by Razor's Edge Virtual Office | Jun 29, 2018
Unanimous supreme court ruling protects future initiatives from Legislature’s “novel” 4th option (so says Eyman’s crystal ball) My attorney Joel Ard told me that I couldn’t wear my orange $30 tabs t-shirt in court. I assured him I...
by Razor's Edge Virtual Office | Jun 27, 2018
Tomorrow, Thurs, 1:30 pm, Olympia, Temple of Justice, oral arguments before state supreme court on 940 case (Eyman v Wyman) Tomorrow, Thursday, June 28, 1:30 pm, there will be oral arguments before the 9 justices of the state supreme court on the Initiative 940 case...
by Razor's Edge Virtual Office | Jun 25, 2018
It’s a marathon, not a sprint – signature drive for $30 tabs goes till Dec 31 The other initiatives have a deadline of July 6, ours is December 31. So that means we have the rest of June, July, August, September, October, November, and December to raise...
by Razor's Edge Virtual Office | Jun 22, 2018
Let me explain paid signature gathering – everyone needs to lighten up about it It’s never been tougher to qualify an initiative in Washington. In 1999, we needed 180K signatures to get our $30 Tabs Initiative on the ballot. For this year’s...
by Razor's Edge Virtual Office | Jun 20, 2018
The fight for our $30 Tabs Initiative is about a whole lot more than $30 Tabs I wouldn’t have sold off my family’s retirement fund and loaned half a million dollars to the signature drive for Initiative 976 if this was just about lowering tabs. ...
[…] former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious legal flaws and…
[…] While former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious legal flaws…
[…] is deserving of its cherished reputation? With this unfathomable, fiction-worthy, but factual episode playing out in Washington, perhaps the rank hypocrisy…
[…] In the past 22 years, by working together with our thousands of heroic supporters, we’ve qualified 17 statewide initiatives…
[…] While former Supreme Court Justice Richard Sanders did an admirable job defending Mr. Eyman and pointing out the obvious…