Author: Ryan Gavin

  • Under the Dome – May 20

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Majority rule survives as dysfunction, chaos reign in Jefferson City 

    The Missouri Legislature ended its session for the year in a display of utter dysfunction with only a few bills reaching the finish line despite Republicans holding a super majority.

    The chaos worked in the favor of democracy this year, however, as a resolution that would have stripped Missourians of their century-old right to amend the state constitution through the initiative petition process was stalled out in the final hours of session. It paves the way for ballot measures including paid sick days and improved wages for workers as well as the right to access abortion. A majority of Missouri voters can pass these measures into law using the initiative petition process in place since 1907. 

    Missourians told politicians that they must protect majority rule and the essential principle of “one person, one vote” in Jefferson City in January. Photo by Ryan Gavin/Progress MO.

    The victory was possible through a massive and sustained nonpartisan wave of support to protect the sacred principle of “one person, one vote” as well as pro-democracy legislators who filibustered to quash the resolution. 

    As noted in the Missouri Independent, the session was the least productive and most chaotic session in living memory. 

    “In the end, only 28 non-budget bills found success this year. That’s fewer than the previous low-water mark in 2020, when only 31 bills passed because the legislative session was upended by the COVID-19 pandemic,” the Independent reported.

    At every turn, legislators failed to enact laws that would actually improve people’s lives, from expanding child care tax credits to banning child marriage to supporting children in foster care. Even a bipartisan bill allowing women to pick up an annual supply of birth control pills rather than going to the pharmacy every few months failed to advance.

    What legislators instead were able to pass directly hurts Missourians, such as the ban on Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood, an essential health care provider on which thousands of Missourians – often those in vulnerable populations – depend. Not to mention the education spending bill that takes money from public schools and pumps them into private charter schools and vouchers.

    Dean Plocher screenshot via YouTube.

    Certainly a low point for the session was the thoroughly unsatisfying conclusion of the investigation of House Speaker Dean Plocher, who was under investigation throughout the year for gross violations of the public trust, including lobbying for unneeded and expensive communications software, double billing travel expenses and threatening staffers who dared to truthfully report about his unethical behavior. Although Plocher was publicly called out for obstructing the investigation by the House Ethics Committee and intimidating potential witnesses, the investigation was ultimately dropped. 

    The good news is that despite the dysfunction in Jefferson City, voters continue to hold the power to put forth ballot measures that matter to them and to change the tide under the dome.

    Power dynamics are always shifting, and anyone watching the goings on in the capitol could plainly see that politics as usual are broken in Missouri. The winds of change are blowing like an afternoon pop-up storm in late spring. This is what a super majority looks like. It’s time to break it.

  • RELEASE: Massive bipartisan coalition of Missourians stops radical proposal to end 100 years of majority rule

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 17, 2024
    Contact: liz@progressmo.org

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The people of Missouri came together with a united message this legislative session: asking politicians to stop their radical attack on the initiative petition process. After months of political infighting, tens of thousands of calls, emails, and meetings, plus an over fifty-hour filibuster, the Missouri House and Senate adjourned for the year without passing any changes to the process. 

    “This is a huge victory for Missourians,” said Liz McCune, Executive Director of Progress MO. “The initiative petition process is an essential part of our democracy that allows voters to have a direct say in the policies and issues that matter to them most.”

    The legislature attempted to pass multiple versions of their radical ideas at times requiring up to 75% approval from voters for a ballot measure to pass. 

    This was not the first attempt by radical politicians to attack the initiative petition process. Progress MO will continue to combat all attempts to end majority rule and remove power from hardworking Missourians. 

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  • Under the Dome – May 10

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Greetings, fellow Missourians! It’s been a lively week in Jefferson City, with plenty of political developments to keep us on our toes. Let’s dive into the latest happenings.

    Senate Minority Leader John Rizzo, center, speaks to reporters after the Senate approved a budget. With Rizzo are, from left, Sens. Karla May, Doug Beck of Affton, Steven Roberts of St. Louis and Lauren Arthur of Kansas City. Photo by Rudi Keller/Missouri Independent.

