Republicans are trying to turn up the political heat on Indiana House Democrats who left the state to stall labor- and education-related
bills they find objectionable, launching radio ads ridiculing the move as the walkout entered its second week and the crowds
of protesters thinned.
House Minority Leader Patrick Bauer said Monday he'd meet "anytime, anywhere," if Republicans were willing
to compromise, but neither side seemed inclined to give ground.
Bauer said Democrats had no plans to return from an Urbana, Ill., hotel anytime soon without changes to about five bills,
including a contentious voucher proposal that would use taxpayer money to help parents send their children to private school.
The South Bend Democrat and Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma spoke by phone Monday, but Bauer told reporters that Bosma
made it clear that he was just listening — not negotiating. Bauer said he's willing to compromise on the bills if
Republicans "take away some of the pain."
"I'm willing to negotiate anytime, anywhere," he said.
Bosma said Bauer is welcome to come to his office Tuesday to talk and that he'd buy his counterpart a cup of coffee and
a sandwich. But Bosma said he wouldn't take any of the proposals off the House agenda.
"I don't want to cut a deal in a hot tub in Urbana," Bosma said. "If he wants to get back here and chat,
we'll chat about whatever's necessary, but we will deal with this calendar."
Asked whether he would agree to make changes to some bills, Bosma said the House would take up amendments and that the Republican-backed
bills aren't perfect. But he said he won't take issues off the table simply because the minority demands it.
Bosma urged Democrats to return and end the floor boycott that has denied the House the two-thirds of members present it
needs to conduct business.
"If somebody's in the building, of course we're going to talk to them," he said. "We're dying
for conversations, but it's tough to have them when people aren't here."
One of the Republican radio ads paid for by GOP Gov. Mitch Daniels' Aiming Higher political committee features a song
saying "Won't you come home Pat Bauer?"
The ad's narrator says the legislators have a right to their say, "but no right to tear up the democratic process
just because the election didn't go your way." Another ad urges listeners to call a Statehouse toll-free number and
tell the Democrats "to stand up to their boss from South Bend."
State Republican Party spokesman Pete Seat said the radio ads began running statewide Monday, but wouldn't say how much
was being spent on them.
The Indiana Democratic Party has been soliciting donations to help pay the bills for legislators staying in Illinois, with
the Democratic lawmakers saying they won't seek their daily $155 expense stipend while they are away.
A few hundred union members cheered during a midday rally when actor and liberal activist Danny Glover urged them to stand
in solidarity against what he called an organized campaign across the country against middle-class workers.
"They are under a vicious attack and we've got to put an end to it," said Glover, who starred in the "Lethal
Weapon" action movies.
Senate Minority Leader Vi Simpson, D-Bloomington, told the union members that whenever they heard one of the Republican radio
ads to respond by telling their friends and neighbors that the boycotting Democrats were defending public schools and the
middle class against Republican attacks.
"This is a class war that they have waged and we must stop them," Simpson said.
Bosma said he laughed when he first heard the song in the Republican ad, and Bauer suggested that he could pen his own song
about Republicans.
"If I get any free time, I just might do that," Bauer said.

















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But if the majority leader admits that the bills are not perfect but he is willing to ramrod them through (isnt that what we had a proble with the dems doing and obamacare?)isnt that just as bad. Listen, the public wants you to slow down. If it isnt perfect then do not force it into law.
And seriously SB577 take away disabled veterans education benifits and give them to convicted felons - realy that came from the republicans???
It is unfortunate that our "system" works this way. If we had a "clean elections" law, then everyone could participate in the law-making process and not allow it to be held hostage by any party or given away to some foreign corporation. In the end, it is the people who lose.
Time for Bosma and the Guv to find a way around these crybaby obstructionists. Cut off their pay and find a rule of order to circumvent their walkout. Bauer never would have let the Republicans get away with this stupidity when they were in power. Time to move forward and win in the marketplace of ideas.