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Request a Demo‘We needed to try something creative’; Here’s why lawmakers are allowing Indy to create a new downtown tax
- An effort to create a taxing district failed in 2018 largely because of opposition from the Indiana Apartment Association
- This year state lawmakers created a new rule permitting Indianapolis leaders to more easily create a district
- It was slipped into the budget after legislative leaders and the governor's office expressed concerns tied to a major state investment into Indianapolis
In the final days of the legislative session, state lawmakers quietly provided the city of Indianapolis with a gift: Mayor Joe Hogsett and the City-County Council gained the power to create a special taxing district in the downtown area.
It is a victory for boosters of Mile Square who have been advocating for a similar district designation for at least five years to pay to improve public spaces, attract new businesses and hold special events. But their efforts failed in 2018, in large part, because of strong opposition from the Indiana Apartment Association that killed a petition drive to create a district.
Now, however, Indianapolis leaders can create the district if they want. No petition signatures are required. That’s because lawmakers created a special carve-out within state law for Indianapolis.
Many observers of the Indiana General Assembly were surprised by the move. The language, inserted into the final version of the state budget bill, was never publicly discussed. Not only that, the Republican supermajority agreed to help local Democrats in a year in which Hogsett is running for reelection against a well-funded Republican candidate. Most years, Indianapolis Democrats are playing defense against bills that would weaken their authority.
The eleventh-hour deal was made possible by the rare bipartisan acknowledgment that the downtown area needs help — not only from the city, but from the state, too.
And while it is true that the creation of a new taxing district could support several quality-of-life improvements and economic initiatives, they are not the main reason the language appeared in the state budget bill.
How the language ended up in the budget bill
The special taxing district language may have emerged in the final moments of this year’s legislative session, but it stems from years of conversations about homelessness.
In 2019, the Indy Chamber led a delegation of local business and government leaders to San Antonio, where they visited a low-barrier homeless shelter. People on the trip envisioned something similar for Indianapolis: a compassionate way to address homelessness by helping people who are unable or unwilling to use faith-based shelters. (One common barrier cited by policymakers, for example, is requiring a commitment to sobriety.)
Since the start of the pandemic, according to an Indiana University Public Policy Institute report, the homeless population has generally grown. They have concentrated in the city’s downtown, advocates say, because that’s where many public services are available.
“The pandemic made it feel like an even more significant, maybe crisis level, situation that we’re still dealing with,” said Taylor Hughes, vice president of policy and strategy at the Indy Chamber. “Coupled with the reality that there aren't as many people downtown for work reasons … That makes the visibility of the challenge stand out that much more.”
In response this year, a bipartisan group of Marion County lawmakers, the Hogsett administration, the Indy Chamber and others asked state lawmakers to financially support the creation of a new shelter in Indianapolis. Those efforts followed several months of meetings on the topic in a task force co-chaired by appointees from the governor and mayor.
Gov. Eric Holcomb’s office and legislative leaders were supportive of a significant capital investment, according to several people interviewed by State Affairs, but they were also concerned: Could Indianapolis find a way to sustain funding for operations in the future?
So a small group of people, led by Indianapolis Republican Sen. Kyle Walker, dusted off some legislative language that had been floating around since at least 2021. That language enables Indianapolis to create a new downtown tax district, which the budget bill identified as an economic enhancement district.
That’s not to be confused with an economic improvement district, which is difficult to implement because it requires a large number of property owners to sign a petition.
The new language, however, skirts some of the red tape — and opposition — that typically appears when new taxing districts are created.
In the final days of the legislative session, budget writers agreed to insert the language into the budget bill as an option for Indianapolis. And then they added a line item to support the capital expenses for a homeless shelter.
The line item in the budget does not specifically mention Indianapolis. It does, however, allocate $20 million — which just so happens to be the amount advocates were seeking. Combined with the $12 million in city dollars that Hogsett has already set aside, the two pools of cash would cover the $32 million in expected capital costs outlined in a feasibility study.
