This message was on display Wednesday at the Kentucky Capitol as the League of Women Voters of Kentucky released a new study of antidemocratic tactics employed by the General Assembly to fast-track bills into law and exclude the public from participating in the process. (Kentucky Lantern photo by McKenna Horsley)
Our representative democracy rests on a fundamental principle: We, the people, have a right to participate in decisions that affect us.?
One year ago, a League of Women Voters of Kentucky report described how Kentucky’s General Assembly has increasingly fast-tracked legislation in ways that weaken that principle.?
In our newest report, “How Can They Do That? (Part 2),” we show that the legislature continued to fast-track legislation in 2024, and used four additional tactics that undermine public participation.?
Public is still shut out of Kentucky’s legislative process, says League of Women Voters
The four fast-track maneuvers identified in 2023 that were used again in 2024 are:?
We hoped that shining a light on these practices would discourage their use. Sadly, in 2024, the maneuvers were used with roughly one-third of House bills and one-quarter of Senate bills that became law.
This year’s report documents four additional tactics that challenge the Democracy Principle:
Using these tactics in combination has a negative compounding effect on public participation.
Remember learning ‘how a bill becomes law’? Well, forget it in the Kentucky legislature.
For example, Senate Bill 299 (passed in 2024) began life on Feb. 27? as a half-page “shell bill” that changed the word “he” to “he or she” in a two-sentence law about pari-mutuel betting. However, that short version ballooned into a 282-page substitute bill that made sweeping changes to horse racing and gaming statutes. The wholesale transformation occurred in less than 60 hours at the end of March, using several fast-track maneuvers and tactics. The substitute version affected not only the horse racing industry, but also charitable gaming organizations, whose representatives had little time to understand and give input on the bill.?
The League asks the General Assembly to strengthen public participation through rules that:
The League of Women Voters of Kentucky supports informed and active citizen participation in government. We urge the General Assembly to restore and expand our voices in the lawmaking process. And we call on the public to remind legislators that we, the people, have a right to participate in decisions that affect us.
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