Fred O’Neill writes:
Some have been complaining that Ohio 95th District State Representative Andy Thompson is being treated “unfairly” by his opponents. At least one local writer has labeled such critics as “Marxists and communists.”
Thompson is one of several Republican office-holders elected in 2010 on the basis of their promises to create jobs and restore economic stability in southeast Ohio after the 2008 economic meltdown. What has has done to fulfill his promise?
Apparently, he has spent most of the last four years promoting a rather juvenile Glenn Beck-sponsored group called the “9-12 Project” which mainly opposes inheritance or capital-gains taxes (not sales or payroll taxes), promotes Birch Society-type stunts, and seeks to abolish nearly all federal programs up to and including Social Security and Medicare. On behalf of another extremist group, the Koch Brothers-sponsored Competitive Enterprise Institute, Thompson has opposed all government oversight of big business and corporate polluters, all forms of public-assistance for low-wage earners, and poor or unemployed citizens. Meanwhile, he has promoted “corporate welfare” for major business interests and corporate malefactors.
Thompson promoted SB-5, the Kasich-sponsored attempt to eliminate collective-bargaining rights that was overruled by Ohio voters in 2012. Andy also was a very visible participant (and perhaps instigator) of the loud and nasty October 15, 2012 protest in Marietta against the “Nuns-on-the-Bus,” a highly-respected Catholic organization that worked on behalf of those trapped by poverty and unemployment. Andy and local GOP chairperson and tea-party honcho Leslie Haas spread the false rumor that these activists were “fake nuns” and were “promoting abortion” (this was untrue). When the event later went “viral” on YouTube, it caused much embarrassment for Marietta and the entire area.
Andy’s most-recent stunt has been his 2014 sponsorship of HB-597, a bill that started as an attempt to eliminate Common Core standards from Ohio public schools, but (since CCS only pertains to math and reading standards) goes far beyond that effort to dictating what can or cannot be taught in science, literature, and history classes in all Ohio schools. This bill promotes “creationism”, removes “controversial” figures like Dr. Martin Luther King from history textbooks, and (in Thompson’s original version) eliminates most “non-English” authors (i.e. Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, Jules Verne, Franz Kafka) from Ohio literature classes.
But what about the “creation” of living-wage jobs for Ohio workers? It seems that Andy has been too busy with his far-right ideological interests to concern himself with such “mundane” matters. Thompson earned his money the “hard way”. He inherited a bird-watcher magazine from his industrious dad.
On November 4, send Andy Thompson back to the birds.