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Andrew Ulysses Dwight Straw
Founder, Disability Party
Personal details
Born (1969-03-19) March 19, 1969 (age 55)
Camp LeJeune Naval Hospital, North Carolina
Political partyDisability Party
SpouseNone
ResidenceStreamwood, Illinois
Alma materIndiana University
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
University of Otago
OccupationAttorney
Academic
Civil Rights Attorney

He is the Chairman of the Disability Party of Indiana/Illinois, which formed for the first time in the United States on February 5, 2013, in Indiana.

Straw was the Disability Party's candidate for Indiana Secretary of State, and the 2012 Green Party nominee for U.S. House of Representatives representing Indiana's 2nd Congressional District, but he was ultimately denied ballot access by the Indiana Secretary of State on July 27, 2012.[1]

Biography edit

Straw was born on March 19, 1969, at Marine Corps Base Camp LeJeune located in Jacksonville, North Carolina.[2][3]

Education:

  • Northridge High School, Middlebury, Indiana - National Merit Scholar, National Honor Society
  • Indiana University, Bachelor's in English & Philosophy (Political Science minor) (1992)
  • Indiana University, Master's degree in Language Education (1995)
  • Indiana University Maurer School of Law, J.D. (1997)
  • University of Otago (Dunedin, NZ), Graduate Studies in Bioethics & Health Law (2004) [4]

Career edit

Straw's professional background includes being the founder and president of the Indiana Center for Excellence in Government, which has conducted studies on lithium concentrations in drinking water in Indiana's 2nd Congressional District, as well as a survey of local government communications and whether they are accessible. In particular, whether local government agencies provide email and fax contact information on the Internet.[5]

Straw is a member of the bar in Indiana. He is admitted to practice law in the U.S. District Courts for the Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, and the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. He has worked as a statistical analyst for the Indiana Supreme Court, collecting and analyzing data for over 400 Indiana trial courts and focusing on disabilities in the judicial system. Straw previously co-chaired the committee on Education of Bench & Bar for the Virginia State Bar Task Force on Technology. Click here to view Straw's CV online.

Straw was in-house corporate counsel for Alan M. Voorhees, who allegedly designed the Interstate Highway System and the Metro in Washington, D.C. Voorhees owned Autometric, the satellite intelligence company that keeps all American military and air traffic safe. He also own the company that invented the Bar Code used in retail, the company that invented the compression software for the FBI fingerprint database, and the company that invented Google Earth. Voorhees was a frogman in WWII, mapping islands and blowing up obstacles for island invasions in the Pacific. He and another frogman swam up Nagasaki Harbor immediately after the bomb was dropped and mapped the port and surveyed the damage. Straw represented Voorhees in corporate matters, education donations, government negotiations, and nonprofit work. He trained at the Council for Excellence in Government in 2000 with top-level civil servants from Health & Human Services. Voorhees founded the Council in the 1980s, and it had all living ex-U.S. presidents on its board of directors.

Issues edit

Campaign themes edit

2012 edit

Major campaign themes for Straw's potential congressional run included:[6]

