loader from loading.io

Milwaukee County Supervisor Marcelia Nicholson on Advocacy, Teaching, and the Power of Baked Goods

An Honorable Profession

Release Date: 12/05/2024

How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Marc Dunkelman on Why Nothing Works show art How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Marc Dunkelman on Why Nothing Works

An Honorable Profession

This week, we bring you another episode of our series on How Government Can Get Sh*t Done, as co-host Ryan Coonerty sits down with Marc Dunkelman, professor and author of Why Nothing Works: Who Killed Progress- and How to Bring it Back. Marc discusses the barrier preventing the government from solving problems and achieving broadly shared goals, what it will take  to instigate meaningful change, the lessons we’ve learned from Trump’s second term in office, and how building more housing fits into progressivism and government reform. They also talk about The Vanishing Neighbor: The...

info_outline
How to Turn Environmental Science into Pragmatic Policy with Rep. Lindsay Cross show art How to Turn Environmental Science into Pragmatic Policy with Rep. Lindsay Cross

An Honorable Profession

Recorded at the NewDEAL Forum Ideas Summit in Atlanta, GA, this week’s special episode features co-host Ryan Coonerty in conversation with Florida House State Representative Lindsay Cross. An environmental scientist, Cross discusses how she draws on personal experiences to fight for the preservation of wetlands and endangered species across Florida. She highlights the bills she has recently championed to improve responses to natural disasters and aid recovery and to enact fair housing policies. Ryan and Representative Cross also talk about what it might take to move Florida back to being a...

info_outline
How to Turn Illness into Advocacy with Ohio State Representative Dontavius Jarrells show art How to Turn Illness into Advocacy with Ohio State Representative Dontavius Jarrells

An Honorable Profession

Recorded at the NewDEAL Forum Ideas Summit in Atlanta, GA, this week’s special episode features co-host Ryan Coonerty in conversation with Ohio House Assistant Minority Leader Dontavius Jarrells. Rep. Jarrells speaks candidly about his childhood experience with  lead poisoning, channeling his identity as a survivor of the devastating illness into advocacy as he works to pass comprehensive laws to reduce children’s lead exposure through the legislature. He also talks about the difficulties of serving in a Democratic superminority, how he draws on his experiences growing up in...

info_outline
How to Overcome Political Challenges with Stacey Abrams show art How to Overcome Political Challenges with Stacey Abrams

An Honorable Profession

In today’s episode, co-host Ryan Coonerty sits down with NewDEAL Alumna and former Georgia House Democratic Leader Stacey Abrams at the NewDEAL Forum’s Annual Ideas Summit in Atlanta. Abrams reflects on how she drove progress on big issues as the minority leader in the Georgia House between 2011 and 2017. She talks about how to model values-based leadership and encourages listeners to do the same, developing concrete guiding principles around which to rally their work. In addition, she cautions leaders to listen and understand the roots of people’s problems before  jumping to policy...

info_outline
How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Caitlin Lewis on Solving the Public Service Crisis show art How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Caitlin Lewis on Solving the Public Service Crisis

An Honorable Profession

This week, we bring you another episode of our series on How Government Can Get Sh*t Done, as host Debbie Cox Bultan sits down with Caitlin Lewis. Caitlin is the Executive Director of Work for America, an organization committed to addressing the talent shortage in public service by connecting qualified and passionate problem solvers with positions in state and local government. In today’s conversation, she speaks with Debbie about the shifting public service landscape under the Trump Administration, the economic challenges facing state budgets, and the unique opportunities for state and...

info_outline
How Michigan Manufacturing is Handling Tariffs with Lansing Mayor Andy Schor show art How Michigan Manufacturing is Handling Tariffs with Lansing Mayor Andy Schor

An Honorable Profession

This week, host Ryan Coonerty speaks with Lansing, MI, Mayor Andy Schor whose community and state are at the center of national politics and the current debates around manufacturing, jobs, and tariffs. Mayor Schor discusses the disconnect between President Trump’s campaign promises versus the actual impacts his policies are having on the lives of the everyday Michiganders who elected him. He digs into the specific impacts of tariffs, including how they threaten mid-Michigan’s auto industry, as well as small businesses through the Lansing region, and speaks more broadly about how mayors...