The line item in the state budget, though, comes with a twist: It is structured as a grant program. That way, if Indianapolis stakeholders fail to identify a funding stream for ongoing operations of the homeless shelter — such as the new downtown taxing district — then the state would not necessarily be required to write a check.
Following a bill-signing ceremony for mental health legislation earlier this week, Gov. Holcomb told reporters he supports a state investment into a low-barrier homeless shelter.
“If nothing else, I’m supportive of local communities who are very transparent about their motives. And how can we then be a good partner?” Holcomb said. "How can we both put skin in the game? How can we both turn the cards face up? ... On this front, it's overdue. So yes, I'm not just pleased but proud to take a crack at this with them but understanding that there is local responsibility here."
Which senators championed the language?
Budget negotiations every two years typically contain extensive back-and-forth between the two chambers of the Indiana General Assembly. This year, it was important to the Senate to see both the funding of the homeless shelter and the option for Indianapolis to create the new district.
Walker, who represents parts of Marion and Hamilton counties, stepped forward as the main voice championing the deal.
“The economic enhancement district, along with the low barrier shelter, certainly will go a long way to giving Indianapolis the tools to make downtown Indianapolis more attractive and also provide valuable services to the homeless community,” Walker told State Affairs. “I worked on it pretty extensively in the final days of the session.”
Walker had several conversations with other lawmakers, budget writers, legislative leadership and the governor's office.
The language garnered broad support in the Senate, but it still required a bipartisan battle in the frenzied final days of the session. Once the Indiana Apartment Association became aware, according to those interviewed by State Affairs, the group moved quickly to lobby lawmakers to strip the language from the bill.
“That person had one job, which was to get this language out of the budget,” Sen. Andrea Hunley, D-Indianapolis, told State Affairs. “And so this was not easy to get through. There were definitely forces that were working against it."
Hunley, who represents the downtown area, described a similar battle in 2018. She was not yet a state senator, but she and her family lived in the Mile Square and went door-to-door collecting signatures on a petition that sought to create the economic improvement district.
“At that time, the apartment lobby stopped it, which was incredibly frustrating,” Hunley told State Affairs. “So we knew that we needed to try something creative.”
Lynne Petersen, president of the powerful Indiana Apartment Association, did not return a call this week from State Affairs. But in an op-ed published by the Indianapolis Business Journal, Petersen criticized the concept: “Imagine our surprise when we learned the Indiana General Assembly granted the Indianapolis City-County Council the authority to levy an additional tax assessment onto businesses and residences downtown to fund some services that presumably property tax dollars already fund.”
Senator cites wide support for district concept
Walker acknowledged the concerns raised by the Indiana Apartment Association, but he emphasized that “the vast majority of businesses and property owners” within the Mile Square are supportive of the creation of a new district. And Walker said he wanted to ensure the legislation contained both guardrails and flexibility.
The guardrails include the creation of an oversight board with representation from downtown property owners as well as appointees from the governor, legislative leadership, mayor and City-County Council leadership.
As for the flexibility? The district can levy taxes in such a way that the costs are proportionate to the benefits, Walker said. The taxing amounts can be different based on the types of properties, too: Maybe residential properties pay one amount, for example, but large commercial properties pay another.
Walker also noted: State lawmakers are not requiring any of it. The legislation, Walker said, simply gives Indianapolis one more option to help the downtown. The ultimate decision is up to local leadership.
“It's a tool, and it could be a very beneficial tool, but not without a tremendous amount of input from stakeholders,” Walker said.
Mayor Hogsett has not publicly endorsed the creation of a downtown taxing district. His administration could theoretically decide instead to set aside money in each year’s city budget to fund the new shelter, but those interviewed by State Affairs shared a fear that it would lead to a decline in public safety spending at a time when Indianapolis is already struggling with homicides, gun violence and a perception that the city is unsafe.
