If we really want to see more progressive voices in the Nebraska Unicameral,
Legislative District 18 - running from Blair to Northwest Omaha - just became a
prime pick-up opportunity in November 2008 after the resignation of State Sen.
Mick Mines only one year into his second term.
As Eric
reports, Mines will be leaving office to set-up shop with his own lobbying
firm. It seems he couldn't wait any longer to cash-in like former Speaker
Kermit Brashear on all the fat lobbying contracts and legislative inexperience
that abound in the post-term limits environment.
Of course, District 18 voters should be annoyed - perhaps even outraged -
that Mines would abandon their interests to exercise his legislative influence
in the name of corporate profits. Every voter across the state, though, should
heed the warnings of this situation, which so well illustrates the dangerous
expansion in corporate influence that has consumed Nebraska politics under the
reigns of Gov. Dave Heineman and his predecessor, Mike Johanns.
Heineman will appoint Mines' successor for the 2008 legislative session. The
example Heineman set with the appointment of Tony Fulton in November 2006
suggests he will look for a long-time partisan ideologue who can be counted on
to serve his corporate agenda.
If that again proves to be the case, this is a district ripe for change where
we must give the people the chance to break Heineman's lock-grip on the
legislature, restoring much-needed balance to our state's democracy.
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