    Despite having months to hammer out the state’s spending plan, the Missouri Senate narrowly avoided a budgetary impasse by just 24 hours. With a dysfunctional GOP supermajority, Democrats played a crucial role in passing the $51.7 billion budget. 

    Even Governor Parson thinks unelected AG Bailey has gone too far

    Missouri State Sen. Rick Brattin, R-Harrisonville, speaks during a press conference in January. Sen. Denny Hoskins, R-Warrensburg, stands to his left. The pair, along with Sen. Nick Schroer, R-St. Charles County, are being sued for defamation. Photo by Eric Lee/STLPR.

    Governor Mike Parson made waves this week by pushing back against Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s legal defense of three Republican senators sued for spreading false information. Parson’s criticism highlights growing concerns about the state’s legal strategy and underscores divisions within the Republican Party over issues of accountability and transparency.

    House Republicans stall child marriage ban

    A bipartisan effort to outlaw all child marriages in Missouri has hit a roadblock in the state House. Despite overwhelming support in the Senate, the legislation has stalled in a House committee, raising concerns about the influence of extreme views on marriage within the Republican Party. With just over a week left in the legislative session, advocates are urging House Republicans to prioritize the safety and well-being of Missouri’s young people by advancing this critical bill.

    Politicians reportedly hell-bent on stripping voters of rights

    As we’ve reported here, Missouri Republicans are diverting attention from the state budget to an alarming proposition: making it harder to amend the constitution through initiative petitions.

    Senate Majority Leader Cindy O’Laughlin of Shelbina speaks after passage of a $51.7 billion state budget as Sen. Lincoln Hough of Springfield waits for his turn to speak. Photo by Rudi Keller/Missouri Independent.

    Senate Majority Leader Cindy O’Laughlin told the Missouri Independent she aims to push the initiative petition bill to a vote before the session ends on May 17. This bill proposes changes that would require constitutional amendments to pass not only by a simple majority statewide but also in a majority of congressional districts. Such alterations could seriously undermine the democratic process.

    Democrats, concerned about potential suppression of voter voices, are gearing up to filibuster. Meanwhile, initiative petition campaigns face daunting new hurdles. Recent successful ballot measures, such as Medicaid expansion, have spurred GOP efforts to restrict citizen-led initiatives. As Republicans seek to overhaul the petition process, the future of grassroots democracy in Missouri hangs in the balance.

    Progress MO launches the Missouri Freedom Project

    Screenshot from the new Missouri Freedom Project website.

    Progress Missouri has kicked off an exciting new initiative aimed at holding our state’s politicians accountable. The Missouri Freedom Project seeks to shed light on the actions and statements of elected officials that don’t align with their public rhetoric. This project empowers Missourians to make informed decisions by highlighting politicians’ records on issues like reproductive rights, workers’ rights, voter rights and public education. It’s a bold step toward transparency and accountability in our state’s politics.

    Don’t let them get away with it

    Stay tuned for more updates on Missouri politics as we navigate the twists and turns of the legislative session. Remember, your voice matters, so stay informed and engaged in shaping the future of our state!

  • RELEASE: Progress MO launches “Missouri Freedom Project”

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 8, 2024
    Contact: liz@progressmo.org

    Effort to chronicle politicians’ statements and actions that stand in contrast to their speeches

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – This morning, Progress MO, a multi-issue progressive advocacy organization that combines cutting edge online organizing and communications with rapid and hard-hitting earned media strategies, announced the launch of a new project aimed at holding the state’s politicians accountable.

    The Missouri Freedom Project, an effort to educate Missouri’s citizens about the statements and actions that some politicians have made and to which the general public might not know about. The project will be regularly updated with new information and maintained with up-to-date research on specific legislators as new information is made available.

    “All too often, politicians use the word ‘Freedom’ as a tagline in their speeches, or as a concept in their slick, well produced ads, but then you look at their record and realize they cast votes or take stances that actually take AWAY the freedoms of hardworking Missourians who are just trying to keep their head down and provide for their families,” said Liz McCune, Executive Director of Progress MO. “I think every Missourian, regardless of their party affiliation, should be concerned when a politician uses the word freedom out of one side of the mouth and then casts votes against our freedoms with the other. This is an effort to give all Missourians an opportunity to educate themselves around the REAL record these politicians have.”