  • U.S. House Disabilities Caucus - Straw promised to become a member immediately upon swearing in.
  • Medicare for all - expand the existing national health system to cover everyone. Removes insurance premium burden on businesses and provides portability. Will cover people working as independent contractors.
  • National Accident Insurance - to cover all accidents without having to go to court. Removes most tort lawsuits and replaces it with a predictable benefit schedule. Very popular in the first country to have it: New Zealand. | ACC
  • Secretary of Disability Affairs - a cabinet-level position to advise the President
  • Disability Rights: Straw has said he intends to join the Disability Caucus in the House. He was the first congressional candidate in U.S. history to run against his own party's district chair in the May 2011 U.S. Census-motivated election. The party's lack of disabled access at the South Bend HQ for 17 years was the stated reason.[7] Butch Morgan, the county chair, district chair, and state committee member Straw ran against, is now convicted of forgery conspiracy in collecting signatures for Obama's ballot access in 2008. Morgan was sentenced in South Bend.[8]
  • Disability Auditors - federal auditors should analyze all communities in the USA for compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act and other laws protecting the disabled.
  • Public education, paid for students, from preschool to Ph.D. Will introduce a bill to freeze student loan payments and set the interest rate at 0%.
  • 20 hours free preschool - must be a certified facility with trained teachers in Early Childhood Education
  • Job creation (25 million jobs from disability accommodation construction) - stronger EEOC for worker rights
  • Emergency Climate Change Program - heavy Defense Department spending to combat climate change.
  • Environmental protection - air, water, land
  • Death Penalty - researched Indiana Constitution, Virginia law on the death penalty. Protested death penalty at governor's mansion in Indianapolis with president of Amnesty International. Clerked on a triple murder/arson case and researched the death penalty for the judge. Pro-life on the death penalty, in favor of Life Without Parole.
  • Pro-choice - President Madison, author of the Bill of Rights and 9th Amendment would be pro-choice today. In 1791, the concept of "quickening" was considered to happen much later than conception. President Madison's position on liberties is clear. This is a major decision and often people later regret making it, so Straw believes those who provide abortion services should provide adequate information on the moral and medical implications of this choice. If it is a medical decision, the doctor should treat it as the removal of anything else from the body, and explain the choice fully, providing any necessary scans needed and show the patient any scans so she can make an informed choice. This is the normal procedure for any surgery, and it should be decided by the physician how to handle it. Straw opposes the choice of abortion solely on the basis of there being a disability or any other civil rights basis, such as nationality or ethnicity. Straw, while supporting the right, confirmed that he opposes abortion as a choice and would not advise someone to have one if asked. There has not been a Democratic Supreme Court since the 1960s. The right to abortion was recognized by Republican justices.
  • Gay marriage - should be guaranteed by U.S. constitution
  • American Voting Tax Credit - $50 every time a person votes in a general election
  • IRS Internet Reform - IRS should provide online accounts for all taxpayers and streamline its services so a person or organization can pay its taxes online and keep track of all information in one place. Social Security has online accounts and access to data. IRS can do this.
  • Non-profit & church free speech - churches and non-profits should not lose their free speech rights just to get their tax benefits
  • Marijuana - legalize it, with hemp and medical marijuana as the priorities
  • Give Workers a Break - mandatory minimum paid meal and rest breaks for all workers, including independent contractors.
  • Right to Work - repeal the anti-worker, anti-union legislation, nationwide
  • Domestic Violence - fund a nationwide database of court orders to protect women, children, and the disabled
  • MMP Electoral System - change the Constitution to allow for national U.S. House selection by party and district voting
  • Term Limits - committed to amending the Constitution so House members may serve a maximum of 6 years, and Senate members 12 years. 18 years as a federal official is more than enough for anyone.
  • Camp LeJeune, North Carolina Water Contamination - full medical coverage under VA for anyone stationed there (including spouses and children) and anyone born there--no questions asked.
  • Cyberbullying - will introduce a bill to help people remove defamation against them on the Internet, including search engines.
  • Democratic Ballot Access Reform - Congress shall abolish the listing of party on congressional general election ballots. Congress shall mandate that any party is eligible to have ballot access in a primary for federal office because a primary is free advertising and provides intelligence about voters; any party should be eligible for that.

Secretary of State edit

Major campaign themes for Straw's Secretary of State run included:[9]

  • Make entire office compliant with our federal and state constitutions, including the federal and state bills of rights. Every function and component of the Secretary of State's office will be subject to a full review for compliance with both constitutions, since there appear to be many violations at the present time. State laws will not be enforced if they conflict with constitutional law as interpreted by Secretary of State Straw, when elected.
  • Make every function of the office not only compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, but actively seek ways to exceed the standards set out by Congress.
  • Will make functions of the office environmentally-friendly, including making use of paper for official purposes rare. All official documents will be available in an official database and available online. The Secretary of State will opt in to accepting e-signatures and will strive to make all forms fillable online and able to be submitted online.
  • Reduce every fee and tax possible to zero or as close to zero as allowed by law to encourage company formation and business growth.
  • Offer value-added business and other services not offered in other states. Constantly seek ways to make Indiana a more democratic and attractive place to live and do business.
  • Coordinate with other state officials so that Secretary of State services reduce crime and serve the public in every way.
  • Improve voter registration and use all discretion to make voting accurate, fraud-free and non-partisan as part of the constitutional review. Currently when voting for candidates, our constitutions require voting for only a candidate rather than a party. With the voter registration improvement, no "straight ticket" voting will be recognized and this option will be stripped from ballots.
  • Voting will be made as easy as possible under the confines of state law and constitutional law while maintaining reasonable mechanisms to eliminate fraud. The Secretary of State has great power over how Indiana democracy functions, and Straw intends to use that power to improve voting and all electoral duties of the office.[10]

2012 edit

Major campaign themes for Straw's congressional run included:[11]

