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Minneapolis Mayor R.T.Rybak made an honest gubernatorial candidate of himself on Thursday, filing the requisite candidacy paperwork with the state Campaign Finance Board. But that wasn't fast enough for the board, which rapped him Friday for charging his mayoral reelection campaign $26,500 for a poll that looked, walked and quacked like a gubernatorial campaign tool.
Bully for the board, whose thankless job it is to uphold and enforce campaign laws that politicians often find inconvenient. The campaign filing requirement that Rybak ran afoul of is fundamentally about openness and transparency in government.
Rybak should have played it straight, and filed as a candidate for governor before last week.
LORI STURDEVANT
Minnesota Congressional Rep. Michele Bachmann wasn't the only regional politician to rip health care reform bills this week. Iowa's Republican Sen. Charles Grassley also sent out a long, long screed warning that the bills amount to an "unprecedented government take-over of our nation's health care system."
Drawing most of the senator's ire is the list of new responsibilities delegated to the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services in the current Senate HELP committee bill. I'm in the same boat as Grassley, still plowing through these massive pieces of legislation. But my initial take is that this has more to do with the practicalities of implementing reforms. Grassley, who raged against nonexistent death panels last summer, sees something far more sinister: "If it isn't a government takeover of our health care system, why does the word "Secretary" appear 982 times in this bill? Maybe the other side needs a reminder that the Secretary of HHS is an agent of the federal government."
To read the Senate HELP committee bill and make your own assessment, go to tinyurl.com/m6ez6x.
JILL BURCUM
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