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House Democrats Move Forward With Petition to Force Debt Limit Vote – The New York Times

House Democrats pushed forward on Wednesday with a procedural move that could force a vote to increase the debt limit should negotiations between President Biden and Republicans collapse, moving despite signs of progress in the bipartisan talks to advance a long-shot Plan B to avert a default.

Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the Democratic leader, wrote to his colleagues urging them to quickly sign a discharge petition, which can automatically force a House vote on legislation if 218 members sign it.

Though Mr. Jeffries noted there were signs after Tuesdays White House meeting hosted by Mr. Biden that a real pathway exists to find an acceptable, bipartisan resolution that prevents a default, he said Democrats must take all possible steps to avert a crisis.

At the same time, the president hasindicated openness to considering new work requirements for recipients of food stamps and other federal aid, a Republican demand opposed by Democrats in the House and Senate. Mr. Biden, before he left for Japan on Wednesday to attend a meeting of the Group of 7 nations, sought to downplay whatever concessions he might make, characterizing the potential changes to benefit requirements as not anything of any consequence.

The Treasury Department has projected that it could exceed its legal authority to borrow to pay the governments debt as early as June 1, leading to a disastrous default.

Given the impending June 1 deadline and urgency of the moment, it is important that all legislative options be pursued in the event that no agreement is reached, Mr. Jeffries wrote. He said that Representative Brendan F. Boyle of Pennsylvania, the senior Democrat on the Budget Committee, would be filing a discharge petition to provide a vehicle that may be necessary to protect the full faith and credit of the United States.

It is imperative that members make every effort to sign the discharge petition today, Mr. Jeffries wrote.

On Wednesday evening, Democrats lined up in the House chamber to sign the petition, with more than 200 lawmakers adding their names. Democratic officials expect that all 213 of their members will sign the petition if no breakthrough in the budget negotiations emerges.

The Democratic strategy faces long odds given the complexity of the maneuver and the partisan divide in the debt talks. Democrats would need at least five G.O.P. members to join them to reach a majority and force a vote, but no Republican is expected to even consider signing unless the debt limit situation becomes especially dire.

But even if the effort falls short, Democratic officials say the discharge petition keeps pressure on Republican leaders to strike a deal or face a potential revolt among their more politically vulnerable members who could pay a price with voters if they are seen as helping to push the country into default. Democrats also see the petition as a way to demonstrate that their party is doing all it can to prevent an economic debacle.

Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Wednesday dismissed the tactic as a political game that would go nowhere, noting that conservatives in the Senate would try to block it.

So is that even sensible? Is that even being productive? Is that even responsible? Mr. McCarthy said at a news conference with congressional Republicans. It seems to be that would be playing into a Biden default. I think America is tired of those political games.

Representative Tom Cole, Republican of Oklahoma and a leading legislative tactician as chairman of the Rules Committee, said Tuesday that he doubted Republicans would cross over and sign on.

I dont think we are in any trouble, Mr. Cole said in an interview. I dont think anybody wants to be one of about a half a dozen that hands victory over to Biden.

The Democratic maneuver is considered a last resort, and such efforts have rarely worked in the past given the obstacles put in the way. Even if the backers of the petition were to obtain the required signatures, House rules stipulate that the legislation could be voted on only on specific days.

Aware of the constraints, Democrats quietly took steps earlier this year to make sure they had ample time to execute their plan, introducing an obscure bill that could be used as a vehicle for an eventual debt limit increase so it could be referred to committees in time to run out the 30-day clock that House rules require before a measure can be discharged. This month, they filed a special emergency proposal that cleared the way for them to begin collecting signatures this week.

Democrats see Republicans in swing districts carried by Mr. Biden as those most likely to be swayed in the event of a default since they could be most at political risk.

But Mr. Cole said that House Republicans from those districts had been the most reliable backers of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who would oppose a discharge petition since it would essentially take control of the floor out of his hands.

I dont think they are likely to crack, he said.

