December 27, 2007

Late morning news digest: transportation edition

The Owatonna People's Press reports Highway 14 funding on its way.  An interesting article; it looks as if Dick Day isn't going make earmarks an issue in his campaign:

Sen. Dick Day, R-Owatonna, who wants to run for Walz's seat in 2008, said Wednesday that he'll take any money the district can get - especially when it comes to highway funding.

"In the scheme of things, that's not a very big chunk of money," he said. "But overall, it's another piece of money, that at least someone knows that there's a highway [in the First District] and we're trying to get it done."

Funny, but everyone who drives Highway 14 knows it's there.  Walz will continue to work on securing federal funds for the highway:

Meredith Salsbery, Walz's communications director, said Wednesday that Walz plans to continue making Hwy. 14 a priority when Congress convenes Jan. 3, 2008.

Federal funds have been cut for groups that work for at-risk kids and for children's mental health needs, the New Ulm Journal reports in Board hears about collaborative funds dilemma.

The Pioneer Press picks up the PB editorial praising Walz, Coleman and Klobuchar's effort to cut FEMA's red tape for fllod victims in its Minnesota Editorial Roundup.

The Blueman looks at the Strib's coverage of Minnesota's freshman members of Congress and sees bias.

He also hands out his top 7 in '07 list for the children of the lesser blogs. Ah, shucks, everybody.  The divine Tild tweaks photographic evidence of Great Moments of 2007:  Dick Day’s Run For The Border. (Warning: put down all food and beverages before clicking on that link).

On the Pfeilsticker DWI

According to the Winona Daily News, Crashing led to Pfeilsticker DWI: Teacher’s blood-alcohol level was 0.17 percent.  Whatever the circumstances behind the arrest, this might not be the time for Pfeilsticker to try for office again. 

We hope Pfeilsticker rethinks her decision to stay in the race for the House 28B seat. Trust can be regained (we know many friends and public officials who've done it), but it takes a bit longer than a handful of months to demonstrate a renewed commitment to responsibility.

It's not up to us to take others' inventory--only Pfielsticker can do that for herself--but sometimes character means putting aside ambition for a while. Those who will point to what they perceive to be bad behavior on Steve Drazkowski's part in defense of Pfeilsticker are arguing that two wrongs make a right.  They do not.

Meanwhile, gentle readers: designate a responsible driver, call a taxi or a sober friend, or stay put when you've been enjoying liquid celebrations.

September 30, 2007

The Draz is a special guest at Mark Olson's Family Picnic today

Steve Drazkowski campaigned on rural values in the recent special election in 28B, and so we're curious to find him listed as a special guest on the handbill promoting Minnesota House Representative Mark Olson's "Old-Fashioned Family Picnic."

Minnesotans may recall that Mark Olson was convicted in July of one domestic abuse complaint and sentenced in mid-August:

A Sherburne County judge on Thursday sentenced Olson, an eight-term Republican from Big Lake, on one count of domestic assault. A jury in July convicted Olson of causing his wife fear of bodily harm during an incident at their home.

Judge Alan Pendleton sentenced Olson to 90 days in jail, but stayed the sentence and put Olson on two years probation, fined him and required him to complete a 12-week group counseling program.

There was talk of the legislature taking action against Olson at the time of the sentencing, who was suspended from the GOP House caucus after his arrest:

House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, DFL-Minneapolis, and House Minority Leader Marty Seifert, R-Marshall, have conferred about Olson's case, but no legislative action has taken place, said Andy Wittenborg, a spokesman for the DFL caucus.

According to Anderson Kelliher, a complaint signed by at least two members would have to be submitted to the House ethics committee before formal punishment could be considered.

"Members from both sides have said they're ready to bring a complaint, but none has been filed yet," Wittenborg said. Olson, who is serving his eighth term, was suspended from the Republican caucus after his arrest.

He is unlikely to be removed. At the time of his sentencing, the St. Cloud Times asked him to step down, as did a Republican blogger at he time of the conviction. His wife, who is divorcing him, discussed Olson's personal family values in Family dynamics prove destructive. Dump Mark Olson contrasts this year's guests with those Republicans who attended Olson's annual picnic last year. We're astonished that Draz is breaking with the consensus of the GOP Caucus in the House and appearing as Olson's special guest. Taxpayer League head former rep Phil Krinkie is a special quest as well. 

