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Indiana governor candidate Q&A: Jamie Reitenour on the issues

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Indiana governor candidate Q&A: Jamie Reitenour on the issues


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Jamie Reitenour admits that for most of her life, she was a conservative voter who felt like she was merely checking boxes.

But the 2016 election piqued her interest in politics. Not long after, the Indianapolis mother of five said, she felt a calling from God to become governor of Indiana. Last year, she said, she felt the calling resurge and decided to act on it.

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She has significant ground to cover in terms of name recognition compared to her opponents in the Republican primary, which include Fort Wayne businessman Eric Doden, U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, former Attorney General Curtis Hill and former Commerce Secretary Brad Chambers. Donald Rainwater is running as a Libertarian and former schools Superintendent Jennifer McCormick as a Democrat.

IndyStar asked Reitenour, as well as the seven other candidates, a set of questions about issues relevant to the 2024 race, some of which were submitted by readers. This interview is edited for length and clarity.

Q: What do you think sets you apart from your competition in the Republican primary?

A: I haven’t been in politics. That’s why people should want me in politics. Because America needs normal people. Not perfect people ― true people. Because the country is in need. And the people are hurting. It’s real. So that’s the biggest difference.

Q: What would be your first priority as governor?

A: I’ve traveled over 13,000 miles in the last two years ― I got started January 2022. And so as I went around, I looked for, where is the most vulnerable place in our state? And what I saw was that education is the area where it is most vulnerable. Our children are vulnerable. Our scores are low. Kids are losing their identity. They’re losing their desire. That’s a big deal ― their vision for life. When you leave, and you have no reason to continue to get a job, when you’ve got half a society that’s just dropping off and saying, who cares? That’s a big deal.

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So my head of education, her name is Paige Miller. And she’s a Mom for Liberty. I love that group; they are a wonderful group of people. We bring to the table, desiring that every senior would graduate having completed an apprenticeship. Senior year is a year where they’re not doing a whole lot anyway. We want Indiana to be the training capital of the United States. So we start there, and we very rapidly go around the state. We’ve got great plans for our small towns. We’ve got our eyes on Gary, Indiana.

Q: In many ways today’s Republican Party has factions defined by one’s posture toward Donald Trump. What’s yours?

A: Whether it’s President Trump or Tim Scott or Nikki Haley or Ron DeSantis ― if any of those people were in the position that President Trump has been put in, I’d have a problem with it. I don’t believe that what’s happening in our country is fair justice. I think it’s easy to not like a person or blame something on a person’s personality, but I love the law. And there’s a lot to be wanting, in the situation that he finds himself in. In the Bible, in Micah, it says, “What is required of you but to do justly, and to love mercy and to walk humbly before thy God.” I would just say to anyone in that position, I would want everyone to do justly. And I think that is wanting, so I would direct my comment less to the person and more to the situation.

Q: Do you believe the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump?

A: I believe the 2020 election had an incredible amount of irregularity, and it should have been questioned.

Q: Where do you stand on Indiana’s new abortion law, and what changes to it would you support?

A: I definitely am a person that believes in life at conception, and I’m not an exception person. I’m just, life at conception. I know a lot of babies that people would have said “no” to that are just so beautiful. And our society needs their beauty.

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Q: Gun violence is an epidemic in today’s American society. How should Indiana respond?

A: Fatherless homes is an epidemic in our society, and that’s what we need to be addressing. Kids model their examples. They want to be wanted. They want leadership. They want to belong.

The issue is not the item they’re picking up to do violence; the issue is their homes and the brokenness of their homes. There needs to be a wake-up call for the families that have been constantly going to the same well, but the water has run dry, and the solutions are not working. So they need to be looking for something different. My solution to gun violence is education. It’s walking in those streets, looking at those children, going to those high schools.

I’m willing to consider very outside-of-the-box things for schools that are struggling in education. If you’ve got a 10% graduation rate, everything is on the table. We will talk apprenticeships, we will talk early training in freshman year. We will talk all solutions so that kids can get out of this cycle of poverty and violence and broken family and really experience what they were made for.

Q: The 2023 legislative session dealt with culture war topics such as LGBTQ issues and school library books. Where do you stand on those issues?

