suggests that many still do. So why did so little change under a Democratic president, and in typically Democratic-run cities? The answers might lie in looking closely at some of the most egregious confrontations that occurred in blue cities over the last few years.

In October 2014, 17-year-old Laquan McDonald was shot at least 16 times by a police officer on a Chicago street and killed. Initial reports claimed that he was walking erratically down the street, carried a knife, and lunged at the police. Testimony from witnesses and other evidence, however, cast doubt on the official version of events. The city turned down numerous requests to release video of the incident, which took place in the middle of a difficult reelection campaign for then-mayor Rahm Emanuel, who eventually won a run-off for a second term in April 2015. When the city, under pressure, eventually provided access to several videos, the evidence showed that McDonald was walking away from the cop when shot. The release provoked widespread protests, and the officer was eventually convicted of second-degree murder.

Emanuel refused calls to resign, despite emails obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request showing that he and members of his administration were aware that the videos existed. Instead, he established a review board headed by Lori Lightfoot, then president of the Chicago Police Board, to recommend police reforms, which a Justice Department report deemed essential to restore trust between the force and the community. While Chicago, governed by Democrats since 1931, made some changes, such as providing officers with tasers, which they could use as an alternative to their guns, no sweeping reforms or reorganization of the force took place. Lightfoot ran for mayor three years later, promising that she would finish the job of reform. In office for a year, with violence spiking in the city, she came under fire in minority communities for not being tough on crime. She has resorted to some of the same strategies that Emanuel was criticized for, including flooding crime-plagued neighborhoods with extra cops.

While the McDonald case festered in Chicago, in April 2015, Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who had been arrested for carrying a knife, sustained head injuries while riding in the back of a Baltimore Police Department van and died in the hospital. Protests broke out shortly after, and some were violent, involving looting and arson, prompting Maryland governor Larry Hogan to declare a state of emergency and send in the National Guard. During the riot, the citys mayor, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, was criticized for declaring, While we tried to make sure that (protesters) were protected from the cars and the other things that were going on, we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that as well.

Under intense criticism for her role during the riots, she decided not to run for reelection. A subsequent Department of Justice investigation accused the city police, headed by an African-American commissioner, of making unconstitutional stops and searches and of using excessive force. The task of reform fell to Rawlings-Blakes successor, Catherine Pugh, the eighth consecutive Democrat elected mayor since 1971, who ran on a platform of restraining the police. Like many of her Democratic predecessors, her strategy revolved around reducing policingbut as police withdrew, crime and disorder spread. Murders, which had declined to as low as 197 annually, spiked to more than 300. Pugh had to resign after just two and a half years in office for pressuring groups to buy a book she had written. She eventually pled guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion and was sentenced to three years in prison.

Though no such postmortems have taken place yet on the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, we can already see the likely direction they will take. The Minneapolis Police Department hired a black police chief in 2017, and he pledged to institute broad reforms, but hes faced resistance. One problem typical of Democratic-controlled cities is that public-sector unions are powerful, and the Minneapolis police union has apparently stymied efforts by the new chief to discipline and suspend officers accused of misconduct. During recessions [the city] would give the union management rights in lieu of money, Robert Olson, former chief of police in Minneapolis, told Reuters two years ago. Were not talking about just one union contract. Were talking about incremental changes in contracts over years that cumulatively, suddenly, theres all of these hoops, which makes it far more difficult for chiefs to sustain discipline. Its an old obstacle that the citys political leaders havent rushed to fix, despite years of complaints from minorities, because unions are deeply embedded in the political landscape. Minneapolis has one of the highest rates of unionization of public employees of any metro area in the country.

Speaking on TV during the recent unrest, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden promised, if elected, to make police brutality a key issue for his administration. It was the latest in a long line of promises by leading Democrats to address what they see as police misconduct toward African-Americans. One wonders when they will be called to account for their repeated failures to do something about it.

Steven Malanga is the senior editor of City Journal, the George M. Yeager Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and the author of Shakedown: The Continuing Conspiracy Against the American Taxpayer.

Photo by Joshua Lott/Getty Images

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In Big Cities, Democrats Have Failed to Reform the Police - City Journal

I actually would be tougher: A Democrat’s plan for changing the relationship with China after Trump – Yahoo Finance

Representative Tom Malinowski represents New Jerseys 7th District in Congress, but before that he served as an assistant secretary of state in the Obama administration and in the National Security Council during the Clinton administration.

Hes emerged as a leading voice on how Washington might shift its relationship with China in the coming years with a possible Democratic administration.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked former Vice President Joe Biden as someone who would give in to China. Malinowski told Yahoo Finance he aims to flip the perception that Democrats wouldnt stand up to China.

I actually would be tougher, and hope that Joe Biden would be tougher, he said during an appearance Wednesday on Yahoo Finances On the Move.

Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., during a hearing in 2019. (Tom William/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

On trade, Malinowski says he agrees with Trump. We needed to take on the Chinese on trade, he said, while also building alliances with European and other Asian nations to make any sanctions or tariffs actually stick.

The congressman has outlined his plan on building coalitions in a variety of forums, including a recent Washington Post op-ed.

He argues that the Trump administration has alienated allies while also not being focused on forcing China into structural changes.

Weve got to be up to the challenge, he said. This is not rocket science."

Rep. Malinowski with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

What I hear from the Trump administration is just, Please buy some of our American wheat and all is forgiven, says Malinowski.

