Would you like some cheese with your whine, Speaker Minnis?

The Oregonian has coverage of the growing campaign to remove Speaker Karen Minnis from power - either by beating her in her own district, or by winning the majority back.

But the Speaker and right-wing allies are decrying how "personal" it's gotten.

Minnis, 51, said she is disturbed by the personal nature of the campaign, which has included doctored Internet pictures of her wearing a crown, a "Stick It to Minnis" fundraiser and a "Minus Minnis" campaign slogan. "In order to generate excitement, they have to demonize people," Minnis said. ...

[Consultant Chuck] Adams, too, took umbrage at how personal the "dump Minnis" effort has become, even though no one has filed to run against her. "We know there's a lot of pent-up frustration," he said. "It's pretty brazen."

Discuss.

  • Jesse O (unverified)
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    It's a common complaint of legislators: any criticism of them is brazen, uncalled for, not nice, etc. But what was really brazen is how Minnis stuck it to Oregonians last session. She's going down.

  • Winston Wolfe (unverified)
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    Hey Chucky-A,

    You saying people shouldn't beat people up personally in politics is kind of like Wayne Scott saying Karen Minnis should lose a little weight. POT...KETTLE...ring a bell?

    Let’s see who has twice been sued for slander? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Who has ran the most vicious personal attack adds in the state? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Who has a losing record over the last two elections cycles? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Your BS isn't working anymore you goofball...try a new line next time like, "Well I'm glad to see that Democrats have finally sunk to our level."

    At least that would have some truth behind it!

  • (Show?)

    If the campaign is personal, it's partly because Minnis has made everything about the way she conducts herself as a legislator personal. But that actually diminishes very real complaints Oregonians--not just Dems--have about her governance.

    We'll all be better off with a Minnisless legislature.

  • Sid Leader (unverified)
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    I'm very proud to say strong women do NOT frighten me.

    Except this one.

  • TimC (unverified)
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    It's all irrelevant unless a strong challenger steps up. When is that going to happen?

  • (Show?)

    Gee, when the Republicans went after Daschle they weren't worried about being personal. Every legislative leader has to understand that they become a target of the opposition. The reason this discussion exists is because Minnis is vulnerable. She won by a small margin last time in a district that is winnable by the Dems. It is only reasonable that she would be targeted by Democrats because she is the leader of the opposition, her policies and politics are strongly disliked, and she is vulnerable.

  • Tom Civiletti (unverified)
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    I think Minnis has a point. Most of the House Republican caucus is just as bad as she is. Of course, as fearless leader, she should expect to be a lightening rod.

    Chuck Adams is clearly laying the groundwork for Minnis's campaign: Don't let outsiders' heavy-handed tactics defeat OUR cherished legislator, blah, blah, blah.

  • Winston Wolfe (unverified)
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    Hey Tom,

    You're right that Chuck is laying that framework. But then again that is exactly what portland, left-wingers are doing. How do you think the "Anyone but Minnis Campaign" plays to the people who live in Gresham?

    You have to make the Minnis election about the Democrats vision of the future as much as getting rid of Minnis!

  • Pedro (unverified)
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    Karen M. is right!

    I take her down right mean agenda to gut the public education of our children very personally. Shame on Karen Minis for what she has done to the future of Oregon.

    Where can I contribute to her defeat?

    Pedro

  • (Show?)

    Make that here:

    http://busproject.org/PacDonate.php

  • (Show?)

    You can also contribute over at DFO Action: http://www.dfoaction.org/donate

    There's also the Minnis Watch Club:

    http://www.dfoaction.org/membership

    I hope my comments in the paper rang home to Minnis. As I told the Oregonian, she ruled the House as a monarch, not a leader. A leader is someone who is willing to compromise and work with others. A monarch is someone who decides how things will be and that's it. She's a queen, pure and simple.

    I wish they would have run the entire quote, but that's how things work. When I wrote for newspapers, I always tried to run an entire thought when I did quotes. That seems to be a rarity in newspapers today.

    It's funny that mentions of queens and pictures of her with a crown are so bad. What about the ads that she agreed with that went out last election cycle? There were some very inflammatory ads that went out from the Republicans last cycle.

  • sjp (unverified)
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    "Their focus is to take the House," Minnis told The Oregonian. "It's going to be a tough case for them to make. However, we never take it for granted. We work hard; we make our case. If voters want to do something different, that's their prerogative."

