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Term limits challenge back before high court

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By OSKAR GARCIA / The Associated Press

Wednesday, Apr 04, 2007 - 04:40:33 pm CDT

A lawsuit challenging term limits for Nebraska’s lawmakers reaches the state Supreme Court Thursday and could ultimately decide the future of some of the state’s most senior senators.

The lawsuit, filed by constituents of Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha and former Sens. Dennis Byars of Beatrice and Marian Price of Lincoln, says term limits violate voters’ First Amendment free speech and association rights and 14th Amendment equal protection rights under the U.S. Constitution.

The six voters are asking the high court to review a decision by Lancaster County District Court Judge Karen Flowers, who threw out the lawsuit.

Lincoln attorney Alan Peterson, who helped overturn previous Nebraska term-limits laws, filed the lawsuit on behalf of the voters.

The three senators tried to file for re-election earlier but were rejected by Secretary of State John Gale. Peterson has also asked the court to overturn Gale’s rejection.

In a brief filed with the Supreme Court, Peterson wrote that the term limits were an “indirect (but not very subtle)” undercutting of black voters’ rights in Omaha. Chambers, the 36-year lawmaker and the longest-serving senator in Nebraska history, is the legislature’s lone black senator.

Statewide voters who could not replace Chambers by a general vote “have arrogated the elective power away from his district and made it impossible for him to continue to serve them,” Peterson wrote.

In response, Assistant Attorney General Charles E. Lowe wrote that the claim had no merit and the term limits would affect all voters in the same way.

“Term limits, it is hoped, will encourage more citizens to run for office as a legislator, giving voters more choices,” Lowe wrote. “Term limits express the will of the people to have a ’citizen Legislature’ and not one dominated by ’career politicians.“’

Under the constitutional amendment passed by 56 percent of Nebraska voters in 2000, senators are limited to serving two consecutive four-year terms.

Twenty were barred from running this past November — 40 percent of the Legislature. Sixteen more will not be able to run in 2008. The rest of the 49 will be gone by 2012.

The lawsuit also attacks the language of the constitutional amendment, which says lawmakers shall not be “eligible to serve” after two terms, an argument that Flowers rejected.

The amendment’s third sentence defines a term as “service in office for more than one-half of a term.”

That, Peterson argued, meant that 20 state senators were ineligible to serve during the last legislative session.

Flowers wrote in her ruling that words in the amendment are to be given their “ordinary meaning and interpreted and understood in their most natural and obvious sense unless the subject indicates or the text suggests that they are used in a technical sense.”

“If the meaning is clear, the court will give it the meaning that obviously would be understood by the layman,” Flowers wrote.

Flowers pointed out that the state constitution provides that members of the Legislature shall be elected for terms of four years. She said the amendment uses the “one-half of a term” phrase to compute consecutive terms.

“This is not to say that there will not be a member of the Legislature who is ’term-limited out’ after six years of service,” Flowers wrote. “That could happen to someone appointed to fill a vacancy created by the death, retirement or resignation of a member less than halfway through a term. Indeed, it seems rather obvious that this is, at least part, what the third sentence of the amendment was intended to address.”


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Bill wrote on April 4, 2007 6:00 pm:
" Typical politicians. I'm glad there are term limits. If they want the law changed, do it via the petition process not the courts. Oh wait, the politiicians dont like the petition process since it can circumvent them to make laws. Iowa is looking better all the time. "

Confused wrote on April 4, 2007 10:37 pm:
" Now we really don't know where term limits are do we. Maybe we should just let the judges vote in the next election and keep the people out of the voting booths. "

Andrew Bargen wrote on April 4, 2007 11:28 pm:
" This subject absolutely infuriates me to no end. As a voter, I should be able to vote for whichever candidate I think will best represent me. All of this rhetoric about "career politicians" is rubbish. WHO KEEPS VOTING FOR THESE PEOPLE???? Are voters just mindless dolts, such that we need term limits to protect us from our mindless selves? Every state in the union has term limits folks, and so do congressional elections. They're called BALLOT BOXES. Precluding someone from being eligible for an office simply because of the fact that they have done a good job and people keep electing them because of that. . . is pretty much ANTI-democratic, isn't it? "

Adam wrote on April 5, 2007 12:27 am:
" We already had term limits... its called elections. Its not as if these politicians are making very much money from this position. If you think your senator has served for to long then don't vote for them. "

The voters have spoken wrote on April 5, 2007 12:57 am:
" Leave term limits alone! We the voters have spoken using our constitutional given right to vote! Mr. Peterson is not doing anything on my behalf. I voted with my own brain to limit the terms of every senator. "

not of the people wrote on April 5, 2007 2:45 am:
" Petitions are almost always funded by out of state interests that think they know what's best for our state. That was the case with the term limits law. And now we have a bunch of inept freshmen letting lobbyists run the show. Good luck Ernie, you are the conscience of this state. We will be worse off without you. I hope you have a fitting successor ready to go. "

PattyJo Higgins wrote on April 5, 2007 7:03 am:
" Does it seem interesting that the people have spoken and said we want term limits, yet we have politicians once again ignoring a vote of the people!! Senators have a GOD complex, this is why term limits were put into place. "

Buddha wrote on April 5, 2007 7:36 am:
" I don't believe everyone was really aware of what the term limits meant when they voted them in. I carefully read the language, etc., before voting, and didn't like it, and voted against it. Voters do NOT read the language carefully. They just vote on the rhetoric of the issue. That's why I think we should do away with the petition process period! "

Truth wrote on April 5, 2007 8:06 am:
" Does anyone realize how much work it takes to be a senator? Many of them are in the capitol well over 12 hours a day and they get paid next to nothing. By allowing term limits to continue we are only putting more power in the hands of the lobbyists who can stay in their position for far more years than the senators and thus gain far more experience and influence than the senators they are lobbying. If that is what you want, fine, keep your term limits. "

ACLU wrote on April 6, 2007 6:54 pm:
" Google Alan Peterson. He is an official with the ACLU. He also defends death row inmates, filing endless appeals on their behalf. Certainly he has a right to his opninions, but it should be known which opinions he holds. "