Democratic Leaders failed to help Oregonians with fundamental issues during 2022 Legislative Session

SALEM, Ore. – House Republicans previously identified lowering the cost of living,
reducing crime, and improving education as priority issues for the 2022 Legislative Session.

“Oregonians needed us to tackle our state’s rising cost of living, unchecked crime wave, and
deteriorating education,” said House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (RPrineville). “I am proud of what Republicans accomplished this session to make life better for Oregonians across the state, but Democrats prevented us from accomplishing more. Instead, Democratic leaders blocked our additional efforts to help Oregonians while passing an eyewatering spending plan and harmful legislation we will need to fix next year. Our state cannot continue under this failed leadership. It is time for more balance in Salem.”

Republicans were successful this session in passing several important bills that will help
Oregonians. Because of Republican efforts, police can stop riots again and struggling local
pharmacies are exempt from paying the corporate activity tax. Republican-sponsored
legislation also ensures affordable dental care for veterans and prevents mothers from
receiving surprise medical bills for out-of-network births
.

However, rather than address fundamental issues with policy changes, Democrats gave
hundreds of millions of dollars to state agencies while Oregonians are financially struggling
under inflation. In addition to a reckless spending plan that bolsters the state budget
without meaningfully helping taxpayers, Democrats pushed for legislation that will harm
farm worker hours and pay, let convicted criminals vote and seek early release. An
additional proposal would have established Oregon’s first sales tax, while another bill will
prevent police from enforcing some traffic laws.

Only some of these proposals passed, but they all used up time and energy during a 35-day
short session, effectively killing additional Republican legislation that Oregonians are
asking for: the option of self-service at the gas station, better protections from physical
assault for hospital workers, appropriate justice for critically injured victims of violent
crime
, restoring Oregon’s reading, writing and math standards for graduation, and
transparent school curriculums, $1,000 tax credits for volunteer firefighters, among others.

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