Thanks to the archives at Dump Mark Olson and IDHA.

August 18, 2007

Post Bulletin LTE: Pfeilsticker thanks supporters

Linda Pfeilsticker thanks people from the area in a letter today, Grateful and eager to serve:

Life is full of opportunities, and those opportunities can come at very unsuspecting times. I was not expecting to run for House Seat 28B this summer, but when I had the opportunity to serve the people of 28B, I had to take it.

As much as a campaign seems to be about a candidate, the reality is very different. It is about the people. The people who rise to the occasion to help through their time, financial support, and even by simply voting in order to make 28B a better district and Minnesota a better state.

Thank you to everyone who helped with my campaign. The hope and optimism you brought was inspiring. It was pleasure to meet so many amazing people.

It reaffirmed the fact that Southeastern Minnesota is one of the greatest and most beautiful places in the world to live.

Linda Pfeilsticker

Wabasha

 

August 07, 2007

Final vote: Draz 3762; Pfeilsticker 3333

Congratulations to Steve Drazkowski. Thank you, Linda for a well-run race in a Republican district.

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 3762 52.89
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 3333 46.86
Write-In WRITE-IN** 18 0.25

With two precincts left to report, Draz lead solid, wins election

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 3659 52.69
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 3267 47.05
Write-In WRITE-IN** 18 0.26

This one is over. Good fight.

At 85%: Draz 2810; P-sticker 2729

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 2810 50.59
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 2729 49.13
Write-In WRITE-IN** 16 0.29

The Winona Daily News is reporting that turnout was high:

Turnout was just over 30 percent in the special election called by Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

That's terrific turnout in a special election.

Continue reading "At 85%: Draz 2810; P-sticker 2729 " »

At 67% of votes counted: Draz inches ahead

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 2034 50.27
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 1999 49.41
Write-In WRITE-IN** 13 0.32

At 60%: Pfeilsticker leads by 9 votes

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 1749 49.73
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 1758 49.99
Write-In WRITE-IN** 10 0.28

Win or lose, this is a great showing by a political newcomer running in a heavily Republican district!

With 54%: Draz leads by 11 votes

Results for State Representative District 28B
• STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 28B Totals Pct Graph
Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 1692 50.01
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 1681 49.69
Write-In WRITE-IN** 10 0.30

With 41% of the vote counted

Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 1382 49.36
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 1412 50.43
Write-In WRITE-IN** 6 0.21

With 30% of the vote counted

Republican STEVE DRAZKOWSKI 1061 46.09
Democratic-Farmer-Labor LINDA PFEILSTICKER 1237 53.74
Write-In WRITE-IN** 4 0.17

Special election House 28B: MNBlue is liveblogging the DFL watch party

The Big E is posting pix and stories over at MnBlue.  Hop on over

Or you can read and watch some Farmfest coverage at KEYC.  There's only text with non-attributed quotes for the Farm Bill Forum, so the experience is surreal and bipartisan at the same time.  Two other stories feature video.

Special election House 28B: MnCR report high turnout in St. Charles

Our friend Joe Bodell at MnCR has been getting busy too:

I just spoke with a Pfeilsticker campaign staffer, who indicated that turnout numbers in St. Charles were unusually high for a special election -- although there is no recent precedent for this election, Team Pfeilsticker is confident that high turnout means a good result for the DFL nominee.  However, the staffer added that even if the result was not a good one for Pfeilsticker, high turnout would be a good thing for Minnesota.

That's class.

Meanwhile, there's video of Tim Walz visitng a farm up at KEYC.  Go entertain yourself reading and viewing Walz Tours Waseca Farm .

Special Election House 28B: Very unofficial results trickling in

Our source in the district reports from fairly reliable sources:

"high turnout in Goodview (near Winona)....should be good for Linda.

Also....unofficial results show Linda taking Zumbrota...big deal as was considered Rep. stronghold..(700 votes in...Linda won by 27)  UNOFFICIAL.

Remember: this information is NOT confirmed or official.  Handle with a grain of salt as broad as the Mississippi.

Special Election House 28B: polls close; reports of turnout trickling in

It's pretty much all over but the counting (and recounting if the final spread is within 100 votes). Polls just closed.

