Wednesday, November 06, 2024

Missourians vote to increase minimum wage, require paid sick leave


By Clara Bates

An effort to hike the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour and guarantee paid sick leave won the support of Missouri voters Tuesday night.

Proposition A was approved by Missouri voters 58% to 41%.


(Photo- Daniel Tucker, a leader with the Missouri Workers Center, teaches chants customized to an initiative petition to raise the minimum wage and mandate paid sick leave outside of the Secretary of State’s office building in Jefferson City in May- Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

The approval follows a trend of Missourians using the initiative petition process to increase the minimum wage — and more broadly, of Missourians using that process to advance policies at odds with the beliefs of the state’s Republican dominated legislature.








Proposition A was backed by various unions and workers’ advocacy groups, social justice and civil rights organizations, over 500 state business owners and others.

Some business groups, including the state Chamber of Commerce, have opposed it, especially the guaranteed sick leave portion. But there wasn’t a coordinated opposition campaign.

The campaign in favor of the measure, called Missourians for Healthy Families and Fair Wages, raised nearly $6 million — including from out-of-state groups that don’t disclose their donors — and collected 210,000 signatures to have the issue placed on the statewide ballot.

The current minimum wage in Missouri is $12.30, which is equivalent to $492 per week, before taxes. The ballot measure would raise the state’s minimum wage to $13.75 next year and $15 in January 2026.

The increase would affect over 562,000 workers in the state, according to the Missouri Budget Project, or nearly 1 in 4 workers. The minimum wage would be adjusted based on inflation every year after 2026.

Voters approved a minimum-wage hike in 2006, with 75% of the vote, and again in 2018, with 62% of the vote.








And businesses will be required to provide one hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours worked, up to five days per year for small businesses and seven days per year for larger businesses. Small businesses are those with fewer than 15 employees.

The paid sick time provision will go into effect on May 1, 2025.

Without sick leave, proponents argue, workers have to choose between their financial and physical wellbeing — going into work sick or losing out on a needed paycheck.

Missouri will join 15 states that require employers to provide paid sick leave. The United States, unlike nearly every other country, lacks federal paid sick leave, so states, as well as cities, have taken the lead.

Some business groups raised alarm particularly with the sick leave provisions, saying the proposal constitutes government overreach in what should be the decisions of business owners.

At the same time, a coalition of hundreds of businesspeople in the state have signed on to support the ballot measure, arguing the policies help their bottom line, causing lower employee turnover, increased productivity and better health and safety conditions.

The ballot measure would change the state law but not the constitution, meaning the legislature could overturn it, but those on both sides of the issue told The Independent last month they see that as unlikely.

Missouri voters approve Amendment 3, overturn state’s abortion ban


By Anna Spoerre

ST. LOUIS — When Missouri on Tuesday became the first state to overturn a near-total abortion ban by the vote of the people, Desiree White cried happy tears.

Twenty-five years earlier, she and her husband chose to terminate a pregnancy they very much wanted after they received a diagnosis of a fatal fetal abnormality.

(Photo- Maggie Olivia, a senior policy manager with Abortion Action Missouri, embraces abortion-rights supporters after the race is called in favor of Amendment 3 on Tuesday in St. Louis- Anna Spoerre/Missouri Independent).

White, a retired professor of clinical psychology at Washington University who is now 66, was among a few hundred people who embraced, cried and cheered as the results were announced just before 10:30 p.m. at an Amendment 3 watch party in downtown St. Louis.






 

With all precincts reporting, Amendment 3 won 52% to 48%.

“We did not accept this nightmare thrust upon us,” Tori Schafer, deputy director for policy and campaigns of the ACLU of Missouri, told the crowd.

The PAC behind Amendment 3, called Missourians for Constitutional Freedom, raised more than $31 million this election, funding TV ads and other messaging across the state. Abortion opponents raised just a fraction of that amount, but had the support of many of Missouri’s top elected officials in spreading the word to “vote no on Amendment 3.”

“Our work to protect the safety of women and the dignity of life continues,” Stephanie Bell, with Missouri Stands with Women, said in a statement Tuesday, adding: “We will continue to fight and ultimately be victorious against the forces who see no value in life.”

When the amendment goes into effect in 30 days, abortion will become legal up until the point of fetal viability — generally seen as the point at which a fetus can survive outside the womb on its own, or around 24 weeks, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

The amendment also protects access to other reproductive health care, like birth control.

