House Republicans tap Diehl as new majority leader
Fresh off obtaining a historic veto-proof majority, Missouri House Republicans selected state Rep. John Diehl as the next house majority leader.
Fresh off obtaining a historic veto-proof majority, Missouri House Republicans selected state Rep. John Diehl as the next house majority leader.
From south St. Louis County to Jefferson County to the Bootheel, Missouri’s most competitive state House contests are rematches from the 2010 election cycle. That the year when Republicans won a staggering 17 seats in the General Assembly’s lower chamber.
State Rep. Stacey Newman will return to the Missouri House next year after emerging victorious in a redo election in the 87th state House District. And this time around, she won by a margin greater than one vote.
State Reps. Susan Carlson and Stacey Newman are out of electoral limbo and back on the campaign trail. Leading up to today's rematch, both candidates used the truncated timeframe to alert their supporters to come back to the polls.
In the term-limited world of the Missouri General Assembly, it's not unusual for a state lawmaker to shift to an office closer to home. But term limits aren't the reason Chris Carter is leaving the Missouri House.
A gaggle of socially conservative Democrats from rural areas proved to be one of the keys to overriding Nixon's veto on legislation allowing entities to exclude abortion, contraception or sterilization services from insurance coverage.
Missouri employers will be allowed to exclude abortion, contraception or sterilization from insurance coverage. But legislative leaders decided not to try override the vehicle tax veto when they clearly did not have enough votes.
Republican Steve Tilley stepped down as speaker of the House on Monday, stating that, among other things, his incoming role as a consultant would interfere with his duties as the General Assembly’s highest-ranking Republican. Tilley, from Perryville, Mo., is also resigning from his seat in the Missouri House.
For many candidates, the August primary is just a winnowing process setting up the November election. But for several state legislative contests, the primary may be decisive because these state House districts are overwhelming Democratic.
Because of redistricting, eight Democrats currently in the Missouri House are squaring off against each other for four state House seats. After Aug. 7, only four will be returning to a legislature likely to be dominated by the Republican Party.