Montana Legislature

The Montana Republican Party likes to pretend that the bad press they received during the last session was simply an example of liberal media bias rather than an objective look at just how out of touch with reality their proposals often were.

Joe Read, representative from Ronan and internationally renowned climatologist, believes that the UN insidiously undermining America, one city council at a time:

joeread

David Howard, representative from Park City, shared this nuanced commentary about his political opponents:

howard

It’s tempting to dismiss these as nothing more than the inane ramblings of a few fringe lunatics, but this is the face of the Montana GOP—a party so out of touch with both the political mainstream and reality that comments like these pass without question.

I can’t believe that these are the viewpoints of most conservative Montanans. When they vote for the candidate with the R after his or her name, they’re voting for a party that may not have existed for the past 8-10 years.

Heading in 2012, it’s critical that Democrats keep reminding Montana voters just how extreme these views are.

While the ongoing farce of John Boehner’s default meltdown in Washington has led every single political leader in the nation other than Denny Rehberg to take a position, back home, today’s news provided a stark illustration about the difference between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to budgeting.

The Democrats believe in using facts and honest revenue calculations; the latter believe in using distortions and being deliberately obtuse to deny workers small raises, the needy social services, and children better schools.

Let’s look back at the session, shall we?

Republican House Speaker Mike Milburn, in February:

What he is doing is making our job difficult, because we have a responsibility to do. We still are short and we are short a lot of money and it is not looking that good into the future….We are doing better, but we are doing it at a less rate of growth than we have seen in the past. We have to deal with that, those are real numbers we have to deal with that, we can’t play games, we can’t play politics.”

Republican Budget Guru Dave Lewis in January:

Sen. Dave Lewis, R-Helena and chairman of the Senate Finance and Claims Committee, said Democrats, including Gov. Schweitzer, are being too optimistic. He said most Republicans believe the economy isn’t ready to take off, and that state spending must be reduced to match what they believe may be depressed tax revenue for some time.
“I could be a little less hard on that issue if I thought the economy was improving, but I just don’t see it,” Lewis said. “I think that’s the big policy debate of the session.”

Throughout the session Democratic leaders like Carol Williams, Jon Sesso, and Governor Schweitzer made it clear that a fact-based examination of tax revenue made draconian cuts and broken promises entirely unnecessary.

And they were right. How does the state look today? $340 million in the bank:

Schweitzer says Montana will start this new fiscal year with about $340 million dollars in the bank.This is the largest amount of money the state has ever had set aside for emergencies.

It’s bad enough that Montana Republicans acted the way they did during the session. It’s even worse that they couldn’t be bothered to be intellectually honest while they did it.

As Representative Kerns mulls his political options going forward (the GOP gubernatorial field could certainly use another candidate, and one nicknamed “Doc” would be a perfect fit), I have to say that it’s quite commendable that he is quite clear about the positions he takes on issues—no matter how ill-informed and dangerous those positions might be.

His latest broadside? Claiming that America is overrun with Marxism, including the socialistic schemes named Social Security and Medicare. Kerns writes, in typically understated fashion:

In 1936, by a vote of five to four in the Butler case, the US Supreme Court ruled Congress could tax and spend money for any cause it considered beneficial. This was the first shoe. Prior to Butler, constitutional scholars had held all revenues must be spent equally among the populace, so this was a monumental leap advancing Karl Marx’s theory of “from each according to his deeds; to each according to his needs.”

The year after the Butler ruling, the second shoe dropped. President Roosevelt’s massive wealth redistribution program called Social Security. The third shoe came in the form of Medicaid and Medicare in 1965. Incrementally, these massive wealth redistribution programs soon permeated every corner of American society. With complete disregard to the impossibility inherent in every Ponzi scheme, citizens demanded benefits to which they felt entitled.

Although Representative Kerns may benefit from reading any basic college textbook about political theory or even looking in a dictionary for the terms “Marxism” and socialism, a more pressing concern might be his ability to budget correctly. He claims:

By next year, 2012, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and the interest payments on our national debt will consume 100 percent of all tax revenues.

Not so much.

Having spent five years in Laurel some time ago, I just can’t believe that the people there really believe that Social Security is a Trotskyite menace or that we should leave the elderly to their own devices in order to assuage the fiscal paranoia of someone who wants to punish the poor for their poverty and the elderly for their age.

Laurel, you can do better.

One of the elements of Western movies that always puzzled me was the frequent assertion that no one in the West cared where a person had come from; all that mattered was the person they were in their new community. Growing up in relatively small towns like Shelby and Laurel, it seemed that the exact opposite was true. When someone new came to town, we wanted to know everything about him or her and we pried like hell to find out whatever we could. But the other half of the story was true: once that person arrived, all we cared about was that the new person did her job, treated her neighbors well, and shoveled her walk in the winter.