    The Missouri Freedom Project is a collaboration between Progress MO, a multi-issue progressive action organization and Preserve, Protect and Defend, a 501(c)4 that advocates for mainstream solutions that defend patriotic values. The Missouri Freedom Project will educate folks across the state about their elected officials and give them the information they need to decide for themselves which ones believe in freedom, democracy and the bedrock values that our country is founded on, and which ones use words like “freedom” as a talking point. The Missouri Freedom Project will be regularly updated with new information on legislators as it is made available.

    For more information about the Missouri Freedom Project, please reach out to Liz McCune at liz@progressmo.org.

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  • Under the Dome – May 3

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Missourians unite to improve future when politicians refuse to solve real-world problems

    In a legislative session marked by callous proposals to criminalize teachers who support their students, expand child labor and protect multi-billion corporations, Jefferson City got a breath of fresh air this week. 

    Hundreds of regular Missourians descended on the state capitol to engage in a right that has been guaranteed in the Show Me State for more than 100 years: they utilized the initiative petition process to put important issues before voters.

    Friday morning, folks supporting the campaign to restore abortion rights in the state turned in a monumental 380,000-plus signatures to the secretary of state’s office. 

    “Today, we turned in boxes filled with hopes and dreams of bodily autonomy. Our message is simple and clear: we want to make decisions about our bodies free from political interference,” said Tori Schafer, attorney for the ACLU and spokeswoman for Missourians for Constitutional Freedom, in a statement to the St. Louis Post Dispatch. 

    It was the third time this week voters seized power from lawmakers and took their rights in their own hands to push for change in the state – first with the measure to guarantee workers paid sick days and a higher minimum wage, and second with a ballot initiative to allow sports betting.

    Missourians for Healthy Families and Fair Wages collected over 210,000 signatures by over 1,000 volunteers on the initiative petition to provide paid sick days and increase Missouri’s minimum wage to $15 an hour.

    Missourians shared their stories at Wednesday’s turn-in at the secretary of state office in Jefferson City, from moms who want to take care of their kids to a restaurant worker who worried about spreading illness to customers.

    “It is a constant stress, a constant anxiety,” food-service worker Alejandro Gallardo said during the rally. “People come into work sick all the time because they have no choice.”

    As Missourians voiced their support for improving lives, politicians are pushing to silence them. With just weeks left in the legislative session, the Missouri Senate is considering SJR74, which would increase the already-heavy burden on citizens and dismantle majority rule.

    “If your friends and neighbors vote a way that you don’t agree, you need to work to change their hearts and minds and not cut out the needs from democracy from under them,” said Crystal Buffaloe, a librarian from Columbia who helped collect signatures for the minimum wage petition.

    While Missourians mobilize to have their voices heard, politicians continue to work actively against them.

    However, this week Jefferson City got to see something that’s been missing for too long. The Capitol City got to see what democracy looks like.

  • Under the Dome – April 26

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Jefferson City politicians get busy kowtowing to GOP fringe group

    With just weeks left in the legislative session and hardly anything to show for it, the week Under the Dome began with a threat from the ultra-right “Freedom” Caucus: Pass our priorities, or we will block everything.

    Freedom Caucus member Sen. Bill Eigel, R-Weldon Spring, on the Missouri Senate Floor. Photo by Eric Lee/St. Louis Public Radio.

    Rank-and-file GOP members seemed to fall right in line, passing measures that that will hurt everyday Missourians by taking away health care options and stripping away voter’s rights.

    “An act of petty vengeance” that hurts most vulnerable

    On Wednesday, the Missouri House sent Gov. Mike Parson a bill that would make Missouri the fourth state to ban Medicaid reimbursements. The bill ends Medicaid reimbursements to any health centers affiliated with abortion providers.

    Supporters bulled their way through opposition even though it’s clear that the state’s health care safety net cannot support the thousands of Medicaid patients who would be displaced from Planned Parenthood for procedures like contraceptive care, STI testing, cancer screenings and wellness checks. 

    Protesters march through the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City. Photo by Jill Toyoshiba/Kansas City Star.