    If Karen Minnis doesn't think of herself as the Red Queen, then why does she refer to herself in the third person?

  • Gil Johnson (unverified)
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    Uh, sjp, that quote from Minnis is in the second person, not third. Third person is how people like Rickey Henderson (baseball player) and Bob Dole speak.

  • Ed Bickford (unverified)
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    Despite Rep. Minnis dismissive remark about Dems' need to demonize her, when it is her own actions that condemn her.

    The justification she cited for refusing bring the civil unions bill to the floor was the upset it would cause her constituency. You can understand how it would upset them to have to openly deny civil rights to a class of people they need to demonize.

    What would you say of someone giving moral cover for such hypocrisy?

  • (Show?)

    Last I checked, pointing out that her "leadership style" is that of a monarch isn't a personal attack. She's acted like a monarch, rather than a leader in our democracy, and therefore she's been called out as such.

    We're pointing out what she's done and what she hasn't done. That's her record and her actions.

    Saying she's fat, or ugly, or stupid-- those are personal attacks. And last I checked, the organizations that are working to defeat her haven't said any of that. Some of the individuals may have, but that was usually out of frustration after dealing with her blocking legislation.

  • (Show?)

    Oh....

    And it's not a surprise that no opposition candidate has come forward yet. Many people have not announced their re-election/election yet or filed the papers.

    Expect a lot more announcements Nov-Jan.

  • (Show?)

    Jenni (and others)-- accepting for the moment that the lack of a candidate is endemic to the process and not the 49th in particular: who are likely candidates for candidacy? Is anyone even on the radar screen in Wood Village?

  • Tom Civiletti (unverified)
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    If the money is there, a series of cable TV ads about the hard-hearted speaker beating up on the poor, old, and defenseless; subverting democracy with dictatorial decrees; and condemning Oregon's children to the deadend of mediocre education ought to do the job. It needs to be sprinkled liberally with "she's out of touch" criticism from in-district folk.

    It'll be like a pail of water on a wicked witch.

  • (Show?)

    Many of us are hoping that Rob Brading will run again. He's considering it.

    I'd imagine we'll have a yes or no from him within the next few months, as he understand how important it is to have plenty of time to raise money and campaign.

    I feel it would be rude to approach anyone else until Rob says yes/no. He did very well with very little outside support. He stepped up to run, even though none of the big political organizations in the state were going to help him.

  • (Show?)

    I should add that the seat covers more than Wood Village. It also covers Fairview, Troutdale, and Gresham (her district basically runs from Burnside-Stark and to the north). Wood Village is always associated with the district because that's where Minnis is from.

    H.D. 49: http://www.co.multnomah.or.us/dbcs/elections/map/dist49.pdf

    I live in the southern half of Gresham, which is H.D. 50 (John Lim).

  • Lefty Fitzpatrick (unverified)
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    Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got... I'm still Jenni from the block. I used to have little political sense but now i have a lot, 'cause I'm DFA from the block.

    The day DFA and the Bus Project make a difference is the day that Ds finally gain the drivers' seat. Which is to say no time soon. Want proof? Just look at the Senate Dems. Feel free to push your quixotic quest, but Minnis won't be beat. The people that actually pay attention to campaign messages will vote for her. We'll have a better chance with Burley, Dalto, Brown or Farr.

    I'm still not convinced, however, that sending PDX progressives to districts around the state has any effect other than to distribute materials for free. It's easy for the Bus Project to take credit for well run D campaigns in districts where the Rs couldn't win, their candidates sucked, or they dropped the ball.

  • LT (unverified)
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    Feel free to push your quixotic quest, but Minnis won't be beat. The people that actually pay attention to campaign messages will vote for her. We'll have a better chance with Burley, Dalto, Brown or Farr.

    I'm still not convinced, however, that sending PDX progressives to districts around the state has any effect other than to distribute materials for free. It's easy for the Bus Project to take credit for well run D campaigns in districts where the Rs couldn't win, their candidates sucked, or they dropped the ball.

    In 2002, the Oregon Bus Project came very close to electing Betty Komp to a Republican state rep. district--she was one of their 14 candidates that year. She lost by 92 votes. In 2004, she won by 1750 votes. Minnis won in 2004 by 1524 votes.

    By all means there should be emphasis on every district where a Democrat lost a close recent election. But for a Republican Speaker to win by fewer votes than a freshman Democrat in a rural district sounds to me like the description of a vulnerable Speaker.

