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Home » News » News » Mills, State House Dems Poised to Approve $120 Million Spending Bill Using “Extraordinary Occasion” Maneuver
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Mills, State House Dems Poised to Approve $120 Million Spending Bill Using “Extraordinary Occasion” Maneuver

John AndrewsBy John AndrewsFebruary 11, 2025Updated:February 11, 202515 Comments6 Mins Read2K Views
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Maine Gov. Janet Mills and her Democratic allies in the Legislature were poised Monday afternoon to once again invoke an extraordinary parliamentary maneuver to pass a major spending package without Republican votes.

By the end of the business day, the Democrat-controlled House and Senate had failed to adopt the same version of the spending measure, and the already unpopular measure lost so much momentum that the leadership retreated from an attempt to push through the spending bill on a majority basis.

The drama began Tuesday morning when Maine House Majority Democrats moved forward with a bill with a hefty title and an even heftier price tag: LD 209, “An Act to Make Supplemental Appropriations and Allocations from the General Fund and Other Funds for the Expenditures of State Government and to Change Certain Provisions of the Law Necessary to the Proper Operations of State Government for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 2025.”

The bill calls for $120 million in additional spending, the vast majority of which would go toward the underfunded medical welfare program.

The initial vote on the committee report fell along party lines with 74 Democrats and left leaning Independents voting ‘Yes’ and 71 Republicans voting ‘No’. That narrow win sent the Supplemental Budget to the Senate for Concurrence.

Concurrence is the legislative term for agreement between the House and Senate on bill that has the same exact wording and expenditures in both Chambers. It is an essential step for a bill to advance to the governor’s desk and be signed into law. A bill left in non-Concurrence dies between the chambers if they can’t agree on its final form.

LD 209 made it onto the House Consent Calendar after receiving a unanimous vote from members present at the late-night Appropriations Committee vote on February 5th. Under new Joint Rules recently adopted, absent members were not allowed to offer a new report of Ought Not to Pass, which would have created a Divided Report and removed the bill from the unanimous Consent Calendar.

Rep. Ken Fredette (R-Newport) was absent from the late night committee session, but had wanted to vote No on the bill. The new rules prevented that. The Democrat-controlled Appropriations Committee denied a request to reconsider the vote to allow Fredette to log his No vote.

Earlier on Tuesday, House members voted unanimously 138-0 to fix that rule change and allow absent members to vote Ought Not to Pass in Committee, but the Fredette ‘No’ vote was not allowed to be counted due the existing rules having been in place on the night of February 5th.

In subsequent statements, the Mills Administration nonetheless insisted on calling support for the committee’s report unanimous despite Fredette’s clear opposition.

Appropriations House Chair Drew Gattine (D-Westbrook), Rep. Michelle Meyer (D-Eliot), and Rep. Jim Dill (D-Old Town) all spoke in favor of the bill, citing fiscal emergencies and a potential Spruce Budworm outbreak as reasons why the bill needed to pass without delay.

[RELATED: Expensive HIV Treatments Add Pressure to Maine’s Healthcare Budget Amid $118 Million Funding Gap…]

Republican Minority Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham (R-Winter Harbor), Rep. Laurel Libby (R-Auburn) and Rep. Gary Drinkwater (R-Milford) and others argued for a more collegial approach and for the bill to go back to the Appropriations Committee to be re-worked for bipartisan agreement.

Rep. Libby pointed out the donkey in the room when she said: “Maine people don’t want us to bail you (Democrats) out.” She was referring to the fact that the Democrats have held control of the Governor’s Office, the House and the Senate for the last six years. In recent years, they’ve passed majority budgets to avoid having to reach a 2/3rds majority vote that would required support from both parties.

Here’s where the State House drama gets further into the weeds of arcane parliamentary procedures, quirks of Maine’s State Constitution, and a tactic the Mills Administration has increasingly come to rely upon to advance all major spending bills without Republican support.

In the last budget cycle, because Democrats could not achieve a 2/3rds majority, their leadership decided to adjourn the legislature prematurely through a procedure know as sine die. Adjourning in that manner meant that legislation passed to that point would take effect after 90 days. In the case of the last two-year budget, that meant the new spending package would be in place before the end of the state’s fiscal year. Thus, there would be no lapse in state funding and no “government shutdown.”

Gov. Mills then re-convened the legislature in a special session, invoking the “extraordinary occasion” provision of Maine’s constitution, so that it could finish their legislative work. This move was made so that Democrats would not have to include Republicans in any budgetary decisions, and that decision was subsequently litigated in court.

Although Mills has previously used the sine die adjournment trick to pass two-year partisan budgets, the tactic has never been used to pass supplemental spending bills. But Tuesday afternoon, multiple State House sources confirmed to the Maine Wire that the Mills Administration had threatened to use the maneuver to secure passage of the $120 million package.

[RELATED: Mills Irks GOP in Meandering, Hyperpartisan “State of the Budget” Speech…]

The initial vote on the Supplemental Budget was taken at 12:23 pm. Shortly after the Senate approved the same measure 20-14.

After the bill’s initial passage Tuesday afternoon, Republicans offered several amendments. All were killed by Rep. Drew Gattine (D-Westbrook) through Indefinite Postponement. Indefinite Postponement is a parliamentary procedure that puts the amendment into an indefinite suspension that requires a majority vote to recall it, effectively killing it for the rest of the legislative session.

Some of the notable amendments centered on the controversial new Paid Family Medical Leave (PFML) tax.