A friend in the area passed along this report:

"I stopped in Stockton to vote about 3:00 today.  As of that time, Stockton had had 47 voters, and Hillsdale Township had 24.  They were very surprised at the turnout, as only had 16 for the primary.   Said that they surpassed the primary number before 9:00 this morning.  ...."

Any friendly progressive from the district with news to report should contact us viathe email address on the right-hand column of this blog.

Special Election House 28B: Mn Secretary of State page for returns

SossealThe secretary of state's office will be posting returns here after the polls close at 8 p.m.  We'll post as they come in, though  everybody can follow along as they like. News sources have been saying it's too close to call and bloggers are trading pictures of postal code violations: in short, it's a special election.

We're hoping that Truthsurfer's assessment holds true:

. . . DFLer Linda Pfeilsticker is a great candidate with wonderful qualities. Her positive and fresh attitude has to factor into the race. I think we might see a change is course with rural Minnesotans.

According to the Rochester Post-Bulletin,  turnout is predicted to be low:

House District 28B is an L-shaped, largely rural district that encompasses portions of three counties -- Winona, Goodhue and Wabasha. County auditors reported light absentee voting, an indication of a potentially low turnout.

"It's been very, very quiet. We've had a little over 50 (absentee ballots) for the general election," said Winona County Auditor Cherie MacLennan.

Tuesday morning news digest: Herds of politicians edition

Welcome Townhall Readers!   We're flattered that the NRCC's Notroots care enough to visit.  If you want to respond to Jason Bauman's comments about stem cell research that are cited below, please go take a look at his blog, too! 

Farmfest07200Mankato Free Press: Herds of Pols
The Mankato Free Press reports that Farmfest will host herd of pols, highlighting today's Feature Forum on the Farm Bill at 10:30.  We'll miss this morning's events, but hope to make it to the global warming forum in the afternoon. The Free Press is also pleased with Congress's new ethics bill.

We'll have our watermelon iced for the DFL corn feed fundraiser later on in the day.

New Ulm Journal: Hope springs eternal
Speaking of fundraisers, The New Ulm Journal took in the Republican First District  hopefuls stop in Sleepy Eye. First up at the Brown County GOP Fun Raiser (oh boy!) was State Senator Dick Day:

Minnesota Senate Minority Leader Dick Day of Owatonna said the Republican effort to unseat Democratic Congressman Tim Walz will be challenging.

“It’ll be a tough battle. We’ll do it the old-fashioned way, earning respect by going to parades and other events, shaking hands and talking to people,” Day explained.

Okay then.  Those who want to know how that's going can check out Evil Bobby's videos. Next up, Lake Crystal School Board member Mark Meyer, who warns against Tim Walz's Secret Plan for Health Care:

“The Democrats want to bring European Socialism to this country. They’re not stupid, just wrong. Socialized medicine is bad for medicine and people,” Meyer explained.

Actually, we were under the impression that Walz was seeking the advice of the First District's medical community when it came to health care issues, or so it seemed at the Economic Summit in Austin last month. Either we missed the European Socialist panel or medical panel moderator Mayo Clinic CEO Glenn Forbes was a really sneaky guy.

Mayo cancer doc Brian Davis came out with his views:

Mayo Clinic cancer physician Brian Davis said he was committed to conservative values like protecting life, stem cell research, no same-sex marriages, securing our borders and remaining offensive in the Global War on Terror.

“You don’t need to destroy a human embryo to do stem cell research,” Davis explained.

This is interesting. Brian J. Davis was in Walz's DC office in April on behalf of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology & Oncology(ASTRO) to discuss Walz's position about stem cell research when he told Walz of his potential plans to challenge him in 2008, according to the Rochester Post Bulletin.  The Cancer Leadership Council includes ASTRO among supporters of the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act

UPDATE, August 16, 2007: Dr. Davis answered our questions below at Blonde Sagacity. Thanks. 

Since the Post Bulletin has put the original archive behind a subscription archives, as is the newspaper's practice, here's an excerpt from the Frontrunner so readers coming in from Blonde Sagacity can get a taste of the original source.   

The material the Frontrunner quotes from the PB suggests that Dr. Davis should ask his local paper   to print a correction, since it reported that Davis was there to discuss "the congressman's positions on stem cell research and other medical issues."