Late last year, however, Hogsett directed $3.5 million in American Rescue Plan dollars to help the downtown area. The money is paying for police overtime, security cameras, cleaning crews and homelessness outreach. Dan Parker, who serves as Hogsett’s chief of staff, suggested the taxing district could provide funding when the federal money runs out.
“If folks want to see it continue into the future, this is one mechanism now available to keep it going,” Parker told State Affairs. “But there needs to be support built for that, and that's the hard work that needs to be done over the coming months.”
Downtown Indy Inc CEO Taylor Schaffer, Hogsett’s former chief of staff, celebrated the proposed taxing district’s potential for Indianapolis, which is the largest city without a dedicated fund for its central business district.
“Those types of sustainable funds really help to come alongside city services and private investment to ensure that a downtown can be responsive and nimble,” Schaffer said, “but also have the level of operations that make sense for that area.”
Contact Ryan Martin on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or at [email protected].
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How this year’s race for lieutenant governor bucks tradition
The usually quiet process of selecting party nominees for lieutenant governor has taken on additional intrigue, as a controversial Republican outsider has challenged the status quo and the Democratic gubernatorial nominee is keeping her options open.
For years, parties have typically rubber-stamped their gubernatorial candidate’s choice for lieutenant governor.
Republican nominee Mike Braun in May announced his choice: state Rep. Julie McGuire, R-Indianapolis. But she will face a challenge from pastor Micah Beckwith, who has campaigned for the nomination for more than a year and claims to have secured support from nearly half of the majority he would need from the party’s 1,800 nominee-deciding delegates.
As Republicans have not lost a statewide election contest in more than a decade, whoever prevails for the lieutenant governor nomination at the June 15 GOP convention will likely become the state’s next number two.
Democrats appear to have a smoother road ahead of their July 13 convention, but gubernatorial candidate Jennifer McCormick has not yet offered up a candidate and recently told State Affairs that “nothing’s off the table,” including selecting a Republican running mate.
Beckwith’s push
Beckwith, pastor of Life Church’s Noblesville campus, told State Affairs he would be campaigning daily for the next five weeks.
“We’re going to try to hit two counties in a day — one in the morning, one in the afternoon. We’ll just be going to county chairs and delegates and letting them ask all the questions,” he said.
He has run for formal office in the past, finishing third in the 2020 Republican primary for the state’s 5th Congressional District. The seat was ultimately captured by Rep. Victoria Spartz.
Beckwith is also a podcast host and may be best known for a tumultuous tenure on the Hamilton East Public Library Board of Trustees, where he pushed for an audit of children’s books. The unpopular plan ultimately collapsed, and the trustees who pushed for it soon left the board.
Beckwith went public with his lieutenant governor candidacy as he left the board and has since barnstormed the state hoping to court potential delegates. His website stresses he is seeking to give Republicans another choice.
Some 1,600 Republican delegates were selected in the May 7 primary election. Every county is represented by a different number of delegates relative to its population, with some fielding only a handful while larger counties field more than 100 each.
Most delegates are elected, but party leaders must sometimes fill vacancies to reach the 1,800 number.
Beckwith said some 400 of the 1,600 newly elected delegates had already pledged to support his bid.
Though Braun selected McGuire, the nominee said last week he welcomed competition for the spot as his running mate.
He told IndyStar: “I think that we’ll win that competition, and if by chance that doesn’t work, which I think is very slim, I’ll deal with it.”
McGuire fits recent trend
McGuire, a one-term legislator from Indianapolis, fits into a recent trend of Republican lieutenant governors: women with legislative backgrounds who represent a different geographical part of the state from their running mate.
Former Lt. Govs. Becky Skillman and Sue Ellspermann and outgoing Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch each fit that description.
McGuire defeated state Rep. John Jacob, a staunch anti-abortion activist who clashed with party leadership, in the Republican primary on her way to winning election to the Statehouse in 2022.
