The WA State 2022 Legislative Session: What went right for Conservatives?
nancydchurchill.substack.com
The 2022 Legislative Session ended on Thursday, March 10. If you want a basic recap of what happened during session, I recommend “What passed? What died? Washington’s 2022 legislative session wrap up,” by Austin Jenkins at NWNews (bit.ly/3w44zQG). The video recap by House Minority Leader J.T. Wilcox (R-Yelm) is also worth your time (bit.ly/3q2YJLl). Wilcox describes his disappointments from the session: a failure to fix last year’s “public safety reforms,” the failure to reform the governor’s emergency powers, the passage of a massively exploding operating budget, no tax breaks despite a record budget surplus, along with a transportation budget that only spends money in central Puget Sound and which is funded with NEW taxes and fee increases.
The WA State 2022 Legislative Session: What went right for Conservatives?
The WA State 2022 Legislative Session: What…
The WA State 2022 Legislative Session: What went right for Conservatives?
The 2022 Legislative Session ended on Thursday, March 10. If you want a basic recap of what happened during session, I recommend “What passed? What died? Washington’s 2022 legislative session wrap up,” by Austin Jenkins at NWNews (bit.ly/3w44zQG). The video recap by House Minority Leader J.T. Wilcox (R-Yelm) is also worth your time (bit.ly/3q2YJLl). Wilcox describes his disappointments from the session: a failure to fix last year’s “public safety reforms,” the failure to reform the governor’s emergency powers, the passage of a massively exploding operating budget, no tax breaks despite a record budget surplus, along with a transportation budget that only spends money in central Puget Sound and which is funded with NEW taxes and fee increases.