  • J. Smalls (unverified)
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    Personal nature? Minnis is the one taking this personal. It's not a personal attack. If we want to get personal, let's talk about her inability to be an effective speaker because she needs to focus her time on being a better grandmother and that her colleagues oticed a decline in her ability once she became a grandma during session. This attack is professional and has nothing to do about whether she is a nice person, good parent, or anything else personal.

    I am not involved in this effort at all but wonder about its effectiveness. Why are we spending so much time working against someone without a candidate in the race against her? That seems goofy as does gunning so hard this far in advance. Voters have short attention spans, people, and for goodness' sake you expect Wood Villagians to remember this stuff in 14 MONTHS! That's 14 overdue trailer payments and countless episodes of Jerry Springer. Seriously, folks, voters everywhere have bigger things in their lives to remember. Unless you are back next October and have a good candidate, why waste your time?

  • Trolling along (unverified)
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    Minnis? Not allowing a vote?

    Over at the Draft Kitzbhaber thread someone asked, "Why haven't our D's thrown it (CIMCAM) off a bridge?"

    They are too busy fighting o keep it.

    The Democratic Senate killed a CIMCAM repeal bill passed in the Republican House.

    Every house Democrat voted to keep CIMCAM and Senate Democrats would not even allow a vote.

    "Would not even allow a vote"

    Sound familiar?

  • Jonathan (unverified)
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    I'm chiming in to second the suggestion that Rob Brading should have everyone's support, if he decides to get into the race. He did a great job last time. And this time around, he would have lots of things to remind Gresham voters about, with respect to Minnis's dismal leadership.

  • sjp (unverified)
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    Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got... I'm still Jenni from the block. I used to have little political sense but now i have a lot, 'cause I'm DFA from the block.

    Comments like the one snipped above are a dismal and unfortunate reminder of just how petty some of the folks on "our team" can be. Here we have Jenni Simonis, a 20-something year old mom who lives in Minnis' district -- Jenni is a woman who has done nothing but volunteer her time to help make a difference in this state, and all you can think to do is take needless pot-shots because she has managed to help raise the profile of a race that she cares about.

    She deserves kudos for her work not half-assed invective from a person who lacks the courage to put their real name to their comments.

    As for the comments about DFA and the Bus ... DFO sent more than 100 people to Seattle for the Peace March last week and have helped to give the Democratic Party in Oregon a badly needed spinal infusion. By my count, the Bus' network has registered close to 1000 voters this year; trained several dozen emerging political leaders last summer, and are already hard at work softening up targeted districts.

  • sjp (unverified)
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    The Democratic Senate killed a CIMCAM repeal bill passed in the Republican House.

    Every house Democrat voted to keep CIMCAM and Senate Democrats would not even allow a vote.

    Sound familiar?

    The difference is that the Senate Dems simply killed a bill in committee that had no chance of passing their body whereas Minnis shredded house rules to get the parliamentary outcomes that she wanted.

    To whit:

    1. Minnis broke 150 years of tradition to change rules so that changes to house rules would happen by a simple majority rather than a 2/3rds majority.

    2. Minnis broke 150 years of tradition to make the clerk, the person who interprets the rules, a partisan office.

    3. Minnis broke 150 years of tradition which allowed any house member to make a motion to bring a bill bottled up in committee to a floor vote.

    4. Minnis broke up the joint ways and means committee -- which made it possible for all budget negotiations to take place in an open public forum - effectively ending public debate on the budget.

    5. Minnis implemented rolling recesses to enforce discipline among members of her caucus.

    The difference between what you are complaining about in the Senate, and what Queen Karen did is this: Karen Minnis abused her authority to gain an absolute veto power over the legislative process of this state and to artificially create a discpline to her will that simply did not exist in her caucus. If she wants veto power, she should run for governor, not subvert Oregon's legislative process for her own personal agenda.

  • (Show?)

    Winston wrote:

    Let’s see who has twice been sued for slander? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Who has ran the most vicious personal attack adds in the state? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Who has a losing record over the last two elections cycles? Oh yeah, Chuck Adams.

    Chuck did a bunch of cookie-cutter, piece of crap pieces for a host of Washington County Republicans (including our unsuccessful opponent) but the one that stood out, the one that truly warrants mentioning, is the piece he did against Rep. Jeff Barker.

    A decorated cop for many years, Barker was the target of Adams' brilliant idea of using his years of service against him and insinuating that he was soft on child abuse and rape (sorry, a little fuzzy on details here). Bottom line: the piece was so over the top it arguably cost Parker (the Republican opponent) the race, one of the closest that year.

