Tag: Sen. Sherrod Brown

  • Before leaving Washington, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown restores retirement benefits for public workers

    Before leaving Washington, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown restores retirement benefits for public workers

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    On his way out of town, Ohio Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown was able to notch one final long-sought legislative victory that will benefit public sector workers in Ohio and around the country. The Social Security Fairness Act ensures former government workers like police, firefighters and teachers can collect their full retirement benefits by repealing two provisions that reduce social security payouts.

    Many public sector workers aren’t covered by Social Security because their employer runs a pension program for their retirement. But eventually, a lot of those workers move on to other jobs that do pay into the Social Security system. Even though many of them end up working the requisite 40 quarters to be fully eligible for Social Security benefits, the program reduces their payouts because they’re also collecting retirement benefits from their other pension program.

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    William Johnson, who heads up the National Association of Police Organizations explained, “Most police officers must retire after specific time served, usually in their early to mid-fifties, (but) many look for new opportunities to serve their community.”

    Those workers are penalized by what’s known as the Windfall Elimination Provision, he explained.

    “Instead of receiving full support from their rightfully earned Social Security retirement benefit, their pension heavily offsets it, thus vastly reducing the amount they receive,” Johnson said.

    Surviving spouses can come off even worse though. The Government Pension Offset requires reductions in Social Security dependent benefits if one spouse receives benefits from a public pension. Johnson argued that offset often results in “eliminating most or all of the payment.”

    Those provision were approved by lawmakers in the 1970s and 80s in a bid to keep the program solvent.

    In all, Brown’s office said, the reductions affect 3 million Americans including almost a quarter million Ohioans.

     U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-OH, leading a panel discussion on public workers’ Social Security benefits. (Photo by Nick Evans for Ohio Capital Journal.) 

    How we got here

    Following an election in which Republicans criticized Brown’s long service in Washington, passage of the Social Security Fairness Act offers one data point in favor of experience. Brown held a field hearing in Columbus discussing the proposal earlier this year and he’s been working to pass it since serving in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    He last served in that chamber 17 years ago.

    In a press release following the vote Brown described working for years to eventually cobble together more than 60 cosponsors.

    “We have spent decades working to pass this legislation and tonight is a victory for all the public servants who will finally get the Social Security they have earned,” he said. “Tonight, Congress ensured that police officers, firefighters, teachers, and public servants across Ohio will be able to retire with the Social Security they spent their lives paying into.”

    Brown’s effort has also been the beneficiary of shifting attitudes in the Republican Party. For many, many years, a core tenet of Republican politics was searching for a way to get Social Security spending under control. Former House Speaker Paul Ryan’s chief legislative goal was privatizing the program. More recently U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, R-FL, proposed a Rescue America Plan in 2023 that would sunset Social Security and Medicare.

    But since the emergence of Donald Trump as the leader of the Republican Party, efforts to overhaul the retirement program have largely taken a back seat. Within weeks of introducing his plan, for instance, Scott backtracked on sunsetting Social Security and Medicare. Last week, he even voted in favor of the Social Security Fairness Act.

    It’s not hard to see why. With Trump leading the party there’s no longer a top-down rhetorical push for cutting spending on a popular program. At the same time, traditionally Republican-leaning constituencies like police have a strong case that it’s unfair to limit Social Security benefits they earned simply because they earned other benefits from a different career.

    All the same, the measure does nothing to improve the long-term balance sheet for Social Security. The most recent report on the Social Security Trust Fund puts its depletion date at 2033. Meanwhile, although Trump has not proposed cutting retirement benefits he has proposed cutting the taxes that pay for that trust fund—potentially burning through its reserves more quickly.

    Reactions

    In the moment however, passage of the bill was met with praise from organizations representing public sector workers. National Fraternal Order of Police President Patrick Yoes argued the WEP and GPO are “inherently unfair provisions that unjustly penalize our nation’s public employees.”

    “No one, even those who did not vote for our bill today, argued that the provisions treated workers fairly,” he went on. “If this scheme were being run by a pension board or private money management group, instead of the social security administration, they would not call it an elimination of a windfall or an offset — it would be considered embezzlement.”

