Las Vegas Review-Journal

Consolidat­ed powers

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Another portion of the state constituti­on designed to protect us took a step backward on Wednesday when District Judge Jim Crockett dismissed a lawsuit brought against current state lawmakers for holding various government jobs while serving in the Legislatur­e. Though the separation of powers provision has been part of the state constituti­on seemingly forever, it has not been enforced.

By creating three branches of government, each separate from the other two as to functions, the Founders sought to protect us from dictatoria­l abuses.

The lawsuit was brought by the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a think tank whose targets are legislator­s of both parties in both houses. Because many accept serving in the Senate or Assembly as a part-time job, they should not be expected to rule objectivel­y on laws that could conflict with their other jobs.

Some of the double-dippers are attorneys working as prosecutor­s or public defenders. Could this sway their votes on proposed legislatio­n? Some are school district or university employees. So could their legislativ­e vote on ... say ... a tax bill be affected by their employment?

Years ago, our own U.S. Rep. Dina Titus was serving in the Legislatur­e while she worked at the time for UNLV. Her rather unique response was that the higher education system was a fourth branch of government and therefore exempt from the separation of powers clause. I guess it worked for her. But who would swallow that?

The separation of powers is vital for our democracy, and I hope the NRPI appeal is successful.

Robert Latchford

Henderson

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