Democrats feel accomplished, Republicans can only wait, and everybody's exhausted
The legislative session in Olympia is over, and the Democratic agenda is enacted. Here's a quick assessment of the ruling party's 105-day reign.
I'm sitting in my office on the Capitol campus looking out at the sine die (final adjournment) party. This is an annual event that takes place in the parking lot between the two media houses on campus – we call them the White House and the Blue House.
The last day of a session feels a lot like the last day of school. There's exhaustion and relief that the 105-day slog is over. People feel like blowing off a bit of steam and going home and getting some much-needed R&R. It's always amazing to me how quickly this place clears out. One day it's a beehive of activity, the next it feels like a college campus on summer break.
Majority Democrats worked through the weekend to pass a two-year, $33 billion budget. Democrats call it an "education budget." Republicans say it spends twice what the state is expected to take in. It does include a rainy-day fund, which is something Gov. Chris Gregoire demanded.
Democrats also passed a Washington Assessment of Student Learning reform bill that delays the math and science graduation requirement and allows students to take alternative tests (such as the SAT and AP exams) if they're having trouble passing the WASL. It will be interesting to see if Gregoire vetoes any sections of that bill.
This has been the "year of the Democrat" in Olympia. With newly expanded majorities in the House and Senate and control of the governor's office, it's been one-party-rule on steroids. Democrats flexed their majority muscle to pass a number of controversial pieces of legislation. These include:
- Domestic Partnership Registry for gay and lesbian couples.
- Simple majority to pass school levies (which now goes to a vote of the people).
- Ban on abstinence-only sex-education.
- Paid Family Leave program.
Topics:
Olympia Journal,
Washington,
Washington Agencies,
Washington Governor,
Washington Legislature,
Expresso,
Politics
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Comments:
Posted Tue, Apr 24, 2:58 p.m. Inappropriate
At the risk of offending drunken sailors, the legislature ran them into the ground in the spending department. And it's trying to drive a stake into the heart of fiscal checks and balances by floating a constitutional amendment to do away with super-majority requirements for levies, something that has saved Tommy and Tammy Taxpayer mucho dinero over the decades.
Would things have been different had fewer Democrats been elected this last fall? Who knows given the loss of their fiscal conservative values by so many Republicans.
But I do know this about one newly elected legislator, Sen. Eric Oemig, D - al Quida, who took his "mandate" to work on education, transportation, and health care as a bi-partisan non-politician to start a foam-at-the-mouth impeachment of the president and vice-president campaign that he claims was just an effort to determine if grounds existed for impeachment. Well, Sen. Quisling stands impeached out of both sides of his mouth.
The April 20th Spokane Spokesman Review quotes him as saying during a Senate floor debate that, "The commander-in-chief must be impeached." Whoa, dude, like that's gonna improve math and science WASL scores!
I was with my Marine son over the weekend down in SoCal (the boy got himself hitched), and let's just say that Muqtada al-Sadr's favorite Washington State Senator ain't a very popular fellow among our men and women in uniform. So much for supporting the troops!
But what can you expect from the legislature this year? This is a legislature that never saw a private dollar it didn't want to tax, a foundational institution of civilization (marriage) it didn't want to chip away at, an educational standard (WASL standards) it lusted after yesterday that today it seemingly abandons, and a ridiculous and potentially small business crippling new entitlement (family leave) that makes the members who supported it feel good at someone else's expense.
Remember, these are politicians, and politicians pander and lie; it's simply what they do. And ones like Sen. Oemig, D - Tehran do it easily and shamelessly.
The Piper
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