04/2008

Minute Man (04/09/08)

The fate of vetoed or excluded state construction projects may be up in the air, but our Minute Man is still on the job. Tonight he hears a bonding pitch for the U of M's Bell Museum, which got the ax from the governor.

Health Care Reform (04/09/08)

Why has health care been a bit of a battleground this session? Mary finds out when Committee Chair Linda Berglin and Republican Committee Lead Laura Brod join her live in the House gallery.

Headlines (04/09/08)

A controversial bill for legalizing medical marijuana is heading to the House floor, lawmakers get an update on their own 35-W bridge investigation, the governor attends signing ceremonies for the projects that weren't cut from the bonding bill and climate change critics speak out against an advisory group's recent report.

Almanac: At the Capitol - April 9, 2008 (04/09/08)

Headlines (04/09/08)

A controversial bill for legalizing medical marijuana is heading to the House floor, lawmakers get an update on their own 35-W bridge investigation, the governor attends signing ceremonies for the projects that weren't cut from the bonding bill and climate change critics speak out against an advisory group's recent report.

Health Care Reform (04/09/08)

Why has health care been a bit of a battleground this session? Mary finds out when Committee Chair Linda Berglin and Republican Committee Lead Laura Brod join her live in the House gallery.

Minute Man (04/09/08)

The fate of vetoed or excluded state construction projects may be up in the air, but our Minute Man is still on the job. Tonight he hears a bonding pitch for the U of M's Bell Museum, which got the ax from the governor.

How It Happens (04/09/08)

Tonight, David Gillette goes out on a limb with this look at the leadership family tree.

GOP Says No Jesse

Wednesday, April 9, 2008 - 12:47 pm

Below is an email that went out to Republican supporters to make sure Jesse doesn't run for Senate. The conventional wisdom was always that Jesse hurt Dems more than Republicans, but in a race that is likely to be close, I guess neither side wants a wildcard. I can't wait to talk to Jesse about this, we have an interview scheduled soon...

Dear Supporters,
Just when you thought the 2008 campaign couldn’t get more unpredictable, Former Governor and professional wrestler Jesse Ventura says that he has not ruled out running for senate –and we need your help to make sure that doesn’t happen.
Ventura alluded to a possible run while promoting his latest book, and spreading his radical view that the government is covering up the real cause of the collapse of the World Trade Center in 2001 and that the CIA is conspiring to keep him out of power.
It is patriotic and responsible Minnesotans like you, not the CIA, who will keep Ventura and the leftist Democrat candidate Al Franken out of the United States Senate. Please make a contribution to the Minnesota Republican Party today, to ensure that we have the necessary resources to keep our senate seat safe.
Minnesota cannot afford to relive the mistakes of the Ventura administration. The Former Governor’s legacy includes major tax increase proposals and major embarrassments. Results which blatantly contradicted campaign promises to lower taxes and decrease the size of governemnt. Please make your donation today to make sure that true fiscal conservatives represent Minnesota in Washington.
Thank you for your support.
Sincerely,
Ron Carey
Chairman
Minnesota Republican Party
P.S. Please make your most generous donation today to help us defend our senate seat from radicals like Al Franken and Jesse Ventura. Thank you!

 


 

 

 
Prepared and Paid For By The Republican Party Of Minnesota, Ron Carey, Chair
Not Authorized By Any Candidate Or Candidate Committee
www.mngop.com
 
 
Below is an email that went out to Republican supporters to make sure Jesse doesn't run for Senate. The conventional wisdom was always that Jesse hurt Dems more than Republicans, but in a race that is likely to be close, I guess neither side wants a wildcard.

Gender Gap Recap--McClung Letter

Tuesday, April 8, 2008 - 8:56 am

 

This unsigned anonymous note is what greeted me this morning in my Capitol office. Frankly, it's rather creepy to me to have people putting accusatory notes in my office when I'm not there. I have had people stalk me, who leave anonymous notes, follow me and have threatened to kill me. This is true for almost anyone who works in television, so we're a bit sensitive to such actions. So if anyone knows who is responsible, please let me know because it's at the very least highly unprofessional and downright creepy.

Now, to the specific questions: The creepy questioner asks "Do you have any evidence related to this charge?" First of all, in my blog post I wasn't making a charge. I was asking a question. "Veto Gender Gap?" was the headline. Note the question mark. I was reflecting an issue raised by four other people, not me. As was noted in the post, Sen. Anderson, Sen. Pappas, Rep. Sertich and at least one reporter raised the issue.