    He pulled a similiar stunt - with a similiar result - against the Mayor of Salem (before he lost to Dalto in 02).

    Hadn't heard about the lawsuits. Winston, you should elaborate.

  • (Show?)

    Here's the difference between what happened in the House and Senate:

    Minnis blocked bills that would have been passed and signed into law. The Senate blocked bills that only had Republican support and would not have passed on the floor. Instead they focused their time on bills that would pass as well as the budget while Minnis did her rolling recesses.

    In response to the fact there's no candidate...

    As I said earlier, it's not a surprise that there is no announced Dem candidate yet. It's a bit early for that. But it's not too early to be out there talking to voters.

    You guys don't understand eastern Multnomah County. These people don't want to just be talked to in the months just prior to the election. That insults them and is a big reason why the Dems and Progressives are not involved in Party politics. They want to be listened to and not ignored whether or not it's election time. We're doing exactly that. And people appreciate it.

    We don't plan to do one or two canvasses. We're planning many of them, with the goal of speaking to every voter more than once. We're going to be asking them about what they're most concerned about, what they think their community needs, etc. We're going to actually listen and hopefully give Dems and Progressives in this area a reason to vote again.

    You have to realize this is a district with more D's than R's. However, the D's don't vote. And the reason they don't is because they're ignored. County services in this area are almost non-existant. The cities have no money to spend on anything, as they get very little from the county and state. They feel that when they did vote it didn't matter, so they've stopped voting.

    <hr/>

    One thing I should point out is that I actually live in John Lim's district, which is Minnis' "sister" district. H.D. 49 and 50 make up Senate District 25. However, both districts have about the same make-up and issues, and both would like to see the Senate District represented by Dems-- 2 reps and a senator. We have Laurie Monnes Anderson, now we have to get rid of Minnis and Lim.

  • trolling along (unverified)
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    "The difference is that the Senate Dems simply killed a bill"

    Who the heck cares about the difference.

    That is so inside baseball it's fricking meaningless.

    We still have CIMCAM because Democrats have killed every effort to get rid of it.

    Apparently they enjoy politicizing the education of our children.

    Are any of you proud of that.

  • (Show?)

    Troll--

    There is a huge difference.

    This session the legislature had a lot of VERY important items to work on. It was taking forever to get a budget worked on. There was no reason to waste time on bills that would have never passed. The only reason bills such as that one passed the House was because there is a Republican majority.

    The bills that Minnis squashed would have passed the House. They would have been signed. They would have become law.

    Comparing a bill that would have never been passed to one that would have become law is comparing apples to oranges.

    What you're complaining about is the Democrats being for/against an issue. We're complaining about Minnis using her power to keep bills from passing.

    Political parties are going to have issues that they're for or against-- that's normal. And when each branch is controlled by a different Party, you're going to get bills sent from one to the other that will never pass.

    That's not what we're talking about. We're talking about a completely different situation, which means you're not on topic.

    We're talking about Minnis acting like a dictator (or a monarch) over the House and killing bills that would have passed. Bills that passed the Senate with BOTH Democrats AND Republicans voting yes on them. Items that would have seen similar votes in the House. Bills that would have been signed by Governor Kulongoski.

  • LT (unverified)
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    So, school funding doesn't matter, nothing else matters, if CIM/ CAM had been eliminated all school problems would be solved?

    Anyone saying that should specify which tests schools should use to comply with NCLB. Or are you saying that there is no connection at all between CIM tests and NCLB tests in this state?

    Is NCLB perfect, or should it be modified?

    Sounds like a political slogan. Go find yourself a candidate who runs on "all school problems will be solved if CIM/CAM is eliminated", and see if that person gets elected. Most people I know think school problems are more complicated than that (esp. in areas where not all students are well nourished, buildings are overcrowded, text books are old, and other such concerns).

  • trolling one more time (unverified)
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    LT, You don't know what you are talking about.

    If Democrats want to continue supporting failed education programs such as CIMCAM then they will never get the public support we all want.

    CIMCAM is far worse than whatever narrow misunderstanding you have.

    The state assessments are unreliable and have no correlation to any national tests, the Certificates of Initial Mastery are useless, the process to get them does more harm than good, the diverted focus has caused a slump in our perpetually mediocre SAT scores, and the failed reform wastes time effort and resources.

