Caucusing in the DFL is a Good Thing

Posted By admin on December 6, 2009

Mike Wrote this for Quiche Moraine

Caucusing in the DFL is a Good Thing

Minnesota doesn’t hold a spring presidential primary, as other states do. Minnesota’s primary election is in the fall, usually forty-five days before the election, and so it wouldn’t make sense to decide on the ballot for president that late. In place of the presidential primaries, Minnesota uses a “straw poll” from the votes of caucus attendees, and it is not as formal as an official election. The person who chooses to vote simply fills out a small ballot, and the results are counted and the ballots destroyed. The results are then called in to the party headquarters, and from that vote, the number of delegates assigned for each candidate to the national convention are determined. It’s that simple; now, go caucus! Right?

District 67 will caucus at Harding High School on Tuesday, February 2, 2010. Starts at 7:00 p.m. and runs until 9:00 p.m.

Deadlines For Political Campaign Refunds

Posted By admin on June 18, 2009

The Governor Kills The Program

Tim Pawlenty cut many necessary programs with his Unallotment Pen, and Minnesotans will have to struggle with reductions in public services.  It’s going to be a tough time for many vulnerable residents of Minnesota, including those who have already been carrying the weight of his political ambitions. The legislature will be looking at ways to fix these problems sensibly and with an eye to economic recovery.  There is a great deal of work to be done to ensure that the state will meet our residents’ needs and return to fiscal sanity.

As your Representative, I appreciate your contributions to the campaign. Your generosity has made possible my work for you in session and throughout the year.  I know that many of you have taken advantage of the Political Campaign Refund to help fund the campaign.  Unfortunately, the program is one of the items that the governor “unfunded” and it will no longer continue past June 30th of this year.

This is your opportunity to donate money to my campaign and still get your money back from the State of Minnesota.  Please hurry, as the deadline is fast approaching and I want you to be able to take advantage of the program.  You will still have until April 2010 to file your claim for a refund of up to $50.00 per person ($100 per married couple,) but we need to receive your donation by June 30th.

Please see our Contributions page for details on how to take care of this securely.

Click this button for an electronic donation. We will send your PCR form to you as soon as we receive your donation:

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Thank you for all of your support!

The Man With the Red Pen

Posted By admin on May 23, 2009

Why We Must Step up our Efforts for 2010

Tim Pawlenty's Idea of "Leadership."

Tim Pawlenty's Idea of "Leadership."

Governor Tim Pawlenty blames the Legislature and the Senate for not giving into his demands for the 2009 session to balance the budget in a way that benefits Minnesota. Instead, he refused to negotiate and held onto a foolhardy “No New Taxes Pledge,” saving his negotiation skills for a flurry of vetoes after the end of the session. By threatening to “Unallot” spending for needed medical and social services in Minnesota, he sent a signal to the citizens of our state that he is more interested in pleasing his potential campaign donors for his presumed presidential/vice presidential campaign in 2012.

While Pawlenty looks to the future, he uses the tools of the past: Cut, slash and burn and borrow. The 2009 portion of the Legislative Session has ended, with a budget we were forced to pass at the last minute before adjournment. Our leadership in the House and Senate had invited the governor many times to forge a compromise between our differences. It could have been something all Minnesotans could have lived with, even if not entirely happy with it.

The purpose of our bills, agreed on by both the Senate and the House, was to address taxation disparities which favor the rich over the working class and the poor, while continuing as many of the state’s needs for health care, local government assistance and education. Yes, even in our budget deal there were more cuts than we wanted. Yet we faced them and worked to minimize their effects on you, our constituents.

Pawlenty turned a deaf ear to the desires and wants of the people of Minnesota to invest wisely in our future and pulled out his red pen to write “Veto! Veto! Veto!” and to move the state its from its progressive leadership to the status of such business and education “powerhouse” states as Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.

In 2010, we don’t know if The Man With The Red Pen will be running again to be our governor, or if he will be foregoing this race to follow his true ambition for national office. It doesn’t matter. We need to pour our efforts into electing a governor from the DFL. The people of Minnesota have elected a divided leadership between the Executive Branch and the Legislative Branch; but in the hopes that we could together find solutions to our mounting problems. Instead they see that the governor had no such intentions.

We have many exciting candidates for the DFL choice to run for governor. I have endorsed Matt Entenza, but whoever we as the DFL place on the ticket Minnesota will win by electing a serious governor who cares about our state and our economic recovery. In 2010,, this is the race that matters (as well as my own, of course.)

