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If you want to single someone out on Infrastructure, look to Speaker & his inability to corrall enough votes to pass the bonding bill. That failure was on the Leg, not Bullock.
Or you could just more simply look to Bullock's outright veto of a infrastructure bill in 2013
Ben,
I was there for some of it and the difference was $25 million in cash. He had about $17 million in other bills that he knew he was going to veto. So the total difference was really $7 million in cash plus the dead bills he vetoed. He then backed out of the deal he made with the speaker and crapped backwards on every eastern Montana county that is impacted by the Bakken boom. They could have funded the bill and had the rainy day fund still fully funded.
So he isn't Saint Steve in my book, I am still going to vote for him and then go the local brewery and get the hoppiest, most bitter IPA they brew, down 48 ounces of it in 15 minutes to try and get the taste of voting for him out of my mouth.
Nemont
The legislature has been a shit show for a while now. It isn't like the Gov did diddly squat to try and get the money together to help us out here on the east coast of Montana so I am not going to say he did. He was more interested in getting money to build a new museum in Helena than in water project in Vida.
While $45 million is nice, it doesn't even pay for the impacts in just Culbertson and Bainville let alone the rest of the area impacted. They have no problem expecting the revenue to flow when an oil well is drilled but the Butte mafia and the Helena first bunch doesn't give two shits about anything east of Great Falls until they want to shoot a few roosters or bitch about farmers and ranchers locking their gates to sportsman and Bullock is in lock step with them. Ask the guys and gals in Colstrip how much the Gov. has done for them.
The commerce power is not confined in its exercise to the regulation of commerce among the states. It extends to those activities intrastate which so affect interstate commerce, or the exertion of the power of Congress over it, as to make regulation of them appropriate means to the attainment of a legitimate end, the effective execution of the granted power to regulate interstate commerce. [ ...] The power of Congress over interstate commerce is plenary and complete in itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in the Constitution. [ ... ] It follows that no form of state activity can constitutionally thwart the regulatory power granted by the commerce clause to Congress. Hence, the reach of that power extends to those intrastate activities which in a substantial way interfere with or obstruct the exercise of the granted power.
You mean the one that would have cratered our rainy day fund and not helped much else out side of a few communities?
Since you brought it up, the rainy day fund is presently cratered, so where was Bullock's financial conservatism this last session? SB 416 was a mix of cash and bonds, and had it passed, would have eaten away most of what remains in the rainy day fund today? If Bullock truly cared about the "rainy day fund" and it wasn't just a coveneint excuse for his 2013 veto, shouldn't he be thanking the GOP reps for stopping SB 416?
His veto in 2013 was about the ending balance. Which, btw, is still over $300 million in the bank today.