Ruth Damsker made a sacrifice for our country. So can you.

It is hard to find heroism and courage in our politics these days. When was the last time you saw a major politician take a big risk or an unpopular stand? If you live in the Delaware Valley, however, you don’t have to look far to see political courage. You just have to look at Ruth Damsker, who is running for reelection as a Country Commissioner in Montgomery County. Now you might wonder how a candidate for County Commission could possibly show heroism. To see the answer, you have to understand just how important the County Commissioner’s race is in the third biggest county in the state. Democrats have not won two of the three seats on the Montgomery County Commission in anyone’s memory. Like many formerly suburban counties around the country, Montco is becoming Democratic. It votes Democratic in national and state-wide elections. But the old party habits have… Continue reading

Catholic and Jewish Theology and Plan B

A lot of the opposition to emergency contraception (EC), also known as Plan B–which is being debated now in the PA House of Representatives–comes from the Catholic Church and other religious opponents of abortion. Because I’ve taught a course on Just War Theory, and most of the leading contributors to that theory work in the Catholic tradition, I have some familiarity with Catholic moral thought. And I must say that there is a plausible argument from within that tradition for allowing EC. Catholic just war theory teaches that it is permissible to do evil—that is, kill innocents—provided that one is doing so in a war of self-defense and provided that one is not aiming at the innocents. The doctrine of double effect says that so long as the death of innocents is not the intent of the military action but rather that one intends to strike at a legitimate military… Continue reading

Fight for EC / plan

Sometime this week—perhaps as early as tomorrow, although I don’t know for sure—the PA House of Representatives will take up once again HB 288, Daylin Leach’s bill to require hospitals to inform all rape victims about the availability of Plan B also know as Emergency Contraception (EC) or the morning after pill. We need your help to enact this piece of legislation. The bill probably had the votes to win a few weeks ago, but some presumed supporters— including Philadelphia Representatives Donatucci (D-185), Kenney (R-170), J. Taylor (R-177) and D. O’Brien (R-169) agreed to put off the vote for a time in the hopes of finding a compromise that would not incur the wrath of the lobbyists for Catholic Church. Rosita Youngblood (D-198) did not vote. Please act today to encourage these and other legislators to support HB 288, without any damaging amendments. Continue reading

A debate between Governor Rendell’s left and right hands

Two weeks ago a high level summit meeting took place in East Falls, one that might determine the future of gaming in Philadelphia. This secret—and so far unreported—discussion took place between Governor Rendell’s left hand and his right hand. The result was that his right hand convinced his left hand to leave the casinos in their current location. Left hand: I promised the residents of Fishtown, Northern Liberties, Society Hill, Pennsport, Whitman and the other residential communities along the Delaware River that I would try to relocate the Sugar House and Foxwoods casinos. You are the one who has been pushing gambling on the waterfront for years and, I might add, the one that pulls the slot machine levers in Atlantic City and Las Vegas. What have you done to keep my promise? Right hand: I asked the casinos operators to move. I asked them nicely. I shook their hands.… Continue reading

Problems with single payer in PA

This is the second of four posts on the health care issue. For an overview of the various posts click here. There are two basic problems with enacting a single payer system in Pennsylvania. The first is that it is pretty much politically impossible this year. The second is that for constitutional and other reasons, a single payer system enacted in Pennsylvania won’t be as progressive as we would like it to be. Let me start with the first problem, briefly sketch the second one, and then come back to the first. Continue reading

The progressive debate about health care reform in PA

To the extent that people with progressives inclinations are focused on the health insurance issue in Pennsylvania—and, right now, too many of us are not focused enough on it—they find themselves torn between two different plans. One is Governor Rendell’s Prescription for Pennsylvania (RxPA). The other is a single payer plan, put forward by the Health Care for All coalition. It is a strange debate. For one thing, most of us, on both sides of the debate, would like to ultimately move to some kind of single payer system with the costs of health care provided by progressive taxation, not by employer sponsored plans paid for by employers and employees. We differ only about whether it makes sense to push for a single payer system in Pennsylvania right now. It is strange, also, in that the proponents of single payer seem to be focusing more on denouncing those who support… Continue reading

This year the action is Montco

For a long time it is has been obvious to anyone who pays attention to politics that the future of the Democratic Party in Pennsylvania rests on our ability to control the counties that surround Philadelphia. Here, and elsewhere in the country, suburban counties that have historically voted Republican are rapidly turning Democratic. Whether moved by liberal views on sexual and lifestyle issues or by an aversion to the Republican War Machine or, in some cases, by the liberal economic views of a large contingent of professionals and managers, suburban counties are voting Democratic. Indeed the position of these suburban counties is similar to that of white Southern counties in the 1970s. White Southern counties were already voting for Republicans in Presidential and Senatorial elections by the mid-seventies. They started voting for Republican Governors and US Representatives soon after. And then finally, they started voting for Republican local officials and… Continue reading

My new gig

For the past nine years I have been a citizen-activist while holding down a full time job as a teacher at Temple University. But no more. Now I’m a paid political organizer. I recently took my first ever job doing politics, as the Health Care Campaign Manager for the State Council of SEIU. I’m really excited to be working with SEIU. Over the years, I’ve worked closely with both SEIU Local 32BJ and more recently SEIU Local 1199p on a number of projects: The Pennsylvania Transit Coalition, the Raise the Minimum Wage Coalition, the Philadelphia Campaign for Housing Justice and most recently, the Philadelphia Health Care Coalition. SEIU locally has been at the forefront of almost every progressive effort. And at the state and national level, SEIU has been leading the way to both health care reform and a reinvigoration of the labor movement. My primary aim at SEIU will… Continue reading

Will Philadelphia home rule go up in smoke again?

The General Assembly is moving forward with plans to enact a state wide smoking ban. But, in the process, it is likely to weaken the ban already in place in Philadelphia. And, even worse, it is likely that the General Assembly will prohibit Philadelphia and other cities and towns from making laws more stringent than the new state law. So, once again, teh state will override the right of Philadelphians to make laws that concern only ourselves. . The Senate passed smoking ban legislation a week and a half ago. It bans smoking in many public places but it exempts 25 percent of the space in casinos and private clubs. And it also allows smoking in businesses in which less than 20 percent of revenues come from food sales, which will allow smoking in many bars. What’s worse, the bill prohibits municipalities from enacting smoking laws that are tougher than… Continue reading