we re getting from the person who became governor. what we know is if we can talk about voter suppression and raise the issue of voting protection, then we can start to change how people see and engage in our elections. and writ large, i m excited about having these candidates here in georgia because they need to know georgia is a battleground state, so i want to hear them talk about how much they love georgia before they get on the stage and i want to see them prove it when they come back. after they talk about how much they love joenchgeorgia to what are the issues in georgia you would have a democratic candidate focus on? ? health care is a critical issue. georgia is one of 14 states who refuses to expand medicaid. the governor has rejected the $213 million plan to cover 490,000 people. it s that disconnect between making certain that you serve your people and making certain that you re being a smart steward of their dollars that s causing harm not only in georgia
are the best writers who don t pay their fares it is no longer and misdemeanor people of color were most often affected. how we look at all policies has a very strong equity perspective. seattle public schools realized latino students are suspended at a higher rate than whites but the board did away with suspensions in elementary schools and in the fall they will vote on the 213 million-dollar property tax levy for the libraries so late fines can be eliminated and minorities pay fines much more frequently than other. to teach responsibility. running for city council in hopes to bring back accountability for all. it seems the more checkboxes you have in terms of which category that it makes you more important enough not equity for anybody. despite the increase of homelessness and property
actually doing less to control it? fox news correspondent dan springer has the disturbing details for us from seattle. in an effort to make seattle more just for certain minorities and poor people, leaders have stopped enforcing several laws and frankly routine policies. it s against the law to camp in public, but you would never know it because thousands of people are living in tents. drug possession is still a crime technically, but the city prosecutors won t charge people with a gram or less of the cops move on making arrest for using drugs in the open. after a library audit found people of color and the poor were getting locked out of their accounts more frequently than whites for notng paying late fines, the city decided to eliminate the fine but sincece that will drop revenue voters are being asked to pass a $213 million library levy. officials say the fines are not about personal responsibility. the fines don t teach
homelessness and crime running rampant. so why our those in charge actually doing less to control it? fox news correspondent dan springer has the disturbing details for us from seattle. in an effort to make seattle more just for certain minoritie and poor people, leaders have stopped enforcing several laws and frankly routine policies. it s against the law to camp in public, but you would never know it because thousands of people are living intent drug possession is still a crime technically, but the city prosecutors want charge people with a gram or less of the cops move on making arrest for using drugs in the open. after a library audit from people of color and the poor were getting locked out of thei accounts more frequently than whites for not paying late fines , the city decided to eliminate the fine but since that will drop revenue voters are being asked to pass a $213 million bribery levy officials say the fines are not about personal responsibility.
to drugs. they won t charge people with less than a gram so no fear of jail time and you won t get hauled into court not paying a bus fare and not paying the fine. king county metro no longer treats that as a misdemeanor and minorities and poor people were affected the most. the foundation of how we look at all of our policies has a very strong equity and social justice perspective. the seattle school district said black and latino kids were getting suspended at higher rates than white students. this year did away with suspensions in elementary school and could extend to higher grades next year. in the fall residents will be asked to pass a $213 million property tax levy to allow the libraries to eliminate fines for late book returns. a study found minorities and poor people got locked out of their accounts more frequently than others. critics are starting to fight back.