Jennifer McCormick Lays Out Commonsense Plan for Change in Indiana During First Debate

Posted by on October 3, 2024 1:23 am
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Categories: State News

During Wednesday’s first Indiana Governor’s Debate on FOX 59/CBS 4, Jennifer McCormick laid out a clear, commonsense vision for the future of Indiana.

“Jennifer McCormick has the clear, commonsense vision to put Indiana back on the right track after 20 years of one-party rule, and that was on full display during Wednesday night’s gubernatorial debate,” said Indiana Democratic Party Chair Mike Schmuhl“Jennifer laid out her plans to restore reproductive freedom, repair Hoosier roads, fully fund public schools, and legalize cannabis like every one of our neighboring states.”

“Braun refused to take responsibility for his falsified, digitally-altered ad still running on television across Indiana or stand up to the dangerous ideas and extremism being pushed by his Christian nationalist running mate, Micah Beckwith. This includes Beckwith’s accusation that his opponents are “Jezebel spirits”, which Braun repeatedly refused to address or apologize for.

“One-party control has left our state government unaccountable, wasted hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars, and cost thousands of disabled Hoosiers their care benefits. Enough is enough. It’s time for change, and that’s what Jennifer McCormick and Terry Goodin will bring from day one.”

Hoosiers need change at the Statehouse, and Jennifer McCormick presented her plans on education, reproductive freedom, legalizing cannabis, and growing high-wage jobs for Hoosiers.

“For over a year, I’ve been traveling Indiana, visiting all ninety-two counties, and talking to Hoosiers about our commonsense plans to restore balance to Indiana government,” McCormick said in a press release. “Tonight, Hoosiers saw the stark contrast between Mike Braun and Micah Beckwith’s out-of-touch extremism and our commonsense plans for helping all Hoosier families.”

After twenty years of one-party control, we need to put Indiana on the right track. In rankings across the board, Indiana is near the bottom for quality of life, wages, healthcare, and education. See the rankings for yourself: