Being a presidential press secretary like ‘being a human piñata’

Former White House press secretaries Mike McCurry, left, and Ari Fleischer speak at LSU’s Manship School Tuesday. (Photo: Dilyn Stewart/LSU Daily Reveille)

By Luke Jeanfreau, LSU Daily Reveille

As anyone who watches the news can see, the White House press secretary is often in a tough spot.

“I’d liken the job to being a human piñata,” Mike McCurry, who was a press secretary for former President Bill Clinton, said Tuesday night at LSU’s Manship School of Mass Communication. “The press corps just kind of whacks at you to see if anything will spill out.”

Read the story in The News-Star.

Louisiana Senate to consider bill that would fortify policies against sexual harassment at state agencies

Sen. Sharon Hewitt, R-Slidell, responding to questions at a Senate hearing on her bill that would fortify sexual harassment policies across the state. (Photo by Tryfon Boukouvidis/LSU Manship School News Service)

By Tryfon Boukouvidis

Louisiana senators agreed Wednesday to cooperate on a comprehensive compromise bill that would fortify Louisiana’s policies against sexual harassment in state agencies.

The Senate and Governmental Affairs Committee sent the bill to the Senate floor to be considered next week after senators negotiate changes in the language.

Read the story in Gambit/bestofneworleans.com.

Lawmakers concerned with Pharmacy Board medical marijuana licensing process

GB Sciences, which operates a cultivation center in Nevada, is licensed to produce medical marijuana in Louisiana by the LSU AgCenter. (Photo provided by GB Sciences, Inc.)

By Natalie Anderson

Legislators expressed concern Tuesday with a potentially unfair application process the Louisiana Board of Pharmacy is conducting to determine which locations throughout the state are granted permits to distribute medical marijuana.

Read the story in The Advocate.

Bill to make bars, casinos smoke-free still being worked out

By Natalie Anderson

A statewide measure to prohibit smoking in bars, casinos and sports arenas is still on the back burner as one Acadian lawmaker is working to ensure businesses aren’t harmed.

Rep. Dustin Miller, D-Opelousas, postponed House Bill 881 — an effort to protect nonsmokers from secondhand smoke — last week in the House Health & Welfare committee after concerns with the bill’s implications for business owner.

Read the story in The Advocate.

‘LSU Day’ comes at fitting time as legislators propose adding to TOPS in budget

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An LSU banner hangs among the flags in the Capitol during the annual “LSU Day at the Capitol.” (Photo: Devon Sanders/LSU Manship School News Service)

By Kaylee Poche and Devon Sanders

Louisiana State University leaders picked a good moment to celebrate their annual “LSU Day at the Capitol,” coming right after both Gov. John Bel Edwards and House Republicans proposed adding more money for TOPS scholarships back into next year’s budget.

But after a painful decade of dealing with cuts in overall spending on higher education, officials from LSU’s campuses and medical schools in Baton Rouge, Alexandria, Eunice, Shreveport and New Orleans descended on the Capitol Tuesday to lobby for more stability.

Read the story in The Daily Advertiser.

House committee restores TOPS funding at expense of health services

Representative Patricia Haynes Smith, D-Baton Rouge (far left) and Committee Chairman Representative Cameron Henry, R-Metairie (center) spent the past five weeks hearing presentations by staff and department heads.

By Tryfon Boukouvidis

After a contentious debate, the House Appropriations Committee voted Monday almost along party lines to approve a state budget that would fully fund TOPS while slashing health services for the state’s most vulnerable citizens.

A set of amendments sponsored by the committee’s vice chairman, Franklin Foil, R-Baton Rouge, would allocate $233 million to fund the popular TOPS scholarships and $13 million to fund Go Grant, a program that provides need-based financial aid.

Read the story in The Bossier Press-Tribune.

Survey: Most Louisianians support criminal justice and Medicaid reform

Dr. Michael Henderson is the director of the Public Policy Research Lab at LSU. | Photo Source: LSU Manship School News Service

By Ryan Noonan & Kaylee Poche

A survey by the LSU Public Policy Research Lab found that a majority of Louisiana residents support criminal justice reform and Medicaid expansion, two major policies pushed by the John Bel Edwards administration.

The survey comes at a time when legislators are considering proposals to scale back last year’s changes in criminal justice and cut funding for some Medicaid programs.

Read the story in KALB-TV/kalb.com.

Panel discusses impact of sexual harassment allegations

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Former U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu, journalist Gloria Riviera and journalism professor Steve Bien-Aime spoke Thursday about sexual harassment in media and politics. (Photo: Devon Sanders/LSU Manship School News Service)

Kaylee Poche and Devon Sanders

 Former U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu said Thursday night that she is not sure what she would have done if she had still been in the Senate when fellow Democrats called on Sen. Al Franken to resign over sexual harassment allegations.

“It was a very tough issue because he is known as a very thoughtful, extraordinary advocate for women and women’s issues generally,” Landrieu said at a panel discussion on sexual harassment.

“I thought a lot about what I would have done, and I’m still not 100 percent sure,“ she said.

Read the story in The Shreveport Times.