She authored one bill signed into law this past session centered on voiding parental rights over children sexually abused by a parent. She co-authored several education bills.
McGuire may be best known as the former author of a proposed bill to block a new tax district in downtown Indianapolis meant to pay for city services. A compromise was ultimately reached to allow the plan. McGuire removed herself as the bill’s author and voted against it.
Braun’s campaign and McGuire did not respond to requests for an interview.
Braun told IndyStar that he recruited McGuire due to her knowledge of health care policy and that he would campaign on her behalf with delegates.
Two state constitutional officers threw their support behind McGuire on Monday: state Treasurer Daniel Elliott and Secretary of State Diego Morales.
“Indiana Republican Convention delegates will have their choice as to who they will support, as do I,” Morales said in an X post. “I will be supporting Julie for Indiana lieutenant governor.”
“Delegates will have a choice at this convention, and I encourage them to choose Julie McGuire as our Republican nominee for lieutenant governor,” Elliott said in a similar post.
Not the first contested race
This year’s competition harks back to the ’90s, when Republican delegates last oversaw several contentious lieutenant governor nomination processes.
In 1996, GOP gubernatorial nominee and Indianapolis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith left the selection entirely up to delegates.
Four years earlier, Attorney General Linley Pearson, the Republican nominee, nearly quit the convention over nominations for lieutenant governor and attorney general that he did not agree with.
Both tickets ended up losing in the general election.
In the ’80s, the GOP experimented with the idea of allowing voters to select the lieutenant governor nominee. John Mutz won a five-way primary in 1980 and eventually served two terms.
Mike McDaniel, a former state GOP chairman who served as Mutz’s campaign manager and chief of staff, said the party returned to the convention system in 1984 because leaders believed a lieutenant governor primary wasted campaign money.
McDaniel, a previous delegate of some 15 state and national conventions, supports the tradition of selecting the gubernatorial candidate’s choice for lieutenant governor.
“I think that’s important because the governor has to serve with this person for four or maybe eight years, and you want somebody you can trust, work with and be part of a team with to get things done,” McDaniel said.
McDaniel called Beckwith’s campaign, launched well before the gubernatorial race came into focus, “very, very unusual.” He said Braun will be the party’s new leader at the convention, so backing his choice is a sign of unity.
“If [Braun] has a preference, we should give him his preference,” McDaniel said.
Holcomb weighs in
More recently, delegates have shown themselves willing to break with the gubernatorial candidate on selections for other constitutional offices. In 2022, the convention chose Diego Morales over Gov. Eric Holcomb’s pick, Holli Sullivan, for the secretary of state nomination.
Holcomb, who briefly served as lieutenant governor under former Gov. Mike Pence, weighed in on this year’s competition on Tuesday, telling reporters that delegates should be the ultimate decision-makers on the nominee.
“And we have a history in Indiana of some tickets being blessed and some not,” he said. “And so that’s very instructive going into this convention and [it’s] incumbent upon the gubernatorial candidate to make their pitch to the convention delegates of their preference. And so I’ve been there, done that. And it worked out OK for me.”
What does a lieutenant governor do?
Whomever the voters select in November will have a role to play in the Legislature and within state agencies.
The lieutenant governor presides over the Indiana Senate and may cast a tiebreaker vote if needed. The position also fills in for the governor if the latter becomes incapacitated or dies.
The lieutenant governor oversees four state agencies: the Indiana State Department of Agriculture, the Indiana Housing & Community Development Authority, the Indiana Office of Tourism Development and the Indiana Office of Community & Rural Affairs.
Finally, the position chairs the Indiana Mental Health Roundtable, the Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Task Force and the Civics Education Commission.
Democrats prepared to back McCormick’s pick
Delegates for the Indiana Democratic Party are preparing to support their nominee’s pick for governor, Chairman Mike Schmuhl told State Affairs.