    House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, a Springfield Democrat running for governor, called the legislation “an act of petty vengeance” that will have a “devastating impact on women.”

    Undermining the will of the people, destroying majority rule

    And on Thursday, the Missouri House advanced a measure we’ve been watching closely – SJR74, the joint resolution that would strip Missourians of their rights and put more power into the pockets of politicians.

    The bill, which now moves to the Senate, would end majority rule in Missouri, potentially requiring more than 70% of a statewide vote for any constitutional amendment to pass. The House shamefully added so-called ballot candy to SJR74, a move meant to trick voters.

    Missourians from across the state gather at the capitol for Voting Rights Lobby Day in support of majority rule.

    The version the House passed prioritizes measures such as not allowing non-U.S. citizens to vote and forbidding foreign countries from funding amendments, which are both already federal law. It buries the actual measure that would eradicate the simple majority vote requirement to amend the Missouri Constitution.

    As Marilyn McLeod, president of the League of Women Voters of Missouri, told KOMU-TV, “If this passes, it really will be taking away people’s right to express their concerns to the legislature, and the only reason people resort to the initiative petition process is because they feel their voice isn’t being heard.”

  • RELEASE: House moves forward with disastrous measure to end majority rule

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Thursday, April 25, 2024
    Contact: liz@progressmo.org

    Politicians scheme to trick voters into giving away rights, end 100 years of majority rule

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The Missouri House today moved forward with a measure designed to strip Missourians of their rights. SJR74, as currently constructed, would end majority rule in Missouri, potentially requiring more than 70% of a statewide vote for any constitutional amendment to pass. The House shamefully added so-called ballot candy to SJR74, a move meant to trick voters. 

    The initiative petition process has been used in the past to both broaden Missourians’ rights, such as expanding Medicaid access, and keep legislators in check through lobbying reforms and term limits.

    Missourians across the state decried the House’s passage of the joint resolution, which must now go to the Senate.

    “The initiative petition process seems to be the only way for us to have our voices heard,” said Jane Holland, a retiree from Columbia. “The current efforts to change the rules would be a step backwards. Our current legislators constantly vote for things that most of us Missourians do not want.”

    Getta Hall of Kansas City agreed.

    “The initiative petition process must be maintained as is and is an important check to partisan politics,” Hall said. “The IP process that already exists requires a high threshold of signatures and has served us well. Medicaid expansion was an issue Missouri legislators failed to pass. It went to the ballot per the initiative petition process and has been a Godsend pre- and post-COVID to Missourians caught in the gap specifically, and to all of us indirectly.”

    The House voted to add items to the Senate version of SJR74, including a requirement that those who vote in Missouri elections be U.S. citizens and a clause that foreign governments cannot fund ballot initiative efforts. BOTH OF THESE ARE ALREADY REQUIRED UNDER MISSOURI LAW.

    “The ballot candy is designed to hide the true impact of the measure and gain support from voters who don’t know that several items in the ballot summary are already required by law,” said Marilyn McLeod, president of the League of Women Voters of Missouri. “The initiative process is an important part of democracy in Missouri and the suggested changes would squelch the voice of the people, overturning the sacred principle of ‘one person, one vote’.”

    Since the beginning of the year, thousands of Missourians voiced their opposition to attacks on the initiative petition process, many pointing out that the process already in place gives Missourians the power to make direct decisions about policies that impact them and their families.

    SJR74 will be referred to the Senate where it can be rejected, accepted and sent to the ballot, or sent to a conference committee. Missourians are urged to let their legislators know they oppose these efforts to trick Missourians into giving their rights away and making it harder for votes to count.

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  • Under the Dome – April 19

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Legislature finally gets around to passing some bills; both are stinkers

    You’d think that a legislature that is controlled by a GOP supermajority would be getting lots done this session without pesky progressives to get in the way. You’d be wrong.

    With less than a month before the end of the legislative session, Missouri electeds finally sent some legislation to the governor to sign. TL;DR: They won’t make Missouri better.

    Gov. Mike Parson at the State of the State address. Photo by Jeff Roberson/Associated Press.