Once you became part of our town, your private life was your private life, and it wasn’t anybody’s business who you loved and/or slept with.

People like Harris Hines and and Dallas Erickson never seemed to learn that, though. For reasons that perhaps only a trained psychiatrist could explain, they seem obsessed with who someone sleeps with, and quite uncomfortably, how they do it. They hate people who are gay, lesbian, or transgender so much that they’ll lie about them, spew vicious invective at them, and even suggest that the death penalty would be appropriate for the crime of loving someone of the same sex.

Now they want to make sure that a community can’t decide to resist that hate.

The good people of Missoula know that discrimination against GLBT Montanans still exists, in overt from people like Himes and Erickson, and in subtler forms from others, and so, their city council passed an ordinance to protect citizens from discrimination in housing and employment for “actual or perceived” sexual orientation.

It’s an ordinance that I wish didn’t need to exist. I’d like to believe that we’ve moved past hatred and fear based on sexual orientation, but we’re not there yet. Gays and lesbians face discrimination daily, and while this ordinance is unlikely to solve that, it at least gives people the tools to redress wrongs done them and access to the rights our constitution gives every Montanan.

Intellectually, it’s easy to attack Representative Hansen’s bill because it’s a complete reversal of her party’s belief in local control, because no one wants to attack another person for bigotry. That’s too easy, though. This bill is more than hypocrisy; it’s bigotry at its worst.

I don’t know Mrs. Hansen, but I do know bigotry when I see it, and HB 516 is nothing but legalized support for discrimination. If Dallas Erickson helped draft it, you can be sure of that. This bill, if passed, will legalize hatred, fear, and discrimination.

Local control matters, but human rights matter even more.

We can’t stop people from wondering about the new person on the block, but the law can—and must—protect their rights to move and live there freely. GLBT Montanans are your your friends, your firefighters, your ministers and your teachers. Is so much to ask that they be legally protected as your neighbors, your co-workers, and your community members?

Absolutely not. Let the Senate Committee know that Montanans don’t support bigotry. Come to the Capitol, Room 405 at 3:00 tomorrow. If you can’t make it, be sure to send a message to the Senate Local Government Committee.

D. Gregory Smith says it much better (and more directly) than I did. Read what he had to say.

Over the weekend, I listened to the nearly three hours of testimony about HB 456 and came away both inspired by the passion of young people who spoke the truth and disillusioned by adults who seemed almost incapable of it. As the testimony went on, it became increasingly clear that the Montana Legislature should reject this ill-conceived, poorly-written mess. Instead of pandering to the Jeff Laszloffys of the world, the Montana Legislature should do what’s right for Montana students: allow teachers and health professionals to educate them.

The Bill is Poorly Worded

If passed, this bill will make class discussion in Social Studies and English impossible. Hell, math is probably imperiled because students are often exposed to the suggestive wiles of “multiplying.”

It’s that bad. The bill requires that schools notify parents 48 hours in advance and get permission before any “instruction of any type that involves human sexual education, human sexuality issues” takes place in the classroom. It’s hard to imagine a curricular area that wouldn’t be impacted by this incredibly vague language. Would a science teacher need to pause and get permission before discussing the reproductive system? Would a history teacher need to pause and get permission before discussing ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia? Would an English teacher need to pause and get permission before discussing Romeo and Juliet?

Given the bill’s incredibly poor wording, they absolutely would. Once again, it appears that the Montana GOP’s only job creation program is creating jobs for lawyers and the judicial system, which will soon be filled with frivolous cases. Don’t believe me? Just look at Helena, where zealots have filed two lawsuits without merit in the just the past year.

Certainly, someone should have paused before presenting this bill.

The Bill Violates Local Control

This bill is nearly identical to two other bills this session in which a local minority who lost a decision wants to impose their will via statewide legislation. Just like the stream access bill and Missoula anti-discrimination bill, proponents, who frequently trumpet the cry of local control are ignoring their principles simply because they lost. Rather than pursuing local democratic action, which takes energy rather than ideology, they’re hoping the big, bad state will do the work for them.

Montana has a proud, important tradition of local control of schools. We don’t have state-mandated curriculum and we don’t impose the vision of Helena politicians and bureaucrats on local schools. Who’s best positioned to deal with thorny issues of health education? The local officials who are closest to the people in their communities.

The Proponents Misrepresented the Truth

Jeff Laszloffy, professional provocateur for personal profit and head of the Montana Family Foundation, lied to the committee, suggesting that the large meetings were only attended by opponents to the bill, which is absolutely untrue. There were hundreds of Helena parents, students, and teachers who testified to the Board in favor of the proposed curriculum.