“It really falls to [McCormick] to make that selection over the next few weeks,” Schmuhl said, adding that both parties have typically backed the governor’s selection and that Republicans are “upending tradition” with Beckwith’s candidacy.
“We really do envision it as the pick of the gubernatorial nominee,” he said. “Not only is it a convention pick, but it’s also who the governor wants as a governing partner if elected. It’s a pretty serious responsibility.”
Asked about McCormick possibly backing a Republican for the Democratic lieutenant governor nomination, Schmuhl said he could not comment on her process directly.
“I think my recommendation is when you’re picking someone for this spot, you want to find somebody who expands your appeal and your campaign’s reach,” Schmuhl said, “and who doesn’t limit you or harm you in any way.”
Contact Rory Appleton on X at @roryehappleton or email him at [email protected].
Indiana appeals court chief judge on AI, mental health, and the state’s dwindling number of lawyers
Many Hoosiers may be familiar with their local courts or hear about the opinions of the Indiana Supreme Court, but a middle tier in the state’s judiciary system shapes justice through some 2,000 rulings a year.
The 15 judges of the Indiana Court of Appeals dole out opinions on everything from murder and fraud to civil and child welfare cases. Every Hoosier has the right to appeal a conviction or ruling, and the Court of Appeals, the second-highest court in the state, takes up each case sent its way.
Chief Judge Robert R. Altice Jr. has analyzed thousands of cases since being appointed by Gov. Mike Pence in 2015. Prior to that, he spent 15 years as an elected judge in Marion County.
Altice sat down with State Affairs for a discussion on the ins and outs of his court, how changes in technology and mental health care have impacted his work and what he sees as a major problem facing the nation’s judicial system.
This conversation has been edited for clarity, brevity and length.
Q. What sort of cases does the Court of Appeals hear?
A. We hear really everything except death penalty cases. If there’s a death penalty case, it goes straight to the [state] Supreme Court. Otherwise, we get it.
I’ve had to publish an opinion on a traffic court case. About 65% of our cases are criminal. Every, everything under the sun: murders, rapes, robberies, child molestation.
Then there are civil cases. We do medical malpractice suits, traffic accidents, you name it. Complex business litigation? Our court was involved.
Q. How does the appeals process work? There’s not a new trial, right?
A. I’ll give you an example. Let’s say you got a murder case and the defendant gets convicted and gets 65 years, which is the max for a murder conviction. Everybody in the state of Indiana has got an automatic right to appeal. Not everybody takes that right, but most criminal defendants do.
Somebody will write his brief for him. That attorney will find three issues that they think will result in a new trial if we rule in their favor. That’s really what the appellate process is: Are the errors committed at the trial court level significant enough to warrant a new trial?
And then the attorney general in the criminal cases will write a brief in opposition, then the appellant or the defendant can file a reply brief as well.
We sit and read transcripts and their briefs and do our own research and come to a decision as to whether or not there was error at the trial court level that warrants a new trial.
Q. How many of the 2,000 cases your court receives a year, how many are taken up by the Indiana Supreme Court?
A. It is rare. You start with the proposition that trial courts throughout the state are doing about 2+ million cases a year. That’s everything. We do 2,000 opinions a year. I think the Supreme Court writes about 60 opinions a year. That’s what their taking of ours.
But we’re considered an error-correcting court, whereas that’s really not their role. Their role is more jurisprudential. It’s “should we look at changing in this regard or changing precedent.”
It’s really an inverse pyramid, with the trial courts, I always say, doing the heavy lifting.
Our turnaround time is very quick. It’s about three months. Some states require oral arguments in every single case, but we don’t.
If you ask for an oral argument, we will sometimes grant that. We do a lot of oral arguments, but most of our oral arguments are traveling oral arguments. We travel all over the state and do live arguments. And we do those in front of high schools, small colleges, bigger schools.