    A political stunt disguised as a bill on Wednesday became the first bill sent this year to Gov. Mike Parson. The bill dedicated $2.2 million to support deployment of Missouri National Guard soldiers and State Highway Patrol troopers to Texas for border security.

    And on Thursday, the legislature sent Parson an education funding bill, which will take support away from the 91% of Missouri kids who attend public schools. Described by one lawmaker as “poison,”  the bill will both expand vouchers, taking money from neighborhood schools, and will allow independent charter schools in Boone County.

    Politicians protect corporations over people

    Meanwhile, the legislature continues to discuss issues that directly hurt everyday Missourians. The Missouri House gave initial approval this week to a bill that could protect pesticide manufacturers from some cancer lawsuits.

    The Missouri House chamber during a debate. Photo by Tim Bommel/Missouri House Communications.

    Much of the debate focused on a specific pesticide manufacturer: Bayer, the company with U.S. headquarters in St. Louis that purchased Monsanto, the original manufacturer of RoundUp pesticide.

    To date, the company has been embroiled in over 167,000 suits claiming that RoundUp is responsible for causing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Some cases have been dismissed, but Bayer has also been forced to pay billions of dollars in restitution for others, according to the Associated Press.

    Obstruction at the highest levels of leadership in legislature

    Finally, bipartisan leaders this week condemned Dean Plocher, who holds the highest leadership position in the House. The speaker obstructed an investigation of his laundry list of scandals by pressuring witnesses and refusing to issue subpoenas, members of the House Ethics Committee said Monday.

    Speaker Dean Plocher at the governor’s State of the State address. Photo by Jeff Roberson/Associated Press.

    Some witnesses refused to speak out of fear Plocher would use his power as speaker to retaliate as he reportedly had before.

    The attorney collecting evidence marveled at the terror among House staff: “I have not encountered more unwilling witnesses … in my career. The level of fear expressed by a number of the potential witnesses is a daunting factor in completing this investigation.”

    That’s the week in politics brought to you by a supermajority that has turned its back on Missourians.

  • Under the Dome – April 12

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Grandstanding at the cost of health care for everyday Missourians

    We’re all for standing on principles, but the Missouri legislature this week proved it prefers grandstanding that directly hurts Missourians.

    This week the Missouri Senate joined the House in voting to block health care provider Planned Parenthood from receiving Medicaid payments on the charge that its affiliates perform abortions (no such procedures are provided in Missouri because it is prohibited under current state law).

    Photo by Jeff Roberson / Associated Press

    According to Planned Parenthood of Great Plains, roughly one in five patients in Missouri are on Medicaid, meaning the organization’s survival would be in jeopardy if signed into law.

    State Rep. Wendy Hausman, R-St. Peters, is one of the dozens of Republican co-sponsors of the bill and admits it’s a symbolic gesture of rebuke. The cost of that symbol, though, is the services that Planned Parenthood does provide in Missouri, including STI testing, cancer screenings, wellness checks and other services.

    Missouri’s teacher shortage isn’t getting any better. Will lawmakers act on a plan to fix it?

    Meanwhile, Jefferson City politicians continue to ignore real problems, like the chronic teacher shortage crisis, which was said to be at a point of crisis two years ago.

    A report from KCUR in Kansas City found little has been done to solve the problem. A recent report found that numerous teaching positions were either vacant or filled by individuals who were not fully certified.

    A teacher leads a class of first grade students at Ingels Elementary School in south Kansas City. Photo by Jodi Fortino / KCUR 89.3.

    The need is especially acute in areas classified as “critical,” which includes elementary classrooms, early childhood education and special education.

    About 3,325 of those positions are vacant.

    Paul Katnik, who oversaw the report as the head of DESE’s Office of Educator Quality, said the teacher shortage started before the pandemic, but has accelerated in the years since. “I can’t think of any reason why uneducated kids in our state is good for anybody so it should be something that’s on all of our radar,” he said.

    Candidates rush to be the most extreme in the GOP primary race for Secretary of State

    From education to health care to crumbling roads, candidates in the GOP primary race seem to be in competition to out-extreme each other. The candidates include a person who made deadlines for burning books with a flamethrower, a top lawmaker who faces an ethics investigation and a state senator aligned with the hard-right Missouri Freedom Caucus.