Memorial Day

Posted By admin on May 21, 2009

We Need to Do More

Memorial Day for most of us is a long weekend and a day away from work. It is a day of sales for those who work in car dealerships and furniture stores, trying to meet the month’s quota with a final blitz of discounts and cash back offers.

It’s an extra day at the cabin, spending time with your buddies and family trying to find the perfect spot on a Monday morning where the walleyes and crappies are biting.

It’s also a day to think about war and why we fight and why we never seem to achieve peaceful, diplomatic long-term solutions to the problems that lead to the massive violence that takes our young men and women away from us. Our defenders volunteer for various reasons, but all of them end up supporting our freedoms and rights whether directly or indirectly. They support the concept of democracy, but they also prevent foreign invaders from taking our shores.

We have vets that may not have died overseas, but bring the war back with them and can never shake it. Memorial Day is a day we should pause and reflect and thank those who have faced enemy fire and taken a hit from us. We should remember those who died in battle and at home, suffering the long-term effects of war.

I feel awkward saying “Happy Memorial Day” because it is not a happy occasion. Families are missing their fathers, mother, brothers, sisters, friends and children. It is a time to reflect on what we have as a nation, and to honor them. It is also a time to remember that we need to show our support and honor to those they leave behind. Thank a vet on Memorial Day, and thank a family.

Pawlenty is Taking Control

Posted By admin on May 15, 2009

There is No Need to Worry, Right?

Tim Pawlenty has just decided that he can do alone with a few broad strokes of his pen and behind closed doors, what they legislature has been working on since January. The Legislature and the Senate have been holding open door meetings for you so that you can have your input into the budget. And we have appreciated your input.

Unfortunately, we were faced with the reality in Minnesota of what will happen with draconian cuts in essential services and investments. Tim Pawlenty is apparently more interested in moving into Barack Obama’s current quarters at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, or at the least into Blair House, in 2013. So, rather than face our reality, he is doing what he sees is going to lead him more towards Washington. He is following the lead of the New National Party of No, with the big buck fund-raising power of the conservative wing of the Republican Party.

The videos I have been putting up over the last few days are the best way that I know how to illustrate what is happening at the close of the legislature.

Please call the numbers and tell Tim Pawlenty that he needs to be more responsible to Minnesota’s future than he does his own.

Call The Governor: Health Care

Posted By admin on May 15, 2009

Real World Issues

Minnesotans testify that the Governor’s proposed cuts would hurt the health of our hospitals, health care worker and the lives of millions of Minnesotans who depend on quality care.

Call the Governor: Education

Posted By admin on May 14, 2009

Slash And Burn

Governor Pawlenty is going to slash and burn the future of Minnesota with his plan to use line item veto to balance the budget. Call the governor and tell them that his hard line on revenue (so that he can raise righ-wing campaign funds for his 2012 presidential campaign,) are taking Minnesota backwards.

Building Codes

Posted By admin on May 14, 2009

Mahoney, a long-time pipefitter, said a grace period that would last until Aug. 1, 2010, is needed to address the state high court’s ruling in the City of Morris v. Sax that local ordinances can’t supersede the State Building Code.

“What we have right now is confusion,” Mahoney said.

Click to continue reading “Building Codes”

Bioscience Executive Sees a Healthier Future

Posted By admin on April 4, 2009

Rep. Tim Mahoney, DFL-Saint Paul, said he’s frustrated by interest in a ban on testing of blood from newborns to catch rare diseases before they kill newborns.

“This saves lives,” he said. “This gets early diagnosis.” A doctor might have to do 50 or 60 tests to diagnose a rare illness. But with standard screening of all babies, the babies with rare illness get early diagnosis and treatment.

“There is a move at the capitol to shut that down, because of DNA privacy issues. I don’t understand it. It is ludicrous,” Mahoney said.

Click to continue reading “Bioscience Executive Sees a Healthier Future”

Let’s At Least Talk About Nuclear Power

Posted By admin on March 27, 2009

“I’m not trying to build a nuclear plant,” said Rep. Tim Mahoney, a Democrat from St. Paul and sponsor of the House bill. “We’re just trying to allow people to talk about it because right now you can’t.”

Click to continue reading “Let’s At Least Talk About Nuclear Power”

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Representing Minnesota's District 67A

Tim Mahoney has represented the East Side of St.Paul since 1998. He is now chair of the Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee; and a member of the Capital Investment Finance Division Committee, the Civil Justice Committee, the Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Committee, Labor and Consumer Protection Division Committee and the Ways and Means Committee. Please feel free to contact me.


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