The Oklahoman

Iowa Rep. wears jeans to protest lack of mask rules

- Stephen Gruber-Miller

DES MOINES, Iowa – Iowa’s Republican House Speaker Pat Grassley has repeatedly said this year that he can’t require lawmakers to wear masks on the House floor. So one Democrat decided to find out how he would enforce the chamber’s dress code.

Rep. Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, D-Ames, said she told her Democratic colleagues Sunday night that she would be wearing jeans on the House floor all week in violation of the dress code.

House rules adopted last month state that “no member of the general assembly or legislativ­e employee or intern shall be admitted to the floor of the House if attired in jeans of any color without leave of the speaker.”

“They’re brand-new, they’re clean, they don’t have any holes in them. They’re not hurting anybody,” Wessel-Kroeschell said Tuesday night. “Not wearing a mask can kill people, and we have had people here – we have a member who was exposed to it and is now COVID-positive at home. And there are five or six of their members who are never wearing masks. This is dangerous, and they’re putting all of us in danger. So if they can enforce a denim dress code, they can also enforce a mask mandate.”

The House rules do not require mask wearing on the floor or elsewhere in the building. Democrats tried to add a mask mandate and other COVID-19 precaution­s to the rules, but Republican­s voted them down.

The Capitol safety protocols set by Republican­s, who hold majorities in both chambers, encourage but do not require mask wearing. Those protocols also recommend but do not require disclosure of a positive coronaviru­s test or contact with someone who tested positive.

Since the Legislatur­e returned on Jan. 11, five people who work at the Iowa Capitol have disclosed that they have tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Four of those cases have been reported within the last week, including at least one lawmaker, Rep. Amy Nielsen, D-North Liberty.

When Wessel-Kroeschell tried to speak during Tuesday night’s floor debate, Grassley said he wouldn’t recog

nize her because she was violating House dress code.

“You will not be recognized to speak for debate,” Grassley said. “You can continue to vote from the floor.”

Melissa Deatsch, a spokespers­on for Grassley, said the speaker has discretion to handle rules violations.

“The speaker has been clear and consistent since the start of session,” she said in a statement. “There is no way to enforce a mask mandate short of having state patrol remove a duly-elected representa­tive from the floor, which is not something he is willing to do, for masks or for jeans.”

Grassley, R-New Hartford, told reporters last month he couldn’t stop members of the House from taking votes on the floor, either because of a lack of mask wearing or a violation of the dress code.

“At the end of the day, if a legislator, male or female, wants to walk in here in their bathing suit and take a vote on the House floor, they will be given that opportunit­y to do so,” he said Jan. 21. “If a member wants to be recognized using proper decorum, from the chair’s perspectiv­e, I will not be recognizin­g those members.”

 ?? OLIVIA SUN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Rep. Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, D-Iowa, is protesting the lack of a House mask mandate. “Not wearing a mask can kill people,” Wessel-Kroeschell said.
OLIVIA SUN/USA TODAY NETWORK Rep. Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, D-Iowa, is protesting the lack of a House mask mandate. “Not wearing a mask can kill people,” Wessel-Kroeschell said.

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