Mykal Wilkerson, the wife of former School Board member Trevor Wilkerson, and the person who has clearly most enjoyed her moment in the spotlight, lied about condom distribution at Helena High.Mrs. Wilkerson claimed that defective condoms (stapled with cards attached) were distributed to over 300 freshman students by the school. The truth? Some senior students threw them on the ground around the school as a senior prank and school staff members quickly gathered them up and threw them away.

Many of the Helena proponents of the bill asserted that they represented a huge majority of the local community, a statement that’s absolutely false and unsupported. If they’re right, one has to wonder why it’s the same small, loud group of people who appear in frivolous lawsuits, interviews on Fox News, and book-banning meetings. Though they’re fond of calling themselves the “Silent Majority,” a more apt title would seem to be the “Disgruntled Dozen.”

P.S.: Nixon was a bad guy.

It’s a good general rule that when people have to lie to make their argument, it’s a bad argument. I can’t help but question the integrity and motives of people who were willing to lie to legislators to advance their agenda.

We Should Trust Our Teachers, Administrators, and Boards

Teachers are professionals who have chosen their careers because they believe in educating children. Instead of demonizing them and fear mongering, we should trust that they will make educationally appropriate decisions for their classes. If they violate that trust or go outside the bounds of their curriculum inappropriately, local boards and administrators can–and should–take action.

Planned Parenthood Provides Vital Services

A final, disastrous component of this bill is that it would prohibit any abortion service provider from offering education in schools, effectively removing Planned Parenthood from the schools, despite the fact that 97% of the work that Planned Parenthood does is prevention and education. As so many of the articulate teenagers noted, students desperately need medically-accurate information about sexual health to prevent disease, abuse, and pregnancy. Banning Planned Parenthood might make a good sound bite for the radical right, but it makes for incredibly poor policy for children.

Representative Knox has been out of the news the past few weeks at the session, but I presumed his silencehad been to conduct a comprehensive examination of the citizenship status of his fellow legislators. It turns out I was wrong: Mr. Knox has been busy attacking other Republicans, suggesting that his “followers” harass a critic, and potentially trying to hack into a blog account. You can view the forwarded e-mail here.

We’re not talking about human rights advocates here or liberal bloggers. We’re not even talking about employees that Knox failed to pay. Knox is attacking fellow conservatives and Republicans in a manner entirely unbecoming a public official, especially during a floor session of the House. I, for one, am glad that the Legislature provided Knox a personal laptop for this critical government function.

I think the good people of House District 47 have already realized that one term is one too many for this clown.

A Washingtonian Proposal: Eliminate Party Primaries in Montana

21 February 2011

In the spirit of Washington’s Birthday, I thought I’d write up my thoughts about a better way to elect candidates for office in Montana: a system like that in place in Washington, in which the top two candidates from a primary advance to the general election, rather than the winners of the respective party primaries. If [...]

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The Constitution Caucus: Idiocy in Action

17 January 2011

Cody Bloomsburg, from the UM School of Journalism, has posted a fascinating look at the self-proclaimed Constitution Caucus at the Montana Legislature, a group of troglodytes headed up by the likes of Krayton Kerns, Greg Hinkle, and James Knox. What Bloomsburg’s story reveals is a group of arrogant idiots, so bound by their narrow ideology, [...]

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Don’t Think the Tea Party Runs the Montana GOP? Think Again

12 September 2010

Dave Lewis, Republican Senator from Helena, has long been known as a pragmatic member of the Montana GOP caucus, so his decision to introduce a resolution urging withdrawal from the United Nations was a surprise. Two sources have told me that Lewis told them that he introduced the resolution to avoid a primary from a [...]

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Primary Predictions

7 June 2010

Just a couple of thoughts about tomorrow’s primary in a few statewide and local races, from my narrow vantage point. If you haven’t yet, be sure to vote. You can check your registration status and polling place on this handy tool at the Secretary of State’s page. Democratic Nomination for Congress I think Tyler Gernant [...]

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A Fond Farwell to Ed Butcher

16 March 2010

It’s with some sorrow that I read the news this evening that Ed Butcher has decided to hang up his tinfoil hat and retire from the Montana Legislature. Now, I’m not sorry that he won’t be voting in the House any more, and I’m not sorry that the people of House District 29 are likely [...]

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Senator Barkus and the Privileges of Rank

14 September 2009

I have to wonder whether Judge Katherine Curtis routinely issues gag orders for every criminal investigation in Flathead County, especially without the attorney for the investigative target asking for one: Monday, Corrigan told KCFW-TV that he could no longer discuss the investigation. The District Court administrator says all information in the case is sealed by [...]

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