A: Some of the books they’ve read, the way that they speak in these books are things that I would never let my children hear. So, there was a need for discretion. So I’m happy with the laws that have promoted that discretion and given the boundaries. But it was done for just up to third or fourth grade. It’ll be interesting to see if they stop at third grade or if they continue it for all the grades. I think if it’s good for a third grader, I don’t understand how it cuts off at fourth grade. I think it’ll be an interesting conversation.

Q: Should citizens have a right to collect signatures to put questions on the ballot without legislative approval?

A: Yeah, I think Hoosiers should.

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Contact IndyStar state government and politics reporter Kayla Dwyer at kdwyer@indystar.com or follow her on Twitter @kayla_dwyer17.





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Indiana leaders push ALEC-backed national debt denunciation

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Indiana leaders push ALEC-backed national debt denunciation


(INDIANA CAPITAL CHRONICLE) — Hoosier leaders gathered Monday to highlight their latest legislative call for a solution to the nation’s ballooning debt — with the support of an influential right-wing policy group.

“We have become a model of fiscal responsibility, but we are vulnerable to the rapidly dissolving financial position of our country,” said Comptroller Elise Nieshalla, who leads a National Debt Crisis Task Force for the conservative State Financial Officers Foundation.

She backed House Resolution 28, recognizing the national debt as a national security threat and calling on Congress to establish “an effective regular order for budgeting.” The declaration comes a year after the Senate approved a similar effort, Senate Resolution 51.

Nieshalla recalled asking Jonathan Williams, the president and chief economist at the American Legislative Exchange Council, if there was “any way you could turn this … into a model resolution and get it passed in as many of the 50 states as possible?”

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ALEC, which promotes model conservative legislation to state lawmakers, finalized the model last summer. Ten other states are weighing the resolution now, per Nieshalla.

“We’re so excited today to launch this national effort, from an ALEC perspective, to help educate the American people, and to state legislators across the country, (about) the dire state of affairs of our national debt and what can be done about it,” Williams said.

The state efforts were based off Gov. Mike Braun’s own U.S. Senate Resolution 600. It was agreed to in 2024, his last year in Congress.

“When I did that resolution, it has to be juxtaposed to the fact that, as a privilege motion, I took a bill to the Senate floor about balancing our budget over 10 years, not even including interest,” Braun said. “Every Democrat voted against it. One-third of the Republicans at the national level voted against it. What does that tell you?”

“This isn’t going to be solved willingly by the people that are running our country at any level,” Braun added. He said the debt fight was one reason he left the Capitol, “because it was like talking to the side of my barn back home.”

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Voters approved a balanced budget amendment to the state constitution in 2018, after it passed two successive classes of the General Assembly. ALEC has also adopted that as a model.

“We think it’s the gold standard,” Williams said.

“Every year we have an honestly balanced budget, so we are leading the charge,” said Sen. Linda Rogers, R-Granger. She also serves as a state chair for ALEC.

“We’ve established the roadmap, so it’s time that we make America like Indiana,” she said to applause.

The news conference, held in at the Statehouse, prompted pushback.

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Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, criticized his GOP colleagues for supporting the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is expected to add $3.4 trillion to the national debt by 2035.

“While Indiana Republicans offered lip service today about lowering the national debt, they have taken steps to import this fiscally irresponsible policy by bringing Indiana in line with the excessive cuts,” DeLaney said in a news release. “… Passing down a $52 trillion national debt to our children and grandchildren is irresponsible and unsustainable. Let’s get serious and prioritize popular programs that help Hoosiers instead of tax cuts for the mega-rich.”

He and other Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee supported the resolution Monday afternoon, however. It advanced to the floor unanimously.

Republicans on the committee did reject a Democratic amendment that would have educated students on how much the national debt increased, as expressed in both dollars and a percentage, during the term of each president.

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Mari Evans: Indianapolis icon of Black Arts Movement remembered

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Mari Evans: Indianapolis icon of Black Arts Movement remembered


INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Throughout the month of February, WISH-TV is celebrating Black History by sharing stories of remarkable African Americans who made great contributions to the Indianapolis community.

Mari Evans was an African American poet, writer, television host and professor who championed the Black Arts Movement in the Circle City.

Her face may be recognizable because her likeness appears on a larger than life mural painted on the side of a building at the corner of Mass Avenue and Michigan Street, signifying her dedication to Black culture in the city.

Her mission was always to depict African American life in Indianapolis, with themes of love, loss, liberation and faith.

