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State House Panel Endorses Rules to Help Prevent Republican Rift

Rules Committee voted Wednesday to change the number of votes required to move a bill stuck in committee to the floor from 60 to 58

By Associated Press

HELENA — A Montana House committee on Wednesday endorsed rules that aim to curb potential Republican infighting while reducing some of the powers of the House Speaker.

The House Rules Committee voted 12-7 on a party-line vote to change the number of votes required to move a bill stuck in committee to the House floor from 60 to 58.

Democrats wanted to reduce that threshold to 51 votes, which would have allowed the 42-member minority party more chances to team up with moderate Republicans to advance certain measures.

Rep. Ed Buttrey, R-Great Falls, who sponsored the Medicaid expansion bill as a senator in 2015, said he felt the “blast motion” compromise was reasonable.

“I think if you look in the past and why the blast motions had to be used on big policy is because games had been placed within the process,” he said Monday after being sworn in to the House. “The new rules are fair. It takes away game-playing.”

Other changes would make it more difficult for bills to be sent to a committee to be killed. The proposal would require hearings to be scheduled for all bills assigned to committees, would require just 51 votes to move a bill from one committee to another or to change the membership of a committee.

House Speaker Greg Hertz, R-Polson “really stepped up to the plate,” said Buttrey, who sponsored the Rules bill. “We worked hard to come up with something that was going to make the process better and that’s exactly what we did.”

He dismissed talk of factions in the Republican caucus.

“I think there are outside forces that were predicting or hoping for a big battle and that just didn’t happen and I don’t think it was meant to happen,” Buttrey said.

The full House is scheduled to hold its final vote later Wednesday.