Democrat Fundraising Platform Falling Short Of ‘Progressive Ideals’ Amid Mass Layoff, Union Claims

A union representing employees of ActBlue, the nonprofit software firm which enables Democratic candidates and entities to fundraise, asserted on Monday that the company is falling short of “progressive values” as several of their members were affected by recent layoffs.

ActBlue dismissed 17% of staff members, the majority of whom were in nontechnical roles, and offered the departing employees eight weeks of pay and benefits. ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones, who started in her position earlier this year, said in a statement that the headcount reduction will help the company serve users “as sustainably and effectively as possible during the 2024 cycle and beyond” as executives seek to control costs.

ActBlue Union, one of the two collective bargaining entities under which the company’s employees are organized, balked at the dismissals in a statement on social media. “Layoffs unfairly punish union employees who are both not responsible for the current financial difficulties,” the group said. “We are disappointed in the mismanagement that has gotten us here.”

The statement from ActBlue Union noted that 32 of the 54 dismissed employees were members of their organization. They blamed leadership for neglecting to take “pay cuts or stipend freezes,” claiming they prioritized “executive profit over rank and file workers’ livelihoods,” meaning that ActBlue is not living up to its own “progressive ideals.”

ActBlue, which does not endorse individual candidates, enabled donors to make a combined $3.5 billion in campaign contributions during the 2022 midterm elections. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Joe Biden used the ActBlue platform to facilitate donations amid their respective runs for the White House in 2016 and 2020.

ActBlue responded to the accusations in a statement affirming that the company has a “deep respect for unions,” including the two unions at ActBlue, and remains “committed to working with them on these changes in a productive manner.”

Several other companies in the technology and media sectors have decreased headcounts in recent months to reduce costs and respond to the current economic tumult. NPR recently canceled four podcasts amid its payroll reductions, while employees of the show “Louder Than A Riot” similarly insinuated that executives were failing to embrace their desire to protect racial minorities and “queer” voices.

Employees at large technology companies have not been immune from the layoffs: Amazon has dismissed more than 27,000 employees in moves to become more efficient, while Meta dismissed 10,000 employees and ceased efforts to fill 5,000 available positions after decreasing its headcount by more than 11,000 workers earlier this year. More than 130,000 workers have been laid off from technology firms so far in 2023, according to a report from Crunchbase, even after companies nixed about 93,000 positions last year.

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Beyond the technology and media sectors, other industries have faced pressure from unions as they navigate an economy characterized by persistent inflation, supply chain bottlenecks, and labor shortages.

Jury Selection Begins In Trial Of Lori Vallow, ‘Doomsday Mom’ Accused Of Killing Children

Jury selection began Monday for the trial of Lori Vallow Daybell, the Idaho mom charged with killing two of her children.

Vallow and her husband, Chad Daybell, are charged with murdering Vallow’s daughter Tylee from a previous marriage and her adopted son J.J., as well as murdering Daybell’s ex-wife, Tammy. The pair was charged on May 25, 2021, but the trial is just getting started, 12 News reported.

The trial will take place in Boise after being moved from eastern Idaho, where the murders allegedly took place, in order for Vallow to get a fair trial.

Late last month, during a hearing at the Fremont County Courthouse in St. Anthony, Idaho, District Judge Steven Boyce heard a motion to dismiss the death penalty, which Boyce granted “to ensure the rights of the defendant to a fair trial are protected,” East Idaho News reported.

Lori’s husband, Chad Daybell, also faces trial for the children’s murders, and at a hearing last month, Boyce ruled that prosecutors must turn over all written and recorded statements made by Chad since he’s been in custody. Chad still faces the death penalty.

Lori was once a loving mother, a guest on “Wheel of Fortune,” and a beauty pageant contestant.

At some point, however, her religious views became more extreme, to the point where she allegedly referred to people who didn’t share her views as “zombies” who needed to be dealt with. As her views veered into the absurd, the people around her began dying, including her children and ex-husband, Charles Vallow.

On February 8, 2018, Vallow filed for divorce from Lori, saying she threatened to kill him if he stood in the way of her preparations for Jesus Christ’s second coming, which she and Daybell said would happen in July 2020. Vallow called the cops on Lori, citing the murder threat and asking her to be placed in a mental institution to receive treatment. Police spoke to Lori and seemed to believe it was Vallow, not Lori, who was the one with mental health issues.

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Then, on July 11, 2019, police in Chandler, Arizona, received a phone call from Alex Cox, Lori’s brother, who said he shot and killed Charles Vallow in self-defense. Lori began telling friends and family different versions of how Vallow died, from saying he had a heart attack, to suicide, to self-defense. She texted Vallow’s children from a previous marriage about his death but stopped answering them when they asked her what had happened. Alex Cox was never charged in the death.

In September 2019, Lori, along with Tylee and J.J., moved to Rexburg, Idaho, to be closer to Daybell, who said a voice told him to move there for the second coming of Christ. On September 8, 2019, Lori and her brother Alex, took Tylee and J.J. to Yellowstone National Park. Tylee was never seen alive again.

Two weeks later, on September 23, J.J., who is autistic, was last seen at his school in Idaho. The next day, Lori informed the school that he would be homeschooled instead.

Shortly after this, Chad’s wife Tammy was found dead in her home. Her death was initially ruled to be natural, but police have since opened an investigation into the matter.

Less than a month after Tammy died, Lori married Chad Daybell in Hawaii.

Three weeks later, after Lori and Daybell returned to Idaho, police conducted a welfare check on J.J. at the request of his grandmother. At the time, Lori told police that J.J. was with relatives in Arizona and that Tylee had gone to Brigham Young University-Idaho. People then began to question where J.J. and Tylee had gone, and suddenly, Lori and Daybell packed up and abandoned their home in Idaho on the same day police began searching for the children.

Not long after, on December 12, Lori’s brother Alex died in Gilbert, Arizona, due to a reported blood clot. His death was not investigated further, as the condition ran in the family.

On December 20, police in Rexburg, Idaho, officially announced an investigation into the disappearance of J.J. and Tylee. A month later, Lori was served a court order to produce the children within five days. She and Daybell headed back to Kauai.

When the deadline to produce the children passed, police began laying the groundwork to arrest Lori. They did so on February 20, 2020, arresting Lori in Kauai and charging her with two felony counts of desertion and nonsupport of dependent children.

It wasn’t until June 9, 2020, when police searched Chad Daybell’s property in Idaho, that the bodies of Tylee and J.J. were found. Daybell tried to flee the scene but was caught and charged with two felony counts of destruction, alteration, or concealment of evidence.

In early March, Lori and Daybell had their trials separated by a judge, with Lori’s trial set to begin on April 3, with Daybell’s to occur later. The separation came after Lori tried to have the charges against her dismissed for lack of a speedy trial since she was arrested nearly three years ago.