© 2025 KLCC

KLCC
136 W 8th Ave
Eugene OR 97401
541-463-6000
klcc@klcc.org

Contact Us

FCC Applications
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

State Sen. Jeff Golden Says Republican Walkout Vetoed The Will Of Oregon Voters

Oregon State Senator Jeff Golden, at a press conference in Medford on Tuesday, July 2.
Roman Battaglia/JPR
Oregon State Senator Jeff Golden, at a press conference in Medford on Tuesday, July 2.

The walk-outs staged by outnumbered Senate Republicans to stop legislation they opposed during the just-concluded session of the Oregon Legislature left a particularly bad taste in the mouths of many Democrats. Freshman senator Jeff Golden held a press conference in Medford Tuesday afternoon to discuss the session.

Golden noted a raft of bills majority Democrats had successfully passed this session, including measures to boost education funding, ban off-shore oil drilling and increase protections for renters. But Golden said he was deeply troubled by the two Republican walk-outs, especially the one that killed the greenhouse gas reduction bill he’d worked on. He said eleven Republican lawmakers had essentially thwarted the will of Oregon voters.

“Eighteen of us were elected by people based on campaigns that were reflected in the legislation that died because of their walkout,” Golden said. “So a minority of legislators vetoed what a majority of legislators ran on and won on.”

Golden said if that tactic can be used to kill bills that lawmakers in the minority don’t have the votes to defeat, the principle of governing by majority rule becomes worthless.

Golden suggested a legislative rule change that would count only days where business was conducted toward the total days in a legislative session. That would prevent minority legislators from running out the clock to force the majority to make concessions.

The senators who walked out say the climate bill would have caused deep economic harm to their mostly-rural constituents. Golden conceded that in the past, rural communities were often hit hardest by laws aiming to reduce the environmental impacts of resource-based industries. But he says this bill was different.

“This bill said no, there’s a better way to do that,” Golden said. “But it was trashed anyway as if it paid no mind at all to the people who would be vulnerable to economic change.”

In fact, Golden said, many amendments to the bill were added specifically to address rural concerns. Such changes included directing investment at rural and coastal communities, allowing the forestry and agriculture industries more freedom and tax credits for low-income Oregonians to offset an increase in gas prices.

Now that the climate bill is dead for this session, Governor Kate Brown says she’s exploring the use of executive action to achieve some of what the bill could have done.

Copyright 2019 Jefferson Public Radio

Liam Moriarty
Liam Moriarty has been covering news in the Pacific Northwest for more than 25 years. He's reported on a wide range of topics – including politics, the environment, business, social issues and more – for newspapers, magazines, public radio and digital platforms. Liam was JPR News Director from 2002 to 2005, reporting and producing the Jefferson Daily regional news magazine. After covering the environment in Seattle, then reporting on European issues from France, he returned to JPR in 2013 to cover the stories and issues that are important to the people of Southern Oregon and Northern California. Liam was promoted to JPR News Director on May 1, 2019.
After graduating from Oregon State University, Roman came to JPR as part of the Charles Snowden Program for Excellence in Journalism in 2019. He then joined Delaware Public Media as a Report For America fellow before returning to the west coast. When not out in the field, Roman enjoys travelling and cross-stitching.