Campaign themes, 2012 congressional election:
    • Medicare for all - expand the existing national health system to cover everyone. Removes insurance premium burden on businesses and provides portability
    • National Accident Insurance - to cover all accidents without having to go to court. Removes most tort lawsuits and replaces it with a predictable benefit schedule. Very popular in the first country to have it: New Zealand.
    • ACC
    • Secretary of Disability Affairs - a cabinet-level position to advise the President
    • Disability Rights: Straw has said he intends to join the Disability Caucus in the House now that the only Hoosier on it is retiring (Rep. Dan Burton). He was the first congressional candidate in U.S. history to run against his own party's district chair in the May 2011 U.S. Census-motivated election, and the Party's lack of disabled access at the South Bend HQ for 17 years was the stated reason.[7] Butch Morgan, the county chair, district chair, and state committee member Straw ran against, is now charged with forgery conspiracy in collecting signatures for Obama's ballot access in 2008. Morgan awaits trial in South Bend.[8]
    • Public education, paid for students, from preschool to Ph.D. Will introduce a bill to freeze student loan payments and set the interest rate at 0%
    • 20 hours free preschool - must be a certified facility with trained teachers in Early Childhood Education
    • Job creation (25 million jobs, Green New Deal) - stronger EEOC for worker rights
    • Emergency Climate Change Program - heavy Defense Department spending to combat climate change.
    • Environmental protection - air, water, land
    • Death Penalty - researched Indiana Constitution, Virginia law on the death penalty. Protested death penalty at governor's mansion in Indianapolis with president of Amnesty International. Clerked on a triple murder/arson case and researched the death penalty for the judge. Pro-life on the death penalty.
    • Pro-choice - President Madison, author of the Bill of Rights and 9th Amendment would be pro-choice today. In 1791, the concept of "quickening" was considered to happen much later than conception. President Madison's position on liberties is clear. This is a major decision and often people later regret making it, so Straw believes those who provide abortion services should provide adequate information on the moral and medical implications of this choice. If it is a medical decision, the doctor should treat it as the removal of anything else from the body, and explain the choice fully, providing any necessary scans needed and show the patient any scans so she can make an informed choice. This is the normal procedure for any surgery, and it should be decided by the physician how to handle it. Straw opposes the choice of abortion solely on the basis of there being a disability. Straw, while supporting the right, confirmed that he opposes abortion as a choice and would not advise someone to have one if asked. There has not been a Democratic Supreme Court since the 1960s.
    • Gay marriage - should be guaranteed by U.S. and Indiana constitutions
    • American Voting Tax Credit - $50 every time a person votes in a general election
    • Non-profit & church free speech - churches and non-profits should not lose their free speech rights just to get their tax benefits
    • Marijuana - legalize it, with hemp and medical marijuana as the priorities
    • Give Workers a Break - mandatory minimum meal and rest breaks for all workers
    • Right to Work - repeal the anti-worker, anti-union legislation, nationwide
    • Domestic Violence - fund a nationwide database of court orders to protect women, children, and the disabled
    • MMP Electoral System - change the Constitution to allow for House selection by party and district voting
    • Term Limits - committed to amending the Constitution so House members may serve a maximum of 6 years, and Senate members 12 years
    • Veterans' Hospital in N. Central Indiana - Veterans should not have to drive over an hour just to get the care they need in a hospital.
    • Camp LeJeune, North Carolina Water Contamination - full medical coverage under VA for anyone stationed there (including spouses and children) and anyone born there--no questions asked.
    • Climate Change - Increase Defense spending to combat climate change.
    • Cyberbullying - will introduce a bill to help people remove defamation against them on the Internet, including search engines.
    • Democratic Ballot Access Reform - Congress shall abolish the listing of party on congressional general election ballots. Congress shall mandate that any party is eligible to have ballot access in a primary for federal office because a primary is free advertising and provides intelligence about voters; any party should be eligible for that.

