MOScout Daily Update: Treasurer Talk - DED Reorg Coming? - Ashcroft as Mueller? and more...
Jeremy LaFaver thrashes the Kansas City School District for opposing Mayor Sly James’ proposed sales tax for pre-K. See his twitter rant here. “This is terribly disappointing. KCPS is opposing early childhood education because KCPS doesn’t get to EXCLUSIVELY control the entire system. That’s bad for kids. And bad for KC. And selfish.”
MOScout Daily Update: Greitens' Legal Funds - Evans for Treas? - Millburg to Dems and more...
Greitens Legal Funds
I did a quick circling back to see if there was an activity in the legal funds that were set up during the height of Eric Greitens’ scandals earlier this year.
The Missouri Legal Defense Fund, which was created to help staffers, showed an expenditure of $183,678 to Graves Garrett LLC on October 25.
The source of the funds came a week earlier from Trusted Leadership PAC. Trusted Leadership gave $186,569 to the Defense Fund on October 16.
MOScout Daily Update: Wagner on GOP Gender Gap - Staffers Resigned Ahead of CLEAN - Galloway Promoted - Irwin to Centene and more...
Justus for KC
KC mayoral hopeful Jolie Justus had a fundy last night at Trezo Mare in the Northland. Tipster says, “Big event… Very well attended, and broad support across party lines.”
The prospect of Justus becoming mayor of Kansas City cheers KC-ers because she has instant relationships with the governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general having previously served with them in the state senate. Justus, though liberal, is particularly gifted at connecting with folks regardless of ideology, and forging a compromise they can accept.
MOScout Daily Update: Opioid War on All Fronts - CLEAN Bits - Treasurer Talk and more...
· The Missouri Ethics Commission released its guideline tutorial on CLEAN’s impact. See it here. One of the provisions which has received less attention is the slight reduction in campaign contribution limits. State-wide office holders are not addressed by CLEAN, but the limits for legislators has been lowered from the previous $2,600 level. The limit for state senators is now $2,500; and it’s $2,000 from state representatives. These levels will be adjusted for inflation every two years. And there’s a more rigorous framework in CLEAN for prohibiting attempts to circumvent the limits through committees.
MOScout Weekender: Labor Preps New IPs - Hallway Hearts Williams - MOScout Poll on Medicaid Expansion and more....
Labor Quickly Responds to New RTW Threat
I wrote yesterday (see it here) about KSDK’s report (see that here) that the governor’s staff had researched the feasibility of attempting to pass right to work on a county-by county basis assuming that the statewide effort would fail.
It sent shockwaves through the political world because the 2-1 margin of defeat for RTW had created the assumption that the issue was dead – for a while at least.
Now there’s the prospect of a Plan B floating out there.
Apparently in response, labor leader Mike Louis quickly filed four initiative petitions. They are variations on the same idea: prohibiting local jurisdictions from implementing right to work. See one of them here.
What It Means
It raises the specter of another huge labor mobilization in 2020. That’s not appealing to Republicans regardless of how bravely they talk about the limited damage that they suffered in last month’s election.
MOScout Daily Update: RTW By County? - Hatfield on CLEAN - Keller on Hulshof - Lohmar on AGs and more...
Parson Staff Researched County Level RTW
KSDK dropped a humdinger of a report that sent shockwaves through political circles yesterday: “Before the August election even took place, high-level officials within Governor Mike Parson’s office began looking at how to get around the anticipated loss of Prop A.”
Why It Matters
The issue is a livewire because it raises again the tension between right to work and the governor’s agenda. Right to work is seen by much of the Missouri Republican faithful as a critical economic policy. But it’s an abomination to organized labor. And organized labor could be an active and important partner in the governor’s stated economic agenda of workforce development and infrastructure investment.
The notion that the governor is slyly plotting to re-engage on right to work could threaten to alienate a significant ally for his legislative agenda.
MOScout Daily Update: CLEAN Day - Corlew, Curtis Resign - Sabato Starts MO Gubby Race a "Likely GOP" and more...
Sabato Starts MO Gubby Race At Likely GOP
The widely-followed Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball has started the Missouri 2020 gubernatorial race as a “likely Republican” hold. Of course, it’s early and things can change, but for Parson it’s a nice initial endorsement of his prospects.
[I]n Missouri, now-former Gov. Eric Greitens (R) resigned under duress earlier this year amidst the fallout of various scandals, putting now-Gov. Mike Parson (R), the separately-elected lieutenant governor, in charge. Ultimately, all three of these governors start as significant favorites, although Parson may have the most to prove given that he was not elected to his current job in his own right.
