Current:Home > ContactCould Nebraska lawmakers seek winner-take-all elections in a special session to address taxes? -ProsperityEdge
Could Nebraska lawmakers seek winner-take-all elections in a special session to address taxes?
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:10:55
Nebraska lawmakers are set to address property tax relief next month in a special session being sought by Gov. Jim Pillen. But the Republican also has signaled his hope that the session could be used to take Nebraska back to a winner-take-all system of awarding electoral votes ahead of this year’s tight presidential election.
There’s a catch to Pillen’s call for changing the system of electoral votes: He’ll need enough lawmakers to back it.
Pillen’s letter to Speaker of the Legislature Sen. John Arch seeking a special session was sent Tuesday. It follows a swarm of townhall gatherings he has held around the state in recent weeks while seeking to rally support for a legislative answer to the state’s soaring property taxes.
In recent years, lawmakers have passed several measures to ease the property tax burden, including income tax credits to partially offset property taxes. But they failed to pass Pillen’s proposal earlier this year that would have shifted that tax burden by increasing and expanding goods and services subject to the state’s 5.5% sales tax.
Pillen also said in the letter that he’s seeking “a signal that support exists” to take up the issue of changing Nebraska’s atypical system of splitting its five presidential electoral votes. His language indicates he lacks the 33 votes needed among Nebraska’s unique one-chamber legislature of 49 senators to overcome a sure filibuster on the proposal.
The issue comes at a critical time for the 2024 presidential contest. Former President Donald Trump could need every electoral vote he can get in his bid to defeat President Joe Biden in a rematch of the 2020 race. If Biden were to win the Rust Belt swing states of Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, an electoral vote from Nebraska would give him the 270 electoral votes he needs for victory — even if Trump wins all the other swing states.
Nebraska and Maine are the only states that split their electoral votes. In Nebraska, the three electoral votes tied to the state’s three congressional districts go to whichever candidate wins the popular vote in that district.
In 2008, Barack Obama became the first presidential contender to shave off the Nebraska electoral vote tied to the Omaha-centered 2nd Congressional District. It happened again in 2020 when Biden captured Nebraska’s 2nd District electoral vote. Trump handily won the rest of the state.
Given this year’s tight race, Nebraska’s unique system has caught the attention of high-profile Trump loyalists, including conservative activist Charlie Kirk. It was Kirk who publicly called on Pillen to back a winner-take-all system with only days left in this year’s legislative session to accomplish it.
Within hours of Kirk’s social media post, Pillen issued a news release urging lawmakers to make the change.
Kirk later held a rally in Omaha, drawing nearly 1,000 people and urging voters to put pressure on state lawmakers to change Nebraska’s system of awarding Electoral College votes.
While Republicans currently hold 33 seats in the officially nonpartisan Legislature, some are unwilling to upend Nebraska’s more than 30-year system of splitting electoral votes. Among them is Omaha Sen. Mike McDonnell, who switched parties from Democrat to Republican in April on the same day Pillen called for lawmakers to take Nebraska to a winner-take-all system.
McDonnell’s office has been deluged with calls since — mostly from people out of state — to support that change, his office said Wednesday. Despite the pressure, he doesn’t support a winner-take-all system for Nebraska.
To address the issue of winner-take-all in this special session, observers expect Pillen would need first to gauge whether he has the votes to pass it — and then include it in his still-awaited official proclamation outlining reasons for the special session.
Pillen’s office did not return messages Wednesday to answer questions about whether he’s putting pressure on specific lawmakers to support a winner-take-all measure. But he left no question in his letter to Arch on where he stands on Nebraska’s current system.
“I believe this practice is inconsistent with our constitutional founding, out of step with most of the rest of America, and signals disunity,” Pillen wrote.
The sudden emphasis on Nebraska’s Electoral College system shows how much sway Trump and his loyalists hold in the Republican Party, said University of Nebraska-Lincoln political science professor Ari Kohen, and how effective they are at exerting pressure on fellow Republicans to bolster Trump.
Kohen noted that Pillen, who began his term as governor last year, had not campaigned on or even publicly discussed the winner-take-all issue until Trump acolytes called for it.
“Now he’s putting it on the same level of urgency as his property tax package,” Kohen said. “If this was not a presidential election year, we would not be hearing about this issue.”
veryGood! (32159)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Puzzlers gather 'round the digital water cooler to talk daily games
- Maui mayor dismisses criticism of fire response, touts community's solidarity
- Vicky Krieps on the feminist Western ‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’ and how she leaves behind past roles
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Alito rejects Democrats' demands to step aside from upcoming Supreme Court case
- Former Olympic champion and college All-American win swim around Florida’s Alligator Reef Lighthouse
- College football Week 2 highlights: Alabama-Texas score, best action from Saturday
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Philips Respironics agrees to $479 million CPAP settlement
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- UN atomic watchdog warns of threat to nuclear safety as fighting spikes near plant in Ukraine
- Maui mayor dismisses criticism of fire response, touts community's solidarity
- Why we love Bards Alley Bookshop: 'Curated literature and whimsical expressions of life'
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- The African Union is joining the G20, a powerful acknowledgement of a continent of 1 billion people
- Celebrity couples keep breaking up. Why do we care so much?
- 'Wait Wait' for September 9, 2023: With Not My Job guest Martinus Evans
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Biden finds a new friend in Vietnam as American CEOs look for alternatives to Chinese factories
Philips Respironics agrees to $479 million CPAP settlement
Authorities search for grizzly bear that mauled a Montana hunter
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
A man convicted of murder in Massachusetts in 1993 is getting a new trial due to DNA evidence
Emotions will run high for Virginia as the Cavaliers honor slain teammate ahead of 1st home game
Queen Elizabeth II remembered a year after her death as gun salutes ring out for King Charles III