Current:Home > ScamsNorth Carolina Republicans are in a budget standoff because of gambling provisions -VitalWealth Strategies
North Carolina Republicans are in a budget standoff because of gambling provisions
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:56:41
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Republicans at the North Carolina legislature converged Tuesday in a standoff over an already long-delayed budget plan because the House and Senate disagree on provisions that would further expand state-sanctioned gambling.
House Speaker Tim Moore said not enough of his GOP colleagues in the chamber are willing to support a final budget that includes the authorization of new casinos and video gambling machines for it be contained in the negotiated plan.
“At this point, the only way the House can pass a budget is if it does not include gaming in it,” Moore told reporters.
But Senate leader Phil Berger said that his House counterparts should stick to their word of agreeing to insert provisions into the budget when a majority of the House Republicans actually support adding the language on gambling.
Since Moore confirmed earlier Tuesday that 30 of the 72 House Republicans opposed inserting the section on expanding gambling, a majority of those Republicans agreed to it.
“It is their responsibility to honor the agreement that we had, and that is put (gambling) in, put (the budget) on the floor and we’ll vote it,” Berger told reporters. “I believe that House leadership needs to live up to its commitments.”
Moore said later Tuesday that no such agreement was broken, and that agreeing to a final budget was contingent on having votes to pass it.
A two-year budget — spending roughly $30 billion annually — was supposed to be enacted by July 1. But negotiations between House and Senate Republicans continued through the summer on a host of issues, including income tax cuts, pay raises, and the distribution of billions of dollars in reserve for special programs and initiatives.
But many lawmakers, Berger included, have pushed for a final plan to include the authorization of additional casinos and the legalization of video gambling machines statewide. Now passage of the other budget provisions are in jeopardy.
Details on much of the gambling provisions haven’t been made public. House Republicans met for several hours behind closed doors both last week and on Monday to evaluate them. Members of the House Freedom Caucus, who make up many of the “no” Republican votes on gambling, also met separately on Monday with Berger.
“I don’t think state-sanctioned gaming is good for North Carolina fundamentally,” Rep. Jay Adams, a Catawba County Republican within the Freedom Caucus, said in an interview. “This should have been discussed months ago. It should have been understood ... that there wasn’t support in the House, and we should have moved on to more important things.”
Lawmakers had said they were hopeful that final votes would happen this week. But short of making concessions, Moore later Tuesday canceled formal House business until next week, when he said his chamber may use a parliamentary maneuver to hold its own budget votes to try to pressure the Senate.
“We believe that we ought to not hold up what is otherwise a really good strong budget over one issue on gaming,” Moore said.
But Berger suggested that the two chambers may have to go back to the drawing board first.
The budget “is a series of compromises,” Berger said. “If the compromises that have been reached in the past fall apart, then I think everything is subject to further conversation.”
Any final spending plan would need to pass both the House and Senate before going to the desk of Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. He said earlier Tuesday that it was “outrageous” that casinos were holding up a budget that contained money for public education, salaries and mental health treatment among other items.
While there are sure to be other provisions in any final budget that Cooper detests, enacting one is required for state health officials to begin implementing the expansion of Medicaid coverage to hundreds of thousands of low-income adults that was contained in a law that the governor signed in March.
While Republicans hold narrow veto-proof majorities in each chamber, the current division between House and Senate Republicans means Cooper may find himself with more leverage into fashioning a compromise budget, with the help of votes of Democratic legislators.
North Carolina already has three casinos operated by two Native American tribes. One proposal that surfaced this summer envisioned new casinos in Rockingham, Nash and Anson counties, and another in southeastern North Carolina.
Casino supporters have said more casinos would create lots of jobs in economically challenged areas, grow tax revenues and counter gambling options that are sprouting up just across the border in Virginia. But opponents living in the targeted counties and social conservatives have said casinos would lower property values and create more social ills.
The legislature already has passed a law this year — signed by Cooper — that authorizes sports betting to begin as soon as January.
veryGood! (6996)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- The best movies and TV of 2022, picked for you by NPR critics
- The NPR Culture Desk shares our favorite stories of 2022
- Finding (and losing) yourself backcountry snowboarding
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Author Jerry Craft: Most kids cheer for the heroes to succeed no matter who they are
- Investigators dig up Long Island killings suspect Rex Heuermann's backyard with excavator
- How Anitta, the 'Girl from Rio,' went global
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Pico Iyer's 'The Half Known Life' upends the conventional travel genre
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- North Korea stonewalls US on status of detained soldier
- Former pastor, 83, charged with murder in 1975 death of 8-year-old girl
- Colorado cop on trial for putting suspect in car hit by train says she didn’t know engine was coming
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Chase Chrisley and Fiancée Emmy Medders Break Up 9 Months After Engagement
- Famed Danish restaurant Noma will close by 2024 to make way for a test kitchen
- Traps set for grizzly bear that killed woman near Yellowstone National Park
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
'Love Actually' in 2022 – and the anatomy of a Christmas movie
Interest Rates: Will the Federal Reserve pause, hike, then pause again?
Ivy colleges favor rich kids for admission, while middle-class students face obstacles, study finds
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Former Hunter Biden associate to sit for closed-door testimony with House committee
RHOA's NeNe Leakes Addresses Son Bryson's Fentanyl Arrest and Drug Addiction Struggles
Man charged with hate crimes in Maryland parking dispute killings