Override attempt in Missouri Senate failed
The bill's proponents said they will push the issue again next year.
Published Sept. 11, 2008
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Craig Stevenson, the Associated Students of the University of Missouri board chairman, discusses ASUM's stance on Gov. Matt Blunt's veto of the ‘student curator bill’ during a press conference with Sen. Chuck Graham, D-Columbia, on Tuesday in Jefferson City. On Wednesday, the legislature will convene to consider overriding bills vetoed by the governor.
An attempt to override the governor's veto of a bill that would give voting rights to a student on the UM system's governing board failed Wednesday in the state Senate.
The bill would have granted voting rights to the student representative on the UM system Board of Curators if Missouri lost a congressional district in 2010.
The Associated Students of the University of Missouri, a student-lobbying group, worked to get the bill passed during the General Assembly's regular session this year. After it passed with overwhelming majorities in the House and Senate, Gov. Matt Blunt vetoed the bill in July.
ASUM board chairman Craig Stevenson spent Wednesday morning at the Capitol hoping to see legislators override the veto, but said the outcome did not come as a shock.
"It doesn't really surprise me," Stevenson said. "It's an uphill battle to override a veto, and when the Republican sitting governor vetoes a bill, the Republican majority is going to be hesitant to override the bill even if it did pass in the first place."
In 2005 a similar bill never reached the governor's desk after being defeated in the legislature. Stevenson said he attributes his disappointment to the early success the bill saw this spring.
"Unfortunately it came as close as it comes to becoming law but it didn't," he said.
The curators made their stance known in May when they approved a resolution against the bill 7-1. Curator John Carnahan was the only curator to vote against the resolution and Curator David Wasinger did not cast a vote.
Last week at the curators' meeting in Kansas City, Mo., several curators again voiced their concerns about having a voting "student curator." Curator Don Walsworth said he worried about the short term and inexperience of a student representative.
"I've been on the board for six years and I'm just now feeling experienced in the decisions I'm making," Walsworth said.
Despite the curators' opposition, ASUM held a news conference Tuesday to gather last-minute support for the override.
The override proposal needed 23 senators' approval, or a two-thirds vote, to advance to the House for further consideration. The bill received 31 votes when passed in the Senate earlier this year. Wednesday's vote showed minimal bipartisanship, Stevenson said.
"It was basically a party-lined vote," Stevenson said. "We only had two Republicans vote to override the" veto.
All 14 Democrats voted to override the veto, and two Republicans joined them: Sen. Jason Crowell, R-Cape Girardeau, and Sen. Kevin Engler, R-Farmington.
Engler compared the current status of the student representative to that of a senator without the ability to vote.
"If we had someone in the Senate that could just listen and couldn't vote, you wouldn't respect them," Engler said.
In response to one of the concerns surrounding the bill, Engler looked back on his past experience in college. Engler said inexperience was not a legitimate rationale for vetoing the bill.
"I was involved in college and I thought I had as much intellect to make informed decisions as someone who was removed from the campus and would come in once a month for a meeting," Engler said.
Tony Luetkemeyer, the current student representative to the board, said he would continue to push for student voting rights alongside ASUM.
"Anything the ASUM needs in terms of my advocacy or my support I am ready and willing to give," Luetkemeyer said.
Stevenson said ASUM would continue to lobby for the student representative voting rights next year.




