Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 31, 2022

New bills are still being added to the Maryland General Assembly website every day, but we've identified our broad policy priorities for this legislative session. We will continue to fight for equity in healthcare, for major changes to policing and our justice system, for meaningful drug policy reforms that acknowledge the failures of criminalization, and for measures that combat environmental injustice in its many different forms. Check out this week's memo for plenty of exciting advocacy opportunities!

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Congress is back and MD Assembly still churning

CampaignMiscImage_1594309709.6756.pngNews you can use on what our national progressive affiliate People's Action has on the burner -- and what is going down in the Maryland General Assembly. Find pathways and tools to make change below, too...

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 24, 2022

This year’s Maryland General Assembly session is well underway, and we’re calling on our representatives to push for the type of bold, progressive legislation our communities deserve. Check out this week's memo for more on how to get involved with our advocacy efforts, electoral updates, and some critical federal-level action items. 

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Voting rights across the country are under threat as GOP lawmakers continue introducing voter suppression laws that will disenfranchise millions of American voters in the coming elections. The Senate must act with urgency to protect our democratic institutions. Check out this week's memo for more on how to push for critical federal voting rights legislation, some updates from our endorsed candidates from 2022, an exciting grant opportunity led by our incredible volunteer-run Reentry Work Group, and so much more.

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Navigating the legislative tangle, here in Maryland and in DC

apocalypse.jpgThe good news is that Maryland wages are going up fast. The bad news is that state and local governments won’t be able to stay competitive because of their lumbering process. “But rising wages — propelled by an unusual churn in the workforce — are going to make it “incredibly difficult” for state and local governments to attract and retain talent, MM reporter Bruce DePuyt reports. It could take activism and pushback to make sure local governments don’t fall short in providing public services.

Who is responsible for actually thinking ahead, making plans, keep the state on an even keel? The usual suspects in the State House. Let's keep an eye on them and make sure we don't just hear the forlorn sound of a can being kicked down the road... our path to reminding the legislators who they work for begins here. Read on... we have action plans to work on the gridlock in Congress too...



 

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Defend our democracy -- make your voice heard with our representatives

ballot_box.jpgOur democracy is under attack.

 

Voting rights are being restricted by hundreds of voter suppression bills GOP lawmakers have introduced across the county in recent months. These new laws are intentionally designed to make it much more difficult for young people, new voters, and people of color to exercise their democratic right.

 

Take action to keep democracy vital. Call our elected officials and demand an end to voter suppression.



 

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 10, 2022

What a way to start the year, with a big electoral win for our endorsed candidate Edward Burroughs in the special election race for the Prince George's County Council seat in District 8! Check out this week's memo for more on how to get involved with our electoral work, defend voting rights across the country, and challenge our Maryland state leaders to address the current pandemic surge with the urgency it demands.

 

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The legislature kicks off this week. What's happening, what to do.

maryland_state_house.jpgThe General Assembly 2022 Session begins Wednesday. It's an election year. Need we say more? Legislators are not allowed to raise money during the session, but they will be tempted to perform like crazy in hopes of future money between the end of the session in April and the all-important primary elections in late June.

We have some preliminary accounts and tools for navigating that and making sure the people's business, not the lobbyists' business, gets done.

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Anne Arundel may join public Fair Elections effort

ballot_box.jpgThe Anne Arundel County Council has set in motion a path to a public referendum enabling a Small Donor Funded Elections Program to open up the electoral process to candidates not backed by big money. Progressive Maryland along with Common Cause Maryland and the Maryland Public Interest Research Group are cheering this citizen-initiated process, in which AAC would join five other major state jurisdictions in a publicly funded elections process.

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Progressive Maryland's Weekly Memo for Monday, January 3, 2022

coronavirus_image2.jpgDueling messages are swirling around this Thursday's anniversary of Trump's attack on democracy, and we'll be watchful. Meanwhile, Progressive Maryland members have work to do, an annual Membership Assembly this Saturday to prep for and an upcoming General Assembly session. And COVID's not done with us. You'll find what you need to stay safe and take action with your fellow progressives and make real change in Maryland in 2022.

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