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Enough is enough! SC launches ‘Truthful Tuesday’ movement


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Taking a page from the Moral Monday Movement in North Carolina, that has now spread to Georgia, activists in South Carolina have declared “Enough is enough!” and are heading to the SC statehouse on January 14th with these demands:

Expand Medicaid

This year, some 1,300 South Carolinians will die because state lawmakers pushing an extreme agenda refused a federal grant to expand Medicaid.

Fund education

In 2013, K-12 funding was nearly $500 million below what is required by law. Higher education funding is 40% less than in 2002, and tuition at our state colleges is among the nation’s highest.

Protect voting rights

South Carolina has the least-competitive elections in the US, with 80 percent of lawmakers facing no major opposition in general elections. And instead of trying to make voting easier and more accessible, SC’s political elite keep making it harder and less inclusive.

They are asking demonstrators to wear black:

We will wear black as a symbol of mourning, in honor of the 1,300 who will die this year in South Carolina because the state refused to use our tax dollars to expand Medicaid.

The Charleston City Paper reports:

Progressive activists in S.C. to launch ‘Truthful Tuesday’ at State House

Progressive activists across South Carolina will gather at the State House in Columbia next week for ‘Truthful Tuesday’ – an event styled after a series of protests at North Carolina’s capital dubbed Moral Mondays.

“It’s to really put lawmakers on notice regarding the need to expand Medicaid and protect voting rights and to fully fund public education,” says George Hopkins, a College of Charleston history professor and Charleston chapter president of the S.C. Progressive Network. “Hopefully on Wednesday the 15th the headlines across the state will read ‘Citizens Descend on Columbia’ to demand legislators take action on these issues.”

Legislators will return to Columbia on Jan. 14 to begin the second of a two-year legislative session. During the week the Legislature is in session Tuesday through Thursday. Last session, South Carolina became one of several states that chose not to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act healthcare law. Lawmakers have also passed a Voter ID bill, and the last session saw efforts to curb early voting.

The coalition has been convened by:

National Association of Social Workers – SC

SC AFL-CIO

SC Christian Action Council

SC NAACP

SC Progressive Network

The SC Education Association

Get the word out to everyone you can in South Carolina, and if you don’t know anyone there you can still send support.

This is how a movement grows, one day, one person, one group at a time!


8 comments

  1. HappyinVT

    We are Facebook friends so I may have to see if she’s posted anything on this.  I’ll have to have one eye closed because she’s more on the conservative side and at one point was screeching about the $15/hr pay and thinks Betsey McCaughey is a good source for all things Obamacare.  

  2. … the state refused to use our tax dollars to expand Medicaid.

    Teaparty governors are turning down federal money simply to burnish their national party credentials for fund raising purposes. Their turning down that money does not lower the taxes of anyone in South Carolina by a penny … that money, paid into the federal government, simply goes to some other state!! How stupid is that?

    Scott Walker did the same thing in Wisconsin. Besides Medicaid expansion, in 2011 he turned down $100 million in light-rail money (and 7,500 jobs) to show how Austere he was. The money was shipped to California to build their high-speed rail (you’re welcome, San Francisco!) and the private-sector jobs that he declared that he would create 250,000 of (still about 225,000 short), were lost.

    Ideology … and ideology driven by a national party movement … is destroying social safety nets for no reason at all.

    Thanks for posting these, Dee. People-powered politics is where it starts. Electoral success will come if we keep pressing these points.

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