INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Author: Elaine Clisham

  • Primer on New Jersey’s Budget

    About 25 members of Indivisible Lambertville New Hope came together on April 22 to hear three representatives from the progressive policy think tank New Jersey Policy Perspective explain the state’s budget process, what the critical budget issues are, and how citizens can get involved in shaping the state’s spending so that it serves all New Jerseyans. Here’s what we learned.

    First, the timing

    In February of each year, after about six months of planning and analysis with agency and department heads, the state treasurer, and the Office of Management and Budget, the governor proposes a budget, to take effect July 1, and delivers what’s known as his “budget address,” in which he highlights the revenues he believes the state will take in and the spending initiatives that he thinks are particularly important. This budget is only the first step in the process — the final budget may look very different — but it is the single most important policy statement the governor makes each year.

    Next, there is a series of public hearings around the state on the governor’s proposed budget. Anyone may offer comments at these hearings, which become part of the public record, and the hearings are often the venue for advocates to make their case for more funding for their particular causes.

    After the hearings are finished, the action moves to the Legislature, where appropriations committees in both houses conduct hearings with each of the agency and department heads and make changes to the governor’s proposed budget, on both the spending and the revenue-projection sides. Those hearings are going on now, and will be finished by the middle of May.

    Between the middle of May and the end of June, which is the deadline by which a budget must be passed, the governor and the leaders of both houses — Senate President Steve Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin — negotiate to synthesize all the changes into a revised budget. Both houses must pass this budget. The governor can then sign it, veto it, veto it conditionally and send it back for changes, or veto individual items in it. New Jersey’s constitution requires a balanced budget, so when the governor signs it he is “certifying” that the spending in the budget will not exceed projected revenues. If the July 1 deadline is not met, the government shuts down until a budget is adopted and signed.

    What’s in the 2020 budget?

    According to NJPP’s “rapid reaction” analysis, Governor Murphy has proposed a $38.6 billion budget that includes several significant things that will help those who are struggling the most to get by:

    • $200 million more than 2019 for K-12 education
    • $68 million more for pre-K expansion
    • $100 million more for NJ Transit
    • Restoration of $59 million for the Affordable Housing Trust Fund
    • $33.5 million more for the new free community college fund, as well as increases for both Tuition Aid Grants and the Educational Opportunity Fund
    • An increase in the earned income tax credit to 39% refundability, up from 37% last year
    • The largest pension payment in state history
    • Big savings in public employee health care benefits
    • New revenue in the form of a true millionaires’ tax
    • A $1.1 billion surplus

    Of this list, perhaps the most important thing on which to focus is the millionaires’ tax. Right now, New Jersey has a “$5x-millionaires’ tax” — a 10.75% tax on earnings over $5 million. Governor Murphy’s proposal would apply that marginal tax rate to earnings over $1 million (right now, earnings between $1 million and $5 million are taxed at 8.97%).

    Doing this would generate significant new revenue after many years of tax revenue cuts, and would take some of the tax pressure off middle-class families. But the Legislature has been cool to the idea, citing a concern that raising taxes in an already high-tax state will drive our wealthiest residents out. There is a real possibility that the millionaires’ tax won’t make it into the final budget.

    What you can do:

    • Call your state legislators — if you don’t know who they are, you can find out here — and tell them you support the millionaires’ tax and you want them to make sure it stays in the budget. Every call makes a difference. They need to hear from their constituents that they should do the right thing, especially this year since the Assembly is all up for re-election in November.
    • Ask your legislators to make a public statement in support of the millionaires’ tax. This can help sway legislators who are undecided.
    • Write postcards to your legislators in support of the millionaires’ tax.

    More generally, to stay up to date on the status of the budget, follow good Statehouse reporters from NJ Spotlight, The Star-Ledger, The Record (they will be assigning a new reporter soon), and Politico.

  • Pennsylvania Voters! Our Upcoming May 21st Elections

    I was dressed up to go to court with my mommy. I usually waited outside on a hard wooden bench. Today was different.  Mommy took me into a big room with a big desk, where a man in a black asked me who I liked better, my mommy or my daddy?.  Without hesitation, I said, “My daddy.” The man asked me why. “Because he buys me dolls and gives me candy.”

    Custody cases are presided over by the 13 judges on the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas, 11 of whom are Republicans and 11, men, some with little to no background in family law, making decisions that can have significant, life-long ramifications.  

    With a three-month backlog in family court, we as citizens must show up and vote for judges with the knowledge, experience, and compassion to make wise choices for our families and, most especially, our children in need of legal care and protection. Here’s what you need to know to make your own informed decisions on these vital issues:

    What’s at Stake for the Court of Common Pleas?

      1. Two new seats on the Judiciary, plus one resignation.  In hopes of addressing our overburdened court system, in 2017, the legislature created two new openings in Bucks County plus a slot made available by one Republican woman’s resignation.
      2. Significant backlog of family and criminal cases. The Bucks County Court of Common Pleas hears Civil Cases.  As examples: based on the latest comprehensive data from 2017, of the 1,896 cases involving child custody/partial custody/visitation, only 727 or 42.1% were handled by a judge; of the 416 cases of child abuse or neglect, a total of 262 were adjudicated, with 57 still pending at year end.
      3. Judges serve for ten years. These lengthy terms give the Court stability and allow judges to fully develop.  But, it also represents a significant commitment to a set of values that may or may not reflect our communities.  It’s vital that we show up and vote for those judges who best uphold the values we embrace.

