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By Douglas Burns
Manilla Democrat plans to spotlight farming, education, infrastructure and health care.
Dave Muhlbauer is the third generation in his family to consecutively serve in public office. His late grandfather, Louis, and father, Dan, were both state representatives in western Iowa. Photo By Douglas Burns.
Former Crawford County Supervisor Dave Muhlbauer, a Manilla farmer and cattleman with deep family roots in rural Iowa politics, this morning announced his bid for U.S. Sen. Charles Grassleyâs seat.
Muhlbauer, who describes himself as an âold-school farming-labor Democrat,â is the only well-known Democrat to enter the November 2022 U.S. Senate race to this point. For his part, Grassley, a Republican who has held his U.S. Senate seat since 1981, says he may file for an eighth term, but likely wonât make his plans known until fall.
In an age of scarcity (for many) and excess (for the few), the language and policies of diversity become zero-sum. What another gets, you lose. So goes the polarized thinking that has turned our public square into a fever swamp of resentments and recriminations.
For too many rural Americans, the
Man sentenced to 206-230 years in cold case
March 10, 2021
LARAMIE (Wyoming News Exchange/Green River Star) – A man who was previously sentenced for a sexual assault in Sweetwater County was recently sentenced for a similar crime in Albany County. Mark Douglas Burns, 70, of Ogden, Utah, was sentenced Feb. 17 by Albany County Second Judicial District Court Judge Tori Kricken for the 1996 sexual assault of a Laramie resident.
Burns pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual assault in the first degree; one count of burglary; and one count of kidnapping-confinement. He received a sentence of 206 – 230 years in prison.
In May 2015, after DNA enter.
By Douglas Burns
3/3/2021
U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, speaks with agriculture professionals and the media during a February event in Jefferson. Photo By Douglas Burns
At age 87, U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, first elected to office during the Eisenhower administration, smiled broadly when pressed by audience members about a potential re-election campaign next year in a town hall at Landus Cooperative in Jefferson recently.
âI can do 20 right now,â Grassley said, referring to push-ups.
The senator said he would make a decision in a matter of months on whether to seek an eighth, six-year term in the Senate in November 2022. If Grassley does run, and wins and lives through inauguration day on Jan. 20, 2029, he will, at age 95 (heâd turn 96 later that year), have served 70 consecutive years in public office as he was sworn into the Iowa House on Jan. 12, 1959.