Retired SIUC official Raymond Lenzi latest to challenge Bost

Retired SIUC official Raymond Lenzi latest to challenge Bost

Collinsville, IL – A retired vice chancellor of Southern Illinois University Carbondale is the second Democrat to announce he will run next year in the 12th Congressional District.

Raymond Lenzi, 72, of Carbondale appeared before the Southwestern Illinois Building and Construction Trades Council to announce his bid to challenge the incumbent, Rep. Mike Bost (R-Murphysboro).

Lenzi retired in 2006 as SIUC Vice Chancellor for Economic Development and CEO of SIU Research Park. He then spent 10 years as board chairman for River to River Residential, now known as The Journey, which provides assisted and supportive living facilities in the region.

Joel Funk, of Mascoutah, a former Army aviation officer, has announced his candidacy in the 12th District Democratic primary as well. He is now a Northwestern Mutual representative in Fairview Heights. More information on Funk can be found on the Labor Tribune website and on Facebook.

A FORMER MINER
Lenzi told the Trades Council that he consulted before beginning his run with Ed Smith, from Marion, IL, a national leader of the Laborers and CEO of Union Labor Life Insurance Co. He said Smith told him to be sure and visit the Trades Council.

“I grew up United Mine Worker,” Lenzi said. “In our household, there was one big picture on the wall. You can guess whose it is – some of you that are older. He had bushy eyebrows. His name was John L. Lewis.

“I worked my way through college at four and a half times the minimum wage as a United Mine Worker, so I know about Labor, and I will be a strong supporter of Labor.”

INFRASTRUCTURE BILL NUMBER ONE
“The first thing we will do is support a big infrastructure bill that will get everybody here working for the next ten years. That’s number one,” Lenzi said. “And raise the minimum wage and pass better labor laws so that we can organize a bigger part of the workforce to be union labor, so that we all get a better slice of the pie and America prospers.”

Bost, he said, has ignored his promise to serve the district’s residents. “He’s not standing with the people, only the super-rich.”

PROFESSOR, EXECUTIVE
Before working at SIUC, Lenzi was a professor at University of Missouri. He’s also operated and bed-and breakfast and vineyard on his property near Carbondale.

“I’ve been a developer all my life in one way or another,” he said.

Lenzi, Funk seek Democratic nomination to take on Bost for 12th District seat

Lenzi, Funk seek Democratic nomination to take on Bost for 12th District seat

CARBONDALE — While incumbent U.S. Rep. Mike Bost won’t face a challenger in next month’s primary election, Democrat voters will choose between Joel Funk of Mascoutah and Ray Lenzi of Makanda to face off against him in the primary this November.

Both candidates recently sat down with The Southern Illinoisan editorial board to talk about the issues facing voters in Illinois’ 12th Congressional District, which runs from the Metro East St. Louis area through rural Southern Illinois.

Lenzi, a union coal miner turned academic who founded the SIU Research Park, said his experience in both arenas have given him a unique perspective on how to best serve the district. He learned the benefits of strong unions in his time underground, and his time studying economics gave him an understanding of how current systems are not working for the majority of constituents, he said.

Funk, a 13-year veteran of the U.S. Army, grew up on his family’s generational farm near Mascoutah. He said he wants to “try to fix the same reason why I left (the farm).” That means finding ways of reducing income inequality, increasing the ability for many in the district to make ends meet, he said.

On the issue of gun control, Lenzi was frank: he is a gun owner who wants more regulation.

“I’m a gun owner … but it’s time to put a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines,” he said, adding he supports red flag laws and universal background checks.

Funk took a more measured approach, stressing balance.

“I am in favor of looking at a red flag law nationally and expanded background checks,” he said.

Lenzi spent a lot of time talking about climate and his ideas for reducing the district’s — and the country’s — impact on it.

“The climate crisis is real and we have to take urgent action to move to renewable energy in 25 to 30 years,” he said. However, as a former union miner, he said he knows how important those jobs are to residents in the 12th. So, he proposed a tax credit system that would aid miners displaced by the shift to renewable energy to be able to get jobs building a new renewable energy infrastructure.

Funk also acknowledged the region’s dependence on coal money and said there would need to be a transition to renewable energy.

“There’s only so much dead dinosaur fuel to go around,” he said. However, he did not go into specifics.

Both agreed that insurance companies and drug manufacturers needed to be put in check. Funk said people have lost their collective bargaining power with the companies.

“We pay what we are told to pay,” he said.

Lenzi said he’d like to see a bigger push toward a government option, but was not willing to ban outright the private sector options.

“I’d like to see a much simpler system,” he said.

The Illinois primary election will be held Tuesday, March 17.

