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Battle of the Constitutional Officers, BINGO!

George Altman of the Mobile Press-Register has a follow-up today to his report from Sunday that Alabama Attorney General Troy King may “intervene” as early as tomorrow in Governor Bob Riley’s Taskforce on Illegal Gaming.  Altman notes that it is now likely that if the attorney general acts, the issue will have to be settled in the Alabama Supreme Court.  A box in the article points to two competing sections of the law that would form the legal question in this case:

Alabama law gives both the governor and the attorney general the authority to order district attorneys, both sitting and retired, to investigate cases. The governor’s gambling task force is based on that rule. A separate law allows the attorney general to take over any criminal case.

Code of Alabama, section 12-17-184

“It is the duty of every district attorney and assistant district attorney, within the circuit, county, or other territory for which he or she is elected or appointed: … to go to any place in the state of Alabama and prosecute any case or cases, or work with any grand jury, when called upon to do so by the attorney general or the governor of the state of Alabama, and to attend sessions of courts and transact all of the duties of the district attorney in the courts whenever called upon by the attorney general or the governor to do so.”
             
Code of Alabama, section 36-15-14
             
“The attorney general, either in person or by one of his assistants, may at any time he sees proper, either before or after indictment, superintend and direct the prosecution of any criminal case in any of the courts of this state. The district attorney prosecuting in such court shall assist and act in connection with the attorney general or his assistant in such case.”

 The debate between the governor’s office and the attorney general’s office has been raging for well over a year now, hinging on the definition of bingo and what machines are allowed or not allowed to be in operation.  In the piece on Sunday,

The source in the attorney general’s office said that King’s concerns have grown in recent days, particularly over Greenetrack, a gambling hall about 30 miles southwest of Tuscaloosa that local officials have vowed to defend from any task force raid.

It seems as if Greenetrack has become the “last stand”, as Victoryland and Country Crossing have closed rather than face the prospect of an armed raid and local officials have vowed to not allow a warrantless raid on Greenetrack.  Pleadings have come from casino owners and legislators for the AG to put a stop to it.  There is no doubt there is also a strong political undercurrent to this whole debate.  The governor has a distinct advantage, in that he is not standing for re-election.  The attorney general, on the other hand, is facing a strong primary challenge from Luther Strange.  How Troy King plays his hand in the coming weeks may well determine whether he is still going to be the attorney general come the June primary, much less in November.

Meanwhile, as the governor and attorney general go round and round on this issue, the state senate will take up the debate this afternoon, with new legislation that would make electronic bingo gaming explicitly legal and tax the proceeds.  I indicated back in November this issue had the potential to suck out all the political air in this state…and it certainly has done that…and the end doesn’t look near.

Friday Recap – What You May Have Missed

My friend Danny at Political Parlor had to play some catch-up this past Tuesday, and I have been MIA for even longer.  I will be working to try to get back to some form of normalcy here, I appreciate all my readers and friends who have offered support and encouragement during a difficult time for me and my family.

So, what have you missed?

I hope to get back to a more regular pattern of reporting and commenting in the next few weeks.  Thank you for continuing to stop by and feel free to offer your comments on these events below.

Alabama Rep. Alvin Holmes has a slightly different definition of “political”

Take a look at a portion of the remarks from the Martin Luther King Jr. day celebration on the steps of the Capitol in Montgomery today.  Pay particular attention to what Alabama State Rep. Alvin Homes says about Governor Riley’s decision to refuse federal dollars for unemployment compensation and the governor’s budget proposal, and then that he terms it an “economic statement”, not a “political statement” because “Martin Luther King was not political”.

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Overall, I enjoyed the celebration, but I thought some of the statements by Rep. Holmes were inappropriate to the occasion.

2nd Legislative Day: Fallout from the Governor’s Budget

I realized I may confuse people by numbering days the way I started to yesterday.  The Alabama legislature’s regular session may only meet for 30 “legislative days” in a 105 day period.  That would make Tuesday, the first legislative day and today (Thursday) the 2nd, as yesterday was solely for committee meetings.  So, I’ll try and stick to counting each of the legislative days, which is the way you will see things presented on the legislature’s website.   A summary of yesterday’s committee activities in the Alabama legislature can be found here.  There is not much action expected in either chamber today before legislators head home from the first week of the session.

Governor Riley’s budget was the main topic of discussion yesterday, as he revealed the details of his proposal.  Patrick Hickerson from The Birmingham News has a very good analysis this morning of what’s in the bill and reaction from several legislators to the proposals.  The governor is counting on additional federal stimulus dollars that have not yet been approved by Congress, and are not certain to be coming.  So, the debate is now between those who believe it’s “crazy” to budget money you don’t know you’ll have and the governor who believes it’s “asinine” to NOT budget money you think you’re going to get.  It appears that the budgets will be set to the side, for the most part, until we know the status of the second stimulus.

That brings gambling, ethics reform, charter schools and PACT front and center as the issues the legislature will be facing.  There is a charter school bill in each chamber of the legislature and there are a number of bills dealing with gambling and PACT.  Relgious groups held a rally yesterday opposing gambling and declaring it an evil, much like the governor did in his state of the state address.

The State Board of Education will vote today on it’s formal position regarding charter schools.  Governor Riley and State Superintendent of Education Joe Morton are both supportive of the resolution, but it will be interesting to watch what the board does.  I saw some interesting analysis yesterday of the bill yesterday that pointed out the legislation includes provision not just for K-12 schools, but also for career-tech and adult community education and adult continuing education.  That is just one of a number of provisions that will be questioned as the bill moves through the committee process.