    International Association of Fire Fighters General President Edward Kelly chimed in that “for over 40 years,” firefighters and other public workers have had retirement benefits “stolen” by Congress.

    “But today,” he said, “the United States Senate, in a rarely seen bipartisan effort, stood up to say, ‘No more,’ voting to ensure retirees finally get the benefits they paid into and earned.”

    Ohio Education Association President Scott DiMauro said, “for too long, the federal government has failed to provide the full Social Security benefits many public school educators earned.”

    “For too long,” he added, “potentially great educators have chosen not to enter this profession because they would lose much of the Social Security benefits they had previously earned if they entered a life of public service. That changes now.”

    Follow OCJ Reporter Nick Evans on Twitter.

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    Nick Evans
    Nick Evans

    Nick Evans has spent the past seven years reporting for NPR member stations in Florida and Ohio. He got his start in Tallahassee, covering issues like redistricting, same sex marriage and medical marijuana. Since arriving in Columbus in 2018, he has covered everything from city council to football. His work on Ohio politics and local policing have been featured numerous times on NPR.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Vance, Moreno blamed “fascist” rhetoric for Trump shooting. Both said similar things — about Trump

    Vance, Moreno blamed “fascist” rhetoric for Trump shooting. Both said similar things — about Trump

    BY:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Just after a 20-year-old shooter made an attempt on former President Donald Trump’s life last Saturday, a host of Republicans rushed to blame Democrats and the media for the shooting.

    They include Ohio U.S. Senator and vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance and Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bernie Moreno. They also include Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

    Rep. Mike Collins of Georgia even posted on X that the district attorney of Butler County, Pennsylvania, where the shooting took place, should file criminal charges against President Joe Biden.

    All rushed to judgment in the hours after the shooting. Some did so even before the shooter’s identity had been released. Yet four days later, the shooter’s motives are unknown and even the basics about his politics remain vague.

    But one fact seems clear. The two most prominent Ohio players in the post-shooting blame game have in the past compared Trump to the most noxious fascist of them all — Adolph Hitler.

    Spokespeople for Vance and Moreno didn’t respond to requests for comment on statements the two made about Trump, whom they were against before they were for.

    On Saturday, just two hours after a 20-year-old took shots at Trump, Vance took to X to blame Biden.

    “Today is not just some isolated incident,” he wrote. “The central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to President Trump’s attempted assassination.”

    In February 2016, Vance sent a text message to a former Yale Law School classmate in which he made an even starker comparison about Trump.

    Vance said he’d been going “back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn’t be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he’s America’s Hitler.”

    Trump is under federal indictment on charges that he tried to steal an election that he lost, he’s called to “terminate” the Constitution over his loss, he’s embraced political violence and police brutality — and he’s called his political opponents “vermin.”

    In saying — repeatedly — that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country” the former president clearly rhymed with Hitler, who several times used the same metaphor to attack Jews and any other “race” that he considered inferior to “Aryans.” Of Jewish men who “allow” Jewish women to marry Christians, Hitler said, “He poisons the blood of others but preserves his own blood unadulterated.”

    It might seem that some of the rhetoric stems from Trump’s own words and actions. It might also seem that the rush to blame others for the shooting was really an attempt to bully people from speaking publicly about Trump’s anti-democratic conduct.

    But to Moreno, the GOP challenger to Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, blame for last week’s shooting lies with the media and Democrats.

    “They’ve been calling (Trump) Hitler for eight years,” Moreno said in a recording that his campaign posted on X. “The shooter is 20 years old. From the time he was 12 years old, they’ve been telling him (Trump) is the reincarnation of Adolph Hitler. If you could take a shot at Adolph Hitler in 1935, would you be a good person or a bad person? That’s how (the shooter) viewed it. That’s on them. It’s on them, meaning the Democrats, and also on the mainstream media.”

    But on Moreno’s Twitter account in 2016, Moreno himself comparing Trump to Hitler. In a now deleted post, the future Senate candidate retweeted a poll featuring Trump and Hitler, and he appended a comment.

    “He attacked immigrants, tries to silence the press, & appeals to the darkest part of human nature,” it said.