MOScout Daily Update: Memo For Legislature and Sunshine - Hulshof for Treas? - Big Parson Fundy - Nov Revs Down Again and more...
Follow-Up on Legislature Following Record Retention Law
MATA’s Sharon Jones has written a very sensible and helpful memo about legislators becoming compliant with the sunshine and records retention laws. Spoiler: you shouldn’t be willy-nilly deleting emails. See it here.
There are two key things to recognize about this language. First, each individual Senator and Representative is responsible for making an office policy, maintaining their own active records, and responding to Sunshine Requests made to their office. Second, the amendment applies existing law to legislative records rather than creating a new open records law specifically for that type of record. Applying current law means that many of the questions and concerns that a legislator may ask have already been addressed by another State entity that maintains records under the same law. Being the custodian of their own records means that an individual Senator or Representative has significant control over the policy that will be followed by their office.
MOScout Daily Update: Reps Can Destroy Records?!? - Survey of Senate Pre-Files - Watson to St. Chuck Spot and more...
Changing the IP Process
I’ve written before that there’s been talk among Republicans about tightening up the initiative petition process. This past year saw right to work reversed by referendum, as well as the minimum wage increase, medical marijuana, and the CLEAN Missouri reforms pass by IP.
· David Sater’s SB5 makes changes to the process. But so does his SJR1 which would increase the number of signatures as well as the vote margin required for a constitutional amendment to pass.
· Mike Cierpiot’s SJR7 requires signatures collected in every Congressional district
· Eric Burlison’s SJR 11 does too, as well as the higher margin for passage.
MOScout Daily Update: Senate Pre-File Bits - Bruns To Become Cops' Legislative Director - Virginia Young Writes Again and more....
Bruns Takes New Job
In the lobbyists registration changes Mark Bruns is shedding many clients. One tipster says the reason is because Bruns is taking a new position created by the various police organizations (STLPOA, State FOP, KCFOP). He will be their Legislative Director.
Bruns is a former state representative.
MOScout Weekender: Welcome to Pre-Filing - Koster on the Forces of Division - MOScout Poll - Who Won the Week and more...
Koster on the Forces of Division
In this week’s Jewish Light, there’s a commentary from Chris Koster from a speech he gave at U. City Shul Gala. I can’t decide if the tone is more gubernatorial or senatorial. See it here.
When I look back at my campaign of 2016, I admit my frustration and even sadness that a campaign that aspired to “bring people together to build roads and fund schools” would lose so badly to a campaign that actually used a machine gun and an exploding barrel to illustrate its promise to “blow up Jefferson City as we know it.” Yet it is the world we live in.
MOScout Daily Update: Fitzpatrick Backs No Withholds - Virtual School RFP Issued - Schmitt's Transition Advisors and more...
RFP For Virtual Schools
The state issued its request for proposals from prospective vendors for possible inclusion in a Qualified Vendors List (QVL) for Missouri Course Access and Virtual School Program (MOCAP)…
From the RFP: “The passage of Senate Bill 603 (2018) modified provisions relating to virtual education and changed the name of the virtual program from Missouri Virtual Instruction Program (MOVIP) to Missouri Course Access and Virtual School Program (MOCAP)... The Missouri Course Access and Virtual School Program (MOCAP) will provide opportunity for students to participate in online courses to Missouri students in grades Kindergarten through 12. MOCAP is a tuition program that is administered by the Missouri Department of Elementary & Secondary Education (DESE). DESE hopes that MOCAP contractors will offer courses to over 500 (Local Education Agencies (LEAs) in the State of Missouri…”
MOScout Daily Update: Moore, Anderson Exit House - CLEAN Coming - No Budget Worries? and more...
New CLEAN Restrictions
Sources in both the House and Senate tells me they won’t be surprised if there’s an uptick in staff turnover ahead of December 6 when CLEAN Missouri takes effect. That’s because CLEAN also includes staff in its 2-year wait period before lobbying.
From the amendment: “[N]o person serving as a member of or employed by the General Assembly shall act or serve as a paid lobbyist…”
Says one building denizen: “There are several [staffers] who are seeking out jobs. I think you’ll see at least a few of the higher level ones move on…”
MOScout Daily Update: Parson Asks for DPS Audit - Tax Receipts Still Weak - Russell Gets Committee Nod - Prop D Autopsy and more...
Another Greitens’ Scandal?