In his letter, Mr. Jeffries noted that former President Donald J. Trump had encouraged Republicans to allow the nation to default if Republicans cannot extract deep spending cuts from Democrats, a position that could encourage Republicans to hold out in the talks.

In the next few weeks, at the reckless urging of former President Trump, he wrote, we confront the possibility that right-wing extremists will intentionally plunge our country into a default crisis.

Catie Edmondson contributed reporting.

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House Democrats Move Forward With Petition to Force Debt Limit Vote - The New York Times

Democrats set sights on Westmoreland commissioner race – TribLIVE

As votes were tabulated Tuesday to determine the two Republican candidates for Westmoreland County commissioner in November, Democrats sat quietly on the sidelines, setting their sights on trying to regain majority control of county government this year.

The Democrats, Ted Kopas, who served more than a decade as a commissioner before he was ousted in 2019, and political newcomer Sydney Hovis were unopposed for Democratic nominations.

They will face incumbent Republicans Sean Kertes and Doug Chew in the fall.

The top three vote-getters will serve as county commissioners in 2024.

Im very pleased with the results last night. It sent a clear message from 24,000 Republicans who (did not vote for Kertes or Chew) think that county government can be better and can expect their leaders to be more accessible and honest, Kopas said.

Kopas received more than 24,600 votes, a number that exceeded every commissioner candidate on Tuesday ballots. Fellow Democrat Hovis, 28, of Scottdale, who is making her first bid for a county office, received just more than 14,200 votes.

Kertes and Chew, both first-term incumbents, finished as the top two vote-getters in the Republican primary that featured five candidates seeking two party nominations. Kertes led the GOP ticket with more than 17,900 votes. Chew garnered more than 11,400 votes, about 1,500 more than retired United Parcel Service security division manager John Ventre, who finished third behind the incumbents.

Retired Municipal Authority of Westmoreland County computer systems manager Paul Kosko finished fourth with about 7,800 votes, and former county Chief Deputy Sheriff Patricia Fritz finished last with fewer than 6,000 votes.

Kertes and Chew were endorsed by the county Republican committee. Meanwhile, GOP Chairman Bill Bretz filed unsuccessful lawsuits seeking to have Ventre and Kosko removed from the ballot.

The results reflect Republican vulnerability this fall, Kopas said.

I think voters from both parties think that Westmoreland County can be and should be better, Kopas said. Certainly the numbers speak for themselves.

Kopas comes into the fall race with a campaign war chest of more than $70,000 raised throughout the spring election season. Hovis raised just $1,500 and as of early May had just $500 in the bank, according to finance reports.

Hovis did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

Democratic Committee Chairwoman Michelle McFall predicted Hovis story will resonate with votersl.

Sydney is coming in as a political outsider. Shes got an amazing story, shes a young mother of three children with a working background and a great message thats going to elevate her, McFall said. She is a unique candidate and she has a real shot.

Kertes and Chew ran separate but compatible campaigns this spring. At this point, Kopas said he does not envision running a joint campaign with Hovis.

Meanwhile, Bretz said he is not overly concerned that Ventres strong showing in the primary reflected a political weakness for the incumbents. He suggested ballot position and media attention on the legal challenges elevated (Ventres and Koskos) candidacies.

Its curious to me to see what will be revealed on the Democratic side. To me we have to go out and get folks engaged in the fall. We have to make sure we circle the wagon going into the fall because the stakes are too high, Bretz said.

Rich Cholodofsky is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Rich by email at rcholodofsky@triblive.com or via Twitter .

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Democrats set sights on Westmoreland commissioner race - TribLIVE

As MI Democrats move on party priorities, House Speaker Joe Tate … – Michigan Radio

Democrats in Lansing have had control of both chambers of the legislature and the executive office since January. They've moved quickly on new policies, including gun safety measures and the repeal of Michigan's right-to-work law.

Joe Tate is the Speaker of the Michigan House and represents the 10th District in Wayne County. Tate joined Michigan Radio's Doug Tribou on Morning Edition.

