Experts in child sex abuse want to shift the state’s conversation from how to punish offenders, to how to prevent these crimes in the first place. We find out what kids need to know to keep themselves safe.
Bob Kinzel talks with Secretary of State
Deb Markowitz about two election-related bills that have been vetoed,
and their implications for the November election. VPR’s Ross Sneyd
analyzes the top stories this week, and we listen back to some of the voices in the week’s news.
The House has voted to sustain Governor Douglas’s veto of
a campaign finance reform bill by a one-vote margin. Backers of the the legislation said it’s needed to keep
big money out of Vermont politics,
but opponents argued that it gives incumbents an unfair advantage.
Vermont Law School professor Cheryl Hanna helps us look ahead to what
might happen with new campaign finance reform legislation, and
explains why the Supreme Court struck down Vermont’s previous bill.
Hanna speaks with VPR’s Mitch Wertlieb.
It appears that lawmakers are ready to challenge
Governor Jim Douglas once again on the issue of campaign finance reform. That’s because after several hours of debate, the House
gave its approval late today to legislation that the Governor
opposes. The vote was 89 to 41.
The House this week is set to debate a new campaign
finance reform law.
Supporters say the bill will help reduce the influence of
money in Vermont campaigns. But opponents argue it will undermine the role
of political parties, and that the legislation is unconstitutional.
Supporters of a new campaign finance reform bill say their
measure is needed to eliminate "the appearance" of corruption in Vermont
politics.
But opponents of the legislation argue it’s
unconstitutional, and will be overturned by the courts.
The Legislature is eager to pass new campaign finance rules in time for
the 2008 elections. Bob Kinzel’s guests look at the bill’s prospects. Also in the program, news analysis from VPR’s John Dillon, and we hear
from NPR’s Juan Williams. Williams was in Vermont this week to speak
to teachers for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.