The Rochester (MO) Post-Bulletin (5/18, Felker) reports, "Radiation oncologist Brian J. Davis   of Rochester in late April concluded a Washington lobbying meeting" with Rep. Tim Walz (D) "with the news that he might seek the Republican nomination to run against him," Walz and Davis confirmed Thursday. Davis, a researcher at the Mayo Clinic, requested a meeting with Walz in his Capitol Hill office on April 24 "as a representative of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiation and Oncology" to discuss "the congressman's positions on stem cell research and other medical issues." At the end of the discussion, Davis told Walz that he "was close to filing a candidate declaration with the Federal Election Commission." However, Walz's spokeswoman Meredith Salsbery said the congressman "cannot by law use his congressional office to campaign." Davis, meanwhile, "said he contacted the Federal Election Commission after the trip and secured an opinion that none of his activities qualified as campaigning since he is not a declared candidate."


[end update]

Months later update (11/4): Davis has clarified the FEC information in a post at his candidate blog (visit via IDHA). Once he declared in his candidacy, the April trip was charged to his campaign.[end update]

UPDATE #2: August 18] Jason Bauman at IDHA  takes a close look at Dr. Davis's answers.  Here's the post:

Recent news concerning Dr. Brian Davis of the Mayo Clinic has caused me to write.  Ollie from Bluestem caused quite a stir with the conservative author at “Blonde Sagacity.” Apparently it was enough of a stir to get Dr. Brian Davis to answer Ollie’s questions on the (not surprising) conservative blog.

The posts are related to Dr. Brian Davis view on embryonic stem cell research and his ties with the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology & Oncology (ASTRO). Ollie writes:

“Mayo cancer doc Brian Davis came out with his views:

Mayo Clinic cancer physician Brian Davis said he was committed to conservative values like protecting life, stem cell research, no same-sex marriages, securing our borders and remaining offensive in the Global War on Terror.

“You don’t need to  destroy a human embryo to do stem cell research,” Davis explained.

This is interesting. Brian J. Davis was in Walz’s DC office in April on behalf of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology & Oncology(ASTRO) to discuss Walz’s position about stem cell when he told Walz of his potential plans to challenge him in 2008, according to the Rochester Post Bulletin. The Cancer Leadership Council includes ASTRO among supporters of the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act.

Will Davis continue to be active in an organization that supports legislation to expand embryonic stem cell research? We’re curious if he shared ASTRO’s agenda with New Ulm’s GOP funsters, or confided his opposition to embryonic stem cell research with Congressman Walz back in April while lobbying on behalf of ASTRO.”

Dr. Brian Davis answers these questions on the conservative blog:

1. Will Davis continue to be active in an organization that supports legislation to expand embryonic stem cell research?

Yes, I anticipate remaining active in this organization. While I may take issue with ASTRO’s stance on this particular issue, I remain supportive of the broader aims of the organization as they relate to providing quality cancer care to our patients and supporting cancer research.

2. We’re curious if he shared ASTRO’s agenda with New Ulm’s GOP funsters.

No, this was not a topic of discussion at the meeting in Sleepy Eye, Minnesota with the group from New Ulm and elsewhere.

3. Did Davis confide his opposition to embryonic stem cell research with Congressman Walz back in April while lobbying on behalf of ASTRO?

No, our discussions were focused primarily on the specific legislative agenda of ASTRO’s at that time. This agenda did not include any references to embryonic stem cell research. Nonetheless, Congressman Walz shared some of his views on embryonic stem cell research but did not inquire about mine. Consequently, I did not take the time to relate my personal views to him on this matter.

As a representative for ASTRO, Dr. Brian Davis should fully support measures that were passed as part of the organization’s legislative agenda. I keep thinking about how MSUSA students advocate for 0% tuition because we voted for this wording in our own agenda. When visiting with legislators, we are bound by our representation of MSUSA and the students to push a 0% tuition increase, not go there on our own and say we don’t personally care if tuition is increased. Dr. Brian Davis stated, “Consequently, I did not take the time to relate my personal views to him on this matter” referring to embryonic stem-cell research. If I was meeting with a legislator (or in his case, a congressman!) and they told me their stance on tuition, would I not take the time to advocate for my organization’s view… especially if I am there on behalf of the organization? Apparently if I didn’t feel strongly enough, I could ignore it. He pushed aside his trip to represent his organization, to represent himself instead. This is evidenced by his hinting of running against Walz.

