March 2011

In nearly six years of blogging, I don’t know that I have ever promoted an old post back to the front page, but following the Senate’s 29-21 vote to repeal the voter-approved medical marijuana imitative, this post seems even more relevant.

This session is a failure of leadership, vision, and governance. The GOP majority should be ashamed of itself.

Reprise:

While the GOP “leadership” at the Montana Legislature will no doubt blame their poor grades from Montana voters on the EVIL, LIBERAL, GODLESS media and its decision to cover their actual bills and speeches, it’s becoming clear that Montana voters are seeing exactly what you get when you elect a batch of uninformed, unprepared, often bigoted, ideologues to the People’s House: the worst legislative session in decades, if not longer. The Republicans can scream that they are creating jobs until they are hoarse, but their obsessive focus on an extremist agenda Montanans don’t support has turned this session into an almost complete waste of time, other than as an object lesson in why we shouldn’t vote these people in again.

[pullquote]Wouldn’t those hours spent debating UN membership, unconstitutional federal nullification, a personhood amendment, the gold standard, concealed weapons in bars and banks, denying basic rights to our GLBT brothers and sisters, and all those other terrible bills have been better spent crafting a solution to the medical marijuana issue?[/pullquote]

No issue better exemplifies this failure than medical marijuana.

Going in to the session, the Republicans had a mandate to reform medical marijuana laws. Even supporters of the law, people who had voted for it, were concerned about the abuses being perpetrated by “entrepreneurs” like Jason Crist and his kind. Far too many people were getting medical marijuana cards for spurious reasons, making a mockery of federal and state laws designed to control the use of the drug.

Montanans, who aren’t ready for full legalization or even decriminalization across the state, would have absolutely supported sensible regulation and stricter controls over the sale and distribution of cannabis. It would have been smart politics, sensible policymaking, and potentially even a way for the state to generate some desperately needed revenue.

But governing is hard. Legislating is hard. Because grandstanding for partisans and performing for the press is easier, that’s just what the Republicans at the Legislature did. We heard them cry out about imaginary drug cartels, organized crime, and teen prostitution. What we didn’t hear were solutions.

So, now, with the session coming towards a close, they’re considering HB 175, which would turn the decision back to voters. Rather than fixing the legislation (the task of the Legislature), this decision would put Montana voters in an untenable position: either criminalize the behavior of thousands of sick Montanans or continue a legal regime ripe for abuse.

The ballot box isn’t the place to legislate and refine laws; that should have happened in the big building a few blocks away. The Republicans have failed to do their jobs—and as concerned as they are about the Constitution, it’s hard to understand how they don’t realize what they are supposed to be doing.

Wouldn’t those hours spent debating UN membership, unconstitutional federal nullification, a personhood amendment, the gold standard, concealed weapons in bars and banks, denying basic rights to our GLBT brothers and sisters, and all those other terrible bills have been better spent crafting a solution to the medical marijuana issue? Writing a sensible, fact-based budget? Funding schools on something other than assumptions?

Medical marijuana is just a symbol of this session’s failure. Whether it has been an obsessive focus on extremism or just basic lack of understanding about the function of government, the Republican legislature has failed to do its job. While they will cash their paychecks, collect their laptops and health insurance, we’re left holding the bills—and the broken policies they leave behind.

The Best Day of the Year

by Don Pogreba on March 31, 2011 · 6 comments

in Montana Politics

For some, of course, the best day of the year is Christmas. For others, Thanksgiving. For some sick, twisted Americas, it might even be Election Day. For me, it was always be Opening Day for Major League Baseball. As a Padres fan since 1983, it’s often been the case that I really only enjoy Opening Day, as the seasons that follow are often a disappointment. After the crushing collapse at the end of last year’s exciting season and the following the departure of Adrian Gonzalez, I plan to make the most of this moment, when hope is eternal.

I’ve always loved this quotation by the last great commissioner, A. Bartlett Giamatti, which better explains the appeal of baseball than anything else I’ve read.

It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone.”

Go Padres!

My Humble Predictions

AL East: Boston Red Sox

AL Central: Chicago White Sox

AL West: Texas Rangers

Wildcard: Tamp Bay Rays

NL East: Philadelphia Phillies

NL Central: St. Louis Cardinals

NL West: San Francisco Giants

Wildcard: San Diego Padres (I don’t care what ESPN says)

Ravalli County is back at it again, showing how political connections and party affiliation are far more important than actual qualifications for government jobs. Despite 17 applicants for a county planner position, the GOP-dominated county commission selected the chair of the Ravalli County Republican Committee, Terry Nelson, for the position,as reporter Whitney Bermes notes in the Ravalli Republic.

