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Worth Noting: Gov. Schweitzer's Tongue in Cheek Gets Him in Trouble Print E-mail
Nation - Government
Nathaniel Weixel   
Saturday, 13 September 2008 17:30
Worth Noting
TS-Si Nation
Washington, DC, USA. The Montana Governor gets grief for remarks he says were made in jest. Vermont officials are fed up with people voting for Bart Simpson. An Iowa state trooper talks to his car. And a Georgia educator may be smarter than a fifth grader. In case you missed those stories this week, Worth Noting fills you in.
 
Some things you just don’t joke about. During a July speech in Philadelphia, Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer spoke facetiously about pressuring election officials to help a fellow Democrat win the 2006 U.S. Senate race. Tamara Hall, a Montana Republican activist and talk-show host, saw his remarks online and didn’t find them amusing. She filed a complaint with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and they’re looking into the matter, The Billings Gazette reports.
 
Vice Presidential nominee Gov. Sarah Palin – a self-described “pit bull” – could learn a few tricks from Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell (D). She’s been boasting about putting her state’s jet up for sale on eBay to cut costs, but she didn’t land as good a deal as Rendell, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer. Alaska’s jet ended up being sold through a broker for $600,000 less than the previous governor paid for it. Rendell sold a Pennsylvania state plane for several hundred thousand more than the state paid for it 16 years ago.
 
In an example of life imitating television, the Iowa State Patrol has unveiled a cruiser that hearkens back to a 1980s television cop show, Knight Rider. Radio Iowa, a radio news network, reports that Trooper Marc Griggs started driving a voice-activated patrol car in February.  Unlike Michael Knight, Griggs can’t carry on a conversation with his car, but he can tell the onboard computer to turn on the sirens, lights, and other gadgets without taking his hands off the wheel.
 
D’oh! Election officials in Vermont are getting tired of people casting joke ballots for the likes of Bart Simpson and Mickey Mouse. The Times Argus reports that clerks automatically toss votes for Mickey, but the spiky-haired Fox television character is trickier. Bart Simpson could be a real person.
 
Georgia state superintendent Kathy Cox got to prove she’s smarter than some of the kids in her school system. According to The New York Times, Cox correctly answered 10 questions drawn from elementary school curriculums to win $1 million in the reality quiz show, “Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?” The money will be donated to two state schools for the deaf and a school for the blind.
 
Stateline ReportStateline is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the Pew Center on the States that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy. TS-Si thanks The Pew Charitable Trusts for its support and cooperation.

Stateline reports are prepared and published by TS-Si.org with permission. Signed articles do not necessarily convey an official position of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates.
 
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Last Updated on Saturday, 13 September 2008 07:01