Senate Republicans Playing Games with House Bill 73
House Bill 73 has been on the Senate Agenda for weeks now, consistently passed over day after day. If the bill had lost the support of Democrats, it would quietly disappear from the Agenda list that is published every day. So the culprit in holding up the bill has to be the Senate Republican Caucus. Yes, all of them. I will explain why.
First, what is House Bill 73? It is the first leg of a Constitutional Amendment that would eliminate the restrictions in the Delaware Constitution that limit the reasons for the means of voting by absentee ballot. The Amendment simply delegates to the General Assembly the power to enact laws regarding how and why one gets to vote absentee.
Second, how does a Constitutional Amendment get passed in Delaware? Essentially, the Amendment is introduced as an ordinary piece of legislation, but it must get approved in both houses of the General Assembly by a two/thirds majority vote, and after that happens, then it must get reintroduced in the next session of the General Assembly and passed again by a two/thirds majority of both houses. So if this Amendment is passed in 2019, it must pass again in the 2021-22 (151st) session of the General Assembly.
So in the House, this Amendment needed 28 votes. It got 38. So no problem there. In the Senate, the Amendment needs 14 votes. Democrats hold a 12-9 majority in the Senate, so we need to hold together all 12 Democrats (no small feat when your caucus includes the conservative Bruce Ennis and the cowardly Dave McBride and Nicole Poore) and get two Republicans to vote for it. Now, it is likely that there are two Republicans that would vote yes for it: Anthony Delcollo and Cathy Cloutier. Both are Republican Senators representing very Democratic districts and both face reelection in the presidential election year of 2020 when every Democrat and Democrat-leaning independent alive will be rushing the polls to vote out Trump and every Republican on the ballot. So all year long, Cloutier and Delcollo have been voting with the Democrats on high profile issues to ingratiate themselves to their Democratic constituents.
Read more: https://bluedelaware.com/2019/06/20/senate-republicans-playing-games-with-house-bill-73/