Is civil disobedience justified?

Rep. Mark Cohen has commented on my last entry on the minimum wage issue, criticizing my call for civil disobedience on this issue. As much as I admire his leadership on the minimum wage issue, I have to disagree with Representative Cohen about some matters. And I want to elevate this disagreement to a separate blog entry because it illustrates many of the arguments I have been making in my not yet complete series of posts on the future of progressive politics in Pennsylvania. Continue reading

Stand up (or sit down) for a minimum wage increase

The Situation in the House The fight for a minimum wage of $7.15 continues. The latest word from Harrisburg is that there will be a vote in the House of Representatives the week of April 5th. Of course, we have been misled before, so no one is holding their breath. I will report here if the votes look likely and urge you to contact Republican members of the House to ask them to support an increase to $7.15 rather than the $6.25 most House Republicans support. The situation is different in the Senate where more drastic action may well be necessary. Rally and Direct Action on Wednesday, April 26 Right now, there is no indication that Senate President Robert Jubelirer or Senate Majority Leader David Brightbill have any intention of allowing a vote on the Senator floor, where we are very confident that we have the votes to raise the… Continue reading

Casey tilts further to the right

 Buried on an inside page of the Inquirer today is an interesting tidbit about Bob Casey. He, of course, will not endorse Russ Feingold’s censure resolution. But he went further and would not even criticize Bush’s domestic spying program. Asked whether it is illegal, he responded “Well, that is a judgment that lawyers are going to make,” said Casey, a lawyer. “And that is an important answer.” Continue reading

Defend marriage–defeat HB2381

The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is expected to vote as early as today on HB 2381, a proposed amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution that not only limits marriage to a heterosexual couple but could also take away existing legal protection, under local laws, for committed long-term couples and their children, such as hospital visitation rights, inheritance rights, pension benefits and health insurance coverage among others. It is likely to undermine the domestic partnership laws that have been created in many localities, such as Philadelphia. I urge you to contact your state legislators to tell them that you oppose HB 2381. Contact information for state legislators can be found on the Neighborhood Networks website. Continue reading

Gay Marriage and Polygamy

A common conservative critique of homosexual marriage is that it will threaten the institution of marriage. This is, in many respects an odd idea. It is not obvious why granting the right to marry to people who do not now have the right but seek it threatens the very institution of which these people want to be a part. Nor, given the mess that so many heterosexuals make of marriage is it all the plausible to blame gays and lesbians for threatening the institution. But there is one argument that I have found carries a certain weight in anti-homosexual circles, the notion that accepting homosexual marriage will set us on a slippery slope to the widespread acceptance of polygamy. (The junior Senator in Pennsylvania evidently thinks that it will also lead to inter-species marriage.) Since some people in Utah do seek the right to have polygamous marriages, conservatives ask us how we… Continue reading

Keep up the pressure against HB 1467

The fight over HB 1467—the bill that will make it more difficult for consumers to use the courts to get compensation for shoddy work by contractors—is heating up. Today the Inquirer reports that the Attorney General Tom Corbett, a Republican no less, has advised Governor Rendell that the bill is unconstitutional. Yesterday Jeff Gelles wrote another powerfu column and blog entry about it. The Inquirer also reports that the City’s Director of Consumer Affairs, Lance Hvaer, and Councilman Jim Kenney, wrote a joint letter asking the Governor to veto the bill. You can join them. Contact Governor Rendell by email at governor@state.pa.us by fax with the Hallwatch Faxbank Service , call him at 717-787-2500 or write to him at Governor Edward G. Rendell, 225 Main Capitol Building, Harrisburg, PA 17120. Over the last few years we have seen one bad bill after another sneak through the legislature when no one… Continue reading

Protect consumers: stop HB 1467

Good editorial today in the Inquirer urging Governor Rendell to veto a HB 1467, a bill that would put homeowners fighting contractors who have done shoddy work at an even greater disadvantage than they are today. The justification for the bill is that it would avoid litigation by giving contractors 2 ½ months repair bad work. But the bill creates procedural barriers that will make it more difficult for homeowners to sue contractors who fail to make the repairs. The editorial follows on an excellent column Jeff Gelles wrote about the bill a few days ago. By the way, if you don’t read Jeff Gelles regularly you should. Not only does he have good personal advice, he regularly takes on political issues from a consumer perspective. He is one of the few reporters willing to take on Comcast, for example, criticizing them for their anti-competitive refusal to allow Direct TV… Continue reading

What we progressives can learn from our own failures: the future of progressive politics in PA, part 3

In the last post in this series I wrote about the limitations of Governor Rendell’s centrist strategy in dealing with a Republican legislature that is tilting very far to the right. Today I want to point to some of the failures of activists in dealing with the same barrier to progressive politics. Let me make clear that this is mostly an exercise in self-criticism. (Yo, David Horowitz, note that suspiciously Maoist turn of phrase.) I am going to write about some of the campaigns on which I have worked and point to three ways in which I think we might have made them, or might now make them, more effective. Continue reading

Alternate Paths to Economic Growth

Last week there was another go round about the Business Privilege Tax (BPT) at a City Council hearing at which I testified on behalf of One Philadelphia. Most of the people who testified had done so before. They, and the council members who were there, seemed to know each other’s lines so well that they could repeat them in their sleep. But it has taken me a while to get my head around the various issues concerning taxation and it was my first time attending this particular circus. I thought it might be enlightening. After all, as the ad goes, if you haven’t seen it before, it is new to you. Unfortunately, it wasn’t really new to me or terribly enlightening. The problem with these hearings about the BPT, and with the whole debate about taxes in the city, is that it is terribly one dimensional. Taxes after all are… Continue reading

Help protect tenants

We tend to think of Philadelphia as a city of homeowners, but there are hundreds of thousands of renters as well. To protect them City Council recently enacted the Certificate of Rental Suitability Bill (#060010). It would improve the lives of tenants in this city, especially those who are poor. Unfortunately, Mayor Street may veto this bill. Continue reading