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Born in 1919 in Toledo, Ohio, Evans moved to Indianapolis in 1947 and made her home here. She became a prolific poet and writer, a musician and professor at Purdue and Indiana University. In later years, Evans produced, wrote and directed a show called “The Black Experience” on Indianapolis Public Television.

Evans died in Indianapolis on March 10, 2017, at the age of 97.

She was a champion of African-American culture in Indianapolis and beyond.



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Lawmakers could scrap child labor reporting in Indiana

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Lawmakers could scrap child labor reporting in Indiana


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  • The Indiana Senate is considering a bill that would totally eliminate Indiana’s child labor reporting system.
  • Employers would no longer be required to register and track minors on their payroll.
  • It’s the latest effort to roll back child labor protections in Indiana.

Indiana lawmakers are once again moving to weaken state child labor laws.

Recent changes to House Bill 1302 would do away with the Indiana Department of Labor’s Youth Employment System, a database where employers are required to register and track minors 17 years old and younger on their payroll.

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Doing away with the system could make it more difficult to estimate just how many Hoosier youth are working across the state at any given time.

According to the most recent legislative fiscal note on the bill, “the change will likely reduce the efficiency of on-site employer inspections for compliance with child labor laws since employers will no longer have to indicate that they employ workers younger than 18.”

State Rep. Jake Teshka, R-New Liberty, the bill’s author, confirmed that the amendments go a lot further than the version of the bill passed by the House with a 92-0 vote on Jan. 28. That version made only a minor adjustment to the mandated reporting timeline for employers.

But amendments made in the Senate’s Pensions and Labor Committee strike all of the provisions about the database from state law. The changes repeal the mandate for the labor department to maintain the database, employer reporting requirements and penalties for failing to report and track teen workers.

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Teshka said he was still gathering details about the new changes. The newer version of the bill, sponsored by Sen. Linda Rogers, R-Granger, will go to the full Senate on Feb. 16. It could get a straight up and down vote as early as Feb. 17. Rogers did not respond to a request for comment.

In 2024, Rogers, who owns a golf course that is registered to employ minors, cosponsored legislation that increased work hours for teens. She also put forth legislation to reduce the age at which teens can sell and serve alcohol in hotels and restaurants from 19 to 18. Both bills were signed into law.

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Teshka said he’ll have an opportunity to concur or dissent to the changes if it passes the Senate. For now, he intends to have more conversations with people in the Department of Labor, industry and education to identify the best way forward.

Department of Labor attorney Brent Cullers told a House committee last month there were 40 violations for reporting requirements in 2025. Employers appealed half of them because of confusion over the timeline to report the employment status of their under 18 workers.

“We’ve heard from some employers of youth that they would maybe hire more, but the [reporting] program has actually become something that’s burdensome to them,” Teshka said Jan. 13.

The Youth Employment System launched in 2021. Prior to the database, schools certified a teen worker’s age and academic standing.

Current Indiana law requires employers to register in the database if they have at least five teens on payroll. The database contains the names, ages and hire dates of youth as well as the email addresses, number of minor employees, and the names of each registered employer. Employers who do not comply with the reporting requirement can face penalties up to $400 per infraction, per minor employee.

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If the reporting system is eliminated, “it would not change any of the laws around youth employment and the way youth in our state can be employed,” Teshka said, “and that goes to the number of hours they can work and when they can work and the types of jobs they can work.”

Like other red states, Indiana has eased child labor laws since 2019. In recent years, lawmakers have eliminated teen work permits, expanded work hours for older teens, shifted oversight of the teenage workforce from the Indiana Department of Education to the Labor Department, eliminated mandatory rest breaks and exempted businesses employing fewer than five teens from registering them with the state.

Last year, an IndyStar analysis of Indiana child labor violations found a steady increase in the number of teens under 18 working hazardous jobs. Labor law violations involving teens hit a nine-year high in 2023.

Teshka said he understood concerns that attempts to do away with the database are another means to weaken labor laws protecting minors. He said there needs to be balance because teens do learn soft skills by working.

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“We don’t want to make it so restrictive that we are icing out youth from certain businesses and those sorts of things,” said Teshka. “But, we also want to make sure that we’re doing it in a responsible way.”

This story may be updated.

Contact IndyStar investigative reporter Alexandria Burris at aburris@gannett.com. Follow her on X, formerly Twitter, at @allyburris and on Bluesky at‪@allymburris.bsky.social‬.



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