Missourians have long lived with limited — or non-existent — abortion access.

This is in part because of the state’s long history electing anti-abortion lawmakers who over the last several years crafted some of the more restrictive laws in the country, known as TRAP laws, or “targeted regulation of abortion providers.”

The legislature in 2019 also passed a “trigger law,” meant to go into effect if Roe v. Wade fell. When the constitutional right to an abortion was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2022, Missouri was the first state to make virtually all abortions illegal.

While the amendment will go into effect in early December, abortion almost certainly won’t immediately become readily accessible across the state.






 

Leaders with Missourians for Constitutional Freedom have said many of the state’s existing TRAP laws, which made access nearly impossible prior to the abortion ban, will first need to be challenged in court. They said they plan to bring forward those challenges “soon.”

And they expect a hard-fought path to regaining abortion access.

“Anti-abortion, anti-democracy politicians are going to try to stomp us out,” Mallory Schwarz, executive director with Abortion Action Missouri, told the crowd after the results were announced. “They’re going to try and fight us in court, they’re going to file new attacks in Jefferson City.”

State Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman, a Republican from Arnold and a leading anti-abortion lawmaker, wrote on social media following Tuesday’s vote that she would “do everything in my power” to ensure Missourians have another chance to vote on abortion.

In response to Coleman’s post, Schafer said the ACLU of Missouri expects Missouri’s abortion-rights senators to “filibuster til the cows and the chickens come home.”

Last session, Missouri Senate Democrats used the filibuster to kill an attempt by Republican lawmakers to increase the threshold required to pass a citizen-initiated constitutional amendment that would’ve made it much more difficult to pass the abortion-rights amendment.

In Missouri, constitutional amendments require a simple majority to pass. In Florida on Tuesday, an abortion-rights amendment received a majority of votes but failed to meet the required 60% approval to pass.

Missourians for Constitutional Freedom formally kicked off a citizen-led initiative petition process to get abortion on the ballot in January.






 

The coalition, whose leaders include the ACLU of Missouri, Abortion Action Missouri and the state’s Planned Parenthood affiliates, emphasized the state’s strict abortion laws in the months leading up to the election.

A decade ago, more than 5,000 abortions were performed in Missouri, according to data from the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. By 2020, that number dropped to 167 due to a series of “targeted regulation of abortion providers” laws enacted by the legislature, including a mandatory 72-hour waiting period between the initial appointment and a surgical abortion and mandatory pelvic exams for medication abortions.

Between June 24, 2022 and July 31, 2024, 74 abortions were performed in Missouri under the state’s emergency exemption, according to health department data.

The abortion-rights campaign saw overwhelming support across the state early on, turning in more than 380,000 signatures to the Missouri Secretary of State’s Office in May.

Those opposed to the amendment launched a mostly grassroots effort to fight the amendment with the help of anti-abortion lawmakers, churches and activists. Their messaging leaned heavily into claims that the amendment would legalize gender-affirming surgeries for minors, something legal experts have disputed.

Several different PACs created to encourage Missourians to “vote no” cumulatively raised a few million dollars to fight the amendment, including through radio ad buys, billboards and fliers, mostly relying on word-of-mouth to raise concerns with the amendment.

Susan Prinster, 72, a member of Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish in O’Fallon, gathered with a few dozen other parishioners to pray the rosary on Tuesday afternoon, hours before polls closed across the state.

“I’m very scared,” Prinster said following the recitation of the rosary late Tuesday afternoon in St. Charles County as part of a larger effort across the Archdiocese of St. Louis to pray for the defeat of Amendment 3. “I don’t know where this thing came from.”

Prinster remembers the moment 52 years ago when she learned Roe v. Wade, a U.S. Supreme Court decision that protected the constitutional right to an abortion, was decided. She was holding her first child, still an infant, in her arms at her home in Missouri.



“It was awful,” she said, recalling how she looked down at her child as they swayed in a rocking chair.

Sylvia Kiphart, a retired preschool teacher who now serves as coordinator for Assumption’s “Pro-Life” program, said if Amendment 3 passes she hopes a new ballot measure is quickly introduced attempting to overturn it.



“We’ve got to stop them,” she said. “We’ve got to. We can’t keep killing babies.”

