MADISON, Wis. - Because of Wisconsin's status as a battleground state, political money is pouring into the coffers of both parties, much of it untraceable - or so-called "dark" - money.
Much of it is used to buy issue ads, which do not ask people to vote for a certain candidate but advocate a certain position. These ads, paid for with largely untraceable money, account for a significant percentage of campaign advertising. This bothers clean-government advocates such as Jay Heck, executive director of Common Cause in Wisconsin.
Under a law passed last year, Wisconsin candidates now can coordinate ad buys with outside groups, which Heck called a big problem.
"That eviscerated Wisconsin's campaign finance laws, including meaningful disclosure," he said. "It means Wisconsin is the darkest of all the states in the country now, in terms of the money that citizens will be able to track."
The new law allows wealthy individuals or corporations to make anonymous or disguised political contributions through these dark-money groups. Heck said that means the public never will know who is influencing the decisions of public officials who were elected with dark money.
Wisconsin also distinguishes between political ads, which ask the viewer or listener to vote for a certain candidate, and issue ads, which advocate a position but don't directly ask for a vote for a certain candidate. Heck said this compounds the problem, allowing candidates to work with the people or organizations paying for the issue ads.
"In Wisconsin now, phony issue ads are exempted from any disclosure and anything goes," he said. "We are the Wild West of American politics, and there is no state in the country other than Florida that allows this kind of coordination."
According to Heck, this trend of coordination between candidates and organizations that pay for issue ads is a huge step backward.
"We used to be a state that had partial public financing. We had disclosure. We had both political parties and candidates of both parties willing to try to at least let people know where the money was coming from," Heck said, "and we've gone in exactly the opposite direction."
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Idaho lawmakers have introduced a slate of bills which would put up greater hurdles for passing voter-initiated ballot measures.
Legislation this session includes bills to increase the threshold for passage to 50%, allowing the governor to veto passed measures and proposes a constitutional amendment that would require signatures from six percent of voters in all 35 districts.
Sen. James Ruchti, D-Pocatello, assistant Senate minority leader, said the measures come after years of attacks from Republicans on voter initiatives.
"They constantly live in fear that the people will tire of the Legislature not listening to them and will use the initiative process to get done that which the Legislature should do," Ruchti asserted.
Ruchti noted one instance in which lawmakers did not listen to Idahoans was on Medicaid expansion. In 2018, 60% of voters approved a measure to expand the program. Lawmakers have introduced a bill this session to repeal Medicaid expansion. Sponsors of ballot measure legislation argued out-of-state money drives the initiatives.
Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa, who sponsored some of the bills to increase initiative thresholds, said allowing the governor to veto measures would be similar to bills passed in the Legislature. He also contended it is "good protection for a misinformed electorate if they don't get the information like we get to have."
Ruchti countered lawmakers deal with people who have agendas.
"We are surrounded by special interest groups who are trying to get their particular bills passed and they use a variety of arguments, some of which are specious, some of which are accurate information," Ruchti observed. "It's just part of living in a democracy. So, the voters can figure this out and they do."
Senate Joint Resolution 101 would make the signature gathering process for voter initiatives harder, increasing the number of districts where six percent of voters have to sign from 18 to all 35. The resolution would need approval from voters to amend the constitution. Lawmakers proposed the amending resolution because in 2021, the Idaho Supreme Court blocked a similar bill, calling it unconstitutional.
Ruchti added attempts like this are disrupting grassroots efforts.
"The signature gatherers, for example, as a general rule and maybe even almost entirely are volunteers who are just taking their time to do something that they feel is really important," Ruchti pointed out. "That certainly was the way it was with Medicaid expansion."
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The Nevada Legislature has kicked off this week and progressive groups are sharing their top priorities.
Many are asking Gov. Joe Lombardo to work with Democrats to get important legislation over the finish line.
Mathilda Guerrero Miller, government relations director for the group Native Voters Alliance Nevada, said the climate crisis is only worsening in Nevada. Whether record-breaking temperatures in the summer or cold winters forcing family decisions about how to afford home heating, she argued more should be done.
"We're fighting for stronger outdoor worker protections and an end to utility shut-offs during extreme heat and cold," Guerrero Miller outlined. "This isn't about policy. It is about basic survival and the ability to thrive. This is also not about party lines. It's about doing what is right."
Nevada approved a regulation mandating businesses with more than 10 employees conduct a "job hazard analysis," and write up a safety program with solutions to potentially harmful working conditions. The Extreme Weather Working Conditions Bill in 2023 would have revised existing workplace safety and health law to require more worker protections but failed. Advocates said they will try again.
Ben Iness, coalition Coordinator for the Nevada Housing Justice Alliance, said housing security and affordability are also top of mind. One of the priorities he and others would like to see reformed is about summary evictions. In Nevada, when a renter receives an eviction notice, they have to file a response in court to prevent the eviction from escalating. If not, Iness noted, it could lead to them being kicked out.
"We're the only state in the country where the tenant has to file first against themselves," Iness pointed out. "They're effectively suing against themselves because their landlord has an issue. And so, folks struggle to navigate that process. They might self-evict, out of fear or hopelessness."
Landlords allege before an eviction is finalized, there are multiple attempts to communicate with a tenant about the resources and services available to help. Iness countered the tenant protections they are fighting for would address the power imbalance between landlords and renters.
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The Utah Legislature has been in session for almost two weeks and one nonprofit research organization contended in order for state lawmakers to be effective and responsive to the needs of Utahns, they need to address two key topics: cost of living and political dysfunction.
Shawn Teigen, president of the Utah Foundation, said through its Utah Priorities Project conducted last year, it found Utahns are concerned about being able to afford housing and other costs, such as groceries and taxes. Teigen reported many said they also do not feel listened to by politicians and are tired of hyper-partisanship.
He argued the information they provide is crucial for communities to be educated and engaged.
"The reason why we are doing that is so that policymakers can make better decisions," Teigen explained. "But it is also that civic leaders can be informed about topics that maybe policymakers are going to be making decisions on."
Teigen encouraged everyone to use the information to have constructive conversations, especially as leaders start to make decisions about what to prioritize this legislative session. It could prove to be a challenge because the foundation discovered more than 70% of Utah voters feel the state's politicians are "beholden" to business, religious and other special-interest groups, subsequently ignoring the will of the people.
Stanley Rosenzweig, a retired business owner and a board member of the Utah Foundation, argued Utah should find a way to improve communication between legislators and constituents. Rosenzweig contended the answer could lie in policymakers doing a better job in explaining why they are pursuing certain legislative action and the potential outcomes.
"If you talk with them individually, what you will find is that they are all people with big hearts," Rosenzweig observed. "In my opinion, they all want to do the best for the people who elected them to serve, but they just don't read it the same way and that is the problem."
The Utah Foundation has found regardless of party affiliation, Utahns agree more than they disagree, especially as it relates to housing affordability, government overreach, having enough water resources and K-12 education.
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