Activists take first steps to recall Assembly Republicans
By RILEY SNYDER - Associated Press - Tuesday, January 27, 2015
CARSON
CITY, Nev. (AP) - A conservative activist and anti-tax firebrand has
helped organize three political action committees with the goal of
recalling Nevada Assembly Republicans that he says haven't come out
strongly enough against the governor's proposed tax increases.
The move by Chuck Muth
came as Republicans prepare for a fierce debate over Gov. Brian
Sandoval's proposed budget when the legislative session begins Feb. 2.
The
political action committees are targeting southern Nevada Assembly
members Chris Edwards and Stephen Silberkraus, and Speaker-designate
John Hambrick, largely to get them to vote against a proposed $1.1
billion in new and extended taxes.
The Nevada Constitution requires a two-thirds majority vote in the Assembly for a tax increase.
Muth
said Monday that three more votes are needed to block the budget from
passing the chamber. He said recalls are necessary to overcome what he
sees as a broken promise by Sandoval, also a Republican, to not increase
taxes.
"Gov. Sandoval is the reason these committees are coming up, because he hid it from voters," he said.
Nevertheless, the move has angered the legislators in the crosshairs.
"He's
premature, unfair and out-of-line," Edwards, whose district includes
Mesquite, Overton and parts of Nellis Air Force Base, said about Muth.
"He's misleading voters in a very bad way."
Hambrick
said he signed a no-tax pledge years ago and wants to review the
governor's budget more thoroughly before dismissing it. He said he would
be open to changes in the tax code that don't immediately cost
taxpayers more money.
"I
signed the no-tax pledge, and I'll live up to that," said Hambrick, who
represents a district in the western Las Vegas valley.
Silberkraus, who represents a district in Henderson, couldn't be reached for comment.
Legally,
PACs cannot begin collecting recall signatures until 10 days after the
legislative session begins. But the groups can receive donations, and
Muth said the goal is to get enough signatures to hold a special
election in May.
No
recall petition filed against a legislative member since 1993 has
succeeded, according to data from the Nevada Secretary of State's
Office, and the few petitions that do meet their signature goal are
usually targeting rural county commissioners or school board members
after elections with low turnouts that require far few voters'
signatures to qualify a recall effort.
The
state only recognizes recall petitions that obtain 25 percent of
registered voters' signatures in a particular district. In Assembly
District 29, represented by Silberkraus, activists would need to obtain
more than 7,000 signatures in order to qualify the recall.
[CORRECTION: The number of signatures needed for a recall in Silberkraus' district is actually 3,412 - Chuck]
"It's an uphill battle," Muth said. "It's going to be very, very difficult to gather enough signatures."
Even
so, the mere possibility of balancing the legislative load and a
special election concerns legislators such as Hambrick. Despite winning
nearly 80 percent of the vote in November, Hambrick said he's prepared
to run again in a special election if necessary.
"I walked my district this last time extensively, and it appears maybe I'll be walking it again on weekends," he said.
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