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Carthage Ward 5 voters kick Tiffany Cossey off City Council


Carthage Ward 5 voters showed Councilwoman Tiffany Cossey the door today,

The results, which were announced moments ago at the Jasper County Courthouse, showed 730 voting yes on the recall, or 61.5 percent, with 457 voters or 38.5 percent voting for her to remain on the council.

Cossey's ultimately successful push to impeach Mayor Dan Rife and remove City Administrator Greg Dagnan and City Attorney Nate Dally (who resigned) led to the push to remove her from the council.


Republican Mike Kehoe wins Missouri governor’s race over Democrat Crystal Quade

By Rebecca Rivas
Missouri Independent 

Missouri’s next governor will be Mike Kehoe, a Republican who cruised to victory Tuesday night over Democrat Crystal Quade.

(Photo- Mike Kehoe, the Republican candidate for Missouri governor, thanks supporters as he steps onstage for his victory speech the night of the primary election in August- Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

The Associated Press called the race at 8:30 p.m. with 22% of precincts reporting and Kehoe leading Quade 52% to 46%.








“Our victory tonight, it’s a win for our cops, our firefighters, our farmers, and our job creators,” Kehoe told supporters Tuesday night. “It’s a win for students who deserve good schools and a brighter future. It’s a win for families who want safe streets and lower taxes. So, to all Missourians, this is your victory. Enjoy tonight because tomorrow morning, we get to work together for an even safer, stronger, and more prosperous Missouri.”

Kehoe has served six years as lieutenant governor after being appointed to the job by Gov. Mike Parson in 2018.

Kehoe’s biggest hurdle to becoming governor came during a contentious primary in August, when he beat out two fellow Republicans who boasted being more conservative on issues.

Leading up to the primary, Kehoe trailed Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft in most polls until the summer, when the $16 million campaign war chest he amassed enabled him to fill the airwaves, overwhelming opponents and surviving a late onslaught of outside spending.

He won the primary with just under 40% of the vote.

Kehoe’s message was that he was a more interested in governing than politics.

“Missourians are a little bit sick of hate politics,” Kehoe said in a July interview with The Independent.

However, Quade, who has served as Democratic leader in the Missouri House, cautioned voters not to view Kehoe as less “extreme” than his primary rivals.






 

“While folks may say that one (Republican candidate) is more moderate than the other, the reality is Lt. Gov. Kehoe would sign the same pieces of legislation that the extremists in Jefferson City would send him regardless,” Quade told reporters, following the annual governor’s ham breakfast at the Missouri State Fair in August.

Kehoe is the youngest of six children raised by a single mother in St. Louis. His mom worked three jobs to support the family, he said, and when he was old enough he got a job washing cars at a local auto dealership.

When he had enough money, he bought a struggling company that built ambulances, doubling it in size over the next five years to what is now one of the largest ambulance manufacturers in the world.

At the age of 30, he bought a Ford dealership in Jefferson City, putting down roots in the community and building the business over the next two decades. He sold the dealership in 2011.

He was elected to the state Senate in 2012 and was the chamber’s majority leader when Parson appointed him lieutenant governor in 2018. Kehoe won a full term as lieutenant governor in 2020.

As governor, Kehoe has vowed to eliminate the state income tax and develop a crime plan that can be rolled out when the legislature reconvenes in January.

Missouri voters pick Donald Trump over Kamala Harris


By Jason Hancock

Former President Donald Trump won Missouri’s 10 electoral votes for the third straight election on Tuesday, easily defeating Vice President Kamala Harris.

The Associated Press called the race at 8:50 p.m., with Trump leading Harris 51% to 47% with only 30% of precincts reporting.






 

In 2020, Trump won Missouri by 16 percentage points over Joe Biden. Four years earlier, he won by nearly 20 percentage points over Hillary Clinton.

Missouri’s status as a bellwether state ended in 2008, when voters narrowly rejected Democrat Barack Obama in favor of Republican John McCain. Democrats managed to win nearly every statewide office in 2012, but at the same time Republican Mitt Romney carried Missouri by nearly 10 percentage points and Republicans built a super majority in the state legislature.

Since then, the state has continued to steadily trend toward the Republicans, with every statewide office in GOP hands.

Josh Hawley defeats Lucas Kunce in Missouri U.S. Senate race

By Jason Hancock and Clara Bates
Missouri Independent 

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley won a second term on Tuesday, overcoming a well-financed rival in a state that hasn’t elected a Democrat to statewide office since 2018.

