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Peter Callaghan is a local columnist. He’s covered the
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John Henrikson is a local news editor who oversees political coverage. He's worked as a journalist in the
Northwest for 19 years, supervising coverage and reporting on local and
state government, the environment and growth. Email John
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State Rep. Jamie Pedersen, D-Seattle, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, took issue with an earlier posting in which I let House Republicans complain that they were being shut out of the "bipartisan" process.
Joe,
This is unfair and somewhat deceptive. I don't think the measure of bipartisanship is how many bills are left in the Rules Committee as we head for the cutoff. Instead, you should really be reporting how many bills have passed out of the House that are sponsored by members of each party.As of now, we have passed 270 bills out of the House, 52 of which have Republican prime sponsors. That's about 20%. Another way of looking at it is that Republicans have been able to get 52/62 (over 80%) of their bills out of Rules, while Democrats have gotten roughly 220/440 bills out of Rules (about 50%).
You could also look at the percentages of bills that people introduce that actually pass. In any case, I think both the statistic that you chose and the headline that you gave it are misleading.
Jamie Pedersen
Fair enough. I'm not about to do all the leg work required to verify this kind of stuff, but I'm glad that you have.
House Republican Minority Leader Richard DeBolt, you've been served!
Here is my original post from Thursday, to which Pedersen was reacting.
