The legislative session was
over. We thought last week would be the end, till it was time for veto override
attempt day.
We were wrong. The
legislature will be back on June 16. One of the bills that had a non-germane
amendment tacked on to it has the governor and the House and Senate leadership feeling
a little cross. SB 485: An Act establishing a state grant program to assist state and local law
enforcement agencies in addressing the opioid crisis and making an
appropriation therefor, relative to the health care premium contribution for
retired state employees who are eligible for Medicare Parts A and B due to age
or disability, relative to funding of retiree health benefits, and making an
appropriation to the department of administrative services.
This bill began life as a bill to fund law enforcement agencies in dealing with the opioid crisis. The funding amounted to $1.5 million for law enforcement. The amendment to mess with the retired state employee health care was tacked on much later.
The
bill sailed through the committee of conference, but it failed to clear the
House. By ONE vote. 159-160. The libertea crowd was peeved about giving money
to law enforcement. The Democrats were peevish about Republicans messing with
state employee health plans. It was enough to ensure the bill didn’t pass.
Law enforcement really wants that money, and Governor Hassan really wants to give it to them. We’ve been losing the war on drugs since Nixon was in the White House but that won’t stop us! We’re still trying to make trickle down economics work, too. I don’t believe that we can enforce our way out of this situation. Enforcement only addresses the symptoms. We aren’t doing anything to figure out the root causes of the drug crisis. (Hint: it’s not the drugs!) We are not a state that engages in self-reflection. We have no interest in planning ahead. All we care about is not raising or spending sufficient money to run our state as if it were a going concern.
Law enforcement really wants that money, and Governor Hassan really wants to give it to them. We’ve been losing the war on drugs since Nixon was in the White House but that won’t stop us! We’re still trying to make trickle down economics work, too. I don’t believe that we can enforce our way out of this situation. Enforcement only addresses the symptoms. We aren’t doing anything to figure out the root causes of the drug crisis. (Hint: it’s not the drugs!) We are not a state that engages in self-reflection. We have no interest in planning ahead. All we care about is not raising or spending sufficient money to run our state as if it were a going concern.
After
the vote, GOP leadership blamed the Governor for not providing leadership
(translation: not caving in to their demands) on retiree health care. No
mention of the fact that it was a Republican on the Finance Committee who added
the poison pill to the original bill, and they passed the bill with that
amendment attached to it. There doesn’t seem to be any awareness on the part of
leadership that the libertea faction of their majority hates law enforcement
and would rather eat ground glass than give them any money. Easier to blame the
governor than look in the mirror.
None of that matters. It’s an election year. People are dying. No one wants to be blamed for not funding solutions, so the bill is going to be stripped of the odious amendment about retired state employee health care plans, and the vote will be taken again on funding law enforcement agencies dealing with the opioid crisis. There will probably be some veto override attempts as well, since they’re going to be in Concord anyhow.
None of that matters. It’s an election year. People are dying. No one wants to be blamed for not funding solutions, so the bill is going to be stripped of the odious amendment about retired state employee health care plans, and the vote will be taken again on funding law enforcement agencies dealing with the opioid crisis. There will probably be some veto override attempts as well, since they’re going to be in Concord anyhow.
A
few months ago, a story came out about State Representative Don Leeman
committing voter fraud. Rep. Leeman, a Republican from Rochester, represented
Wards 2 and 3 in Rochester. In December he moved into Ward 6. In February,
Leeman voted in the NH presidential primary in Ward 3. If he admitted that he
was no longer domiciled in that ward, he would have had to resign from the
House. Naturally people knew, there was talk, and eventually it became an
issue.
The NH Republican party is obsessed with voter fraud. There were numerous bills put forth this session that attempted to somehow define the word “domicile” as meaning “not letting students or other unlikely-to-be-Republicans vote in our state.”
In
March, the House Legislative Administration Committee determined that he was no
longer qualified to represent his district, since he no longer lived in it.
Here was a clear-cut case of voter fraud. Guy lives in one ward, moves to
another, deliberately votes in first ward – that’s fraud. This was a chance for
the fraud obsessed majority party to take action! A chance for them to put
their principles into practice!
A
letter from a new landlord was magically produced, some tap dancing was done,
incantations were chanted, and Leeman was deemed able to keep his seat, because
he lived in his district again. His domicile dance was deemed “temporary.” The
fact that Leeman fraudulently voted in the primary was swept under the rug. Here
was their chance to make an example of one of their own – which would have been
a bold and powerful statement – and they blew it. They couldn’t act on
principle, because you can’t act on what you don’t possess.
The
March 9 Union Leader editorial was filled with finger wagging about voter
fraud, acknowledging that Leeman committed it, blaming Democrats (just because)
and congratulating Leeman for keeping his seat. Other than a big lump in the
carpeting, that seemed to be the end of the story.
Last
week, Leeman was arrested on charges of bribery and witness tampering. House
leadership may have swept Leeman’s conduct under the rug, but the AG’s office
took it seriously, and did what they were supposed to do, investigate. He’s
accused of trying to induce an employee of the Rochester Housing Authority to
provide a letter with false statements regarding his move. He’s accused of
offering that same employee a bribe from the Knights of Columbus (he’s a
member) in order to expedite a transfer to another apartment in his House
district.
Leeman
claims he did not commit voter fraud, because his intent was to move back into
his district. Yet even though that magical letter from a new landlord was
produced, he continues to live in Ward 6. He never moved. He did, however,
resign from the House days before his arrest, which he claims is a mere
coincidence.
Leeman says he’ll be exonerated, and he’ll bring charges against those falsely accusing him. He also intends to run for the House again, to represent Rochester’s Ward 6.
Leeman says he’ll be exonerated, and he’ll bring charges against those falsely accusing him. He also intends to run for the House again, to represent Rochester’s Ward 6.
1 comment:
The level of underhandedness and sheer lying is really unbelievable! There appear to be no more "moral values" that the right is consistently preaching, yet is unable to follow itself. The so called "left" is also not without blemish. Once someone in elected office has been caught red handed, they should not be allowed to function ever again in any level of government. I'm sad at what is happening in NH and sadder still that bad behavior appears to be the accepted norm rather than scorned and strongly rebuked. The Libbytea crowd appear especially adept at routinely bad behavior and this says something extremely negative about them as a group.
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