    Moreno didn’t say to which man he was referring. But his use of the present tense is telling, given the fact that Hitler was 70 years dead at that point.

    Moreno’s spokeswoman was asked for examples of the press comparing Trump to Hitler for the past eight years. She was also asked whether Moreno worried that blaming press and political opponents for Trump’s attempted assassination would paint targets on their backs, given all the armed, unstable people there are.

    She didn’t respond.


    Marty Schladen
    MARTY SCHLADEN

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Sen Brown announces more than $21.1 million in affordable housing funds for Ohio

    Sen Brown announces more than $21.1 million in affordable housing funds for Ohio

    Investment is a Part of the Housing Trust Fund and Will Help Create and Preserve Affordable Housing for Ohioans

    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) – Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs – announced that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has awarded Ohio $21,186,076 through the national Housing Trust Fund to help create and preserve safe, affordable housing for low-income households and families experiencing homelessness.

    U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) (provided photo)

    “Even before the pandemic, one in four renters in Ohio were paying over half of their incomes on housing, leaving many to choose between buying groceries or paying rent,” said Brown. “This Housing Trust Fund grant will provide over $21 million to create and preserve affordable housing for Ohioans, and give more families a stable foundation for accessing healthcare, jobs, and educational opportunities.”

    Ohio’s affordable housing providers can use the funds from this investment for property acquisition, site improvements and development hard costs, demolition, relocation assistance, financing costs, and operating cost assistance for rental housing. The funds will be allocated by the Ohio Housing Finance Agency. 

    Brown has been a longtime supporter of the Housing Trust Fund, which was created by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 and is funded by contributions from Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. However, after its creation, the Housing Trust Fund was not consistently funded as intended, but, in December 2014, at Brown’s request, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to begin regular contributions.   

    And in 2019, following inexplicable delays in the release of these funds by the Trump Administration’s acting GSE regulator, Brown demanded that the Administration quickly disburse the funds so they can be used to create and preserve affordable housing.

  • Sen. Sherrod Brown issues statement justifying impeachment vote of “Guilty”

    Sen. Sherrod Brown issues statement justifying impeachment vote of “Guilty”

    In the 57-43 vote, seven Republicans joined every Senate Democrat and independent in support of convicting Trump. Ohio Republican U.S. Sen. Rob Portman voted to acquit Trump. Ohio Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown voted to convict.

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    by  Tyler Buchanan and Ohio Capital Journal

    David DeVillers, the U.S. Attorney whose office has led the prosecution of former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, will soon be replaced, Sen. Sherrod Brown confirmed on Thursday.

    DeVillers was appointed to the position by President Donald Trump and confirmed by a Republican-led U.S. Senate in 2019. Brown told reporters that both U.S. Attorney positions in Ohio would be replaced with Democrats regaining control of the White House and U.S. Senate.

    The U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio already resigned earlier this month. DeVillers will be staying on until a successor is appointed and confirmed, according to Brown’s office. 

    While it is common for presidents to replace federal attorneys upon taking office, some had called for the Biden administration to keep DeVillers in his post. 

    “Every president is entitled to, with Senate approval, his own team of federal prosecutors,” wrote Mark Weaver, a former deputy attorney general of Ohio, in a Columbus Dispatch guest column last month. “However, as Ohioans know, DeVillers is leading an aggressive and much-needed effort to stem the tide of pernicious public corruption that shatters faith in government.”

    Brown has issued a call for applicants to the U.S. Attorney position, with the web page stating he “will be working to recommend candidates to the Biden Administration.”

    DeVillers became the face of the Householder prosecution when he appeared at a press conference to announce racketeering charges against the speaker and four of his political operatives. The five were arrested July 21 as part of an alleged $61 million bribery scheme to get a $1.3 billion nuclear bailout bill enacted in 2019, which DeVillers described as being “likely the largest bribery and money-laundering scheme ever in the state of Ohio.”

    Two of those charged have since pleaded guilty, while the others (including Householder) have pleaded not guilty and await trial. 

    More recently, DeVillers pledged justice would be served against anyone from the Southern District of Ohio who committed crimes during the attempted U.S. Capitol insurrection: