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You are here: Home / Archives for governor

Nebraska Election 2014: Candidate Profiles

Originally published October 26, 2014, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated July 21, 2015. 2 Comments

Nebraska Election 2014: Candidate Profiles

Be sure to read the text below the list for important notes about these profiles. Simply click anywhere within the gray area to toggle the candidate lists open and shut. If you’d like to see (view / download / print) a sample Lancaster County ballot, while reviewing these profiles, click HERE. General sample ballots, listing […]

Filed Under: 2014 Elections, Featured Tagged With: 2014 election, attorney general, candidates, challengers, congress, congressmen, democrats, Elections, governor, incumbents, independents, legislature, nebraska, republicans, secretary of state, state, state auditor, state senators, statewide ballot, u.s. senate, Unicameral, voting records

Ruling: State Lawsuit Against Illegal ObamaCare IRS Rule Can Proceed

Originally published September 12, 2013, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated July 21, 2015. 2 Comments

Ruling: State Lawsuit Against Illegal ObamaCare IRS Rule Can Proceed

On August 11, 2013, a federal judge ruled that the State of Oklahoma has standing to proceed with a lawsuit challenging an Internal Revenue Service rule issued in May 2012 regarding premium subsidies in the form of tax credits and penalties delivered through the Affordable Care Act’s insurance exchange provisions. Oklahoma’s Attorney General Scott Pruitt […]

Filed Under: Featured, Federal Legislation, Health Care, Legal Limit, State Sovereignty Tagged With: aca, attorney general, attorneys general, congress, defund, governor, governors, health care law, insurance exchanges, irs, jon bruning, jonathan adler, lawsuit, legislators, litigation, michael cannon, nfib v sebelius, obamacare, oklahoma, ppaca, state senators

Health Care Reform: Republicans Helping Implementation (For Our Own Good)

Originally published December 6, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated July 21, 2015. 3 Comments

Health Care Reform: Republicans Helping Implementation (For Our Own Good)

“The essence of Government is power; and power, lodged as it must be in human hands, will ever be liable to abuse.” ~ James Madison, 1829 So, all quiet on the health care front? Definitely not. There were recent news reports about the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to consolidate and hear several health care law […]

Filed Under: 2010 Election, Ben Nelson, Big Brother Government, Congress, Data Gathering, Featured, Federal, Federal Legislation, Governor, Health Care, Legal Limit, Like Drunken Sailors, Nebraska, Senators, State Legislation, State Sovereignty, Stimulus, US House, US Senate, Welfare Tagged With: 2010, 26 states, adrian smith, attorneys general, attorneys general lawsuit, commerce clause, congressional repeal of health care, constitutional, constitutionality, cornhusker kickback, cutting state budgets, dave heineman, de-fund, department of justice, doj, election issues, expanding medicaid programs, facts about health care law, february 2009 stimulus bill, federal court, federal government, florida, gop congress repeal, governor, governors, Health Care, health care court cases, health care implemenation, health care law, health care lawsuit, health care opposition, health care reform, health care setup, health care stimulus provisions, health care unconstitutional, healthcare, healthcare law, healthcare reform, house repeal health care, implementation of health care law, individual mandate, insurance exchanges, interposition, jeff fortenberry, jeremy nordquist, judge roger vinson, justice department, lee terry, local focus, march 21 2010, march 3 ruling, medicaid, medicaid expansion, medicaid program, motion to clarify, nanny state, ne unicameral, nebraska, nebraska gop, nebraska governor, nebraska health care, nebraska tea party, nebraska teaparty, nebraska unicameral, northern district, obama care, obamacare, opposition to health care law implementation, opt-out clause in health care law, original meaning, paca, party politics, repeal, roger vinson, ruling in health care case, senator ben nelson, state budget cuts, state budgets, state government, state implementation of health care, state legislators, state legislatures, state officials, state senators, state sovereignty, states are implementing health care law, stay in health care case, stopping health care, stopping the health care law, supreme court, the nullification debate, truths about health care law, unfunded mandates, universal health care, untold truths about health care law, vinson, welfare programs, welfare state

Nullification: Are States Sitting Ducks or Willing Accomplices?

Originally published March 24, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. 3 Comments

Nullification: Are States Sitting Ducks or Willing Accomplices?

