logo

Morning Report: August 10, 2017

image
Author: Jeff Powers
Created: 09 August, 2017
Updated: 21 November, 2022
2 min read

The Federal Election Commission has argued that since Level the Playing Field is not a political party and gives no guarantee that it will run or back a candidate in 2020, it has no “competitor standing” to challenge the commission’s policymaking.

In a court filing on August 8, Level the Playing Field (CPF) fired back on the FEC’s attempt to dismiss a second complaint against the Commission on Presidential Debates. LFP states, “The FEC concedes that at least one of these parties has standing, and both clearly do. The Libertarian Party has been excluded from every presidential debate staged by the CPD, and it will nominate another candidate to run in 2020.”

Read the full story here.

IVN takes a look at the clean energy empire Elon Musk has built, and how a good bit of the money for his companies, Tesla and Solar City, has come from taxpayer subsidies.

In particular, the story examines California and the bill that just passed the Assembly that will likely bring some $3 billion taxpayer dollars to Tesla. There is no question Musk is a brilliant entrepreneur, and the piece doesn't argue that point. But it would be a good place to start if politicians negotiated these subsidies with the best interests of taxpayers in mind. Currently, it’s not clear that the decisions being made are done with those intentions. With so much spending, Governor Jerry Brown just announced the state of California will have a $1.5 billion budget shortfall next year.

If you would like to hear the IVN Ideas Podcast on this issue and read the story, click here.

Kate Harveston tackles the subject of marijuana and our failing health care system and if one can save the other.

Harveston writes:

"The introduction of cannabis, both medically and recreationally, has created new revenue streams and reduced costs for social care programs, bolstering the medical community’s ability to deliver care with next-to-no downside. For patients who rely on the benefits of medical cannabis, there’s no going back."

More Choice for San Diego

Despite some local jurisdiction push back, Harveston is bullish on nationwide legalization, "For states, shutting down dispensaries would be forfeiting significant tax revenue and destroying jobs. Neither seems likely, and although the federal government still takes a negative stance toward marijuana, it seems that nationwide legalization is only a matter of when, not if."

Check out her story on IVN right here.

Latest articles

Vote
Leaders of Pro-Voter Movement for Better Elections to Meet in San Diego
The work to make elections better for voters never stops and no one knows that better than the organizations that put a historic number of systemic reforms on the 2024 ballot. And now, these leaders will gather in San Diego to plan for the future of this massive movement....
13 November, 2024
-
3 min read
money in politics
Maine Voters Reject Big Money in Politics Amidst Most Expensive Election Ever
The 2024 elections broke another spending record from independent political groups. Yet, amidst billions being used to influence voter decisions, Maine citizens voted to rein in this spending on Election Day....
12 November, 2024
-
5 min read
Arizona Government
Arizona Rejected Primary Reform in 2024, But Voters Don't Support the Status Quo Either
Election Day was mostly a rough night for election reformers across the board, from primary reform to new voting methods to gerrymandering. However, it would be a mistake to suggest that this means voters are okay with the status quo....
12 November, 2024
-
4 min read