Doug Tribou: The legislature has passed a number of gun safety measures this year, one for universal background checks, another for safe storage requirements, and a third establishes a so-called red flag law that would allow a court to temporarily take away someone's guns when the person is deemed to be a risk to themselves or others. What other gun safety bills are you considering?Joe Tate: I think for us, the gun violence prevention bills that we passed really sets the foundation to lower gun violence across the state of Michigan. I think there are other opportunities. This is certainly the start and not the finish of it. And those deliberations are going to continue throughout the rest of the legislative session.

Joe Tate, Michigan's Speaker of the House of Representatives

DT: You served in the Marine Corps. You were deployed to Afghanistan twice. You've had weapons training, been around guns. What's your personal view of the ongoing debate about gun rights and personal safety?

JT: You know, what really drives me the most is ensuring that we do have safe communities and we are doing things in Lansing. The last thing that I want to do is hear from a parent that has been impacted by gun violence, whose child has been impacted by gun violence, and comes to ask me, "What have you done?"

DT: If you were to have that conversation with someone affected by gun violence, do you feel like the measures that have been taken now would be enough for that person?

JT: I don't think that these are just one-time solutions, but we know that there's more that can be done. Obviously, supports around mental health as well as public safety. How are we supporting our public safety organizations? Another factor, too, is ensuring that people across the state have access to opportunities and being able to raise a family and having good jobs. I think that that all plays into this. I think there's more that can be done and we can take a more holistic approach as as we continue to work on this.

DT: Do you currently own a gun?

JT: I do not.

DT: The legislature recently passed a bill package that would require employer health plans that cover pregnancy care to also cover abortion services. Democrats have said it's part of the process of implementing the new abortion rights amendment that voters passed in November. What other bills do you expect related to abortion rights?

JT: The voters, they expressed their support at the ballot box last year, and it is up to the legislature to be able to identify what legislation has to go hand-in-hand with that to ensure that the intent of of the ballot initiative is met. So I think you'll see more of that and ensuring that there are lower barriers in terms of reproductive health. We want to make sure that there is access because reproductive health is a part of health care.

DT: In 2022, Democrats had their most successful state elections in a couple of generations, and it would be easy to see that as a mandate for your party's priorities. But as we've discussed, abortion was on the ballot in Michigan a huge issue that contributed to turnout across the political spectrum. With all of that in mind, what kind of mandate do you see in the results of last year's elections?

JT: There are a couple of things. One is residents of Michigan want to see their government functioning and working, and us moving to provide solutions, whether it's around targeted tax relief, which we did with the earned income tax credit expansion and repealing the retirement tax.

Also, making investments in economic development for job creation, making sure that people have opportunities to raise their families. I think that's what people want to see at the end of the day: "Are you working with my interests in mind and putting people first?" That's kind of our basic principle in our philosophy.

DT: I take your point. I think the Republican counterpoint would be that the government is functioning in much the same way it has in in other eras, say when there was a Republican governor and Republican-controlled legislature. Some of your Republican colleagues have complained that legislation is being pushed through with your very slim majority. Do you see a difference in the way you're governing now?

Joe Tate, Michigan's Speaker of the House of Representatives

JT: Yes, I think we are seeing a difference, Doug, in terms of legislation that that we have been moving out of the House and deliberations there. And I'll use gun violence reduction as an example. You know, that's an issue that bills have been introduced for almost a decade and there were no hearings on it when Republicans were in control. You saw with the issues around gun violence, that we saw across the state, and there was no action taken on it.

And we knew that in order for us to continue to build trust with the residents of Michigan, that we have to show that we are governing. And I think that's the contrast in terms of what Democrats have been doing with what you've seen in prior majorities in the recent past.

DT: The state is in the midst of the budget process. The two chambers are now beginning to reconcile their versions of the budget. In your view, what are the top two or three highlights from the version of the budget that the House has passed?