    Who’s Running? From the Bucks County Unofficial Candidate List, several of the candidates for open seats are listed here with links to their pages.

    • Court of Common Pleas – For the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas, several candidates are running, three of whom have received Democratic Party endorsements:

    Democrat                    Republican

    Charissa Liller                     Allen Toadvine

    Jessica VanderKam                Grace Deon

    Jordan Yeager                     Chris Serpico

    Dawn Dinato-Burke           

    Diane McGee                    Gary Gambardella

    Who else? In addition to the open seats on the Court of Common Pleas, the following races include:    

    • Bucks County Commissioner four year terms

    Democrat            Republican

    Diane Ellis-Marseglia     Gene DiGirolamo

    Bob Harvie             Robert Loughery

    • Bucks County Treasurer – four year term

        Democrat            Republican

        Kris Ballerini            Tom Panzer

    • Bucks County Coroner – four year term

    Democrat            Republican

    Meredith Buck            Joseph P. Campbell

    2019 Key Election Dates for Pennsylvania

    • April 22  — Last day to REGISTER before the primary
    • May 14  — Last day to apply for a civilian absentee ballot.
    • May 17  — Last day for County Board of Elections to receive civilian absentee ballots
    • May 21  — MUNICIPAL PRIMARY
    • Nov. 5    — MUNICIPAL  ELECTION

    For more information, additional resources, and ways to get involved:*

    • Bucks County Blue:  Great source for info on all races and candidates in Bucks, including upcoming events and voter registration.
    • Solebury Democrats: Lively, up-to-date site, with excellent content.
    • Indivisible:  Provides a wealth of information and ready-made materials, ranging from Elections 101, Voting Rights, and Voting Suppression, Voter Registration, Endorsement Guides, and more.
    • SwingLeft: Nationwide organization dedicated to flipping Congressional districts like ours.
    • Flippable: Mounting a Blue Wave Tsunami across the states.

    Special thanks to Charissa Liller and her team for their time.

  • In the Absence of Honor

    In the Absence of Honor

    What now, after the Mueller report?

    Contributed by Deb Kline.

    Honor is simply the morality of superior men – H.L. Mencken

    In the hours since the redacted Mueller Report has been made public, many – if not most – on the resistance side believe that the attempts to obstruct justice by the president are stunningly clear. We cannot believe Attorney General William Barr’s claim that there were none.

    Some of us had already moderated our hopes that we would finally get to the truth of what led to this horror show of an administration and subsequent actions to block its discovery. Nevertheless, whether we had already steeled ourselves or not, there was a strangely, familiar sense that we were suddenly thrust back to the day after the election in November 2016.

    Listening to the myriad analysts postulating in the media, to congressional legislators calling for the full report as well as in-person appearances by Barr and Mueller, it became known that while Trump certainly tried to block the investigation, in the end (oh, please don’t let this be the end) he was unwittingly successful because: a) – people around him knew he was ordering them to break the law and didn’t follow through; b) they lied or dissembled enough to make it impossible to uncover the truth, c) destroyed evidence.

    This alone is a profound perversion of the Oath of Office every president takes upon entering. Is this how one “preserves, protects and defends the Constitution of the United States”? The lie has been there since Day One.

    In March 2017, Benjamin Wittes and Quinta Jurecic wrote “What Happens When We Don’t Believe the President’s Oath?” in Lawfare:

    “It is that the presidential oath is actually the glue that holds together many of our system’s functional assumptions about the presidency and the institutional reactions to it among actors from judges to bureaucrats to the press. When large enough numbers of people within these systems doubt a president’s oath, those assumptions cease operating. They do so without anyone’s ever announcing, let alone ruling from the bench, that the President didn’t satisfy the Presidential Oath Clause and thus is not really president. They just stop working—or they work a lot less well.”

    We expect that those who occupy the highest offices in government will be people of honor. That whatever their failings, we expect that they have the good of the country and its people at heart. In Robert Mueller, we have a superior model of a man with honor, who follows the letter of the law to the extent that he declines to make a legal judgement on obstruction because people surrounding the president repeatedly lied or destroyed evidence.

    Up until a point, some of the those close to the president had a sense of honor and duty,  whether we agreed with them or not. However, most have left, only to be replaced by those who look at the government and ability to set policy as a means of enriching themselves.    

    Now, we see the decay happening before our eyes, and wonder, will we survive?

    Here’s my answer: Yes. One way or the other we will survive. We are still a democracy, we still have a voice and a vote. We have been through difficult times – many of us remember if not participated in the Civil Rights protests of the ‘60s, the anti-war protests and the Nixon-Watergate trial and resignation of the ‘70s. We survived 9/11. We will survive this president and our despair at what our government has become.

    Individually and collectively, we are compelled to survive. The work may get hard and ugly, but in this community there is strength. We hold each other, lean on each other, give each other courage. We honor you for all that you do, and demand that those who would govern, do so as well.

    Our country deserves no less.