Taxpayer-funded campaigns clear House

A bill that would allow cities and towns to use taxpayer money to pay for campaigns cleared the House Tuesday.

The bill, which was approved 60 to 56, now moves to the Senate. The bill's supporters have repeatedly delayed the bill to avoid adding long debate to already long sessions and because supporters have been absent.

"It's been pulled so many times I've about forgoten why I'm opposed to it," said Rep. William Current, a Gastonia Republican.  

The bill allows cities and towns to create programs to give realistic candidates taxpayer money to campaign. The bill was amended Tuesday to apply only to municipalities with populations greater than 50,000.

Rep. Rick Glazier, a Fayetteville Democrat and co-sponsor, said the bill is voluntary and that cities and towns will decide whether they beleive publicly financed campaigns are a good idea. 

Rep. Paul Stam, an Apex Republican and House minority leader, again quoted Thomas Jefferson in opposing the bill. Stam said the bill would force a person to pay for a political ad they disagree with. 

Bills would make redistricting blind

A bill filed this session would establish an independent commission to draw the state's district lines.

The goal would be to avoid the contentious and litigious debate that typically accompanies the required changes to the state's legislative districts, said Sen. Pete Brunstetter, a Lewisville Republican and senate sponsor of the bill. House and Senate Republicans said they believe the bill and others similar to it would curb gerrymandering.

"The big problem is it allows legislators to chose their voters and not vice versa," Brunstetter said.

The state constitution currently calls for the legislature to change districts after the federal decennial census. The idea is to have legislative districts reflect changes in population.

More after the jump.

More recent House bills

Recent House bills of note:

H.B. 414: Judicial Appointment/Voter Retention, Rep. Johnathan Rhyne

H.B. 421: Use of Deadly Force/SBI Investigations, Rep. Kelly Alexander

H.B. 427: Counties May Fund Charter Schools, Reps. Tim Moore, George Cleveland, Larry Brown and William Current

H.B. 430: Voter Identification, Reps. Moore, Current, Paul Stam and Ric Killian

H.B. 431: Abortion-Parental Consent Notarized, Reps. Mark Hilton and Pat McElraft

H.B. 432: Conscience Protection/Health Care Providers, Rep. Hilton

Who didn't get paid this session?

Twenty-four legislators did not get paid for every day.

According to state records, 17 representatives and seven senators asked not to receive their $104 per diems for at least one day during the 2007 session.

Reps. Angela Bryant, William Current, Annie Mobley, Deborah Ross, John Blust, Bill Daughtridge, Laura Wiley, Ruth Samuelson, Pryor Gibson, David Lewis, Mitchell Setzer, Paul Stam, Jennifer Weiss, Martha Alexander, Pricey Harrison, Alice Bordsen and Paul Luebke did not receive pay for every day.

Luebke was the lowest, receiving pay for just 178 days.

Sens. William Purcell, Fred Smith, Clark Jenkins, Harris Blake, Tom Apodaca, Janet Cowell and Marc Basnight did not receive pay for all 191 days of session.

Basnight was the lowest, receiving pay for just 176 days.

Under state policy, legislators automatically receive pay for every day of session, regardless of whether they attend, unless they specifically ask not to be paid for that day. 



Document(s):
2007-perdiem.xls
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