(Photo- U.S. Senator Josh Hawley speaks to reporters at the governor’s ham breakfast at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia on Aug. 15.-Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Hawley led Marine veteran Lucas Kunce 51% to 47% when the Associated Press called the race at 9:30 p.m








A former U.S. Supreme Court clerk and law professor at the University of Missouri, Hawley briefly served as the state’s attorney general before jumping into the 2018 U.S. Senate race against incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill.

He survived a national Democratic wave that year and defeated McCaskill by six percentage points.

Since joining the Senate, Hawley has struck a more populist tone, abandoning previous opposition to anti-union “right-to-work” laws and minimum wage hikes. He also championed an unsuccessful push to expand the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act to cover individuals exposed to nuclear material left over from atomic bomb development in St. Louis.

It was his support for the RECA expansion that impressed Debbie Hedgepeth, who is retired and lives in Rolla. She said she supports Hawley because of “what he does for Missouri” and all he believes in.

“He is a man of faith,” she said, “and he’s done a lot for St. Louis, as far as the bill to clean the (nuclear) waste.”

Sam Coryell, who lives in Springfield, works in commercial real estate and say she attends the same church as the Hawleys when they are in Missouri, said Hawley “does a great job in the Senate of holding our leaders, both Republican and Democrat, accountable.”

Hawley was criticized in 2021 for expressing support for Jan. 6 rioters shortly before they stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overturn Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump. He was later captured on video running through the Capitol to escape the mob.

He has defended his decision to object to the certification of the 2020 presidential election, despite there being no evidence of wrongdoing that would have impacted the outcome of that race.

In his campaign for re-election, Hawley worked to paint Kunce as an extremist, highlighting the Democrat’s support for transgender rights and slamming his call for the country to transition off of fossil fuels.






 

Hawley also openly mocked Kunce after a reporter was injured by a bullet fragment at one of his shooting-range campaign events, releasing a television ad saying Kunce “can’t shoot straight” and calling him a “reckless liberal.”

In turn, Kunce hammered Hawley as an out-of-touch plutocrat, pointing out that Hawley’s campaign spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on private plane flights across the state after attacking McCaskill for the same thing in 2018.

Hawley also caught flak for reports that he only rarely visited Missouri during his six years in the Senate.

In the end, despite being outraised by Kunce, Hawley emerged victorious.

Parson signs executive order activating emergency response to flooding, severe weather


(From Gov. Mike Parson)

Today, Governor Mike Parson signed Executive Order 24-14 activating the Missouri State Emergency Operations Plan in response to flooding and severe weather. Parts of Missouri have already sustained flood and storm damage with additional impacts expected as river levels begin to crest and floodwaters recede.

“With several areas of Missouri already impacted by this week’s storms and heavy rainfall, we want to ensure state resources are available should further disruptions or damage occur,” Governor Parson said. 






“This action enables the state to be better prepared and ready to assist our communities with response and recovery. We urge Missourians to follow the direction of local authorities and emergency managers, use extra caution on the roads, and never drive into floodwaters.”

Executive Order 24-14 will expire on December 5, 2024, unless otherwise terminated or extended. To view Executive Order 24-14, click here.

Monday, November 04, 2024

Neosho man accused of chasing relative two blocks with a machete, threatening to kill him


No one knows why, according to the probable cause statement, but Km M. Narian (DOB 1966), Neosho, became upset during an argument about a fan Saturday, grabbed a machete and yelled at a relative, "I'm going to kill you."

Narian chased the relative two blocks but did not catch up with him, the probable cause statement said.






The Newton County Prosecuting Attorney's office filed a felony third degree domestic assault charge against Narian. Bond was set at $1,500 cash.

The case was investigated by the Neosho Police Department.



Webb City man allegedly beat girlfriend while she was driving on Rangeline


The Newton County Prosecuting Attorney's office filed a felony child abuse charge against a Webb City man who allegedly beat his 16-year-old girlfriend while she was driving on Rangeline Sunday.

A warrant was issued today for the arrest for Noah Duley, 18, with bond set at $3,500 cash or surety. A condition of the bond is that Duley is to have no contact with the alleged victim.







The alleged crime began in the parking lot at Freeman West Hospital with Duley "slapping, punching and slapping" the girl, according to the probable cause statement.

From the statement:

V1 left the parking lot of Freeman Hospital and began traveling east bound on W 32nd Street and then to S Range Line Road. W 32nd Street is a four-lane highway with a turning center lane. The speed limit is 40 mph with moderate to heavy traffic during the day. S Range Line Road is a four-lane road with a center turning lane in some areas and a raised concrete median in other areas. 







