Guest Post: ‘Most Harmful and Destructive’ Iowa Legislative Session Ever

Rep. Sami Scheetz, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids

This week, the Iowa Legislature concluded the 2023 legislative session — one that will arguably go down as the most harmful and destructive in our state’s history.

The list of catastrophic legislation that the Republican Party has imposed on the people of Iowa is lengthy: 

  • A billion-dollar voucher scheme that gives handouts to private schools and wealthy Iowans in our largest, richest cities — legislation that will destroy our rural public schools and accelerate the degradation of our public school system statewide.
  • A series of laws that attack our LGBTQ youth: book banning; bathroom bills; a ban on life-saving care for transgender children.
  • Legislation limiting the ability for Iowans who die or are catastrophically injured by medical malpractice or negligent truck drivers to be fully compensated for their losses.
  • A child labor bill that turns the clock back on worker protections and encourages children to not complete their high school education.
  • Likely the most harmful bill passed this session: legislation that kicks thousands of working-class Iowans off of their food benefits and takes away health care from close to 1,000 Iowa children. This is at a time when Iowans are facing 40-year price highs for food and basic goods.

The GOP told Iowans that they would focus on fighting inflation, but their leadership in the Capitol has instead been laser-focused on the marginalization of working-class and minority communities in our state.

Like many Iowans, I do not recognize the state that I was proud to grow up in: a state that provided limitless opportunities for my dad who was raised in foster care in Cedar Rapids; a state that welcomed my mother, who came to Iowa from Damascus, Syria, almost 40 years ago; a state that elected the son of an immigrant to represent his community in the Legislature at the age of 26.

Our state has a proud progressive history: we desegregated our schools 50 years before the Brown v. Board of Education decision; we were the second state in the country to legalize same-sex marriage; and we catapulted a man who would become our nation’s first African-American president to the national stage.

I ran for the Legislature because I believe that Iowa can once again become a welcoming, forward-thinking state that young people will want to call home for decades to come. A place where, whom you’re born to doesn’t determine the trajectory of your life. While this reality may seem distant now, I have faith that the incredible people of this state will continue to fight for the future that Iowans need and deserve.

Rep. Sami Scheetz, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, was elected to the Iowa House in 2022. Email him at info@samischeetz.com.

2 Comments on "Guest Post: ‘Most Harmful and Destructive’ Iowa Legislative Session Ever"

  • Rep. Scheetz, who graduated college from a renowned private institution run by the Jesuits, (AKA the Society of Jesus) should dial back his over-caffeinated rhetoric about effects of private schools in the school choice law. The law passed with strong majorities in both chambers of the Legislature; all of these pro-school-choice legislators were the democratic choice of Iowans.

    So, I have a suggestion for the Catholic-educated Rep.Scheetz: Let’s give school choice a 5 or 10 year trial period before wildly casting stones. It hasn’t even started yet. Just as Rep. Scheetz chose to use tax dollars to subsidize a Catholic school, many Iowans may choose to do likewise.

    Scheetz cites no evidence that school choice will be the ruination of public districts. In Wisconsin, school choice is 30 years old, and both public schools and many forward-thinking Catholic schools are thriving. Gov. Evers, a Democrat who is the face of the education establishment, would not dream of trying to do away with school choice there.

    Let me end by citing the contributions of some very well-educated, talented Iowans: Caitlin Clark (Dowling High) and Gabby Marshall, from Ohio, both attended Catholic schools. Clark used some of her celebrity to promote a Coralville food pantry.

    Perhaps Rep. Scheetz would care to take some potshots at these beloved Catholics on the beloved Iowa women’s basketball team? I’ll wager he won’t.

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