    As Republican strategist Gregg Keller shared with the Kansas City Star, “Being branded in a Republican primary as a moderate today is really the kiss of death.”

    ICYMI, there was a bit of good news this week, from Tony Messenger’s excellent column in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch about why ballot candy should leave a bad taste in our mouths; to this P-D piece that highlight’s a Kansas City’s dad’s embrace of his transgender daughter despite bigoted views he once held.

  • Under the Dome – April 5

    Under the Dome graphic with Missouri State Capitol Dome in background

    Welcome back to Under the Dome, your weekly update on the goings-on of the Missouri state legislature.

    Voters get final say as politicians seem bent on representing everyone but them

    Remember that early viral video of the kid who had just received anesthesia at the dentist who – drugged up and confused — asked from the backseat of his parents’ car, “Is this real life?”

    This week felt like that in Jefferson City, from an ethics investigation that continues to drag on for the House’s top leader to attempts to take money from public schools with unpopular vouchers to lawmakers’ refusal to help those injured in Kansas City’s Super Bowl parade.

    David After Dentist screenshot via YouTube.

    Sadly, the answer is yes. Yes, this is real life.

    Grown adults who theoretically got into politics because they care about their communities and state voted this week to return so-called ballot candy to a joint resolution that dismantles majority rule and makes it harder for ordinary Missourians to keep politicians in check.

    Why the candy? Because these politicians know the only way voters will give up their rights is if they are tricked. In this case, voters could be asked whether one must be a U.S. citizen to vote in Missouri AND whether foreign entities should be forbidden from funding initiative petitions – both already required and forbidden, respectively, in the state.

    The measure will now go to the full House for debate before it heads back to the Senate.

    Budget fight looms as help for Missourians is bleak

    Meanwhile, elected officials are rushing to reach agreement on the state’s budget, which is shaping up to be even more draconian than the funding plan originally announced by Gov. Mike Parson, with reduced funding for teacher pay supplements and caps on how much providers can pay personal care aides who help people with disabilities.

    Rep. Peter Merideth of St. Louis speaks after passage of the budget, shares how Missourians will face even fewer services. Photo by Tim Bommel / Missouri House Communications.

    As reported in the Missouri Independent, the budget approved Thursday by the House is $1.9 billion less in total spending than Parson’s proposed plan. Much of that reduction is in the Medicaid program and other services provided by the departments of Mental Health, Health and Senior Services and Social Services.

    Prioritizing pesticide over people

    If politicians aren’t focused on improving teacher pay or paying for personal care for people with disabilities, what are they doing?

    Republican lawmaker Justin Brown has put the state on the map as one of three in the country considering bills to shield pesticide makers from lawsuits. Roundup and its parent company Bayer have shelled out billions of dollars to defend its product. Thousands of people nationwide have sued claiming the pesticide’s active ingredient glyphosate caused non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma.

    According to an investigation by KSDK in St. Louis, the Missouri Coalition for the Environment said the proposed legislation shows how companies like Bayer do not want to pay the cost of harming people.

    Voters reject far-right school board candidates campaigning against DEI and “woke” agendas across Missouri

    There is a somewhat happy ending to this edition of Under the Dome. And here it is: Despite these extreme politicians who seem hell bent on plowing over their constituents, voters ultimately get a say and they did in spades during Tuesday’s municipal elections.

    Voters defeated conservative candidates across the St. Louis region and in Columbia Tuesday in a sweeping rebuke of right-wing efforts to gain control of local school boards.

    As reported in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, none of the 13 candidates endorsed by right-wing radio talk show host Marc Cox won their races after campaigning against what he called a “woke agenda” in schools.

    Supporters celebrate victories in the St. Louis region school board races. Photo by Laurie Skrivan / St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

    And in Columbia, John Potter, who also ran unsuccessfully last year, was defeated by two more progressive candidates for school board. As reported in the Columbia Missourian, Potter campaigned on bringing a conservative voice to the board. He focused primarily on addressing students’ behavioral issues, implementing concealed carry training for district staff and advocating for school choice policies.

    So yes, David, this is real life. But no, it’s not going to be like this forever.