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TexasTowelie

(116,562 posts)
Sun Jan 17, 2021, 03:13 AM Jan 2021

Dispute over Democrats' speed-reading computers lands in front of Colorado Supreme Court

If the Colorado Constitution requires you to read a 2,023-page bill out loud to the state Senate, can you set up six computers to read different sections of the bill at once, at the incomprehensible speed of 650 words per minute, and call it even?

Colorado Democrats say yes. Republicans say no.

The 2-year-old dispute over a stalling tactic used by the Republican minority in 2019 — and Democrats’ subsequent technological work-around — landed before the Colorado Supreme Court on Tuesday as the justices considered whether they should step into the political arena and define how legislators should behave to meet the state’s constitutional requirement that bills be read out loud in their entirety upon request.

The dispute began in 2019, when Republican Sen. John Cooke asked that a mundane but lengthy bill be read aloud — a procedural tactic intended to delay votes on other more controversial issues, like abolishing the death penalty.

Read more: https://www.denverpost.com/2021/01/12/colorado-general-assembly-bill-reading-requirement-speed-computers-supreme-court/

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Dispute over Democrats' speed-reading computers lands in front of Colorado Supreme Court (Original Post) TexasTowelie Jan 2021 OP
incentive to write shorter, comprehensible bills rampartc Jan 2021 #1

rampartc

(5,835 posts)
1. incentive to write shorter, comprehensible bills
Sun Jan 17, 2021, 03:36 AM
Jan 2021

and why not? the details should be left to regulatory agencies.

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