info_outline
ICYMI: How Government Can Get Sh*t Done with Jen Pahlka show art ICYMI: How Government Can Get Sh*t Done with Jen Pahlka

An Honorable Profession

Today on An Honorable Profession, we’re revisiting co-host Debbie Cox Bultan’s conversation with Jennifer Pahlka. Pahlka has decades of experience in civic technology. She was U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer under former President Obama and recently authored  the book, Recoding America: Why Government is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better. Debbie and Jennifer talk about the factors that often make government slow or ineffective and what the Department of Government Efficiency is getting wrong about cutting waste, fraud, and abuse. Jennifer shares her advice for...

info_outline
How Government Can Support Small Businesses with State Senator Christine Cohen show art How Government Can Support Small Businesses with State Senator Christine Cohen

An Honorable Profession

This week, host Ryan Coonerty talks with Connecticut State Senator Christine Cohen. Cohen is a small business owner turned legislator who previously served on her local school board before running for the state senate following the first election of President Trump. In Hartford, she draws on her experiences as the owner of Cohen’s Bagel Company  to guide her leadership on various legislative committees, including the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee and the Environment Committee, and now as the Co-Chair of the Transportation Committee. Her impressive record of legislative success...

info_outline
How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Jim Townsend on Public Policy and Legislative Oversight show art How Government Can Get Sh*t Done: Jim Townsend on Public Policy and Legislative Oversight

An Honorable Profession

This week, we bring you another episode of our series on How Government Can Get Sh*t Done, as host Debbie Cox Bultan sits down with NewDEAL alumnus Jim Townsend. Jim is a former Michigan state legislator now serving as the Director of the Levin Center for Oversight and Democracy, which promotes fact-based legislative oversight as a key to the integrity, transparency, and accountability of the government. Debbie and Jim discuss the false choice between defending institutions that aren’t working and tearing the government to the ground and why DOGE and the current political climate might...

info_outline
How to Build the Democratic Talent Pipeline with Zach Wahls and Debbie Cox Bultan show art How to Build the Democratic Talent Pipeline with Zach Wahls and Debbie Cox Bultan

An Honorable Profession

This week, The NewDEAL and The Next50 announced a partnership that will build a robust pipeline of center-left talent by combining The Next 50’s electoral backing and campaign tools with the network, policy, and skills support that the NewDEAL provides. The goal is to round out a cycle of support for leaders who can win tough elections, deliver results while in office, and be the Democratic messengers who connect effectively with the broad majority of Americans. CEO Debbie Cox Bultan speaks with NewDEAL Leader and Iowa State Senator Zach Wahls – who joins us today as Executive Director of...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Filmed at the 14th Annual NewDEAL Leaders Conference in Washington, D.C., host Ryan Coonerty talks with Milwaukee County Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Marcelia Nicholson. Growing up in one of the country’s most underserved zip codes, Nicholson is using her experiences to improve  the communities she holds dear. She begins the conversation explaining how she found her way to elected office after being upset by the lack of resources available to her students as a fourth grade teacher. From there, she explains how to organize and advocate successfully at the local level, offering her tested methods for bridging divides across her state as she “bakes her way” to bipartisan collaboration. We also look at the future of the Democratic Party in Wisconsin and what they can do to improve the lives of everyday Wisconsinites, from focusing on housing to relationship building with unlikely allies.

 

IN THIS EPISODE: 

• [01:04] Chairwoman Marcelia Nicholson describes her journey into public office.

• [04:24] How her childhood experiences and representing her constituency informs her policy.

• [06:12] Advice for teachers on how to approach governments to affect change.

• [07:53] Past issues Marcelia was concerned with, how she solved them, and what she’s
focused on now.

• [10:34] How Milwaukee and Marcelia’s role fits into broader Wisconsin politics.

• [12:24] Marcelia’s protocol for bridging racial, cultural, political, and geographical divides.

• [14:05] Unpacking the current state of the Democratic Party in Wisconsin.

• [16:19] The policies that Marcelia would like to see the Dems pushing for her constituents.

• [18:07] Her advice for other public office leaders for keeping groups and policies cohesive.

• [20:20] How she spends her time, and what’s next for her in policy and politics.