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Musgrove announces candidacyJan. 24, 2000 Havre Daily
News
John L. Musgrove, 58, announced today that he will be a candidate for
Representative in the Montana Legislature, running in House District 91 as a
Democrat.
”Our country has been in one of the longest periods of economic prosperity
in its history,” Musgrove said, ”and yet I see little evidence of that
prosperity extending to the Hi- Line or to the north- eastern part of the
state. Symbolic of our plight is the unused grain elevators that are being
dismantled in several Hi-Line towns. When farmers received less than 3 percent
return on equity during the 1990s, this impacts the entire Hi-Line
community.”
Except for a few years, Musgrove has been a resident of Montana and a resident
of Havre since 1973.
If elected, Musgrove said he will work to provide stronger state support for
agriculture, education and small businesses.
”Each of these three areas interrelates with the others,” Musgrove said.
For every seven farm families who can’t make a reasonable profit, one main
street business closes, and the school’s funding base declines.” Musgrove said he is looking forward to meeting and talking with the people in House District 91 and invites anyone who is interested in discussing issues and concerns to contact him at home at 265-1787.
Musgove campaigning for Peck's seat in HD91Eric J. Greene, Great Falls Tribune, Jan. 25, 2000
John Musgrove of
Havre announced his intention Monday to run for the state House of
Representatives seat being vacated by veteran legislator Ray Peck, D-Havre,
who cannot run because of term limits. Musgrove is the
only candidate so far [1/25/00] to file for House District 91, a 1,466-square-mile
region that includes the northern half of Havre and parts of Hill and Blaine
counties. A Havre resident
since 1973, the 58-year-old Democrat said he wants to increase the state’s
support of agriculture, education, and small business. “Our country has
been in one of the longest periods of economic prosperity in its history, and
yet I see little evidence of the prosperity extending to the Hi-line or to the
northeastern part of the state,” he said. “For every seven farm families who can’t make a reasonable profit, one Main Street business closes and the school’s funding base declines.” Dem’s
central committee launches Campaign 2000
Ron VandenBoom, Havre Daily News,
January 26, 2000 Democratic Central
Committee Chairperson, Debbie Friede, launched Campaign 2000 Tuesday by telling
guests at the Central Committee monthly meeting that she believes they’re
going to win. “I think we’re
going to win hands down,” she told the crowd. Friede introduced
the democratic candidates that have so far filed to run in 2000.
They include: Kathy Bessette, county commissioner district 3; John
Musgrove, representative HD 91; Antoinette “Toni” Hagner, representative HD
90; Dena Tippels, Hill County clerk of court. In explaining his
reasons for running, Musgrove, the only candidate that is yet to hold political
office, told the crowd a story about the Masal Tribe in Africa who are known as
fierce warriors. “They have a
greeting they say to everyone as they pass by . . .,” he said.
“They say,' How are the children.’” He explained the
reason they use that particular phrase is “because they know that if the
children in the community are alright, then everything else is going to be
alright as well.” Montanans, too,
are going to have to start looking at what kind of a place they are presenting
for the children and also where their children are because Montana is losing
population, Musgrove said. The central
committee established four work committees.
Musgrove working for responsive governmentRon VandenBoom Havre Daily News Feb
10, 2000 Tell John Musgrove, Democratic candidate for House
District 91, that you want less government and you’re bound to get a reaction.
”I’m tired of that phrase ’less government,’”
Musgrove said in a recent interview. ”It’s my feeling that we need
responsive government rather then less government.” Musgrove, a former teacher at Havre High School, is
running against fellow Democrat Roberta Demarest, in a primary bid for the seat.
”Sometimes the government is our only protection,”
Musgrove said. Protection primarily from what Musgrove sees as a shift in
balance between the rights of big corporations and the need by workers to make a
reasonable profit for their efforts. “Montana has hard workers and educated workers that
are being forced into a position where the top end of the scale and the bottom
end of the scale is widening all of the time,” he said. ”We need to put the
brakes on that. We all deserve a profit.” In his own case, Musgrove said he has worked all of his
life to get into what he sees as ”the middle class.” “And they are setting the bar higher and higher all
of the time,” he said. Musgrove however sees the bar lowering when it comes to the balance
between individual freedoms and individual responsibilities. ”You have to have a balance between individual
freedoms and community protections,” he said. ”If they’re out of balance
then certainly something is wrong. And I believe they are.” He quotes a comment borrowed from an unknown source
that states: “The Statue of Liberty is on the east coast and they ought to
have the Statue of Responsibility an the west coast.” Musgrove said a push during the 1970’s for individual
rights lacked the individual responsibilities that go along with them. ”The individual position became much more important
than the community position,” he said. ”We’re human beings and human
beings belong with the community.” He added, ”It starts with the family.” Musgrove believes the impact of this push toward
individualism is part of the reason Montana is coming in dead last according to
most economic indicators. ”We’re in trouble here,” he said. ”And we’ve
got to find a way to turn it
around. I don’t know if that’s possible, but I’m going to give it a
try.”
Musgrove believes that what has been done so far to reverse the downslide
constitutes little more than ”spinning our wheels.”
”We keep trying to bring the big corporations in here when we need to unify
the small businesses to equal the big corporations,” he said. ”I’m for the
small businessman who doesn’t have the same break on wholesale items because
they can’t purchase enough in a unit to sell it at a good profit.”
As for agriculture, Musgrove rejects the argument by Republican candidate from
HD 90, Merlin Wolery, that less government regulation of agriculture would help
Montana farmers.
”A partnership between government and agriculture is much more beneficial than
having less government,” Musgrove said, referring to granges and co-ops as a
way agriculture might be able to effect changes. Musgrove also believes Montana’s share of the tobacco settlement money should be used for getting people to stop smoking and to aid in health concerns related to smoking. His fear is that the money might be squandered unless there is a strong workable program laid out by the legislature.
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