The second statement that concerned me was his view on embryonic stem-cell research. Ollie quoted him saying, “You don’t need to destroy a human embryo to do stem cell research.” As a medical professional and person that people look up to, I am astonished that his personal bias goes beyond sound medical research. As a doctor, I respect him greatly for his work. I work with great doctors that excel in their practice. As a candidate for Walz’s seat, I criticize his belief that embryonic stem-cell research is the destruction of life. It is saving lives from soon-to-be-already-destroyed embryos! The American Medical Association, the organization that physicians are members of supports fully-funded embryonic stem-cell research. What is Dr. Brian Davis trying to prove when he doesn’t follow what research papers, organizations that he’s a part of, and many of his republican colleagues all agree on?

Just a quick paragraph from my 10-page research paper entitled, “Stem Cell Research: The Morality Policy and What Nurses Can Do”:

The authors, along with many organizations from the scientific community like  the American Academy of Neurology and the American Medical Association show a congruent trend toward fully funding stem-cell research. Discussions are made on the ethics and how current restrictions limit research, slowing progression toward useful treatments. There were similar guidelines put forth among the articles that suggest new ways of ethically advocating stem-cell research (McCloskey, 2002; Okie, 2005). These guidelines tended toward stem-cell advocates and still the moral policy of opponents is challenged. The Committee on the Biological and Biomedical Applications of Stem Cell Research was quoted on a number of occasions suggesting recommendations to move forward with the vast potential stem-cell research has (McCloskey, 2002). The committee suggested that life is not being taken away from stem-cell research, and that stem-cell lines are from embryos already going to be destroyed. Opponents still hold their moral convictions despite the ethical bargaining of the committee.

Sources and great reads:

Cedar, S.H. (2006). Stem cell and related therapies: Nurses and midwives
     representing all parties. Nursing Ethics, 13(3), 292-303.

Ennen, K. (2001). Shaping the future of practice through political
     activity: How nurses can influence health care policy. AAOHN
     Journal, 49
(12), 557-569.

McCloskey, B. (2002). The controversy surrounding stem cell research.
     Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice, 3(1), 4-13.

National Institutes of Health (2006). Federal Policy
     [Stem Cell Information]
. Retrieved

November 11, 2006

from
     Web site: http://stemcells.nih.gov/policy/defaultpage.asp

Okie, S. (2005). Stem-cell research: Signposts and roadblocks. The
    

New  England

Journal of Medicine, 353(1), 1-5.

Schwartz, R. S. (2006). The politics and promise of stem-cell research.
     The

New  England

Journal of Medicine, 355(12), 1189-1191.

Townhallers and Notroots-- the above excerpt  is from IDHA.  Go visit that blog too.  They'd love the traffic! [end of update #2]

Will Davis continue to be active in an organization that supports legislation to expand embryonic stem cell research?  We're curious if he shared ASTRO's agenda with New Ulm's GOP funsters, or confided his opposition to embryonic stem cell research with Congressman Walz back in April while lobbying on behalf of ASTRO. 

Somehow, Randy Demmer ended up at the bottom of the article:

Hayfield businessman/corn and soybean farmer and 3-term Dist. 29A Rep. Randy Demmer of Hayfield called for fiscal responsibility and lower taxes so private businesses can flourish.

Demmer will be at Farmfest today, according to his website. If you visit the Demmer website, take the poll.  Seems like most people stopping by before  9:00 a.m. today think immigration is the biggest issue facing the First, while not one worries about transportation issues.

Winona Daily News editorial: Minnesota's roads and bridges: When, not if
That doesn't seem to be the mainstream if we are to believe the Strib's report about today's special election, the Owatonna People's Press's article Transportation funding a priority for now, a Rochester Post Bulletion editorial or today's editorial page of the Winona Daily News.

Today's WDN editorial, Minnesota's roads and bridges: When, not if, recalls the paper's constant call for better transportation funding.  The staff minces no words:

“But will it take a bridge falling apart with motorists on it to get us to realize the state has needs, not just wants?”

— Winona Daily News editorial, Dec. 31, 2006

Tragically, it might have been a matter of when, not if. And there is absolutely no joy, no gloating in “We told you so.”