From the Lenzi Campaign

From the Lenzi Campaign

Feb. 13, 2020
For immediate release
The Ray Lenzi for Congress campaign is moving forward, advancing clear solutions to issues facing the 12th District, connecting with more and more voters and positioning itself to take on Mike Bost in November. It’s clear the Funk for Congress campaign is in deep distress:
1) End of the year financial filings with the Federal Election Commission show a campaign deep in debt. The Lenzi campaign, by contrast, has money in the bank with no debt and is increasingly gaining many small donations from its grass roots supporters.
2)That same report shows the “grass roots” Funk campaign to be a myth. More than half of the campaign’s expenditures have been to political consultants who are out-of-state/out-of-district. Mr. Funk is paying outside interests in Washington, D.C., Chicago and elsewhere to convince 12th District voters to support a floundering campaign. Funk’s own internal polling shows him losing to Mike Bost.
3) Mr. Funk voted Republican in the 2010 and 2012 primaries. The Democratic Party’s own voter database shows Funk “leaning Republican.” His “Republican lite” approach to the campaign simply isn’t flying with Southern Illinois and Metro-East voters.
4)The Funk campaign refuses to meet head-on with Ray Lenzi for various debates set up across the 12th District. Negotiations on issues such as dates, times and format began in December 2019, but the Funk campaign has put off the Lenzi campaign, using every excuse in the world. “We already have ‘No Show Mike (Bost),’” said Lenzi, “we don’t’ need a ‘No Show Funk’ who’s afraid to meet in face-to-face debates and side-by-side appearances.” One voter says, “If Funk is not willing to travel outside the metro east area, how can he convince voters to retire Mike Bost.”
5)The Funk campaign has brought in a new campaign manager, an out-of-state political consultant, to try to right the ship. Again, the “grass roots” Funk campaign is proven to be a myth.
6)The previous Funk campaign manager is making negative, misleading posts on the Lenzi for Congress Facebook page, that are simply untrue.
7)As the campaign has progressed, what we do know is that we are the campaign with momentum. When we do have a debate or joint appearance, voters come forward telling us they are changing their vote from Funk to Lenzi.
Lack of experience, lack of support, and simple dishonesty. The Floundering Funk campaign can’t connect with the voters and is NOT ready to take on Mike Bost in the General Election.

The Mike Bost-Egor Fruman/Lev Parnas Corruption Scandal

The Mike Bost-Egor Fruman/Lev Parnas Corruption Scandal

Raymond Lenzi, Congressional Candidate, Illinois 12th District

Dirty money, illegal campaign contributions, foreign election interference. It seems these issues often dominate the national headlines. Well, now, thanks to “No Show” Congressman Mike Bost, these issues are front and center in the 12th Congressional District, too.
Yes, that’s right. Mr. Bost brought the stench and stain of corruption to the good people of Southern Illinois when he accepted an illegal campaign contribution from infamous Russian money launderer Igor Frumen. Frumen and his partner Lev Parnas, you may recall, are both associates of President Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani. Both have been indicted by a grand jury for violating federal election laws.
This illegal dark and dirty money was a factor in Mr. Bost’s election margin over Brendan Kelley in 2018. At minimum Mr. Bost owes Brendan Kelley a public apology. This is on top of his acceptance of more than a million dollars in Super PAC money. Clearly, as a puppet of mega-wealthy donors, Mr. Bost is ignoring working people and families in the 12th district.
Mr. Bost needs to answer two questions:
1) Will you say openly that “It is wrong to solicit money or a thing of value from a foreign government or individual?”
2) Will you refuse “Super PAC dark money” in your 2020 electoral race?
Mr. Bost: We await your public response to these two questions.
Election reform needs to start with getting billionaire money out of American politics. Most western democracies have done this. America, the cradle of democracy, needs to catch up with its junior partners in setting the example for what modern democracy looks like. Clearly Mr. Bost will not help champion honest government. He is a pawn of the oligarchs who now have American democracy by the short hairs.
Stand with the vast majority of Americans who support affordable universal healthcare, climate crisis and infrastructure initiatives, and keeping dark money out of politics. Reject the candidate who cozies up to Igor and Lev.
It’s time to retire Mike Bost. Vote for change and honest government of, by and for the people! Vote for Raymond Lenzi, Democratic candidate for Illinois’ 12th Congressional District.

Congressional Candidate Raymond Lenzi Attended Impeachment Rally

Congressional Candidate Raymond Lenzi Attended Impeachment Rally

In Carbondale on December 17th an impeachment rally was held outside of Congressman Mike Bost congressional office. Democratic candidate for U.S. Congress 12th district in Illinois Raymond Lenzi, charged Bost with corruption and called for his retirement.

MoveOn.org, Stand up American, and Indivisible sponsored the rally. The corruption charges come from Bost’s acceptance of $1.4 million dollars from super PACs and acceptance of the maximum financial contribution from Russian money launderer Igor Fruman.

