Podcast Ep. 53 | Someone should poll our dogs
News RoundUp
Education Leaders See Few Benefits of in Ballot Measure to Give Schools More Financial Stability
The Strawberry Capital of the World is the Early Death Capital of the US
Dark Money Spending Hits Record in Oklahoma, With Surge to Come
On The Sidelines of Democracy: Exploring why so Many Americans Don’t Vote
Take-aways
Everyone is campaigning, so most of the updates are in the form of articles this week.
Voter turnout is key to making change in our state.
All politics is local. The more local the race, the more of a direct impact it has on your day-to-day life.
There’s going to be a ton of new legislators going into next year, so it is imperative that we as voters & advocates begin getting to know them soon. They’re going to have a lot to learn about how things work at the Capitol…and we need to ensure they learn the right things.
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Podcast Ep. 52 | Capitol Reporters, Vol. 1 (with Grant Hermes and Sean Murphy)
In this episode we visit with two of Oklahoma's intrepid journalists, Grant Hermes (News9) and Sean Murphy (Associated Press) to get an inside look into what it's like to cover the State Capitol and politics in general in today's political climate.
NOTE: As you’ll hear at the beginning of the episode, we had an issue with the initial audio export and thus had to cut out the first five minutes of the original recording. So, we jump in near the beginning of our discussion of the second news article listed below.
News Round-up
New Election Board service allows voters to change registration information online (State Election Board)
GOP nominee for Oklahoma Senate flipped between parties during campaign (NewsOK)
Editorial: Health Department should honor open records requests (NonDoc)
“Overkill,” Town Board guts draft ordinance on Medical Marijuana (Luther Register)
Democrats Don’t Care About Policy Compromise Anymore — Just Like Republicans (FiveThirtyEight)
Live From the Battleground Districts: Polls of the Key Races for House Control (NY Times The Upshot)
Take-Aways
For all of us who have jobs and cannot be at the Capitol all day, every day, the journalists that comprise the Capitol press corp are our eyes and ears inside the building. However, they are merely observers of the process, not active participants. Because of that, they have a unique insight and perspective into what goes on there, and we thought it would be interesting to hear from them directly.
Journalists have come under fire during the last couple years, largely without warrant. Both Grant and Sean do a great job explaining how the see their role in politics today and the process that goes into investigating, researching, vetting, and writing the news. These are not cable news talking heads - these are local people reporting on local things, working their tails off to ensure that they get it right. They also share the most challenging aspects of their jobs as well as their favorite Oklahoma political stories from the past couple of years.
We included “Vol. 1” in the title because we will be doing additional interviews with other reporters at the State Capitol for future episodes down the line. Stay tuned!
Podcast Ep. 51 | Too Close for Missiles
In this episode, Andy & Scott are joined by Commander Scott Downey, USN, Retired, for what starts out as a discussion of current events and the run-off election but what ends up being a rather vulnerable conversation between a liberal and a conservative.
Articles Discussed
hat Oklahomans Are Telling Their Legislators
State office independents running as a team on open government
Education funding remains a contentious debate
Oklahoma gave Boeing $90 million in incentive money, along with a few other breaks
Pruitt Watch
EPA watchdog faults Scott Pruitt's $3.5 million security costs
Take-aways
Honestly, the main takeaway from this episode is that most Oklahomans probably agree on a surprising number of political policies.
A point of personal privilege, from Andy: Over the past couple of years, I've grown to respect Scott Downey an awful lot. He's about twenty years older than I am, so his perspective on marriage, parenting, and navigating the workplace are personally valuable to me. Additionally, he is a former Navy fighter pilot with combat experience and, at one time, held the record for the most landings on an aircraft carrier. Those stories are very different...many funny, many inspiring, and many others just incredibly painful. General Sherman famously said "War is hell," and based on some of the stories I've heard from Commander Downey, that quote is completely true.
Scott and I would often discuss the current political climate in Oklahoma before class, and while we certainly butted heads on a few issues, we found that we agreed on policy just as often as we disagreed. Perhaps more importantly, we both made a point to listen to the other person's perspective and work to find common ground. I think we both hoped to change the other person's mind on certain issues, so we started with what we had in common first and then worked on the peripheral stuff. Did it always work? Certainly not! But we both have a better understanding of the other side, we're still friends, and our friendship is stronger because of it.
Update 9/8/18 @ 10:00am - I just received the following text message from Scott Downey, and am sharing it here with his permission:
I read your take aways at 12:41 AM, almost texted you then. That's some of the nicest things anyone's ever said about me although you give me l more credit than I'm due. And your readers, donors, board members, listeners should know that my reasonable, courteous discussions with you have altered my positions on many things, some large some small - I would say this shows that Lets Fix This is effective.