Two weeks ago I wrote about
the legislature being called back for a special vote on a bill to give law
enforcement an extra $1.5 million to deal with the opium crisis. To recap: The
original bill, SB 485, failed to pass because a non-germane amendment concerning
state employee health care was tacked on, to ensure that it wouldn’t pass. It
didn’t. By one vote. The Governor wanted it to pass. House and Senate
leadership wanted it to pass. Law enforcement wanted it to pass.
And so, a bipartisan group
got together, eliminated the poison pill amendment, and wrote a new bill, HB
1000. The House and Senate were called back in to vote on it. Some
representatives were very unhappy at being called back. They were so unhappy
that they spent two hours debating whether to suspend the rules in order to
vote on the bill. The legislative session began at 10. They didn’t begin
discussing the bill till after the lunch break.
The vote was 241-97 to
suspend the rules. It’s a small group of GOP miscreants who continually obstruct
and delay, but they’re incredibly effective at wasting the time of their
colleagues. They made a big point of asking the Speaker if leadership could
vote without fear of retribution. It was the last day of this session, what did
they think he going to do to them? Change the combo on their locker? Take their
lunch money? Send them to detention?
This voting session came into
being because of a non-germane amendment. To illustrate their displeasure, the libertea faction
proceeded to propose 7 non-germane floor amendments to HB 1000. Most were an
attempt to add in the language of bills that had already failed or been vetoed.
Rep. JR Hoell, for whom guns appear to provide his sole reason for living, put
forth a floor amendment to add on a provision that would repeal the requirement
for a concealed carry license. Another amendment would have allowed stores to
sell syringes without a prescription. Yet another would have allowed towns that
have no public schools to use public funds to send children to private
religious schools. All seven of the non-germane amendments failed by wide
margins, but did succeed in wasting hours of everyone’s time.
Eventually HB 1000 passed by
a vote of 235-74. They moved on to attempt to overturn the governor’s veto of
six bills. The first prohibited the confiscation of firearms and ammo during a
state of emergency. This has never happened in New Hampshire. It was proposed
in New Orleans during the aftermath of Katrina, but that story has been twisted
by the NRA to get the gundamentalists up in arms, which isn’t exactly a
challenge. They’re easily manipulated. (One can only imagine their
disappointment in the fact that Obama never even tried to take their guns away,
after 8 years of caterwauling about it.) The veto override failed. So did the attempt
to override the veto on the bill repealing the concealed carry license
requirement, so that bill failed twice in one day. The override of the bill to
use public funds for private religious schools failed. All six override
attempts failed.
The last debate concerned an
entry in the House journal. Every voting session day begins with an
“invocation” which is another way of saying prayer. The prayer was edited in
the print version, as many things are. All of the “umms” spoken in a speech are
edited out. The minister made reference to “children, born and unborn” in his
prayer, and that was truncated to “children.” There’s also a tradition of
editing overly sectarian or politically charged language in favor of more
neutral language in the permanent record. Fetus fetishist Warren Groen took
exception to this editing, and made a fuss. You may remember Warren Groen as
the representative who made the fetus speech to fourth graders visiting the
legislature who proposed making the red tailed hawk the state bird. The vote to
amend the journal passed by a narrow margin, after an hour long debate that
began at 4 p.m.
I’m in favor of transparency. If inflammatory, foolish, or reactionary statements are made, they should be included in the permanent record, where the public can see them and hold the makers of the statements accountable for them. Legislative sessions should not be opened with prayers. It is a tradition that should be eliminated. The 400 members of the House do not all share the same religion – and even if they did, their religion should have no sway in the public affairs of our state. No religion should. If there’s a need to fill a hole in the ritual, read a poem. Some Walt Whitman would be nice.
Over in the Senate, the vote
to suspend the rules slid right through on a voice vote. No floor amendments.
HB 1000 passed unanimously.
HB 1000 passed largely because it’s an election year and most legislators did not want to be seen as voting against law enforcement during an opioid crisis. Whether this is a good use of funds is debatable. In this case, because it’s an election year, perception is everything.
A number of long time
representatives are leaving the legislature because of the obstructionist
crowd. The endless roll call votes and procedural delays are working exactly as
planned.
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