JT: I think for us, when you look at the investments in schools, that's incredibly important. We want to have a world-class education system in our state. Also, the investments that we're looking at around both mental health and public safety. And then finally, I'll touch on job growth and how are we supporting opportunities to expand job growth.

DT: What's your view of the situation with the Gotion proposal for Big Rapids, which would have some state investment? There are concerns about Gotion being a subsidiary of a Chinese company and some security concerns there. What is your view of the state supporting that project and the process that went into that?

JT: There has been a significant amount of time that has gone into, you know, locals and also state officials looking at, "Where's this opportunity? Is this opportunity feasible?" And and from what we've seen, it is.

DT: Do you share the concerns about security with the involvement of China?

JT: I do not share that concern. If you look, just for example, with our auto heritage and our supply chains, I think we have to be able to work together and to compete, in not only other states, but other countries as well. And this is something that we have done for for a number of decades. So, no.

DT: Speaker Tate, I want thank you very much for your time today.

JT: Thank you so much, Doug. Have a great day.

Editor's notes: Some quotes in this article have been edited for length and clarity. You can listen to the full interview near the top of this page.

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As MI Democrats move on party priorities, House Speaker Joe Tate ... - Michigan Radio

Republicans and Democrats are confused by one Youngkin veto – WVTF

Governor Glenn Youngkin is taking final action this week on a number of bills from the General Assembly. That includes one about power lines.

Earlier this year, members of the General Assembly gave unanimous approval for funding an underground transmission line in Fauquier County and an underground distribution line in Fairfax County. But Governor Glenn Youngkin vetoed that bill a shock to Senator Jill Vogel, a Republican from Fauquier County.

"The governor vetoed a bill that was passed unanimously out of the House and unanimously out of the Senate," Vogel says. "And the rub is that the governor took a very strong position on behalf of ratepayers. But the people in my district care very deeply about the impact of this in the community that I represent."

That community is Fauquier County, although the bill also had funding for an underground distribution line in Fairfax County. Here's Senator Scott Surovell, a Democrat from Fairfax County.

"I was really dumbfounded by the fact that he vetoed it," Surovell says. "This was a bill that was carried by the majority whip in the House, Delegate Webert. Senator Vogel in my chamber, a pretty senior Republican senator. And I had worked with both of them on a bipartisan basis to get a bill that we could all agree on that would do good things for all of us."

The governor says hes looking out for ratepayers, but Senator Vogel and Senator Surovell say they are looking out for their constituents.

This report, provided byVirginia Public Radio, was made possible with support from theVirginia Education Association.

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Republicans and Democrats are confused by one Youngkin veto - WVTF

With clock ticking on legislative session, Texas Democrats delay … – The Texas Tribune

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribunes daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

Texas House Democrats successfully delayed debate Thursday on the Houses version of a bill meant to put guardrails on faculty tenure at public universities, kicking the legislation back to the Higher Education Committee.

Just as Rep. John Kuempel, R-Seguin, started to lay out his version of the legislation, Rep. Ron Reynolds, D-Missouri City, raised a point of order a parliamentary procedure used to delay or kill legislation on a technicality arguing that the analysis of the legislation was misleading.

In their point of order, Democrats argued that the bill analysis says that university governing boards must file a copy of their policies and procedures related to performance reviews of tenured faculty to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. But the new legislation would also require university system leaders to provide their tenure policies on other areas like granting tenure, reasons for dismissal and due-process procedures, which is much broader information than the analysis states.

After the House recessed for the day, the Higher Education Committee voted the bill out of committee again along party lines. The bill now heads to the Calendars Committee to get back on the House floor for a vote. The House has until May 23 to give preliminary approval to Senate bills.

If the legislation goes back to the House floor and is voted out by the full chamber, the House and Senate would have to agree on the version that emerges from closed-door meetings before sending the bill to Gov. Greg Abbott. The two chambers have until May 26 to come to agreement.

