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Dan Patrick says he may further lower threshold to bring bills to Senate floor

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Senate Parliamentarian Karina Davis on the senate floor. Miguel Gutierrez Jr. / Texas Tribune.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Thursday he may further lower the threshold required to bring bills to the Senate floor if Republicans lose one or two seats in November.

Patrick made the comment at a conservative policy conference in Austin while discussing the current makeup of the upper chamber, which has 19 Republicans and 12 Democrats. Currently, 19 votes are required to put legislation on the floor for passage. But Republicans are facing the real possibility of losing at least one caucus member in 2020. Sen. Pete Flores, R-Pleasanton, is running for reelection in a solidly Democratic district after winning his seat in 2018 special election upset.

“I’m right there at that number, and if we lose one or two seats, then we might have to go to 16 next session,” Patrick said. “We might have to go to a simple majority because we will not be stopped in leading on federalism in the United States of America.”

Patrick went on to express confidence that Republicans will “be successful in November” up and down the ballot. He said the party will “keep the majority in the Senate” but did not specifically comment on the seats that Republicans need above that 16-member baseline to be able to bring bills to the floor on their own.

A change in the threshold only requires a simple majority when senators vote to approve their rules at the start of every session.

It would not be the first time Patrick has presided over decreasing the threshold. After he became lieutenant governor in 2015, the Senate lowered its long-standing “two-thirds rule” — a 21-vote threshold — to three-fifths, requiring the 19 votes. That has allowed the Patrick’s Senate to steamroll Democrats while bringing up a host of conservative priorities for consideration.

Patrick’s suggestion he may drop the threshold even lower drew some laughter in the audience at the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s annual Policy Orientation. But Patrick indicated he was serious, acknowledging the media in the room and holding firm after a moderator intervened.

“If we are still the majority but the minority has power to overrule us,” Patrick said, “we cannot let that stand.”

This article first appeared on the Texas Tribune. Click here to read it in its original form.

Patrick Svitek, The Texas Tribune
Patrick Svitek, The Texas Tribune
Patrick Svitek is the primary political correspondent for The Texas Tribune.
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