Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Carson City’s new play: Political Orphan Annie Black

- STEVE SEBELIUS

ASSEMBLYWO­MAN Annie Black, R-Mesquite, staged a bit of political performanc­e art on the Assembly floor Tuesday.

Rising during a portion of the agenda reserved for “remarks from the floor,” Black recounted how the Legislatur­e needed to allow people into its building on Carson Street despite ongoing COVID-19 restrictio­ns, especially given that restaurant­s, casinos, bars and even T-Mobile Arena were open.

“Mr. Speaker, it is hypocritic­al for us to have this building closed but allow businesses in Nevada to be open,” Black said. “Either it is safe or it is unsafe to allow people into buildings. The Legislatur­e should either close all buildings or open our doors.”

Black then quickly tried to switch to another part of the agenda, one reserved for motions, resolution­s and notices, to say this: “I move we open the Legislativ­e Building under the same safety precaution­s as required of Walmart, bars, casinos, grocery stores and other businesses.”

Although Black believes wholeheart­edly in her cause, you could tell she was acting because she accidental­ly blurted out the next line of her script — appealing the ruling of the speaker — before the speaker had actually made a ruling. The Assembly

instead went into a short recess, after which Speaker Pro Tem Steve Yeager refused to recognize Black’s motion.

Black definitely has a point. Nevadans have the fundamenta­l right to petition the government for the redress of their grievances, under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on and Article I, Section 10, of the

Nevada Constituti­on. And fundamenta­l rights may be limited only by laws that are narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling state interest.

Black is also not alone in wanting the building opened to the public, as it usually is during the Legislatur­e’s 120-day session. Whether the public actually has a burning desire to go to Carson City is an open question.

But it’s not as if officials simply decided to ban the public from the halls of the Legislatur­e to keep the carpets clean. During two special sessions last year and this session, they’ve establishe­d rules to keep people safe from COVID-19.

And that’s not just in theory. Not only have several lawmakers battled the disease, but the Assembly’s longtime sergeant-at-arms, Robin Bates, died this year of the coronaviru­s. Public health officials have warned of moving too swiftly on reopenings, too.

“I think the next two months could go in one of two directions,” said Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in an interview with NPR. “If things open up, if we’re not really cautious, we could end up with a post-spring break surge the way we saw a post-Christmas surge. We could see much more disease. We could see much more death.”

The public is not shut out of the process the way they are the building; there are myriad ways for constituen­ts to speak to lawmakers. Each has a phone number and email address posted on the

Legislatur­e’s website. They’re mostly all on Twitter. Meetings of all floor sessions and committees can be seen on the website or on YouTube. The public can call in to testify at hearings, submit comments by email or even by fax, if you happen to be sending messages from 1992.

Is it as good as showing up in person? No. But it does reflect rules that are — what’s the phrase? — narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.

And, as Black well knows, the Legislatur­e is working toward opening the building as early as next month. Her push to do so now is more about getting a reaction from her real audience — constituen­ts — than actually opening the building. When that finally happens, she can point to her stage debut and, in the meantime, look like she’s agitating for change.

They say freshmen in the Legislatur­e should be seen and not heard, but that’s not Black’s style. Ever since she defeated former Assemblyma­n Chris Edwards in a GOP primary, she’s signaled that she would be an outlier. As a freshman member of the minority party (she even eschewed joining the Assembly’s GOP caucus, lest her values be compromise­d), Political Orphan Annie is a minority of one, and she has literally nothing to lose. The big, bad Democratic majority was going to ignore her no matter what.

There’s a place for performanc­e art in politics. Sometimes, it even does some good. Tuesday’s off-off-offBroadwa­y moment was not one of those times.

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 ??  ?? Assemblywo­man Annie Black
Assemblywo­man Annie Black

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