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MT lawmakers choose 2019 legislative leadership on Wednesday

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HELENA – State lawmakers on Wednesday will choose their leadership for the 2019 Legislature – and new faces are guaranteed for the top spots in the Montana House.

Leaders from the 2017 House are not returning next year, so majority Republicans will be choosing a new speaker of the House and Democrats will be selecting a new minority leader.

In the Senate, the two current top leaders – Republican Senate President Scott Sales and Democratic Senate Minority Leader Jon Sesso of Butte – are running for those posts again, for the 2019 session.

Sesso told MTN News Monday that he’s unopposed within his caucus, while Sales will face opposition from current Senate Majority Leader Fred Thomas of Stevensville.

Rep. Greg Hertz, R-Polson

In the House, the two top candidates for speaker are Rep. Greg Hertz, R-Polson, and Rep. Nancy Ballance, R-Hamilton. Hertz was the speaker pro tem in the House during the 2017 session and special session, while Ballance chaired the House Appropriations Committee.

The speaker is the top office in the House. He or she appoints committee members and chairs and controls the flow of legislation on the House floor.

Rep. Nancy Ballance, R-Hamilton

Republicans currently have a 58-42 majority in the 2019 House, although one Republican, Rep. Lola Sheldon-Galloway of Great Falls, faces a possible recount in her election. She currently leads by five votes, before provisional ballots are counted this week.

Two Democrats are competing for House minority leader: Reps. Casey Schreiner of Great Falls and Tom Woods of Bozeman.

Woods, a substitute special-education teacher and adjunct physics instructor at Montana State University, said Monday that Democrats want to ensure that Medicaid expansion is preserved and push for a more equitable tax structure and better infrastructure funding.

He said he’s pointing to his experience on the Appropriations Committee and ability to lead the opposition and, when necessary, negotiate with majority Republicans.

Schreiner, who works for the state Labor Department on worker-training programs, said he has a unique perspective coming from a city where politics are often evenly split between Democrats and Republicans.

“I think it will help with our idea of how we’re going to focus on working families and put the partisan politics aside,” he told MTN News.

Republicans hold a 30-20 edge in the Senate, after losing two seats during the election last week.

Thomas told MTN News Monday that he’s promising his caucus to formulate a “good plan” that’s conservative for the 2019 Legislature, but declined to elaborate on why he’s challenging Sales for the Senate’s top post.

Story by Mike Dennison, MTN News