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Why Are You Here? A Primer for State Legislators and Citizens is a
challenge to America's 7,382 state legislators and their
constituents to critically examine their state legislature and take
appropriate action to improve it. This is a handbook telling how
legislatures came to be, how they function, and discussing how they
have fallen in public esteem. The book provides an analytical
discussion for evaluating how any legislature deals with four
issues: personal greed, criminal and ethical scandal, the influence
of money and lobbying, and self-serving legislative seat
apportionment. The last section is a "Legislative Toolbox" that
provides information helpful in evaluating legislatures and
readings of a patriotic nature that enhance idealism and spirit.
In this legislative autobiography Franklin L. Kury tells the story
about his election to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives,
and later the Senate, against the senior Republican in the House
and an entrenched patronage organization. The only Democrat elected
from his district to serve in the House or Senate since the
Roosevelt landslide in 1936, Kury was instrumental in enacting the
environmental amendment to the state constitution, a comprehensive
clean streams law, the gubernatorial disability law, reform of the
Senate's procedure for confirmation of gubernatorial appointments,
a new public utility law, and flood plain and storm water
management laws. The story told here is based on Kury's
recollections of his experience, supplemented by his personal
files, extensive research in the legislative archives, and
conversations with persons knowledgeable on the issues. This book
is well documented with notes and appendices of significant
documents. Several chapters provide detailed "inside" descriptions
of how campaigns succeeded and the enactment of legislation
happened. The passage of the environmental amendment, clean streams
law, public utility code, flood plain and storm water management
laws, and the gubernatorial disability law are recounted in a
manner that reveals what it takes to pass such proposals. The book
concludes with the author's reflections on the legislature's
historical legacies, its present operation, and its future.
In this legislative autobiography Franklin L. Kury tells the story
about his election to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives,
and later the Senate, against the senior Republican in the House
and an entrenched patronage organization. The only Democrat elected
from his district to serve in the House or Senate since the
Roosevelt landslide in 1936, Kury was instrumental in enacting the
environmental amendment to the state constitution, a comprehensive
clean streams law, the gubernatorial disability law, reform of the
Senate's procedure for confirmation of gubernatorial appointments,
a new public utility law, and flood plain and storm water
management laws. The story told here is based on Kury's
recollections of his experience, supplemented by his personal
files, extensive research in the legislative archives, and
conversations with persons knowledgeable on the issues. This book
is well documented with notes and appendices of significant
documents. Several chapters provide detailed "inside" descriptions
of how campaigns succeeded and the enactment of legislation
happened. The passage of the environmental amendment, clean streams
law, public utility code, flood plain and storm water management
laws, and the gubernatorial disability law are recounted in a
manner that reveals what it takes to pass such proposals. The book
concludes with the author's reflections on the legislature's
historical legacies, its present operation, and its future.
In the spring of 2018 the U.S. Supreme Court will render a decision
in the Wisconsin gerrymandering case that could have a
revolutionary impact on American politics and how legislative
representation is chosen. Gerrymandering! A Guide to Congressional
Redistricting, Dark Money and the Supreme Court is a unique
explanation to understand and act on the Court's decision, whatever
it may be. After describing the importance of legislative
representation, the book describes the anatomy of a redistricting n
Pennsylvania. That is followed by a review of legislative
redistricting in American history and the Supreme Court's role
throughout. The book relates what has happened to the efforts to
bring changes to redistricting through the legislatures, including
the unseen but omnipresent use of dark money to oppose reforms. The
penultimate chapter analyzes the Wisconsin case now pending in the
Supreme Court and concludes that anyone relying on the Court's
decision is relying on a firm maybe. Following the text is a
Citizen's Toolbox with which readers throughout the country can
evaluate the redistricting situation in their states. The Toolbox
is replete with useful information gerrymandering. There are
numerous books that tell how bad gerrymandering is, but my book is
different, much different. Unlike the others, this book analyzes
gerrymandering as developed through the force of history, the
hardball politics of state legislatures and scantily disclosed
campaign expenditures to maintain it, and the daunting legal
challenge for those who want the Supreme Court to adopt a new
national standard for determining when gerrymandering is
unconstitutional as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of
the 14th Amendment. The daunting challenges is to show the Court
that a mathematical formula, such as the efficiency gap formula, is
a valid method to measure violations of the 14th amendment's
guarantee that every citizen be given equal protection of the law.
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