    Countless parents and students have witnessed this debacle for years now. It isn't a partisan thing with them.

    The only thing that makes it partisan is Democrats refusing to act on a known failure which is wasting education dollars.

    The bill which passed the house would have replaced the state assessment with a simpler, independent, reliable and less costly system. Full compliance with NCLB would have been maintained. In fact schools would have had more time and money to bring about genuine progress without the CIM beast in the classrooms.

    Will "all school problems will be solved if CIM/CAM is eliminated"?

    Not hardly, but it would be a great start and send a strong message.

    School problems are more complicated than they need to be. Take out much of the phoney BS and focus on the fundementals (till we do them well) and it's things would be less more manageable. (esp. in areas where not all students are well nourished, buildings are overcrowded, text books are old, and other such concerns).

    I can't figure out what other motives Democrats have and what they gain by defending and keeping this BS school reform.

    They don't seem to be concered that the public is learning who is keeping this nonsense around.

    Here goes another screwed up school year.

  • LT (unverified)
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    The bill which passed the house would have replaced the state assessment with a simpler, independent, reliable and less costly system.

    And what was that bill number?

  • LT (unverified)
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    The bill which passed the house would have replaced the state assessment with a simpler, independent, reliable and less costly system.

    And what was that bill number?

  • (Show?)

    OK, everybody, knock it off with the chit-chat about CIM/CAM. This is a post about challenges to Karen Minnis.

  • (Show?)

    LT--

    I'm assuming the person is talking about this:

    House Bill 3180: Abolishes Certificate of Initial Mastery and Certificate of Advanced Mastery on July 1, 2008.

    If this is the bill the person is talking about, it never made it out of the House.

    From the Legislature's website:

    3-14(H) First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk. 3-17 Referred to Education. 8-5 In committee upon adjournment.

    The only other one I could find that was close was:

    House Bill 3222: Suspends for 2005-2007 biennium requirements placed on school districts related to district improvement plans, assessments, alternative placements for students, Certificate of Initial Mastery, Certificate of Advanced Mastery, alternative certificates, alcohol and drug abuse prevention programs, instructional materials, substitute teacher salaries, talented and gifted students, instructional time, class sizes, media programs and guidance and counseling programs.

    This one also did not make it out of the House:

    3-14(H) First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk. 3-18 Referred to Education. 5-16 Public Hearing and Work Session held. 8-5 In committee upon adjournment.

    In running searches through the 2005 Session's bills, these were the only House Bills I was able to locate that dealt with terminating or suspending CIM/CAM.

  • Pity Poor Minnis (unverified)
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    I hope no one is surprised by Minnis’s response. The “Oh they’re picking on me” response is a standard in campaigning. It is an effective way to turn your opponent’s attacks against themselves. It redirects the focus of the argument away from matters of policy, where Minnis is vulnerable, and calls her attacker’s integrity into question.

    We need to understand most people do not vote based on policy. People vote for candidates that they can relate to, at some level. This is a perfect example, no one likes to get picked on, people can relate to that. This dynamic at play is why some districts elect candidates who do not effectively represent their interests.

    Alan Brown used this strategy in his last campaign. What I found interesting was that Brown came out of the gate throwing punches and eventually his opponent swung back. He played the “She’s picking on me” card and effectively redirected the debate to the way his opponent ran her campaign.

    He won by something like 400 votes, a couple percent. He is a Republican that continues to represent a county with a Democratic registration edge of 8%.

    That is why we must be very cognizant that our attacks on Minnis are always matters of policy and never entertain the cries from Minnis about it being personal. She knows as well as you or I, nothing about campaigning is personal, it is all business.

  • (Show?)

    Maybe Jenni's point needs to be repeated here. What Minnis has done consistently that is beyond the pale, is to bury bills that were probably going to pass the house with bipartisan support, or worse, would have put Republicans at risk with their constituents if they'd had to vote against them.

    Neither the Oregonian nor the trolls see it as consequential, but it is the heart of the argument.

    Oh yeah, and why would the Oregonian write a story villifying the Dems for working to carry out their core mission, which is to get Dems elected.

  • last troll (unverified)
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    Just to provide the bill number.

    The CIM repeal bill, HB 3162, passed the house with every Democrat voting against it and to keep CIMCAM. It was killed in Senate, by Democrats wanting to keep CIMCAM.

    It should be clear enough that Democrats are the party of CIMCAM.

    Be proud, face it, explain it, brag about it, don't spin it.