We answer questions or ask questions like we normally would do, and then once we’re finished, then we have a question and answer session with the students.
Q. One thing we heard about at the State of the Judiciary is there’s an attorney shortage in the state, particularly in rural areas. How has that affected your work?
A. I think we’re seeing more pro se litigants, people representing themselves, and that can be difficult because we hold them to the same standard that we would hold a lawyer to. It can be really difficult for them. So in that regard, it has hurt.
We’ll go to traveling oral arguments in some rural county, and the bar association will host a lunch for us. We’ll go and there’ll be six lawyers in the room and I’ll say to somebody, “So how many people are in the bar?” And they’ll say, “Well, you’re looking at it.”
That access to justice is a really difficult thing that I think the state of Indiana is dealing with now. The Supreme Court has just set up a task force to look into how we can improve that. I believe law schools are looking at incentivizing young kids to go practice in rural areas.
It’s a real issue. I think a lot of it stems from the low bar passage rate of the last 10+ years. It’ll be interesting to see what the task force thinks.
Q. How has technology impacted the court?
A. Technology has been huge. All our work is done online now. The briefs are filed online.
The technology that we have to keep an eye on, and we’re already looking at, is artificial intelligence. What impact is that going to have on the courts, especially our courts?
You can punch a button and write an opinion. It’s probably not going to be very good, but as technology improves, it’s going to be. We’re kind of leery of that.
But at the same time, from a research standpoint, it’s been a very valuable tool. We’ve been using AI in that regard for researching for some time now, with Westlaw and Lexus as they’ve come out with those kinds of tools.
Q. There have been changes in how the world views mental health. How has that impacted the court?
A. I see it primarily in the sentencing arena. Before every defendant is sentenced by a trial court, a pre-sentence investigation is prepared on them. And so that’s where you see a lot of that because it discusses their entire background, and the number of people with mental health issues coming through has really increased greatly.
I think the pandemic had a lot to do with that as well. But again, the mental health issues are very much creeping into the system, and one of the things that we’re constantly working on trying to be aware of and trying to, to the extent we can with alternatives to incarceration, assist people.
Q. Are there any other challenges facing today’s judiciary?
A. I guess not necessarily my court, but courts in general. It appears to me that Congress is broken. They’re not passing laws.
So, what are we doing? We have to rely on the other two branches of government to kind of take up the slack, and that’s why you’re seeing tons of executive orders.
That’s not traditionally their job, and then you’re seeing the courts being called upon to determine whether or not those regulations are enforceable.
I see that as a long-term problem that we’ve got to get corrected.
Contact Rory Appleton on X at @roryehappleton or email him at [email protected].
How McCormick, Braun view abortion, taxes and other key issues
A Democrat-turned-Republican and Republican-turned-Democrat will soon face off in the race to become Indiana’s next governor.
Sen. Mike Braun, who voted as a Democrat prior to 2012, captured the Republican nomination in Tuesday’s primary. Jennifer McCormick, formerly a Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction, will represent the Democrats.
Voters will decide the state’s next chief executive in November.
A State Affairs analysis of the candidates’ campaign platforms and public statements found key differences — and a few similarities — in their planned approaches to a variety of issues impacting Hoosier voters.
Here is how they match up.
Abortion
Braun: As a senator, Braun has long supported abortion restrictions.
In 2020, he called for the Supreme Court to re-examine Roe v. Wade.
In 2023, he proposed federal legislation that would have required parental notification before any unemancipated minor could seek an abortion. He said at the time: “Hoosiers put their trust in me to stand up for the unborn, and that’s what I’ve been proud to do every day in the Senate.”
He has since signaled support for the state’s abortion ban. His platform reads: “State lawmakers must work to ensure the gains we have made to protect life are secured and strengthened.”
McCormick: In a Tuesday interview with State Affairs, McCormick said her candidacy represented a referendum on reproductive rights.