For further evidence, my colleagues have spelled it out pretty clearly in their stories. St. Paul took the brunt of the vetoes. The largest projects that were vetoed came from St. Paul: Central Corridor, Bell Museum, Como Zoo, and more. The female chair Rep. Alice Hausman is from St. Paul. One reporter saw her appear to be crying after the vetoes. Her St. Paul senators said she ran out of the governor’s office because she was so upset.

*Update, the governor's press secretary wrote the note and just supplied this response:

Mary –

I tried calling you yesterday evening and this morning, but have missed you. Please feel free to post this entire email on your blog if you’d like (in fact, I’d prefer if you did so my side of the story can be fully shared with your readers)

I left you that note around 6:00 p.m. yesterday. I came downstairs to talk with you, but when you weren’t there, I just wrote a note and left it. Unfortunately, I forgot to write my name on it, but after I slid it under the door I figured I’d just call you first thing Tuesday to discuss it. I didn’t intend it as an “anonymous” note, as I always planned to follow up with a call.

What bothered me is that, once again, you posted an untrue and unfair accusation from Democrats without contacting our office for a response. You did this on March 14 when you posted their claim that the Governor had not met with DFL leaders, which was not true. And now you post their claim that gender was a factor in the Governor line-item vetoes without contacting our office for a response. This claim is also untrue.

Several other reporters heard DFL legislators claim gender bias regarding the Governor’s vetoes. But none of those reporters actually reported on it, because the claim is ludicrous on its face. This is a Governor who has worked very closely with women over the course of both his private sector and public sector careers. His Lt. Governor is a woman. More than 75 percent of the policy staff in the Governor’s Office are women. His general counsel is a woman. It’s pretty serious to claim that the Governor took official actions with gender in mind as a factor. I believe, at a minimum, you should have given us an opportunity to respond before posting such a claim.

You also said in your post that “the question some reporters started asking is if gender looks like a factor.” No reporter asked that question in the press conference with Governor Pawlenty, so I guess you mean that reporters asked that question after some DFL legislators raised the issue in the hallway after the press conference.

Again, I apologize for not signing my name to the note I left you. And I agree that my handwriting is pretty creepy. I really need to work on my penmanship. Not signing the note was an unfortunate oversight on my part, but I just jotted it down standing in the hallway of the press corps yesterday evening. My concerns about your blog posting still stand, however. I look forward to continuing to work with you around the Capitol.

Sincerely,

Brian McClung
Director of Communications
Office of Governor Tim Pawlenty

This unsigned anonymous note is what greeted me this morning in my Capitol office. Frankly, it's rather creepy to me to have people putting accusatory notes in my office when I'm not there. I have had people stalk me, who leave anonymous notes, follow me and have threatened to kill me. This is true for almost anyone who works in television, so we're a bit sensitive to such actions.

After Hours: Lobbyists and Luck (04/08/08)

What does it take to be a successful lobbyist? As Mary explains, "smarts, knowing your industry inside out ... and the brass equivalent of a rabbit's foot found in the Capitol rotunda."

Veto Gender Gap?

Monday, April 7, 2008 - 4:33 pm

Gov. Pawlenty hit projects hard that are close to House Chair Alice Hausman (DFL-St. Paul). Majority Leader Tony Sertich called it "personal" what Pawlenty did to chair Hausman. Sen. Sandy Pappas (DFL-St. Paul) was very emotional right after the gov's press conference, saying the vetoes are "insults to chair Hausman." The question some reporters started asking is if gender looks like a factor with Hausman being a female chair. Hausman was at the governor's press conference but Pappas said she ran out because she was so upset. We haven't been able to verify that because Hausman has been tied up in meetings. But two female senators from St. Paul (Anderson & Pappas) saw gender as a factor.

Senate Bonding Chair Keith Langseth wasn't very upset afterwards and showed little emotion to the governor eliminating about $200 million dollars of the bonding bill he crafted with Hausman. The biggest shock in the Capitol hallways is Pawlenty's slashing of Central Corridor money. Few saw that coming. The governor didn't get a big project he wanted: Vermilion State Park. So lawmakers got something gutted they wanted too. Pawlenty noted that they already passed a huge transportation bill above his objections. The governor is keeping lawmakers on their toes; they really didn't expect a line-item vetoed bill since Pawlenty has been quick to take down whole bills. This reminds lawmakers of some of the unique and huge powers a governor has in a year where they overrode the big guy for the first time.

Gov. Pawlenty hit projects hard that are close to House Chair Alice Hausman (DFL-St. Paul). Majority Leader Tony Sertich called it "personal" what Pawlenty did to chair Hausman. Sen. Sandy Pappas (DFL-St. Paul) was very emotional right after the gov's press conference, saying the vetoes are "insults to chair Hausman." The question some reporters started asking is if gender looks like a factor with Hausman being a female chair.
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