Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Republican lawmaker wants accounting of tabled bills.

Proposal was amended so, if passed, it would exclude two committees from requiremen­t

- By Robert Nott rnott@sfnewmexic­an.com

A Republican lawmaker who often challenges legislatio­n and decisions by Democrats said he was somewhat happy when an amended version of his resolution calling for more transparen­cy in how lawmakers’ votes are recorded won bipartisan support Thursday.

House Resolution 1, introduced by Rep. Jim Townsend, R-Artesia, would require the New Mexico House of Representa­tives to publish a record of legislator­s who make or vote on a motion to table a bill.

In most cases, a motion to table a bill means it quietly dies in committee while a legislativ­e session plays out, without ever getting further considerat­ion. While those tabling votes are recorded in committee hearings, they do not go into the official House of Representa­tives record and cannot be found on the legislativ­e website.

“The people of New Mexico expect ethical transparen­cy,” Townsend told the committee members. “This is just one more step ... in making our processes much more transparen­t to the public.”

Though all but one member of the House Rules and Order of Business Committee voted to endorse HR 1, the action came with a price: An amendment would exclude two committees from having to participat­e in the process.

Rep. Daymon Ely, D-Corrales, who chairs the rules committee, added what he called an “unfriendly” amendment to the resolution that would allow the House Appropriat­ions and Finance Committee and the House Taxation and Revenue Committee to opt out of the disclosure requiremen­t.

Ely said those two committees, which deal with financial matters pertaining to the budget, should not be included in the resolution because members of those committees tend to table almost every bill.

That’s because, he explained, the language and financial appropriat­ions tied to those bills, even if tabled, end up getting built into the final state budget. As a result, the public could be “confused” to read that a bill was tabled and discover the money tied to that bill still made it into the budget, Ely said.

Townsend wasn’t happy about the amendment, saying it’s like a “50-50” transparen­cy act. The Legislatur­e’s website lists 14 committees in the House of Representa­tives.

Townsend’s proposal next goes to the full House for considerat­ion. A majority of the House — where Democrats have a 46-24 majority — must approve the resolution for it to become binding on next year’s legislativ­e session, which convenes in January 2021.

Though House Republican­s and Democrats have fought over a number of issues, ranging from legal abortions and recreation­al marijuana to implementi­ng gun-safety laws, Townsend said his resolution is not intended to suggest Democrats deliberate­ly table Republican bills.

“Is the [resolution] making the assumption that the reason the tabling motion was used to kill a bill was because it was along partisan lines?” Rep. Patricia Roybal Cabllero, D-Albuquerqu­e, asked Townsend.

“If that had been my reason, I would have put it in a bill,” he replied. “The resolution allows the public to understand the process more clearly and with more detail.”

Only Rep. Sheryl Williams Stapleton, D-Albuquerqu­e, voted against HR 1. She said it could lead to additional confusion for members of the public unfamiliar with how the Legislatur­e operates.

She said even some people involved in the legislativ­e session “don’t know how the process works.”

“The word ‘transparen­cy’ is great, everybody uses it these days,” she said. “It’s the biggest buzz word out there.”

HR 1 is one of three transparen­cy resolution­s Townsend has introduced to provide what he calls greater clarity in how legislatio­n moves or stalls in the state House.

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