In the inevitable rush to find out what caused Wednesday’s catastrophic Interstate 35W bridge failure, there’s a lot of finger pointing, a lot of talk about inspections and a lot of grief for those who were injured or lost their life.

And now, with the television cameras turned on and the nation watching, Gov. Tim Pawlenty decides he might finally support a gas tax increase. This change of heart is well-timed at best for a man who refused such an increase twice recently.

It’s a shame that it took a disaster of this magnitude to change the governor’s mind. What’s even worse is the time Minnesota has lost by not properly funding roads and bridges. Even a modest increase in the tax (which hasn’t been raised since 1988) will not fund all the state’s needs.

Right here in Winona, our interstate bridge got low marks and is years away from being replaced. The scary thing is that there are other bridges in worse condition, others that probably remain more of a safety hazard.

The refrain we’ve been hearing for years is that we need to cut taxes, yet no one would say this bridge disaster was worth the pennies saved.

Go read the rest at the WDN.

Continue reading "Tuesday morning news digest: Herds of politicians edition" »

Rochester Post Bulletin: Draz doesn't share his conversion with local reporter

Update: Joe Bodell at MNCR looks at today's special election.

Today's Rochester Post Bulletin reports that Voters go to the polls today in state House District 28B. Reporter Matthew Stolle seems to have interviewed the candidates yesterday:

With the trauma of the I-35W collapse casting a shadow over the state, voters are heading to the polls today in a special election to decide the next state representative for House District 28B.

Republican candidate Steve Drazkowski and Democratic-Farmer-Labor candidate Linda Pfeilsticker said they planned to use the waning hours of their campaigns in a sprint of door-knocking and phone calls.

Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. today, except in some townships where it's 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

The 28B seat was held for the past 29 years by GOP Rep. Steve Sviggum, who was House speaker for eight of those years before being appointed commissioner of labor and industry by Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

With turnout expected to be low, both candidates appeared focused on getting their base supporters and party activists to the polls.

"That's exactly what it's about. It's getting the supporters out to vote," Drazkowski said.

While Drazkowski told the Strib's reporter that he's open to raising the gas tax:

During the legislative campaign, Drazkowski had remained adamantly opposed to increasing the gas tax, saying it would cripple the economy of the district.

But on Monday, the last full day of the campaign, Drazkowski said he would leave open the idea of supporting a gas-tax increase.

he doesn't seem to have shared that new insight with Stolle:

Even before the collapse of the I-35W bridge, the condition of the district's and the state's roads and bridges had been a key campaign issue.

Both Pfeilsticker and Drazkowski have emphasized the need to update the state's road and bridge network, but they support different funding approaches. Pfeilsticker says she is open to a gas tax increase, while Drazkowski opposes one, preferring bonding or borrowing money, instead.

Other than wanting to get elected, does The Draz know where he stands?

 

August 06, 2007

Blinded by the light: Draz's 11th hour gas tax conversion experience

Conversion Hallelujah! Brothers and sisters!  Another anti-tax-pledger has seen to light on the road to St. Paul!

The Strib has just reported that Steve Drazkowski has backed-off on his opposition to raising the gas tax:

During the legislative campaign, Drazkowski had remained adamantly opposed to increasing the gas tax, saying it would cripple the economy of the district.

But on Monday, the last full day of the campaign, Drazkowski said he would leave open the idea of supporting a gas-tax increase.

Just hours before the bridge collapse last week, the Minnesota Republican Party put out a news release warning that DFLer Pfeilsticker's "repeated refusal to rule out a gas tax increase means the residents of House District 28B had better hold onto their wallets."In terms of whether I'll support a gas tax or other funding mechanism, generally speaking I'm willing to see what type of lead the governor takes," Drazkowski said, adding that he would prefer other funding approaches, such as bonding and using a budget surplus.

Where, oh where, did the Strib dig up that research?  My, my.

Of course, the Strib doesn't specifically spell out how he came to repent his adamant opposition to raising the gas tax, nor does it share the fact that Draz was still the scourge of the tax increase as late as Saturday--after the bridge collapsed. 

What could it be?  Sources speculate to the Strib:

One of the first tests of the political impact from the Interstate 35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis last week will come today in the towns of Zumbro Falls and Pine Island and the surrounding townships of southeastern Minnesota.

