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Nebraska Legislature - Photos Clearinghouse
src: nebraskalegislature.gov

The Nebraska Legislature (also called the Unicameral) is the supreme legislative body of the state of Nebraska. Its members are "senators." The legislature is officially unicameral and nonpartisan, making Nebraska unique among U.S. states; no other state has either a unicameral or a nonpartisan legislative body. With 49 members, it is also the smallest legislature of any U.S. state.


Video Nebraska Legislature



History

The First Nebraska Territorial Legislature met in Omaha in 1855, staying there until statehood was granted in 1867. Nebraska originally operated under a bicameral legislature, but over time dissatisfaction with the bicameral system grew. Bills were lost because the two houses could not agree on a single version. Conference committees that formed to merge the two bills coming out of each chamber often met in secret, and thus were unaccountable for their actions. Campaigns to consolidate the Nebraska Legislature into a single chamber date back as early as 1913, meeting with mixed success.

After a trip to Australia in 1931, George W. Norris, then U.S. Senator for Nebraska, campaigned for reform, arguing that the bicameral system was based on the non-democratic British House of Lords, and that it was pointless to have two bodies of people doing the same thing and hence wasting money. He specifically pointed to the example of the Australian state of Queensland, which had adopted a unicameral parliament nearly ten years before. In 1934, voters approved a constitutional amendment to take effect with the 1936 elections, abolishing the House of Representatives and granting its powers to the Senate. The amendment was based on a bill to establish a unicameral legislature that had been introduced years earlier by Nebraska legislator and later U.S. Congressman John Nathaniel Norton.

Many possible reasons for the 1934 amendment's victory have been advanced: the popularity of George Norris; the Depression-era desire to cut costs; public dissatisfaction with the previous year's legislature; or even the fact that, by chance, it was on the ballot in the same year as an amendment to legalize parimutuel betting on horse races. This latter coincidence may have aided the measure's passage in Omaha, where the unicameral issue was not a pressing one but horse racing was. (Gambling interests campaigned for "yes" votes on all amendments in hopes of assuring the horse-racing amendment's passage).

The new unicameral Legislature met for the first time in 1937. Though the name of the body is formally the "Nebraska Legislature", during the first session the Legislature adopted a resolution formally giving members the title of "senator." In Nebraska, the Legislature is also often known as "the Unicameral."


Maps Nebraska Legislature



Selection, composition, and operation

The Legislature is composed of 49 members, chosen by a single-member district or constituency. Senators are chosen for four-year terms, with one-half of the seats up for election every second year. In effect, this results in half the chamber being elected at the same time as the President of the United States, and the other half elected at the same time as other statewide elections. Senators must be qualified voters who are at least 21 years old and have lived in the district they wish to represent for at least one year. A constitutional amendment passed in 2000 limits senators to two consecutive terms. However, a former senator is re-eligible for election after four years. Senators receive $12,000 a year.

Members are selected in nonpartisan elections. Rather than separate primaries held to choose Republican, Democratic, and other partisan contenders for a seat, Nebraska uses a single nonpartisan primary election, in which the top two vote-getters are entitled to run in the general election. There are no formal party alignments or groups within the Legislature. Coalitions tend to form issue by issue based on a member's philosophy of government, geographic background, and constituency. However, almost all the members of the legislature are known to be either Democrats or Republicans, and the state branches of both parties explicitly endorse candidates for legislative seats.

Sessions of the Nebraska Legislature last for 90 working days in odd-numbered years and 60 working days in even-numbered years.

President and Speaker

The Lieutenant Governor is the President of the Legislature and the official presiding officer. However, the highest position among the members is the Speaker, who presides over the Legislature in the absence of the Lieutenant Governor. The Speaker is elected by a floor ballot (or secret ballot) for a two-year term. Among his responsibilities, he provides the agenda for the Legislature, and he is expected to create the agenda in fair and nonpartisan way. The Speaker is not a member of any committee, but is an ex-officio member of the Rules Committee and the Executive Board.

Executive Board

The day-to-day matters of the body are dealt with by the Executive Board. The Board includes the Speaker, a chairman, a vice chairman, and six other senators. The chairman and vice chairman are chosen by floor ballot (or secret ballot) for two-year terms by the entire legislature. The chairman of the Appropriations Committee serves, but cannot vote on any matter, and can only speak on fiscal matters.