While V1 was driving, Noah continued to strike V1 with an open hand to the right-side of her face. V1 advised some strikes were forceful enough that her head would then strike the driver-side window. V1 would “black-out” at times while driving due to the force of strikes from Noah.  

V1 feared crashing so she pulled off the roadway on S Range Line Road. 

V1 is a 16-year-old juvenile. Noah and V1 are boyfriend / girlfriend and involved in a romantic relationship

Josh Hawley, Lucas Kunce make final TV ad buys in Missouri U.S. Senate race


By Rudi Keller

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Lucas Kunce closed out his campaign with four days of television ads costing $366,000 while incumbent Republican Josh Hawley is making his final argument with $325,000 of ads during Monday night’s Kansas City Chiefs game.

Kunce and Hawley are the only candidates in a statewide election who have been airing broadcast ads continually since the August primary. Tracking by The Independent shows Hawley’s campaign has spent $5.5 million on broadcast ads, with a PAC called Show Me Strong adding $2.7 million to his quest for a second term. Kunce has spent $7.7 million on broadcast ads, with a PAC called Patriots Prevail expending $373,000.








Hawley has spent almost $26 million since taking office in 2019 to retain his seat. Of that amount, $15.5 million has been spent since the start of 2023, when Kunce began his campaign. The Democrat has spent $20 million to unseat Hawley, including more than $2 million on digital messaging.

For the final 10 days of the campaign, Hawley outspent Kunce on broadcast ads, with about $971,000 in television and radio spots compared to $854,000 for the Democrat. Kunce will have more ads aired because he did not buy many ads on Monday night, where a single 30-second spot cost Hawley as much as $50,000, depending on the market.

It is a far different campaign from the 2018 election where Hawley defeated incumbent U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill. That year, Hawley and McCaskill combined to spend about $50 million, with about $39 million raised and spent by McCaskill. Outside groups spent $76 million more, according to the campaign finance tracking site Open Secrets.

Voters have one more day of “no excuse absentee” voting on Monday before polls open at 6 a.m. Tuesday. Polls close at 7 p.m. and anyone in line by 7 p.m. will be allowed to vote.








Voters must have a non-expired Missouri or federally-issued identification with their photo and birthdate.

To be sure of where to vote, go to the secretary of state’s website where you can check your registration and also see a sample ballot.

Along with the U.S. Senate race, every voter will have five other statewide contests on their ballot – governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, state treasurer and attorney general. Except for the Republican nominee for governor, Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe, and the Democratic contender, state Rep. Crystal Quade, the statewide campaigns have been virtually invisible on television. Kehoe purchased just under $1 million of broadcast ads that ran during the final two weeks of the campaign and Quade has put about $750,000 worth of ads on the air.

Every voter will have six statewide ballot questions to go along with the six statewide candidate campaigns. While statewide candidates haven’t had the cash to go on the air, the campaigns to convince voters to approve Amendment 2 for sports wagering, legalize abortion with Amendment 3 and approve an increase in the minimum wage on Proposition A have spent more than $100 million.

The committee backing Amendment 2, Winning for Missouri Education, raised $40.8 million, a record for a ballot measure campaign. Backers of abortion rights, Missourians for Constitutional Freedom, will also break the previous record of $31 million, set in 2006, when the final accounting is made on the campaign.

The effort to defeat Amendment 3 was boosted by a late contribution of $1 million from The Concord Fund, a group associated with conservative activist Leonard Leo. The Vote No On 3 used the funds to boost a late television campaign in the St. Louis and Kansas City markets.








Every voter in the state also has a vote for the lawmaker for their district in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Missouri House. The 2nd Congressional District is the only one with a challenger airing broadcast ads against the incumbent, with Democrat Ray Hartmann, one of Missouri’s best known political commentators, challenging incumbent U.S. Rep. Ann Wagner.

While most of the 163 MIssouri House districts are also considered non-competitive between the parties — there are 53 seats where no one filed from the opposition party — there are a handful of contests that will determine if the GOP can maintain its supermajority of more than two-thirds of the seats.

Every voter will also have two Missouri Supreme Court judges, Kelly Broniec and Ginger Gooch, on their ballots for retention votes. If voters approve the appointments, each will have 12-year terms before they are on the ballot again.