Elections edit

2013 edit

Straw's candidacy for appointment as superior court judge was supported by his work on trial judge analysis and court technology at the Indiana Supreme Court. Straw was law clerk for the Hon. Joseph Spruill in Virginia's 15th judicial district in 2000, and provided research for the judge on Virginia's death penalty for a triple murder arson trial. He also worked on trial court technology at the Virginia State Bar Task Force on Technology, and on a court automation project promoted by transportation legend Alan Voorhees.[12]

2012 edit

See also: Indiana's 2nd Congressional District elections, 2012

Straw initially declared his intent to run in the 2012 election for the U.S. House, representing Indiana's 2nd District. The Secretary of State, Connie Lawson (R), denied his petition on July 27, 2012 on grounds that Straw had submitted one signature on his petition. According to Straw, there was no mention of his statutory or constitutional objections. Namely, since Lawson was appointed and the number of signatures needed depended on the number of votes she received, only one was required.[1][13]

According to Straw, he left the Democratic Party after the mayor-elect of South Bend, Pete Buttigieg, his Democratic opponent, Brendan Mullen and the new district chair, Mike Schmuhl, announced their solution to the inaccessibility at headquarters. Straw claims the ramp is several feet too short (making the slope dangerously high), and contains no railings. In addition, the ramp twists because the sidewalk outside is at an incline from right to left.[14]

Straw's Indiana Civil Rights Commission disability access complaint against the Indiana Democratic Party of September 2012 is ongoing, and was unsuccessful in mediation.

On January 3, 2012, Straw announced his switch to the Green Party. Straw had previously been a regional male co-leader of the Green Party of Aotearoa, New Zealand. Straw was the 2012 Indiana delegate to the Green Party National Convention, and as such was a member of the Green National Committee through 2/5/2013, when he founded the Disability Party.

On March 4, 2012, Green Party presidential candidate Dr. Jill Stein stumped for Straw in South Bend and in his home town of Goshen.[15]

After hearing he had been disqualified from the ballot, Straw addressed a letter to the Secretary of State, in which he wrote: "I am stunned at the way you so cavalierly disregarded our constitution’s guarantees of equality and prohibition on privileging certain groups like your Republican and Democratic parties."[1]

Straw was a presidential elector for Stein, and received 625 write-in votes on her behalf in 2012.

Endorsements edit

  • Straw was endorsed by the Indiana Green Party on January 3, 2012. [16] The Lavender Greens, the LGBT caucus of the Green Party of the United States, endorsed him also.
  • Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein campaigned for Straw in South Bend and his home, Goshen on March 4-5, 2012.
  • 11-year dean of the IU-Maurer School of Law, Prof. Fred Aman. June 27, 2011.
  • Professor Jiefen Li, a Chinese law professor and expert on human rights, administrative law, and labor rights in China.
  • Mr. Skip Potter, computer architect for Alan M. Voorhees, Autometric, and Boeing.

Personal edit

Straw lives in Streamwood, Illinois, and has 2 children, Ava and Manu. Straw is fluent in English and Italian, as are his children. He also speaks some German and some French.[17]

Captain Jason Lee Straw edit

Straw's brother, Capt. Jason Lee Straw, is a critical care trauma nurse in the U.S. Air Force. He has served two tours in Afghanistan. During his second tour, Capt. Straw served as a CCAT nurse. His responsibilities included flying as part of 3-person team from Afghanistan to Germany, while helping keep severely injured amputees alive.

See also edit

External links edit

{{submit a leg link}}

References edit

  1. ^ a b c South Bend Tribune "Green candidate denied ballot spot," July 27, 2012
  2. ^ Andrew Straw Birth Certificate
  3. ^ Associated Press, "CDC: Water at Marine Base Linked to Birth Defects", December 6, 2013
  4. ^ Goshen lawyer running for Congress "Education"
  5. ^ Local Lawyer Explores Run for U.S. Representative "IndExcel"
  6. ^ [Information added to page by candidate on June 18, 2013]
  7. ^ a b "Democratic Party ignores handicapped woman’s plea for access to downtown South Bend headquarters" "Democrat HQ"
  8. ^ a b "Butch Morgan gets prison time for election fraud" "2008 Dem Voter Fraud" Cite error: The named reference "MorganForgery" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  9. ^ [Information added to page by candidate on August 27, 2012]
  10. ^ [Information added to page by candidate on August 27, 2012]
  11. ^ [Information added to page by candidate on July 1, 2012]
  12. ^ [Information added to page by candidate on January 16, 2013]
  13. ^ Indiana Secretary of State "2012 Primary Election Results," May 8, 2012
  14. ^ [Content added by candidate, June 2012]
  15. ^ Jill Stein Stumps for Straw "SteinStraw"
  16. ^ eTruth.com "Goshen attorney Straw to run for Congress" Accessed December 15, 2011
  17. ^ Cite error: The named reference bio was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

{{Illinois congress}} {{Illinois}}

Category:Disability Party Category:Illinois Category:Third Party Category:Indiana Category:U.S. House candidate (Disqualified), 2012 Category:2014 potential U.S. House candidate