Voters there will go to the polls in a special election to replace 15-term Republican stalwart Steve Sviggum, a former House speaker who is becoming the state commissioner of labor and industry.

Even before last week, the House race between DFLer Linda Pfeilsticker, a 35-year-old high school teacher running for office for the first time, and Republican Steve Drazkowski, a 42-year-old cable contractor and former University of Minnesota extension agent, had been regarded as too close to call.

Update:  Jeff Fecke riffs on the old Hank Williams classic here.

Special election House 28B: Netroots reaction

Like the Star Tribune and MPR, the netroots are paying attention to tomorrow's special election in House District 28B. (Unlike their venerable counterparts in the MSM, however, they've been paying attention since the endorsing conventions).

Using the Mn Chamber of Commerce questionnaire BSP ferreted out online, Vox Verax asks if this is A canary in the coalmine election?  The Blue Man in a Red District makes A few observations as the Special Election looms..., including about Draz's failure to answer the question on education. An interesting move from a campaign that accuses his opponent of not provided detailed answers to questions.  Michael M at Inside Minnesota Politics looks at the Draz's response to the transportation question in Drazkowski: There is enough money for transportation projects.

Matt at MnPublius looks at MN GOP, Pfeilsticker, Draz and the Gas tax and thinks that Sturdevant Predicts DFL Win in 28B.

Special elections tend to be won on each party, campaign, and allies' ground games. Tomorrow will tell. 

Special election House 28B: Draz campaigns on bridge tragedy

Steve Drazkowski has produced a radio ad using the tragedy for his bid for office. Go listen.

MPR: Special election for House district 28B heats up

Minnesota Public Radio broadcast Special election for House district 28B heats up this morning.

The segment is rather muddled (what is Draz saying about the Eagle Center?), but here's a snippet:

. . .DFLer Linda Pfeilsticker lives on her family's dairy farm. Her great-grandfather bought it in 1919.

"I have lived in this district my whole life. I was born here, raised here, and I've chosen to live here. This is my home," she says. "And I spent my whole life listening to what people say and growing up in this value system, and if I can't represent that, I don't know who can."

Linda Pfeilsticker teaches social studies at Winona High School. She served as a school district contract negotiator.

Pfeilsticker has never run for office, but she beat out four other candidates vying for the DFL nomination. In 2006 the DFL candidate garnered 40 percent of the vote, so democrats not only think they have a chance. Analysts say they also see the Republican-held seat as a potential feather in their House cap. . . .

August 05, 2007

Special Election: Minnesota Prosperity Project - Candidate Guide

The MN Chamber of Commerce has posted its Minnesota Prosperity Project - Candidate Guide online for the special election. Both candidates have responded.

To view their answers, go to the link above and click on the "Show" link beneath each question.

House District 28B special election: the gas tax and bridge rebuilding

WinonabridgeToday's Strib brings us a column in the oped section Lori Sturdevant: Can DFL pick up a seat? That's the whisper.

We're surprised to see the column there at all given the dearth of coverage about the race in the paper. 

The column represents the fourth time Linda Pfeilsticker's name has graced the olympian pages of the Strib. Before this, Pfeilsticker has come up three previous times:  once in a nine-paragraph Associated Press brief about both parties' endorsing conventions, then in a five-paragraph Associated Press bulletin about the primary results on July 11. 

There's also a short AP brief on the primary which mentions Pfeilsticker, but it only turns up in searches for the GOP candidate's name.

Drazkowski's entry into the race merited its own article, Candidate enters race for Sviggum's state House seat though it too was just a short Associated Press item, as was the next mention of the contest.  We don't see much of a pattern here, other than the paper's indifference to covering Greater Minnesota.

Perhaps that's why the op-ed columnist can only report on whispers, though we also recommend reading the newspapers in southeasten Minnesota, where a healthy debate has been going on about the contest.

Sturdevant brings up the bridge collapse in the context of the special election. Along with discontent over the Iraq War, she thinks it might affect Tuesday's results in the special election:

The other thing is the tragedy Wednesday night on Interstate Hwy. 35W in Minneapolis. Transportation adequacy and safety suddenly lurched to the top of every Minnesota list of legislative concerns.