The Senate, led by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, voted on a version of the bill that would eliminate tenure altogether, arguing that it has allowed woke faculty to spew ideology because they feel they are protected by tenure, which provides continuous employment. The House version, as approved by the Higher Education Committee, instead enshrines tenure policies in state law.

Faculty have largely opposed both versions of the bill, arguing that while the House option is better than the Senate proposal, it includes various provisions that could effectively gut tenure protections, making it difficult to recruit and retain top faculty who help the states universities rise in prestige and national rankings.

A robust system of tenure is the surest means of protecting academic freedom so that truth might be pursued in the classroom, in the archives, and in the lab, leaders of the American Association of University Professors wrote in a news release. The tenure system remains the foundation of academic freedom in the United States, and is as important to students and society at large as it is to the faculty who work under its protection.

Tenure is a nearly century-old practice used by universities across the country that provides professors with continued employment, allowing them to pursue long-term, independent research and teaching free from political or administrative interference. Tenured faculty cannot be fired without good cause, and they must receive due process if they are terminated.

Patrick vowed to ban tenure in Texas last year after a group of University of Texas at Austin faculty issued a resolution in defense of academic freedom, the idea that faculty can teach and speak freely about their fields of study without political or outside influence. Specifically, their resolution was in response to the Legislatures decision in 2021 to ban the teaching of critical race theory in K-12 schools. Patrick has repeatedly accused the faculty of stoking societal division, claiming the professors felt they were above the law.

Sen. Brandon Creighton, R-Conroe, carried the Senate legislation, which would eliminate tenure for all professors who have not received the status by Jan. 1, 2024. He described tenure on the Senate floor last month as outdated, saying it allows faculty to ruin the brand of a university.

The House version of the bill approved by the committee replaced the Senate version with a proposal that would instead enshrine tenure in state law.

Kuempel said during the House committee hearing on the bill last week that he believed tenure needs to be offered. His bill defines tenure in state statute as the entitlement of a faculty member of an institution of higher education to continue in the faculty members academic position unless dismissed by the institution for good cause in accordance with the policies and procedures adopted by the institution, which reflects the common definition of tenure in higher education.

Under Kuempels bill, much of how universities currently award tenure would remain intact. University regents would have to clearly lay out how they grant tenure and how they evaluate tenured faculty, and include required reasons to terminate a professor such as professional incompetence, conduct involving moral turpitude or unprofessional conduct that adversely affects the institution.

But faculty have raised concerns about a portion of the bill that they worry might gut the long-term job security that tenure provides. Under the 14th Amendment, Americans are entitled to due process if the government tries to take away their property. In 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a tenured faculty members right to continued employment qualifies as property interest, meaning it cant be taken away without a documented reason for the termination, a hearing and an opportunity to appeal.

But the House version of Senate Bill 18 includes a provision that says tenure creates a property interest equivalent only to one years salary. Faculty and Constitution experts worry that would mean a university could fire a professor without due process if they paid them a years salary, which faculty and constitutional experts have flagged as a potential erosion of their rights.

[T]he protection provided by the committee substitute for SB 18 would be tenure in name only; and could have the same consequences as the elimination of tenure itself, leaders of the Texas Conference of the AAUP wrote in a news release.

Faculty from across the state warned lawmakers in committee hearings in the House and Senate that universities already have rigorous systems in place to grant and revoke tenure. They also expressed concern that the acceptable reasons listed in the House version to terminate a professor are vague and could be easily weaponized to fire faculty who say or do something state or university leaders disagree with a situation that tenure is supposed to protect faculty from.

SB 18 is one of a few of Patricks legislative priorities that was watered down by the House. The lower chamber also made changes to Senate Bill 17, which would ban diversity, equity and inclusion offices in state colleges and universities. Kuempels version of that bill would allow for such programs when they are required by a private or federal grant or an accrediting agency. The House is expected to take a vote Friday on the version of SB 17 that the Higher Education Committee approved.

Disclosure: University of Texas at Austin has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribunes journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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With clock ticking on legislative session, Texas Democrats delay ... - The Texas Tribune