
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Guests - Juan Ciscomani, Betsy Smith, Scott Schara
Eighty-eight days to the primary. The Pima County fair was running. Volunteers were collecting recall signatures. The Board of Supervisors had just voted to double their spending cap and put the question to voters in November. And a father in Wisconsin was preparing to spend seven weeks on a radio show in Tucson telling the story of how his daughter with Down syndrome was killed by a hospital that called itself a place of healing.
Thursday on Winn Tucson moved through all of it — from the halls of Congress to the streets of Memphis to a Wisconsin civil courtroom — with the same underlying question threading every conversation: who is fighting for the people they claim to serve, and who is fighting against them?
By Kathleen WinnGuests - Juan Ciscomani, Betsy Smith, Scott Schara
Eighty-eight days to the primary. The Pima County fair was running. Volunteers were collecting recall signatures. The Board of Supervisors had just voted to double their spending cap and put the question to voters in November. And a father in Wisconsin was preparing to spend seven weeks on a radio show in Tucson telling the story of how his daughter with Down syndrome was killed by a hospital that called itself a place of healing.
Thursday on Winn Tucson moved through all of it — from the halls of Congress to the streets of Memphis to a Wisconsin civil courtroom — with the same underlying question threading every conversation: who is fighting for the people they claim to serve, and who is fighting against them?