This article is part of an ongoing series about the concept of nullification by states; the idea that individual states can declare a federal law or regulation unconstitutional, and therefore, refuse to implement it. See the bottom of this article for a complete list of series’ articles. This article explores the second reason why I […]

Filed Under: Governor, Health Care, Nebraska, Senators, State Sovereignty, Tenth Amendment, Unicameral Tagged With: 10th Amendment, antonin scalia, attorneys general lawsuits, balanced federalism, bureaucracy, bureaucrats, commerce clause, Constitution, dual federalism, dual sovereignty, effectiveness of nullification, federal aid to states, federal debt, federal deficit, federal funding, florida court, general welfare clause, governor, governors, gregory v ashcroft, growth of government, health care implementation, health care law, healthcare law, interposition, judge roger vinson, justice scalia, legislators, lopez v united states, myths about nullification, necessary and proper clause, northern district, nullification, nullification series, obamacare, printz v united states, state governments, state senators, state sovereignty, states, stopping obamacare, supreme court, supreme court rulings, supreme court state sovereignty, Tenth Amendment, the nullification debate, the states, unconstitutional, us constitution

Nullification: Are State Level Officials Really Opposed to Federal Encroachment?

Originally published March 23, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. 4 Comments

Nullification: Are State Level Officials Really Opposed to Federal Encroachment?

This is Part 4 in an ongoing series about a the concept of nullification by states; the idea that individual states can declare a federal law or regulation unconstitutional and, therefore, refuse to implement it. See the bottom of this article for a complete series list.  My prior opinion, that nullification is a legitimate and Constitutional […]

Filed Under: Governor, Senators, State Sovereignty, Tenth Amendment, Unicameral Tagged With: 10th Amendment, 2010 election nebraska, 2010 election results, american recovery and reinvestment act, arra, attorneys general lawsuits, balancing government budgets, bureaucracy, bureaucrats, comparative research council, cutting spending, dave heineman, defined benefits plan, entitlement, entitlements, federal budget, federal deficit, federal encroachment, federal funding, federal government aid to state, gin nullification series, government goodies, governor, gross public debt, growth of government, health care court cases, health care in stimulus bill, health care law, health care nullification, health care unconstitutional, health freedom act, health information technology, healthcare, healthcare lawsuits, healthcare unconstitutional, implementation, insurance exchanges, lobbyists, march 2010, medicaid, nebraska, nebraska unicameral, nullification, obamacare, political benefits, political organizations, political power, sacred cows, state budget shortfalls, state budgets, state legislature, state legislatures, state sovereignty, states moving to implement health care, stimulus bill, Tenth Amendment, us government spending, welfare

Nullification Measures Not Stopping Health Care Implementation (Think Idaho)

Originally published March 15, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. Leave a Comment

Nullification Measures Not Stopping Health Care Implementation (Think Idaho)

This is an ongoing series about the issue of nullification. For Part 1, click HERE. For Part 2, click HERE, and see the bottom of the article for a complete list. Idaho may be the best example of an action by a state to nullify the health care law. Both houses of the State Legislature […]

Filed Under: Governor, Health Care, Nebraska, Senators, State Legislation, State Sovereignty, Uncategorized, Unicameral Tagged With: alaska, attorneys general lawsuits, comparative research council, dave heineman, february 18 health care grants, federal grants for health care, florida court case, gin nullification series, governor, governor heineman, governor otter, governor parnell, health care court cases, health care in stimulus bill, health care law, health care nullification, health care unconstitutional, health freedom act, health information technology, healthcare, healthcare lawsuits, healthcare unconstitutional, idaho, implementation, insurance exchanges, judge roger vinson, lb515, march 2010, medicaid, nebraska, nebraska unicameral, northern district court of florida, nullification, obamacare, state legislature, state legislatures, states moving to implement health care

History Has Proven Nullification a Failure – Just Look at REAL ID

Originally published March 14, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. 7 Comments

History Has Proven Nullification a Failure – Just Look at REAL ID

This is Part 2 in a continuing series on nullification. For Part 1, click HERE. In Part 1, I explained that in the past year, I’ve come to realize that nullification is not a solution that should be pursued by the states. That change of opinion, the result of much research and reflection, includes a […]

