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Terie Norelli is new Speaker of the NH House

by: Mike Caulfield

Sun Nov 19, 2006 at 02:11:30 AM EST


Terie Norelli is the new Speaker of the House:

Norelli won a majority of the vote on the first ballot of yesterday's Democratic caucus. She received 128 of 218 votes, while Rep. Stephen DeStefano of Bow received 57 votes, and Rep. Jay Phinizy of Acworth received 33 votes. After the initial vote, the caucus took another vote, electing Norelli unanimously.

Norelli quickly defined the bounds of what bipartisanship means, and more importantly, does not mean:

Norelli said she would not appoint Republican chairs of committees, noting "the role of the chairmen of committees is the direct the policy of the committees. As the majority, it is our right to direct that policy."

But she did say Republicans and Democrats alike would be treated with respect, and noted Republicans would not be in a small out-of-the-way office. Several years ago, Democrats were moved from their long-held, third-floor office to much smaller space on the first floor of the State House.

She also stated that her understanding is that a statewide income tax for education is off the table.

More after the flip...

Mike Caulfield :: Terie Norelli is new Speaker of the NH House
The real story of the night was how the party as a whole held up. With the sudden leap of the state Dems to power, there have been questions about whether the unity the party had developed in opposition would hold.

It did. In the contest for Speaker, none of the candidates crossed party lines to solicit votes from Republicans.

In an additional testament to the unity of the caucus, the Democrats rejected a proposal that would have allowed the direct election of a majority speaker and risked fragmenting the party. From the Boston Globe:


Rep. Daniel Eaton, of Stoddard, said the Democrats also considered changing their rules Saturday to elect a majority leader, but that effort was defeated after intense debate.

Eaton said he and others worried that an independently elected majority leader would split the Democrats, just as the party gets ready to take control of the House for the first time since 1922.

"It just sets a recipe for disaster if you have a speaker and a majority leader in conflict. You leave the caucus in disarray and not knowing who to follow and it creates difficulty in keeping a very unified working team," he said.


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Republican Comittee Chairs (0.00 / 0)
I had seen that the Union Leader was suggesting the way for Democrats to prove that they were 'Bipartisan' was to appoint Repiblicans as chairs of comittees.  Come on, Union Leader.

How many times did a Democrat land as a comittee chair in a Republican majority?

Once again, a Right Wing media outlett misleading its readers.


I know, the UL is becoming increasingly absurd (0.00 / 0)
The editorial page lately has been a riot.

Not just wrong, mind you. They've often been that. But the Bass endorsement column, followed by the let's ditch Bass column, followed by this OK, we'll share the chairs stance...they're clearly off their meds here. They seem to be grasping for anything to hold on to.




[ Parent ]
Yeah, they are clearly looking for "reform" (0.00 / 0)
and young blood in the GOP, but I think their version of reform is more going far far right than anything else.

I can't see that as a winning strategy in NH right now.

If, on the other hand, they reached further back into TR land, that would be a different story.

birch, finch, beech


[ Parent ]
I wonder if this is based (4.00 / 1)
on a fundamental misunderstanding of what's happening nationally.  That is, might they believe (or hope) that because hard-right Republicans had been winning in other regions, the problem in NH was that Republicans weren't going hard-right enough?  And that if Republicans would just move right, they'd be able to recapture their natural constituency?  But in fact, the problem for Republicans in New England is precisely that people don't like the southern and western radical Republicans, and are finally beginning to realize that a vote for the supposedly moderate New England Republican is in fact a vote for Trent Lott et al?

Now, this theory takes healthy doses of both stupidity and wishful thinking on the part of the UL, but I'm certainly willing to attribute stupid to them.


[ Parent ]
The UL's history (0.00 / 0)
It has pushed for extreme-right policies and candidates for generations. Its goal is not to help Republicans win; its goal is to move the state and the nation further right.

The UL has often urged voters to support doomed wingnuts rather than moderate Republicans.

The surprise to me was that they supported Bass at all.


[ Parent ]
Oh, and welcome, nhcollegedem! (0.00 / 0)
Looking forward to your diaries!



[ Parent ]

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