  • LT (unverified)
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    HB 3162 has a very interesting history, including ammendments and a minority report. I was amazed--I thought Minnis had clamped down on minority reports by May when the bill was debated. There was a majority report and a minority report and so both were voted on before the bill was voted on. It was a committee bill, not one sponsored by a member.

    The bill which passed the house would have replaced the state assessment with a simpler, independent, reliable and less costly system. Full compliance with NCLB would have been maintained progress without the CIM beast in the classrooms.

    Troll was right in that there was language which said "Prior to July 1, 2006, the Department of Education shall report to the legislative interim committees on education on the progress of the department in contracting with an independent educational assessment organization to develop and implement a statewide assessment system as required by ORS 329.485, as amended by section 11 of this 2005 Act. + } ' ."
    but that looked to me to be in ammendments, not in the bill as introduced. And how do we know that this language would have provided a simpler more reliable system--because a poster on a blog said so? Why weren't those like Troll trying to get publicity for this bill during the session? Did they welcome open public debate? Were there just too many other competing issues?

    Whether that ammendment language would have qualified as full compliance with NCLB (or for that matter if NCLB is good for classrooms) is beyond the scope of this topic and the understanding of most who are not experts.

    Someone who has lots of time can look at the legislative website and can spin all kinds of theories about all sorts of bills.

    The bill was sent to Senate rules, and it was in committe upon adjournment. If someone wants to say that all Republicans opposed any bill that was in House committee upon adjournment and all Democrats opposed any bill that was in Senate committee upon adjournment, that is one thing. But to use that one bill to broad brush all Democrats is to say no Republican wanted the S. Coast airport to be upgraded because they stood behind their Majority Leader and Speaker trying to "teach a lesson" to Rep. Roblan. Many voters and many legislators don't follow the party line at all times (note the comment on the Environmental Scorecard topic by someone who would prefer one courageous vote against one's party to a high score on a lobby group scorecard)

    Or maybe Troll is trying to distract us because Minnis is about as popular in Oregon as DeLay is in DC at the moment?

  • troll returns (unverified)
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    I'm not trying to do anything but clarify this abhorrent CIMCAM position by Democrats.

    And yes full NCLB was assured.

    "Why weren't those like Troll trying to get publicity for this bill during the session?"

    They were.

    "Did they welcome open public debate?"

    Of course. The public wants CIMCAM gone. Public testimony, nonpartisan and a full cross section of interests, was overwhelmingly in favor of the bill. The ODE, it's usual allies and Democrat legislators ganged up to save keep CIMCAM.

    "Were there just too many other competing issues?"

    What is it that competes with a failed and wasteful education program?

    Most people couldn't care less who gets rid of it but the reality is that CIMCAM is now a party issue with Democrats supporting it.

    Why?

    In the mean time, what's wrong with making it clear to the public who is sustaining our failed school reform?

    I get the feeling Democrats want to keep it while keeping it quiet that they do. Why? If they think it is worth keeping why hide from that position?

    As a side note, the hell with Minnis. I want a sound school system.

    Don't you?

  • (Show?)

    I wrote HB3162. It had many hearings in the House. First the House Audits committee took up the question of CIM/CAM and voted out a report that among other things called for contracting out Oregon's flawed assessment system to an independent company. Then 3162 was heard in the House Education Committee.

    HB 3162 would have implemented the changes called for in the Audits report, along with eliminating all the busywork of CIM/CAM.

    While on the House floor there were some Democrats who voted in favor of it, by and large it is D's who protect CIM/CAM and R's who want it gone.

    So Troll's question is a good one: Why?

    In the general public, for those who have been through the system, CIM/CAM is tremendously unpopular. Especially for teachers. It diverts immense time, resources and focus away from effective learning activities in favor of contrived exercises that have very little educational or assessment value.

    So, why do Democrats protect it? This is a valid question and I have yet to hear anything approaching an honest answer.

    Let me take a shot at it: Democrats protect it because they almost reflexively support the wishes of the education establishment bureaucracy, usually without exercising any independent analysis or judgment. There are notable exceptions to this. One is Rep. Brad Avakian.

    I thought that Vicki Walker would be another. She considered taking the issue on in the Senate when 3162 got over there. But in the end she cooked up amendments that decimated every important element of the bill, and even then her caucus told her it wouldn't support doing anything.

    So, CIM/CAM survives. Compliments of Democrats who pretend they are all about excellent schools.