It’s a pretty remarkable story, actually. The county commissioners refused to release Nelson’s resume, didn’t hire two former planners, and claimed that the job was over 50% public relations. Given that the former planning director resigned over subdivision difficulties, it would appear that the job is just a bit more complicated that shaking a few hands, as does the Ravalli County Planning Department web page:

The mission of the Ravalli County Planning Department is to administer and facilitate the processes of land use planning, subdivision review, and floodplain management in order to promote a high quality of life while protecting the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens of Ravalli County.

What’s the worst that could happen? Unfortunately, Ravalli County already knows.

Perhaps this is just a new front in the GOP assault on government services: electing and selecting people so woefully under-qualified for the positions that government will simply collapse under the weight of their incompetence. It might just work.

If I were an enterprising reporter in the state of Montana, I’d certainly be asking Representative Rehberg for his opinion about the Montana Legislature. [pullquote]So, despite talking all the time, Rehberg has nothing to say.[/pullquote]

Rehberg has demurred in town hall meetings, telling constituents who ask about the Legislature that “they’d be pretty mad at him if he spent his time paying attention to the Legislature,” but that’s a disingenuous position at best. Many of the most controversial bills from this session are exactly the kinds of issues in which Rehberg’s experience and “leadership” could be quite helpful. Whether it’s wolf management and the Endangered Species Act, medical marijuana and law enforcement, or even Sheriffs First! legislation, many of the bills are at the nexus of federal and state control. Rehberg should have an opinion.

He’s also the leader of the Republican Party in the state. For all their legislative gains in 2010, Rehberg remains the sole statewide elected Republican, a position that demands leadership, practically and traditionally.

Of course, Rehberg’s being coy because he realizes the bind he’s created for himself. He hitched himself to the TEA Party Express just as the movement was going off the rails and headed into territory that voters are entirely unwilling to follow them into. If Rehberg speaks out against the Bob Wagners and James Knoxes of his party, his risks alienating the fringe, who represent a troubling percentage of the people in his party. If he endorses their ideas, most charitably described as “kooky,” he risks alienating the vast majority of Montanans.

So, despite talking all the time, Rehberg has nothing to say.

On another note, I’d probably ask Steve Daines, too, since he donated to many of this session’s leading intellectual lights, like James Knox.

Today, Representative Sands gave an impassioned, personal speech, trying to force the House of Representatives to debate SB 276, which would finally strike down language in the Montana Code that criminalizes sexual behavior between consenting adults of the same sex. Despite powerful speeches from a number of Representatives, discussing the impact of the law on their lives and families, the cowards in the Republican caucus refused to even bring the bill to the floor for debate.

Even the Senate, hardly a bastion of progressive thinking, voted 35-14 to strike down this language.

There is no place for bigotry enshrined in law. There is no place for government in our bedrooms or our hearts. There is no place in the Montana Code for this unconstitutional, hateful language.

This law will vanish. The radical right in the House of Representatives is clearly on the wrong side of history. The vote to bring the bill to the floor received 51 votes, which suggests that this session might finally have been the one that saw this hateful, clearly unequal language stricken from the laws.

Thank you, Representative Sands, for your efforts to restore a sense of justice and decency to this session. Unfortunately, you were talking to 49 people who have no sense of either. Thank you, too, to the Republican representatives for breaking ranks with their party—and the Democrats who have been standing up for human rights all session.

These Republicans voted to bring SB 276 to the floor: Reps.  Ankney, Clarke, Connell, Cook, Cuffe, Esp, Evans, Fitzpatrick, Gibson, Greef, Hoven, Knutsen, Lavinders, McLaren, McNutt, Miller, Roberts, Welborn, and Yates

Thanks to Mike Wessler, for posting the speech that Representative Sands gave.

Representative Hale Defends Drunk Driving

March 28, 2011

Just when you can’t imagine that the GOP majority in the House will say something worse, those crafty devils come along and outdo each other. It’s almost like they’re playing a game, presumably a drinking game. Congratulations, Representative Hale—you are no doubt in the lead. And a special congratulations to the voters of HD 77, [...]

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Your Extended Forecast

March 27, 2011

As the air war in Libya continues to be remarkably successful from a military point of view, the next week will likely be much more difficult. As I see it, the two things to keep in mind if the rebels keep up their advance are as follows: 1. The defense of civilians in Sirte. That [...]

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Deficit Grandstanding Vs. Montana Kids

March 27, 2011

Ignoring for the moment whether the State of Montana even needs to make substantial cuts in its budget, it is important to look carefully at what we choose to cut. The IR has done a decent job outlining some of the main points of contention here. The one that troubles me the most, because it [...]

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