nc senate

NC Senate launches new offensive in the "war on math"

Only a professor from the Art Pope School of Fuzzy Math would say that cutting taxes at a time of record deficits and firing 20,000 public employees is good for what ails us. The Wilmington Star News has all the sad details.

The white flag of surrender

The Senate budget that emerged this morning is akin to a white flag of surrender, a retreat from all that we have done to make our state so desirable for families and businesses. The proposed cuts will be felt in every community In North Carolina.

Tagged:

Senate Republicans rub salt into education wounds

If you thought the House's budget was bad:

Under the Senate plan, cuts to K-12 education would be $800 million. That's about a 15% deeper cut than the House proposal, and more than twice the cut included in Perdue's budget.

Cuts to the community college system would be about 19% deeper than the House plan: $132 million, compared to the House's $111 million.

So, all those job loss numbers that both sides have been tossing around now need to be revised, and not "to the good", either. These backwards idiots are going to ruin this state before they're through.

What's really behind Senate rules ban

He who makes the rules rules the kingdom:

If an agency wants a new regulation that doesn't fit into those categories, it would have to come before the legislature, which would assess its relative costs and benefits.

The power of government doesn't rest in oratory or documents, it is manifested in the implementation of such. The Roman Senate knew this, and so does the North Carolina Senate. When Senate Republicans ponder this rulemaking ban, they don't have efficiency or economic growth in mind; for them, this represents the disarming of an opponent's troops.

N.C. legislators ignore discrimination, honor Boy Scouts

On Monday, both the North Carolina House and Senate adopted resolutions honoring the Boy Scouts of America in recognition of their 101st anniversary yesterday.

Unsurprisingly, neither resolution (House, Senate) mentions the Scouts' anti-gay and religious discrimination against youth members and adult leaders. And, unsurprisingly yet again, not a single member of the legislature had the courage or conviction to vote against the resolution.

Dear state lawmakers, do you actually care about children -- all children -- or just the straight and religious ones?

(Crossposted from InterstateQ.com)

Amateur hour for the NC Senate GOP as session opens

Also file under: Useless Fights, Wasting Time, and Bad Politics

Those following opening day at the NC General Assembly will have noticed that the new GOP leadership of the Senate is rewriting a few chamber rules. Big whoop. Happens every session.

However, this time the GOP is said to be creating a new position called "parliamentarian" basically to override the Lt Gov's rulings from the chair if they don't like a given ruling.

I could not have said it better myself....

... and there's a god reason for that!

Courage and Clean Elections


(See what happens when you make me mad?!)

Fighting the urge....

... to slap the Senate Dems this morning after getting a look at the weekend's editorials. Yes, once again, in the face of the reality of the ethics scandals, and the coming indictment of Easley (you know it's going to happen, sooner or later) Dem Senate reps talked a big game and then folded, letting the chance to take the lead on ethics reform slip through their hands. Now they're just standing there, like deer caught in the headlights, waiting for the potshots being lobbied their way to hit them and praying they get out of Raleigh before the Easley mess hits the fan.

NC Senate predictions

Marshall: 136,052
Cunningham: 104,981

Many are predicting a much lower turnout based on most runoff turnouts. The Cunningham campaign has publicly estimated the turnout near 200K. The Asheville Citizen - Times has suggested 75K. But they aren't comparing apples to apples. They are looking at recent runoff elections that involved downticket races such as the State Education Superintendent.

Corporate tax-dodgers get help from NC Senate

Those poor little multi-state corporations need protection from the mean old tax collectors:

The state Senate and the business lobby want to take away a big stick that the state's tax collector says it needs to punish big businesses that dodge their taxes.

The issue is up for debate in budget negotiations under way between the state House and Senate. The Senate's version includes a provision that would prevent the N.C. Department of Revenue from assessing a penalty on businesses it thinks are hiding income.

Syndicate content