Filed Under: Biometrics, Legal Limit, REAL ID, State Sovereignty Tagged With: 2007 nebraska resolution real id, attorney general, attorneys general, balanced federalism, bill of rights, biometrics, chips in driver's licenses, driver's license, federalism, fifth amendment, fourth amendment, governor, governors, history of nullification, history of real id, interposition, jurisdiction, law enforcement, lr28 real id, national id card, nebraska governor, nebraska politics, nebraska real id, nullification, nullification by states, nullification debate, personal information, personal privacy, politics, printz vs united states, real id, state action on nullification, state legislatures, Unicameral

Nullification NOT the Answer for Health Care (or anything else)

Originally published March 13, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. 3 Comments

Nullification NOT the Answer for Health Care (or anything else)

This is the first installment in a series about nullification – see the bottom of this article for a complete list. On March 21, 2010 – I stood on an improvised stage (the back of a pickup truck) located between the State Capitol and the Governor’s mansion at GiN’s flash rally “Kill or Nullify the […]

Filed Under: Events, Featured, Health Care, State Legislation, State Sovereignty, Tenth Amendment Tagged With: 10th Amendment, constitutional, constitutionality, cornhusker kickback, dave heineman, de-fund, federal government, federal tyranny, gin rallies, governor, governors, grassroots action, grassroots activists, Grassroots in Nebraska, Health Care, health care implemenation, health care law, health care opposition, healthcare, interposition, kill or nullify the bill, local focus, march 21 2010, medicaid, nebraska tea party, nebraska teaparty, nebraska unicameral, nullifcation series, nullification, obamacare, opposition to health care law implementation, original meaning, repeal, republic v democracy, senator ben nelson, state budgets, state government, state officials, state senators, state sovereignty, tea party rallies, teaparty rallies, Tenth Amendment, tenth amendment center, the nullification debate, tyranny of federal government, unfunded mandates, virginia and kentucky resolutions

Wisconsin Legislation: Union Busting or Common Sense?

Originally published February 19, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated October 13, 2012. 7 Comments

Wisconsin Legislation: Union Busting or Common Sense?

As  events have continued to unfold in Wisconsin this week surrounding legislation that would do away with collective bargaining between government entities and public employees in determining benefits, I have surveyed some of the news coverage. Among the more fascinating reports I watched or read included a woman holding a sign that said, “I’d rather […]

Filed Under: Featured, In the News, Videos Tagged With: bus in, collective bargaining, day of rage, democratic lawmakers, ed schulz, governor, lawrence o'donnel, msnbc, protests in wisconsin, public employees, State Capitol, teacher contracts, teacher strikes, teacher walkouts, teachers unions, wisconsin, wisconsin budget shortfall, wisconsin legislature

Comment on GiN Site Reveals Troubling Attitudes of Too Many

Originally published February 10, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated February 10, 2011. 1 Comment

Comment on GiN Site Reveals Troubling Attitudes of Too Many

“Unions exist to protect workers and ensure that our children receive a quality education and that those who work for the state and educate your children live healthy, decent lives. I am opposed to CIR reform. The CIR is not the source of the problem. CEO salaries are the source of the problem.” The above […]

Filed Under: Featured, State Legislation, Unicameral Tagged With: agriculture subsidies, ceo, cir, cir changes, cir reform, class warfare, federal funding, government budgets, government unions, governor, home schooling, homeschooling, income brackets, income tax, income taxation, industrial relations act, lea, Legislation, legislator, legislature, nanny state, national educaton association, nea, nebraska, nebraska budget, nebraska economy, nebraska state education association, nsea, private schools, progressive income tax, public education, public employee unionization, public schools, redistribution of wealth, state budget, state employee collective bargaining act, teachers unions, Unicameral, unionized public employees, unionized workers, welfare state

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Archives

SO, we had a 10th Amendment resolution, huh?

And how's that working out for us?
GiN's Nullification Series provides a hint:
  1. Nullification Not the Answer for Health Care
  2. History Has Proven Nullification a Failure: Just Look at REAL ID
  3. Nullification Measures Not Stopping Health Care Implementation (Think Idaho)
  4. Nullification: Are State Level Officials Really Opposed to Federal Encroachment?

Health Care Archive

GiN health care graphic
  • Health Care Law Achilles Heel? A Growing Legal Morass
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