• Home
  • News
    • Politics & Government
    • Business & Economy
    • Crime / Courts
    • Health / Medicine
  • Sports
    • High School Sports
    • Radio Iowa Poll
  • Affiliates
    • Affiliate Support Page
  • Contact Us
    • Reporters

Radio Iowa

Iowa's Radio News Network

You are here: Home / Politics / Govt / It’s getting hot at the statehouse

It’s getting hot at the statehouse

April 6, 2005 By admin

The temperature and the tempers are rising at the statehouse. For some reason, the heat was left on overnight in the state capitol, so it’s a little hot in here. And House Speaker Christopher Rants, a Republican from Sioux City, is hot again today because so few bills are making it through the Iowa Senate because it’s evenly-divided between Democrats and Republicans. A few bills that got the votes of every Republican and Democrat in the House haven’t even cleared a committee in the Senate. Rants says it’s now apparent the party power-sharing arrangement set up in the Senate isn’t working, and legislators won’t be able to get their work done anytime soon. It’ll be a “long, hot May,” according to Rants. “You have one grumpy House member. You’re going to start seeing a lot of other grumpy House members because we’re not getting any response from the Senate.” But “Whoa Nelly” says Senate Co-Leader Mike Gronstal, a Democrat from Council Bluffs. “I don’t know why he’s suggesting most of these bills are dying in the Senate because we don’t have any particular concerns about most of them,” Gronstal says. He says Rants should stop pressing for Republican priorities that Democrats simply hate, and start doing what Democrats in the Senate have done, which Gronstal says is back away from some of their own priorities. Gronstal says Democrats think raising the minimum wage is the right thing to do, yet they aren’t pressing it because Republicans object and the session should be about reaching “common ground” according to Gronstal. He says if Rants doesn’t understand that yet, it’s going to be a long, hot summer. “My exit strategy is to accomplish what’s important for Iowans,” Gronstal says. “I don’t care whether that takes ’til May, June, July or August.”

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Politics / Govt

Featured Stories

Governor hails passage of ‘transformational’ state government reorganization

Economic impact of Iowa casinos tops one billion dollars

State board approves millions in settlement with former Hawkeye football players

Monroe County man dies while serving prison term for killing brother

Bill would make changes in Iowa’s workplace drug testing law

TwitterFacebook
Tweets by RadioIowa

Traveling to Texas to watch the Hawkeyes in the Final Four will cost you

Iowa women are headed to the Final Four

Ogundele and Ulis are leaving the Iowa basketball program

Iowa plays Auburn in NCAA Tournament

Volunteers help pull off NAIA Women’s basketball championship in Sioux City

More Sports

Archives

Copyright © 2023 ยท Learfield News & Ag, LLC