“I’m going to fight to restore those rights under any authority I can, working in a bipartisan fashion, using our committees, board and our agencies. I also know, too, what everybody’s fear is: that they’re [Republicans] not going to restore those rights and will take [restrictions] further.”
From her platform: “Indiana’s Republican-led extreme abortion ban has taken away the right of women to make deeply personal decisions regarding their own health care.”
Marijuana
Braun: At a March 26 Republican primary debate, Braun suggested an openness to legalizing medicinal marijuana.
“It’s gonna hit all of us. I’m gonna listen to law enforcement — they have to put up with the brunt of it,” he said. “Medical marijuana is where I think the case is best made that maybe something needs to change. But I’ll take my cue from law enforcement there as well. … I hear a lot of input where [medical marijuana is] helpful, and I think that you need to listen and see what makes sense.”
McCormick: The Democrat’s platform also addresses medical marijuana legalization, while speculating on possible recreational use.
“We will fight for the legalization of medical marijuana as a source of state revenue established on a well-regulated marketplace and monitored by a Cannabis Task Force in order to study the issues, opportunities and potential obstructions associated with recreational marijuana legalization.”
McCormick said she would also support expunging low-level marijuana-related convictions.
Taxes
Braun: At a March 19 National Federation of Independent Business forum, Braun said the state’s property tax system “went out of whack because it couldn’t respond to inflation like we’ve never seen before.”
“The way you finance any lower taxes would be to bank on the government being run more efficiently,” he said.
His platform also calls for government spending cuts to finance lower taxes: “Reducing the size of government is the key to cutting taxes, and Mike Braun will work through every state agency to find ways to save money while delivering high-quality services to taxpayers.”
McCormick: McCormick also spoke about taxes at the March 19 forum.
“I agree with a revamp of our taxing system,” she said. “But also it’s about not just how we’re getting our revenue, it’s about our expenditures. Yes, we need to fix our gas tax. Yes, we need to look at the income tax. But here’s the thing: There are hidden taxes we’re not having a conversation about.”
Her platform also references the possibility of combining state agencies as a way to save money.
Education
Braun: In his platform, Braun supports broadening school choice and parental rights.
“As a former school board member, Mike Braun knows parents are the primary stakeholders in their children’s education and every family, regardless of income or zip code, should be able to enroll in a school of their choice and pursue a curriculum that prepares them for a career, college or the military,” the platform reads.
Braun also pledged to ensure critical race theory and discussions about gender are banned in public schools.
McCormick: Education is one of McCormick’s primary issues, according to her platform.
She calls for the elimination of statewide testing, increased early childhood reading and child care options and a minimum base salary of $60,000 for all K-12 teachers.
McCormick also addresses the state’s school choice movement.
“We will call for a pause in the expansion of school privatization efforts while requiring fiscal and academic accountability and transparency for all of Indiana schools that receive public tax dollars,” her platform reads.
U.S.-Mexico border
Braun: Braun’s television ads have touched on border security, and his platform calls for increased focus on the area.
“Joe Biden and the left have created a humanitarian and national security crisis on our southern border,” the platform reads. “As governor, Mike will continue to support and enact the America First policies that were working. Otherwise, every town will become a border town.”
McCormick: McCormick’s border-related plans are more focused on facilitating legal immigration.
“We will work with local, state and federal officials in supporting an immigrant system that creates a safe, timely, orderly and humane pathway for those seeking legal immigration while keeping our communities and those responsible for border security safe,” her platform reads.
Contact Rory Appleton on X at @roryehappleton or email him at [email protected].
Spartz, Shreve, Stutzman win Republican congressional primaries
A central Indiana congresswoman successfully fought off eight primary challengers, while crowded races for three other Republican-leaning congressional districts began to clear in Tuesday’s primary election. And in northeastern Indiana, a former congressman held on in a tight race as he seeks to return to Congress. All of the state’s nine U.S. House of Representatives …