On that issue, Drazkowski and Pfeilsticker offer voters a pronounced difference. Drazkowski is foursquare against an increase in the gas tax, or any tax for that matter. He's content for the state to borrow more highway money, service the debt with existing taxes and invest about one-tenth the amount that road experts say is needed in the next 10 years to prevent further deterioration in Minnesotans' mobility or safety.

Pfeilsticker isn't Ms. Courage on the gas-tax question. She doesn't flatly say she's for a boost. But she makes clear that she's open to a small, phased-in increase in the tax as part of a comprehensive package of highway and transit investments -- a package big enough to fix the crumbling roads and deteriorating bridges that run through and near her district. Bonding alone, as proposed by Gov. Tim Pawlenty, won't do that.

In other words, Drazkowski's for more muddling along. Pfeilsticker's for noticeable improvement, on a matter that literally means life and death to drivers of rural roads -- or life and death to users of structurally deficient bridges.

How have the Pfeilsticker and Drazkowski campaigns used the gas tax issue in the race?  Certainly, there's been a lot of shrieking about suspicions that Pfeilsticker might raise the gas tax from the right. The Republican Party of Minnesota put out a press release chiding her for even considering a gas tax increase.

Drazkowski and his supporters have been more assertive. And for that, we must leave off our prance through the jungles of the Strib's archive and seek the pastoral pages of the Red Wing Republican Eagle, the Rochester Post Bulletin, and the Winona Daily News, as well as the candidate's web site itself.

Yesterday's lead headline in the Republican Eagle was Bridge collapse prompts Pawlenty to rethink gasoline tax. Earlier, the Winona Daily News reported  Pawlenty open to special session for gas tax hike. The Post Bulletin published similar news undert he headline  Gas tax part of discussion in wake of bridge collapse. It looks as if there will be a special session after Labor Day.

Is Drazkowski also rethinking his stance on raising the gas tax? All we know is what we read in the newspaper.  What we read in area newspapers is instructive. 

On Thursday, before Pawlenty turned his attention from the disaster itself to remedies, the Post Bulletin went straight to the heart of the matter in House candidates say they're committed to road, bridge work. Here's what the candidates said:

Even before the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge, the crumbling state of Minnesota's roads and bridges was a dominant concern in the race for House 28B between GOP candidate Steve Drazkowski and DFL candidate Linda Pfeilsticker.

Now that issue may have eclipsed all others.

In interviews Thursday, both candidates said they remained committed to their approaches for fixing the state's regressing road and bridge network. The special election is set for Tuesday.

Only a week earlier, both Pfeilsticker and Drazkowski appeared at Zumbrota city hall before community and transportation officials anxious about the deteriorating condition of the region's infrastructure.

Pfeilsticker, a Winona high school teacher, said she was open to a range of funding sources, neither endorsing a gas tax increase or rejecting it outright.

Drazkowski, a Wabasha cable contractor, said he opposed a gas tax hike and argued in favor of GOP Gov. Tim Pawlenty's preferred solution of bonding, meaning borrowing money, for road and bridge improvements.

In the aftermath of a disaster that is likely to make transportation infrastructure a national preoccupation, both House candidates reiterated their approaches for mending the state's infrastructure.

"It hasn't changed anything of my position," Pfeilsticker said. "We need to pass a quality, sound transportation bill, and that bill is going to have to have a variety of sources of funding to it."

Drazkowski said he remained opposed to a gas-tax increase. The state should use its revenue surplus to pay for replacing the bridge, then assemble a bonding bill along the lines proposed by Pawlenty.

It's not just the Post Bulletin reporting Drazkowski rigidity in the face of extraordinary events. Here's Drazkowski on Drazkowski (we like the Bob Dole-esque use of the third person) on paying for roads in Friday's Red Wing Republican Eagle, two days after the I35 disaster:

What about roads? We should spread the cost of new roads over several decades with bonding bills. You take out mortgages on houses, and long-term loans on vehicles. The principle is the same. We should also use one-time money to help counties with rural roads and bridges, because state trunk highway funds cannot go to local governments.

Note that the "one-time" money is for "rural roads and bridges."  The Rochester Post Bulletin reported similiar views on Friday in a profile of Drazkowski:

He advocates bonding for highway construction projects as opposed to an increase in the state's gas tax, saying it would be "an economic killer," hurting the area's businesses and residents.

In today's Winona Daily News' profile of Drazkowski, the same plan is repeated:

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