In a vague, but ominous press release, Governor Mike Parson said that he was requesting an audit of the Department of Public Safety (DPS) Director’s Office after his new appointee Sandy Karsten raised “concerns about questionable use of taxpayer dollars” under previous leadership.
See Parson’s letter to Auditor Nicole Galloway here. Yikers!
MOScout Daily Update: Early Senate Committee Chair Talk - MO Ripe for Medicaid IP? - Sifton PAC Formed and more...
Hegeman for Approps Chair?
Senate watchers believe that Sen. Dan Hegeman is likely to be named Senate Appropriations Chair. An announcement is expected this week.
The budget process begins soon as the governor’s office and legislative leaders will sit down to hash out a consensus revenue estimate. Those discussions will take place against the backdrop of lethargic state tax revenues despite a booming economy.
MOScout Daily Update: Looking Ahead at Redistricting Battle - Political Gender Gap - Cleaver to the Rescue and more...
Don’t Miss Last Friday’s Update
If you were among the scores of last week’s “out of office” replies, click on Friday’s morning update here. It had a trio of stories: a new Republican campaign committee was formed to revise CLEAN Missouri’s redistricting plan before it takes effect in 2021; Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker announced she’s running for Dem Party Chair; and Kirk Mathews resigned his House seat. We’ll start with the follow-ups to those items…
MOScout Daily Update: Mathews Resigns - Peters Baker for Dem Chair - Meet Fair MO
Meet Fair Missouri
Fair Missouri was formed. It’s a campaign committee formed to support “measures to reform Missouri redistricting” on the November 2020 ballot. Its treasurer is Eddie Greim, a conservative attorney who works on ballot questions.
The Republican State Committee had seeded the new committee with an initial deposit of $150,000.
What It Means
This is an indication that Missouri Republicans are serious about revising the redistricting process contained in the CLEAN Missouri amendment.
There will legal challenges leveled at CLEAN. But this shows they are already mobilizing to put a proposal on the November 2020 ballot as a back-up plan.
MOScout Daily Update: Parson Signed Ethics EO - Vandeven Back to DESE - Party Chair Positioning and more...
Parson Extends Executive Gift Ban, Lobbying Wait
The press release: Missouri Governor Mike Parson signed Executive Order 18-10, renewing the administration’s commitment to uphold the highest ethical standards and ensure the needs of our citizens are being served… Executive Order 18-10 revises certain provisions of Executive Order 17-02, updating the order to align directly with current state law. Governor Parson’s executive order upholds the prohibition that no employee of the Governor’s Office shall act as an executive lobbyist until the end of the administration in which he or she served. It also renews the ban on employees of the executive branch receiving gifts from lobbyists. In addition, the executive order updates provisions to provide clarity and consistency for future administrations to adhere to the principled values set by Governor Parson’s administration.
MOScout Daily Update: Treasurer Sweepstakes Update - Margie 2.0? - Senate 17 in Play? - Manzo for SOS and more...
Senate 17 in Play?
One reader thinks that Senate 17 will be part of the Senate battleground districts in 2020. I mentioned Republicans needing to defend Senate 15 and 19. Senate 17 is held now by Dems after Lauren Arthur beat Kevin Corlew in a special election.
He writes, “Arthur is most definitely vulnerable in 2020. She won a special election in a June off-year election. If that election had been in November, I believe the Republican would have won. With Donald Trump on the ticket and increased voter intensity on all sides- that will be a fight. And if you look at Ridgeway and Silvey, they both won it 52-48 (with the exception of 2016 when Silvey didn’t have a real race.) It’s a tight district… and Arthur could get Corlew again or Jerry Nolte, who is fresh off a second countywide win for Presiding Commissioner. Credible either way…”
It’s a classic swing district, with a Dem tilt perhaps. Trump did win it in 2016 (52.4% – 47.6%), but Jason Kander bested Roy Blunt (55.5% – 45.5%) and Chris Koster beat Eric Greitens (52% – 48%).
MOScout Daily Update: IP Process Eyed for Reform - Vulnerable GOP Sens in 2020? - Treasurer Sweepstakes Power Ranking and more...
Extreme Risk Protection Orders
Rep. Deb Lavender tweets that she and Sen. Jill Schupp will introduce a bill next year on “extreme risk protection orders.”
Here’s a Detroit, Michigan story on the issue…
A 25-year-old man from Southeast Michigan is an example of a serious problem in the country. Mathew is the type of person law enforcement officials are worried about, even though he hasn't committed a serious crime…