  • Minus Minnis (unverified)
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    I hope no one is surprised by Minnis’s response. The “Oh they’re picking on me” response is a standard in campaigning. It is an effective way to turn your opponent’s attacks against themselves. It redirects the focus of the argument away from matters of policy, where Minnis is vulnerable, and calls her attacker’s integrity into question.

    What I find ironic is that no one in the Democratic establishment has yet to figure out a way to convey the fact that Jenni Simonis, a 20-something year old mom from Gresham, is the person throwing some of the most potent haymakers at Karen Minnis. Isn't there some smart consultant out there who can do some spinning about the fact that the most powerful republican in Oregon is whining about getting the crap beaten out of her by a house mom who is sick of seeing her family wrecked by Minnis' crappy policies and bad behaviour in the legislature?

  • (Show?)

    Minus Minnis--

    Thanks for the comments, as well as bringing us back on topic. As much as I like discussing education, that isn't the topic of this blog post.

    I actually sent out a LTE right after the story hit the Oregonian to about 20 papers across the state. I've already heard from a few, so it appears it will get printed.

    It focused mainly on the same topic as my comments that showed up in the paper, but with more detail.

    I plan on writing up some more stuff, focusing on how Minnis' actions (and inactions) have hurt families like mine. How thanks to her budget cuts, and pushing for the balanced budget to be repealed by voters, my youngest sister is unable to get the medicines she needs so she's not in constant pain. And of course working under constant pain is almost impossible.

    How thanks to our education system tanking, our roads falling apart, and our police being at such low numbers, businesses don't want to come to Oregon. That means many family members are stuck in low-paying jobs (or unable to find one at all). It does no good to take a job that is just going to put you in the hole to pay for child care, additional gas or bus fare, etc.

    That crime rates out here in the Gresham area are steadily going up. Our numbers per hundred-thousand resident are steadily growing closer to that of Portland-- murders are almost the same, rapes and auto thefts are higher. And I can't even begin to tell you how much street racing and extremely reckless driving on local streets we have out here-- much more than I see in Portland. Yet we don't have enough police to cut down on these crimes. Getting someone to come out and investigate a break-in at your house is impossible. With cars they take a report over the phone so you can claim it on your insurance.

    This area has a hard time getting any type of support from the state. You'd think with things getting so bad that Minnis would fight for us. But she doesn't.

    Some of these problems are the city's, but they can only do so much. The residents here have for so long been ignored by the county and state that people want nothing to do with the government.

    She doesn't do anything for her constituents, except the handful that give her big bucks. When going through her contribution reports, you'll notice very few addresses in eastern Multnomah County. But you'll find plenty from outside of Oregon.

    She doesn't care about her constituents, and she doesn't care about Oregon.

  • Troll back (unverified)
    (Show?)

    Jenni said,

    "She doesn't care about her constituents, and she doesn't care about Oregon."

    Well aren't you the little judge.

    Why don't you prod your peers into answering why Democrat legislators uniformly protect CIMCAM.

    They refuse to answer. Preferring to hide and avoid answering.

    Are you not a little bit curious yourself?

    Or do YOU "care" about Oregon?

  • having a hard time being positive? (unverified)
    (Show?)

    This is a topic about Minnis, yet while Troll says "the public" agrees with him on HB 3162, insulting remarks are made about Jenni "She doesn't care about her constituents, and she doesn't care about Oregon." Well aren't you the little judge. Are snippy remarks the key to political success? Is there no individual thought among "the public"?

    If Rob Kremer's views are so popular, why didn't he win election as St. Supt.? Could the tone of the campaign have been a factor? I recall more attack than "vote Kremer to get rid of CIM/CAM".

    Truth be told, many members of "the public" never read blogs, don't like a stranger telling them what they believe, belong to no organized groups, and don't pay attention to politics more than a month or so before an election. And in Minnis's district about 8000 refuse to register with a major party. Minnis won last time by something like 1524 votes--were all of those votes straight party? Talk all you want about "the Democrats" or "the Republicans", those of us who are or ever were registered NAV will vote on the candidates and issues as WE see them, not as we are told to see them.

  • (Show?)

    Troll--

    Yes, I am judging her. All of us should look at our representatives and see if they are representing the people or their contributors. Do they care about their district and Oregon, or not? The lack of this is why we have so many bad elected officials across the U.S.

