This editorial was published by the Idaho Statesman of Boise.
For several months every two years, prospective Idaho lawmakers make their pitch to voters. Then there’s an election. Then the focus is supposed to be on governing.
A House resolution jointly sponsored by Reps. Britt Raybould, R-Rexburg, and Brent Crane, R-Nampa, would go a long way toward restoring that focus by ensuring bills have to go through the normal legislative process.
Understanding the resolution requires some background.
“A personal bill” is a bill that gets printed without going through vetting in committee.
Old hands at the Idaho Legislature generally considered the personal bill process a measure of courtesy from the majority Republican Party to the minority Democrats. It was a way they and other minority voices could codify ideas committee chairs refused to hear in a bill to show voters what they would do if they had power.
But the bills were born, lived and died quietly in a desk drawer.
That is, until the far-right began using them as a campaign ploy.
The prime offender was former Rep. Ron Nate, R-Rexburg, who worked throughout his career to turn the House rotunda into a circus. When giving a floor speech, instead of speaking to his colleagues — the people he needed to join him if he had any real intention of passing legislation — his habit was to speak to the camera in the corner broadcasting the floor session. The cheapest campaign videos are those produced on the taxpayers’ dime, after all.
Last year, during Nate’s final session in the House, he found a new tactic. He repeatedly disrupted floor sessions by making an obscure motion to pull one of his personal bills out of the Ways and Means committee. With allies like Rep. Heather Scott, R-Blanchard, Nate would then force an extended debate and vote on this motion, which was defeated each and every time by a wide margin. Hours were wasted this way.
Opponents of the change are likely to object that it will remove a way for popular ideas to bypass obstruction by committee chairs. But there’s no evidence of that.
Nate was pitching a fit because he couldn’t get a hearing for a policy that we support — ending the grocery tax. If Nate had moved the needle even one inch in the direction of repealing the tax, maybe his showboating would have had some value.
But Nate’s antics were singularly ineffective, even counterproductive, toward that end. Often, Nate’s motions gathered fewer than a dozen votes exclusively from the furthest reaches of the far right. That’s despite the fact that many House members, including most or all of the Democrats, also support repealing the grocery tax. Nate was so obnoxious he managed to make it look like there was far less support for repealing the grocery tax than there actually was.
The only real effect of Nate’s repeated motions was to give him more personal time in the spotlight — which was the real objective.
(That didn’t work out so well either, though; Nate lost his election to Raybould in May.)
House members should adopt House Resolution 1. It retains the option for personal bills, now rebranded “informational bills.” Each lawmaker could have three printed per session so that voters can see how minority factions would govern if given the opportunity, but there couldn’t be a motion to pull them onto the floor. It treats these bills as what they are: a press release with a bill number, not a monkey wrench to be tossed in the gears of the Legislature.
It would put an end to the time- and money-wasting tactics of the last session. And it would return the focus of the Legislature to governing, rather than campaigning.