CA SWEARS IN FIRST BLACK FEMALE LEGISLATIVE LEADER: CALIFORNIA Assemblywoman Karen Bass (D) became the first African American female to lead a legislative body in U.S. history when she was sworn in last Tuesday as speaker of the chamber to which she was elected in 2004. (WASHINGTON Sen. Rosa Franklin (D) serves as Senate president pro tem, but that is largely an honorary title, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.) The 54-year-old Bass, who earned a name for herself as the leader of a community group that helped improve neighborhoods in South Los Angeles after the 1992 riots, succeeds fellow Los Angeles Democrat Fabian Nunez, who will be term-limited out of office this year.
As speaker, Bass will be one of the so-called "Big Five" — along with the Assembly minority leader, the Senate president pro tem, the Senate minority leader, and the governor — who's first priority will be to negotiate the state budget for the coming year, for which a deficit of about $15 billion has been projected. "California is a giant in crisis — and now it is up to us to solve that crisis," she said. She also gave some indication of where she'll be looking for a solution: "Most importantly, we have to ask the question of whether a tax structure that was established in the 1930s is sufficient to meet the needs of Californians in 2008...." (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, USA TODAY, ASSOCIATED PRESS, LOS ANGELES TIMES)
OHIO AG DANN DONE: OHIO Attorney General Marc Dann (D) finally resigned last Wednesday over the sexual-harassment scandal that had prompted calls from fellow Democrats in recent weeks for him to take that action. (See OHIO AG REFUSES TO RESIGN OVER HARASSMENT SCANDAL in May 12 issue of SNCJ.) Dann announced his decision to immediately step down at a packed Statehouse news conference with one of those Democrats Gov. Ted Strickland.
"My conduct has caused the creation of a firestorm of negative publicity that has reached a point where it is preventing the great professionals in the office from doing their important work," Dann said. He added, "The only way I can ensure that the great work in the office can continue is to take responsibility by resigning," before rushing off and leaving Strickland standing alone at the podium.
Dann was reportedly "pushed over the edge" by raids earlier in the day by investigators from the inspector general's office of Dann's Columbus office and a satellite office in his hometown of Youngstown, in which, among other things, his Blackberry and state vehicle, a GMC Suburban, were seized. That had come a day after House Democrats had filed articles of impeachment against him.
In accordance with state law, Dann's top assistant, Thomas R. Winters, took over as acting attorney general, pending an appointment by Strickland. Winters' background includes a stint as a lobbyist for Thomas W. Noe, the now-imprisoned coin dealer who was a key player in the investment scandal that lead to the ouster of former Gov. Bob Taft (R). (COLUMBUS DISPATCH)
BATTLE LINE SHIFTS ON VOTER ID: With the U.S. Supreme Court having tentatively settled the issue last month of whether states can require voters to show a government-issued photo ID before casting a ballot (see HIGH COURT APPROVES INDIANA VOTER-ID LAW in May 5 issue of SNCJ), the next phase in the battle over Voter ID has apparently begun.
Lawmakers in MISSOURI are backing a constitutional amendment that would make it the second state — after ARIZONA — to require proof of citizenship, such as a birth certificate or naturalization papers, from anyone registering to vote. Nineteen other states are considering similar measures, and those in FLORIDA, KANSAS, OKLAHOMA and SOUTH CAROLINA have strong support. But MISSOURI's is the only one likely to take effect before the upcoming presidential election. It wouldn't need the governor's signature to do so, but it would have to be approved by voters in the state's August primary.
Many hope that doesn't happen, arguing that photo ID requirements already disenfranchise eligible voters — such as a group of nuns who were turned away from the polls in INDIANA two weeks ago — and proof of citizenship would only make that problem worse by allowing even fewer forms of documentation.
"Everyone has been focusing on voter ID laws generally, but the most pernicious measures and the ones that really promise to prevent the most eligible voters from voting is what we see in ARIZONA and now in MISSOURI," said Jon Greenbaum, director of the voting rights advocacy group the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
Over 38,000 voter registration applications have been rejected in ARIZONA since it adopted its proof-of-citizenship law, and MISSOURI Secretary of State Robin Carnahan (D), who opposes her states' measure, estimates it could disenfranchise up to 240,000 registered voters there.
But MISSOURI Rep. Stanley Cox (R), the sponsor of the amendment, said the state Constitution already requires voters to be citizens and his proposal merely provides for better enforcement of that provision.
"The requirements we have right now are totally inadequate," he said. "You can present a utility bill, and that doesn't prove anything. I could sit here with my nice photocopier and create a thousand utility bills with different names on them."
And Thor Hearne, a MISSOURI lawyer who's a strong advocate of voter ID laws, dismisses the contention that the measure would impose a significant hardship on voters.
"There were a lot of the same alarmist charges regarding INDIANA's voter ID law and how it would disenfranchise so many people," he said, "and those allegations were not accepted by the Supreme Court."
Hearne had some advice for the critics: "To those who have spent great energy opposing some of the voter registration or voter identification requirements, I would say their energy would be much better spent working toward trying to provide identifications to those who need them or assisting these people with getting registered." (NEW YORK TIMES)
POLITICS IN BRIEF: MASSACHUSETTS House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi (D) was given State Police protection at his Boston home in March and early April after receiving a death threat during the state's highly charged debate over casino gambling (BOSTON GLOBE). • The sitting chief justice of the WEST VIRGINIA Supreme Court, Elliott E. Maynard, finished third in a field of four candidates in the state's Democratic primary for that post last Tuesday. Maynard had been dogged by a conflict-of-interest scandal stemming from photographs of him vacationing with the chief executive of a coal company that had cases pending before the court at the time. Only the top two candidates, Margaret Workman, a former State Supreme Court justice, and Menis Ketchum, a lawyer, will advance to the general election in the fall (NEW YORK TIMES).
— Compiled by KOREY CLARK