The rally that was held in Carbondale was one of 500 rallies held across the country over the impeachment of President Donald Trump. Lenzi stated at the rally “The corruption must be called out and stopped.”

(Copyright WBGZ Radio / www.AltonDailyNews.com)

Lincoln-Douglas style debate challenge

Lincoln-Douglas style debate challenge

The Lenzi for Congress Campaign has announced a Lincoln-Douglas style debate challenge between their 12th District Congressional candidate Raymond Lenzi and St. Clair resident Joel Funk. The Lenzi for Congress campaign is already working with Democratic Party Chairs and other interested political and community groups in the 12th District on dates and places for these debates to take place over the early January to mid-March period before the March 17th primary. One debate is already scheduled in February.
The basic outline of the Lincoln-Douglas debate challenge plan is to have a debate in each of the twelve counties in the 12th district just as Lincoln and Douglas debated in all of Illinois’ then congressional districts in their U.S. Senatorial contest in 1858. The preferred debate format will be modeled after the Lincoln-Douglas debates where each speaker took alternate turns speaking of their positions and platforms, issuing questions and challenges to their opponent and responding likewise to the other’s pronouncements and questions. The suggested alternating format will allow the first speaker to speak for thirty minutes, followed by a 45 minute response and rebuttal, followed then again by a 15 minute response from the opening speaker. By having these debates in every county voters will have an open and fair opportunity to hear the candidate’s views on the key issues of the day including climate change, healthcare, jobs, economic development, income inequality, gun safety, educational funding, the electoral college and so on.
The Lenzi for Congress campaign is busily working with each county to set up these events and invites the Funk campaign to respond cooperatively with all speed so that the voters may have the opportunity to compare and contrast our campaigns and positions on the vital issues in these very challenging times.

Ray Lenzi Launches Campaign for Congress

Ray Lenzi Launches Campaign for Congress

BRAD PALMER   WSIU  SEPT 20th 2019

A second democrat has jumped into the race to oust republican Mike Bost as the U.S. Representative from the 12th congressional district.

Former SIU administrator Ray Lenzi officially launched his campaign on Thursday evening in front of around 30 supporters at Carbondale City Hall.

“We say it’s really time to drain the swamp. We say it’s time to retire Mike Bost.”

Lenzi laid out a progressive agenda that he says is in stark contrast to Bost, the GOP incumbent. He says progress must be made on issues such as healthcare, gun violence , income inequality and others.

“The current government is not addressing the problems of the American people. We need an infrastructure bill, we have crumbling roads, all of those things. Then, we also have the climate crisis, where we really need action.”

He believes voters across the district are ready for his progressive agenda.

“I think the phenomenon we saw with the conservative surge in the last three cycles, let’s say, and particularly in the most recent, I think it’s waning.”

Joel Funk from Mascoutah announced his intention to run for the democratic nomination in the 12th district last month.

Makanda Democrat Lenzi hopes to challenge Rep. Mike Bost in 12th District

Makanda Democrat Lenzi hopes to challenge Rep. Mike Bost in 12th District

GABRIEL NEELY-STREIT The Southern   Aug 30, 2019

CARBONDALE — Makanda Democrat Raymond Lenzi will be filing as a candidate to challenge U.S. Rep. Mike Bost in Illinois’ 12th District in the 2020 election, he announced Thursday.

“This is going to be a bold campaign and it’s going to be a campaign on the issues,” Lenzi told The Southern. “This is a tough district to win. We’re going to have to start early and work harder.”

Like Bost, Lenzi has deep Southern Illinois ties.

He comes from a multi-generational coal mining family, and put himself through Southern Illinois University Carbondale working in the mines, he said.

Lenzi holds multiple degrees from SIUC, and filled several roles at the university, including associate chancellor for economic development and CEO of the SIU Research Park.

“We did millions of dollars in development plans in deep Southern Illinois every year, so I know about financing and tax credits, and I have clear, specific ideas about economic development in the 12th District,” he said. “I want to build the ‘city-county coalition,’ where St. Clair, Madison and Monroe counties stand with Union, Franklin and Williamson. We need bold action so people can share in the good things of the great American economy.”

Lenzi sees Bost, a three-term incumbent, as a yes-man for President Donald Trump, whose administration he called “an egotistical farce.”

“I think (Bost) has been complicit in everything that’s happened in this administration,” Lenzi said. “He’s been silent about disastrous immigration policies, silent about a tax cut that is only benefiting the rich, silent throughout the climate crisis. He was even silent when Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner was starving our university.”

Lenzi hopes to appeal to Republicans on the issues, he said, from justice for coal miners, to stable economic policies and fair taxation.

“I ask them, ‘Do you really stand with this chaos in Washington?’” he said.