All mail-in election bill fails in House
A bill that called for conducting all
elections in the state other than school elections by mail-in
ballot failed to pass on a third reading in the House on Jan.
28.
Efforts to enact vote-by-mail elections
have appeared in past legislative sessions, with both Republicans
and Democrats leading the efforts. House Bill 130, sponsored by
Rep. Pat Ingraham, R-Thompson Falls, had moved through the House
with some bipartisan cooperation until the third reading, which
failed by a 57-42 vote.
Rep. Carolyn Pease-Lopez, D-Billings, a
member of the Crow Indian tribe, accused another lawmaker of racism
during a public hearing. Turning to Rep. Derek Skees, R-Kalispell,
who represents the urban Whitefish House district, Pease-Lopez
said, “I felt so much hatred from your caucus.”
Continuing, Pease-Lopez said, “I feel
like if it was up to you, we would all be dead. We are going to
keep having babies and live and thrive no matter ho much you try to
oppress us.”
Pease-Lopez later apologized for her
comments and asked for “forgiveness.”
Several Indian legislators had
expressed concerns about an amendment brought by House Majority
Leader Tom McGilvray, R-Billlings, during the bill’s second reading
on Jan. 27. The amendment, which passed, removed an “outreach”
provision that would have required counties to notify residents of
reservations and universities of the mail-in ballot system.
The Indian legislators pointed out that
many residents on Indian reservations don’t have mailing addresses,
but after HB 130 failed, Skees told reporters that race had nothing
to do with his vote.
“Race has nothing to do with it,” Skees
said. “I have nothing to do with hatred. I love humanity.”
Skees, who voted against HB 130, told
the Pilot he and other Republicans conducted extensive online
research on the topic of mail-in elections.
Specific to HB 130, he said the cost of
the outreach provision would be borne by counties, and the outreach
provision was unfair because it gave special treatment to residents
of reservations and universities.
Skees also had proposed during the
bill’s second reading removing a provision that called for “24/7
drop boxes” for voters. He said the drop boxes created the
potential for fraud, but the provision was kept in the bill.