During the primary campaign, Democrats often shied away from offering specifics on what they would do different than Trump on trade with China. Biden often went the furthest. During the September 12 debate, he said, You need to organize the world to take on China, to stop the corrupt practices that are underway.

He added, [The United States makes] up 25 percent of the world economy. We need another 25 percent to join us.

Malinowski endorsed Biden in January, saying that as a former assistant secretary of state, he is eager to support a nominee with the experience to restore the place of respect America once occupied on the world stage.

Malinowski also discussed what do to about the clashes between protestors in Hong Kong and Chinese authorities.

The strongest, the toughest thing we can do in support of the protesters in Hong Kong is to signal that we will allow the people of Hong Kong to rebuild their experiment in capitalism and democracy in the United States," he said.

In recent weeks, authorities in Beijing announced what they are calling national security laws that activists say would curb freedoms and end the traditional "one country, two systems" relationship between Hong Kong and mainland China.

Representative Malinowski represents a district in Northern New Jersey and recently joined a Black Lives Matter protest in the town of Millburn. (Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire)

Story continues

We will open our doors to refugees from Hong Kong, he says, arguing that doing so would be the most important deterrent that we can put into place against increased Chinese repression there.

The Trump administration has begun the process of withdrawing special trade benefits for Hong Kong in response to the crisis. But Trump also recently said he was not considering placing sanctions on Chinese President Xi Jinping personally.

The battle lines for Democrats and Republicans over China have become quite clear in recent weeks with each side seemingly in a contest to accuse the other of being the weaker party on China.

In a recent speech, Biden said that Trump has repeatedly praised Chinas containment response, despite a litany of public appeals, including from me, not to bet American lives and the U.S. economy on the word of the Chinese government.

During all the election-year back and forth, Malinowski has tried to make progress on China where he can find it. He recently joined a bipartisan letter to Apple (AAPL), which included signers from Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) to Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) to condemn what they called the companys censorship at the behest of the Chinese government.

For Malinowski, the goal is to change the overall focus. He says the United States needs to show the world that we are, in every way, different from the Chinese Communist Party.

Ben Werschkul is a producer for Yahoo Finance in Washington, DC.

Read more:

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Why Trump is moving closer to punishing China for the coronavirus

The Democrats have no answer to Trumps reckless trade war

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I actually would be tougher: A Democrat's plan for changing the relationship with China after Trump - Yahoo Finance

Redistricting Campaign Hopes Signatures by Mail Will Put Their Measure on the Ballot – The Corvallis Advocate

Putting a measure on the ballot means getting petition signatures, but in a time of pandemic, at least one group will be trying a direct mail campaign instead.

People Not Politicians is calling on thousands of Oregonian voters via mail to sign a petition for an independent commission to take over electoral redistricting in the state, and if enough people sign the measure would be on the November ballot.

The coalition is asking for signatures by mail because social distancing restrictions make traditional face-to-face petition work unrealistic.

What the Measure Would Do

Called Initiative Petition 57, this proposal seeks to transfer Oregons redrawing process for legislative and congressional lines from the hands of the state legislature, and move authority to a new 12-member commission. The idea is to put an end to partisan gerrymandering, which occurs because legislators can have conflicts of interest during the process and can essentially choose their voters, instead of voters choosing them.

The initiative letter contains a return envelope and is being sent to multiple voters within 500,000 addresses, meaning it is reaching about one million Oregonians. It needs 149,360 valid signatures by July 2 to qualify for the November ballot.

The 2011 update was the first time in a century that lawmakers did not defer the duty of redrawing to the partisan secretary of state, which also can create potential bias issues.

Both Support and Opposition are Bipartisan

Former President Barack Obama as well as former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder are national supporters of the initiative. Locally, supporters include NAACP branches of Oregon, the conservative Taxpayer Association of Oregon, public interest nonprofit OSPIRG, the American Association of University Women of Oregon, and Oregons Progressive Party. A chief petitioner of the initiative is Norman Turrill, a retired Portland software engineer and former president of the nonpartisan League of Women Voters of Oregon. Those in favor are hoping that the initiative will help end gerrymandering and subsequently give voters more power to hold elected representatives responsible, by, according to Turrill, potentially decreasing the number of districts where incumbents can easily win re-election.

The opposed include executive director for nonprofit Our Oregon, Becca Uherbelau and executive director of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Oregon, Emily McLain. The two have filed a lawsuit with hopes of stopping the redistricting commission initiative from going any further. Uherbelau and McLain are arguing that the initiative violates the Oregon Constitution, specifically a procedural requirement that requires initiatives to only amend one provision of the constitution at a time. They claim that the initiative would both switch redistricting from the state legislature to the commission as well as restrict Oregonians rights to free speech excluding elected officials, lobbyists, and other political insiders from serving on the commission.

Uherbelau and McLain are also concerned that the initiative could prevent young voters and newly naturalized citizens from serving, and since it requires applicants to have voted in at least two of the last three elections, could leave out many more Oregonians as well.

Heres Where the Campaign Money is Coming From

As of right now, People Not Politicians, spearheaded by civic and good government groups, has accrued $316,000 in funding: $61,000 from in-kind donations from nonpartisan democracy reform organization Common Cause, $40,000 from The Standard insurance company, $37,000 from the League of Women Voters, and $35,000 from Oregon Business and Industry.

By Cara Nixon

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Redistricting Campaign Hopes Signatures by Mail Will Put Their Measure on the Ballot - The Corvallis Advocate