    I, along with many other residents out here in the Gresham area, have seen her do nothing for her district or the area. The vast majority of her money doesn't even come from her district. A huge chunk of it doesn't even come from Oregon.

    If you compare her voting record and her contributors, it's obvious who she cares about. If she cared about Oregon, she'd be doing something to repair the damage that's been done the past few years. She'd be willing to work not only with Democrats, but Republicans she disagrees with.

    Instead, she refuses to allow bills to be voted on that would have passed. This isn't about a partisan Dem bill not being allowed to the floor. This is about bi-partisan bills that had enough support in the House to pass not being allowed on these floor.

    These bills were good for Oregonians.

    One would have allowed Oregon to join with other states in protecting consumers from three-digit (or four-digit) interest rates at payday loan places. Do you have any idea how many people end up paying more in interest than they did for that little $150-500 loan? And we're not talking about a few hundred bucks-- it's not out of the ordinary for someone to pay into the thousands of dollars for a loan they had for only a short period of time.

    Another would have extended the prescription drug pool to more people, allowing them to afford needed medications. Now these people go without medications, causing their condition to worsen and them end up in the emergency room. And we all know who ends up paying for that-- those of us with insurance.

    This topic isn't about CIM/CAM. This isn't a place where you can speak on any topic you want. This topic is about Minnis, the opposition to her, and why they are opposing her. End of story. No one's going to respond to you on the topic of CIM/CAM, and I wouldn't be surprised if you don't start getting deleted soon for being off topic.

  • Troll girl (unverified)
    (Show?)

    "insulting remarks are made about Jenni" What? That was a quote of Jenni insulting Minnis.

    Having a hard time being positive said, "will vote on the candidates and issues as WE see them, not as we are told to see them." Good for you. Who suggested otherwise?

    You might want to improve your vision on who supports failed progams though. So you can see who to vote for.

    The blue denial around here is something. CIMCAM is a wasteful failed program and should be replaced.

    I guess all of the smart people here just don't like answering queitons.

    I find it rather gutless and hypocritical.

    Too snippy for you?

    Nice excuse.

  • (Show?)

    Actually, saying Minnis doesn't care about her district or Oregon is not an insult. It is an observation based on how she has voted, her actions, her comments, etc. An insult is something like calling her fat, a bitch, stupid, etc. There's a big difference.

    And like I told you before, there is a TOPIC to this blog post. You stay on topic, people respond. You get off topic, people don't. Simple as that.

    This is not a free for all place to discuss anything and everything you want. It is structured and has a topic.

    You may want to stray off topic, but the rest of us prefer to stay on topic.

  • girl troll (unverified)
    (Show?)

    It's not because it is off toipic that no one will explain the Democrat support for CIMCAM. It's because this is the standard MO for you blue people. You ignore and seek to silence that which you do not want to be public knowledge.

    The shameless support of CIMCAM by every Democrat legislator is the perfect model of Oregon Democratic hypocrisy.

    Off topic? What a spineless excuse.

    More like off your group message, group thinking, and group betrayal of our schools.

  • To Minus Minnis (unverified)
    (Show?)

    I don't know if giving her a hot shot consultant will help matters. It could actually hurt her public perception, which needs to stay in tact if we want her story to resonate with voters. In this case, part of her appeal is that she is the little guy going up against the big bad Minnis.

    At best, she should work with the Democratic candidate that runs against Minnis. Possibly a picture or quote on the campaign literature, maybe a direct mailer to all Non-affiliated female voters and Republican females without a Republican male in the household.

    She can canvass for the Democratic challenger, time consuming...yes, but effective. Aside from that, letters to the editor, and not just the Oregonian, all the small papers too. And her friends should send some in as well. It sounds like she has already been talking with the press, but this is a potential human interest story.

    I remember an article during the session about a citizen lobbyist that was running into road blocks in getting some bill passed. She got an excellent write up that took up something like half a page in the Oregonian. A citizen going up against the big bad legislature parallels a citizen going up against one of the leaders of the big bad legislature.

    There is definitely potential here, but we need to wait till a Democrat files. If we don't wait, the best case scenario is we get someone’s attention, convince them Minnis is not effectively representing their interests, but can offer no remedy. And we can't tell them to blindly support whatever Democrat that enters the race, at least not without sacrificing our credibility.

    The way to win it is not about Democrat or Republican, it is about better goals bringing about a better Oregon. And how can we say that a candidate to be named later has better goals than Minnis. We can't, so we should wait patiently, do our homework, and strategize.

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