[RELATED: Maine’s Private Sector Workers Are Paying the New 1% Paycheck Tax. They’re Also Paying the Tax for State Employees…]

Rep. David Boyer (R-Poland) offered Amendment D, which would have required state employees, including legislators, to pay their share of the PFML. Currently, state employees are covered by the state, i.e. the taxpayers — unlike private sector workers, which is to say everyone else. That motion died 74-71

Rep. Laurel Libby (R-Auburn) proposed Amendment G, which would have made the new Paid Family Medical Leave program optional instead of mandatory. That motion died 73-71.

Late Monday afternoon, lawmakers in the House and Senate were still wrangling over a version of LD 209 that could be passed in concurrence between the House and Senate and, ultimately, put on the governor’s desk for approval.

At the core of the supplemental budget bill debate are some minor welfare cuts originally proposed by Mills and later backed by Republicans.

Under “Part S” of the governor’s originally proposed supplement spending bill, the state would place new limits on emergency rental assistance, including the taxpayer-funded shelter program used to house migrants during and after the Covid-19 scare.

Although Republicans supported this part of the governor’s proposal, Democratic lawmakers removed it from the version approved in the House Monday morning, causing GOP lawmakers to take a unanimous stand against the spending bill.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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John Andrews

John Andrews is the Political Editor for the Maine Wire. He brings six year's experience as a former state representative to the Maine Wire’s political coverage. He can be reached at john@themainewire.com

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<span class="dsq-postid" data-dsqidentifier="34897 https://www.themainewire.com/?p=34897">15 Comments

  1. Benny Weaver on February 11, 2025 4:04 PM

    The democrats in Augusta have until 2026 to do their damage .
    In 2026:even the “ lowest information voter “ will know and remember what they have done since 2019 to destroy the state of Maine .
    Republicans WILL TAKE CONTROL of Augusta . People will remember . We will MAKE them .

  2. Mark Wheelin on February 11, 2025 5:06 PM

    Well that didn t take long – no surprise
    They re already moving to misappropriate funds from the new tax hike.
    To feed the parasitic invaders, no doubt
    They are Satan’s spawn

  3. Mike on February 11, 2025 5:10 PM

    This is going to sound fatalist but the state of Maine is lost and cannot be won back to sanity or even a semblance of fair play. There are too many displaced idiots from southern New England that left their own cesspool states who have come up here to ruin ours. They’ve been putting in place rules and a system of governing that will always keep the Democrats in control. They can’t win on a fair and balance way so they have to cheat. Between the governor, Secretary of State and the testicularless beta male Attorney General the democrats will never have true opposition. I’m old enough to remember the complaint that this state was really two state: north and south. It’s now deeper. The people who actually do the work and pay the majority of taxes. In addition the elderly on fixed income who have no political weight. This governor and her cronies in the legislature will go down in history as the most evil and wreckless politicians ever. Enjoy hell Janet. You’ve accomplished your ultimate goal of destroying what we all know was a beautiful state and wonderful place to live.

  4. Benny Weaver on February 11, 2025 5:20 PM

    WTF does an “ underfunded medical welfare program “ have to do with a “ potential “ spruce budworm outbreak ……that is like saying the gulf of Maine’s water temperature “ could “ increase by five degrees ….the earth “ could “:get hit by an asteroid ….four hundred million people “ could” die from Covid ……….
    Why don’t you LIARS hold your damn vote at two o’clock in the morning in the middle of a snowstorm
    LIARS LIARS LIARS
    Democrats are liars and they are DESTROYING our state .

  5. Mooseman on February 11, 2025 5:44 PM

    I’ve lost all respect for Mills, she is determined to tax working class Mainers into the stone age. How can she look at herself in the mirror after taxing all Mainers but state workers. State workers become a protected class….and guaranteed Democratic voters to maintain their privilege. Taxing the elderly on prescriptions, ambulance services…..ensuring increased property taxes. Grotesque abuse of power.

  6. Olde Crone on February 11, 2025 6:14 PM

    STOP THE STUPID SPENDING YOU DRUNKEN SAILORS!!!

  7. Les More on February 11, 2025 6:15 PM

    Democratic Rep. kweisi mfume, maryland promoting the idea of a “street fight” to get what you want which was then repeated by jeffries and waters.. apparently its the dog call of the day as scripted by the deep state. Wondering if that’s what its going to take to get Augusta’s attention.

  8. Mark Wheelin on February 11, 2025 6:38 PM

    @Mike
    l hear what you re saying, but still feel there is hope to wake Maine from it s apathy
    This observation is coming from an outsider
    Dystopia has not quite fully arrived -yet

  9. WallyJaz on February 11, 2025 6:44 PM

    Just like the Democrats in DC, Democrats are doing everything they can to destroy the country… Most of the Illegal Immigrants that came here under Obama/Biden came here not to work, but for the FREEBIES! I don’t even care if people are here illegally, but if they break any laws, they should definitely be kicked out!

  10. SarahKAne on February 11, 2025 9:08 PM

    I just started 3 weeks ago this web income system that my friend recommended to me and I’ve gotten 2 checks for a total of $9,200… this is the best decision I made in a long time! This extra cash has changed my life in so many ways, b21 thank you!

    Here is I started_______ tinyurl.com/homestar2?/452

  11. Beachmom on February 12, 2025 6:50 AM

    Dirty Dems can only cheat because their ideas are so terrible

  12. sandy on February 12, 2025 11:37 AM

    Always cheating.

  13. monfopedia on February 12, 2025 12:37 PM

    D.O.G.E. Maine, NOW!!

  14. David on February 12, 2025 2:23 PM

    Wouldn’t the next Extraordinary Occasion be Mills’s last day in office? Patience is a virtue.

  15. DMD on February 12, 2025 10:19 PM

    I love all your comments!! We need to fight, fight, fight every last Democrat & Mills!!

Leave A Reply

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