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Democrats Short On Support To Get Severance Tax To The House Floor; Will Try Again

AP Photo/Keith Srakocic

State House Democrats and a handful of Republicans are trying to figure out the best way to bring a natural gas severance tax up for a vote.

The group briefly tried to bring a bill to the floor Tuesday, but had to drop the effort because they were short on support.

The version of the severance tax under consideration has been sitting in the GOP-controlled House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee since January.

The panel's leaders haven’t seemed inclined to act on it.

So instead, some members have signed on to a discharge resolution—a procedure that would bypass the committee and let the full House decide whether to consider the bill.

House Democratic spokesman Bill Patton said that’s where things get hairy.

He thinks the bill would pass on the floor with support from most Democrats and some moderate Republicans.

But he noted, it’s harder to rally the procedural votes to get it there—because that basically requires the GOP to vote against the legislative process it controls, and members “sometimes feel they have to support their caucus leaders.”

He said the House hasn’t given up getting the tax to the floor—but its exact route will remain to be seen.

House Republican leaders have said they’re happy to consider the tax on the floor, if it can get there.