By PETER WONG/Oregon Capital Bureau
The walkout as a political tactic resurfaced Thursday in the Oregon Legislature.
This time, however, the 12 Republicans in the Senate said Thursday that they were absent not to stall a vote on legislation by the 18 Democrats — although their walkout will delay at least five bills from coming to a final vote — but to send a message to Democratic Gov. Kate Brown.
Still, the Senate could not conduct business because the Oregon Constitution requires a two-thirds majority (20) to be present in the Senate chamber. Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, was forced to adjourn the Senate until March 3.
Minority Republicans in both chambers walked out of sessions in 2019 and 2020. The first forestalled a vote on the corporate activity tax in 2019; the tax was allowed to come to a vote after Democrats shelved several other legislative priorities. The other walkouts in 2019 and 2020 blocked action on climate-change legislation; Brown then issued an executive order that covered some points in the legislation.
The 2020 walkout prompted Democratic legislative leaders to shut down that session a few days ahead of the constitutional deadline of 35 days. The shutdown left budget changes and legislation to die on the table.
The Senate GOP letter made two demands of Brown, who just renewed an executive order for another 60 days, giving her emergency authority during the coronavirus pandemic. That period now extends to May 2.
One was for Brown, as state superintendent of public instruction, to order the reopening of public schools, although Oregon has 197 separate districts with their own governing boards.
“We request that you immediately reopen schools for full in-person instruction with proper public health,” the letter says.
The other was for Brown to end pandemic-related lockdowns and let businesses reopen. Declining COVID-19 infection rates and new cases have allowed the state to ease restrictions in many counties.
“We ask that you immediately speed up economic reopening to give Oregonians a fighting chance of recovery,” the letter says.
“Our previous efforts to bring these issues to your attention have gone unacknowledged. Thus, we are protesting today’s floor session. In this show of solidarity with Oregonians who are being failed by the current direction of your policies, we hope this action conveys the importance of these issues.”
The walkout caught Courtney by surprise. Courtney said he received no notice in advance — the Senate GOP letter was not addressed to him — and he was forced to close the session. He said he could have issued a call of the Senate, under which members’ presence can be compelled.
“Frankly, I’m not interested in doing that,” he said. “They need to be here and do what they need to do to show their opposition on the floor and allow us to move forward.”
“Senate Republicans continue to sabotage Oregon’s democracy and undermine the will of voters,” said Sen. Rob Wager, D-Lake Oswego and the Senate Majority Leader. “They have abdicated the oaths of office many of them took just weeks ago. They continue to accept pay, benefits and daily expenses from Oregon taxpayers all while completely obstructing the business before the Legislature – the people’s work.”