Mar 01, 2007
Hackney proposes new limitations on House speaker's use of powers
- Associated Press
The speaker of the N.C. House, Joe Hackney, rolled out new rules yesterday for the chamber that are aimed, at least in part, at curbing some of the powers that critics say were abused by his predecessor.
"I've been here a long time. I have accumulated a lot of opinions about how things ought to work," said Hackney, D-Orange. "More than anything else, this is sort of how I think they ought to work."
The proposed rules governing how the House will debate and vote on legislation are an arcane topic that rarely garners attention outside of the Legislative Building.
But after former Speaker Jim Black entered pleas to bribery and obstruction of justice in recent weeks, both Republicans and reform groups ramped up their demand for change.
"Right now is an historic opportunity, given the cloud we're under, to actually fix things and make them right from here on out," said Rep. John Blust, R-Guilford. "These are good changes, but basically the speaker can still call the shots."
Hackney shepherded ethics and lobbying-reform bills through the House last year and pledged a comprehensive look at the rules when he was elected in January.
He said he talked with legislative staff, fellow Democrats and the House minority leader, Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake, before rolling out the rules, which must be approved by a majority vote in the Democratic-controlled House.
The rules would prohibit the House's budget from containing policy provisions that aren't related to taxes or spending. Black was criticized last year for inserting, with little debate, a provision requiring all public-school children to get a comprehensive eye exam before entering kindergarten.
Federal prosecutors also said that Black used his power as speaker to insert into the 2005 budget a provision that benefited chiropractors while three industry members were giving him thousands of dollars in illegal cash.
Hackney's rules would also eliminate the right of a handful of House members to sit on any committee. Started during Republican control of the chamber in the mid-1990s, the so-called floaters give the majority party extra votes to push through legislation.
Another rule would generally prevent the House from considering legislation on the same day that it clears a committee, but the majority party still gets to control what bills are heard on the floor and in committee.
"It does not guarantee every member that their bills will come to the floor, or even in the priority of things that all bills will be heard," Hackney said. "Judgments have to be made."
The new rules include several recommendations of the bipartisan N.C. Coalition for Lobbying & Government Reform, including a ban on blank placeholder bills that can be used to sneak in last-minute legislation.
The House Rules Committee will consider the rules today, said Rep. Bill Owens, D-Pasquotank, the committee's chairman.