Current:Home > MyNebraska lawmakers reconvene for new session that could shape up to be as contentious as the last -Infinite Edge Learning
Nebraska lawmakers reconvene for new session that could shape up to be as contentious as the last
View
Date:2025-04-20 03:24:08
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Legislature returned to the Capitol in Lincoln on Wednesday for the start of the short 2024 session that could end up as contentious as last year’s historically combative session, with a key lawmaker reviving her efforts to target LGBTQ+ youth.
As one of her first acts in the new 60-day session that ends in April, conservative Omaha state Sen. Kathleen Kauth followed through on her promise to prioritize a bill that would restrict transgender student participation in high school sports and limit trans students’ access to bathrooms and locker rooms.
On the other end of the political spectrum, progressive Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh, of Omaha, introduced a bill to repeal a hybrid measure passed last year that included Kauth’s restriction on gender-confirming care for transgender minors as well as a 12-week abortion ban.
It was conservatives’ push for those measures that led Cavanaugh and a handful of other progressive lawmakers to filibuster nearly every bill of the 2023 session — even ones they supported. Despite that effort, Republican lawmakers who dominate the officially nonpartisan Nebraska Legislature aggressively pushed conservative legislation, passing measures allowing people to carry concealed guns without a permit, a new voter ID requirement, and a measure that funnels millions in taxpayer money to scholarships for private school tuition.
Most senators are hoping to avoid a repeat of last year’s session that was peppered with yelling, name-calling, crying and the refusal of some lawmakers to even speak to each other. None of that acrimony was evident Wednesday as lawmakers from both sides of the aisle hugged and greeted one another with smiles following the more than six-month break from last session.
Many lawmakers from across the political spectrum made efforts during that time to meet with one another and get to know one another better, said Sen. John Arch, speaker of the Legislature.
“We want to hit the reset button this session,” Arch said.
Getting there will require a return to the congeniality of legislatures past, he said, when lawmakers often met political adversaries outside the chamber for lunch or dinner or even drinks to talk compromise.
“We have to learn how to debate controversial bills and have our have our debates, have our issues, have our fights, whatever they might be, and then move on,” he said. “Because this also this isn’t a one-year event where we have one controversial bill. We are going to have other controversial bills in the future. And so I say we kind of have to build and build muscle memory of what that feels like to take it to filibuster, to debate strongly, to take the vote up or down and then move to other work that we have to do.”
Lincoln Sen. Carol Blood, a Democrat entering the last of her eight years as a term-limited lawmaker, said she appreciated Arch’s words, but is not as optimistic that lawmakers will take on those issues she says concern Nebraskans most: access to affordable child care, health care, housing and “real help with soaring taxes.”
“As a freshman senator, I was such a Pollyanna,” she said. “But last year showed me that, while previous legislative bodies may have worked together for the good of the state, times have changed. Politics has become hyper-partisan, and this body reflects that.”
veryGood! (729)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Texas man on trip to spread father’s ashes dies of heat stroke in Utah’s Arches National Park
- Biden to establish national monument preserving ancestral tribal land around Grand Canyon
- Lawsuit filed after facial recognition tech causes wrongful arrest of pregnant woman
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Missouri grandfather charged in 7-year-old’s accidental shooting death
- Bike theft momentarily interrupted by golden retriever demanding belly rubs
- All of You Will Love These Photos of John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's First Vacation as a Family of 6
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- The Visual Effects workers behind Marvel's movie magic vote to unionize
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- DJ Casper, Chicago disc jockey and creator of ‘Cha Cha Slide,’ dies after battle with cancer
- Hip-hop and justice: Culture carries the spirit of protest, 50 years and counting
- Shark attacks, critically wounds woman at NYC's Rockaway Beach
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Miami police begin pulling cars submerged from a Doral lake. Here's what they found so far.
- Nagasaki marks 78th anniversary of atomic bombing with mayor urging world to abolish nuclear weapons
- Stranger Things Star Noah Schnapp Shares College Dorm Essentials for the Best School Year Yet
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
BTS' Suga enlists for mandatory South Korea military service
Idaho man charged with shooting rifle at two hydroelectric power stations
Monthly mortgage payment up nearly 20% from last year. Why are prices rising?
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Below Deck Down Under Shocker: 2 Crewmembers Are Fired for Inappropriate Behavior
Jay-Z’s Made In America fest canceled due to ‘severe circumstances outside of production control’
Pioneering study links testicular cancer among military personnel to ‘forever chemicals’