The Executive Board is also the Referencing Committee. All bills introduced are referenced by the Referencing Committee to the committee who's subject relates to the bill. Members of the Legislature may object to where a bill was referenced and may attempt re-refer the bill to a different committee by a majority vote.

Caucuses

Senators are classified into three geographically based "caucuses." Each caucus elects two board members who serve on the Executive Board and four members who serve on the Committee-on-Committees.

General powers

The Legislature is responsible for law-making in the state, but the Governor has the power to veto any bill. The Legislature may override the governor's veto by a vote of three-fifths (30) of its members. The Legislature also has the power, by a three-fifths vote, to propose a constitutional amendment to the voters, who then pass or reject it through a referendum.


Debate on tax-relief package to begin Friday in Nebraska ...
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Committees in the Legislature

Standing Committees:

  • Agriculture (8 members)
  • Appropriations (9 members)
  • Banking, Commerce and Insurance (8 members)
  • Business and Labor (7 members)
  • Education (8 members)
  • General Affairs (8 members)
  • Government, Military and Veterans Affairs (8 members)
  • Health and Human Services (7 members)
  • Judiciary (8 members)
  • Natural Resources (8 members)
  • Nebraska Retirement Systems (6 members)
  • Revenue (8 members)
  • Transportation and Telecommunications (8 members)
  • Urban Affairs (7 members)

Select Committees:

  • Committee on Committees (13 members)
  • Enrollment and Review (1 member)
  • Reference (9 members)
  • Rules (6 members)

Committee Selection and Election of Chairs

At the beginning of each biennium, the Legislature elects a Committee on Committees of thirteen members, one at large who is elected by all members from the floor of the Legislature by floor ballot (or secret ballot). Four members are from Districts 2, 3, 15, 16, 19, 21-29, 45, and 46; four from Districts 4-14, 18, 20, 31, 39, and 49; and four from Districts 1, 17, 30, 32-38, 40-44, 47, and 48. Each caucus elects its own four members to serve on the Committee on Committees. The Committee on Committees creates a report of the membership of all committees for the Legislature. The Legislature may approve the report with a majority vote or reject it, but may not amend the report. If the report is rejected, the Committee on Committees must start over and create a new committee membership report until the Legislature can adopt one.

Committee chairs are elected on the first day of the 90-day session and serve until the end of the 60-day session. Committee chairs are elected directly by the entire membership of the Legislature. On the first day, those wishing to run for a committee chair give a brief speech as to why they believe they're qualified, and following the speeches for that committee, members use a ballot vote to choose who they wish to serve as committee chair.

History and Controversy of Chair Elections

From 1937-1939 each committee was allowed to choose its own chair; from 1941-1971 the Committee on Committees designated the committee chair; and from 1973 to presently committee chairs are chosen by ballot. The Speaker, Committee on Committee Chair, and the Chair and Vice Chair of the Executive Board have been chosen by floor ballot since the Unicameral's first day in 1937.

The ballot vote (also referred to as the "secret ballot") has become increasing controversial, especially among some Republicans who believe it gives politically moderate or liberal members a chance to become chairs. Some argue that a ballot vote is not transparent. Others argue it insures members can select the most qualified candidate without regards for the political party of the members, thus helping preserve the nonpartisan organizational structure within the body.

The use of a ballot vote and a committee-on-committees is unique to Nebraska. Most legislative bodies in the United States give the Speaker/Majority Leader the power to appoint both committee membership and the committee chairs.


Nebraska Legislature - Photos Clearinghouse
src: nebraskalegislature.gov


Membership

Note: The Nebraska Legislature is nonpartisan; members' party affiliations are for informational purposes only.
Republican-affiliated: 31 members
Democratic-affiliated: 16 members
Libertarian-affiliated: 1 member
Independent: 1 member


Nebraska lawmakers get to work; 'Hard session' ahead as fights ...
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Past composition of the Legislature


Nebraska Legislature - Photos Clearinghouse
src: nebraskalegislature.gov


See also

  • History of Nebraska
  • Nebraska elections, 2010
  • Nebraska House of Representatives
  • American Legislative Exchange Council members
  • List of Speakers of the Nebraska Legislature

Internet sales tax bill in Nebraska Legislature dead for this year ...
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References


Nebraska Legislature
src: nebraska.boldalliance.org


External links

  • Nebraska Unicameral Legislature official site
    • History of the Nebraska Unicameral
  • Unicameral Update official news of the Nebraska Legislature since 1977

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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