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While Republican legislature obsesses over culture war, Iowa Dems pitch pocketbook policies

All Sami Scheetz wanted to do was feed kids. The Democratic representative from Cedar Rapids introduced HF 575 last session, which would allow 23,000 Iowa students enrolled in the federal reduced breakfast and lunch program to receive free meals at school. The state would use a small portion of its billion-dollar-plus surplus to pay the…

Picture of Gov. Kim Reynolds, seated, signing a bill surrounded by Iowa senators
Gov. Kim Reynolds after a 2023 bill signing. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

All Sami Scheetz wanted to do was feed kids.

The Democratic representative from Cedar Rapids introduced HF 575 last session, which would allow 23,000 Iowa students enrolled in the federal reduced breakfast and lunch program to receive free meals at school. The state would use a small portion of its billion-dollar-plus surplus to pay the difference.

Universal free school meal plans are unpopular with a lot of Iowaโ€™s elected Republican officials, so Scheetz’s bill was a compromise: low-income kids would get to eat free but the program wouldnโ€™t cover families who donโ€™t already receive assistance.

Twenty Iowa House Republicans agreed to co-sponsor Scheetzโ€™s bill and for the second session in a row, Rep. Skyler Wheeler (R-Hull), chair of the Iowa House Education Committee, declined to give the legislation even a subcommittee.

“This billโ€™s bipartisan support demonstrates that when we set aside our differences, we can deliver for families who desperately need our help โ€ฆ Every child deserves access to nutritious meals, regardless of their family’s income,โ€ Scheetz said. โ€œUnfortunately, Republican leadership in the Iowa House chose to put politics over Iowa kids.โ€

Under Iowaโ€™s one-party rule, proposals from Iowa Democrats such as feeding kids, raising the stateโ€™s abysmal $7.25 minimum wage, making childcare more affordable, locking in tuition rates for in-state freshman undergrads at regent universities, or putting abortion rights directly on the ballot simply go nowhereโ€”often without so much as a subcommittee.

โ€œWhat I take from the fact that Republicans have ignored our legislation over and over again is that they are more interested in playing politics than they are in governing,โ€ said Rep. Jennifer Konfrst, leader of the Iowa House Democrats.

โ€œWe also represent constituents in this state. We also have a right to be part of these conversations and I think Iowans believe that because bills sometimes pass in a bipartisan way, that means we were part of the process and that simplyโ€”most of the timeโ€”is not true.โ€ย ย 

Notably, Republicans in charge of Iowaโ€™s government have spent more time targeting LGBTQ Iowans than writing and enacting legislation to tackle kitchen table issuesโ€”unless you consider plant-based proteins a scourge on your day-to-day life.

Over the last two years, Iowa Republicans have introduced 60+ bills targeting the LGBTQ community, many of which have gone on to become law.

In that same period, Iowa Republicans have:

  • Passed a six-week abortion banโ€”which is before many people know they are pregnantโ€”and continue to introduce other bills stripping reproductive freedoms.
  • Passed bills aimed at weakening the powers of the office of Iowaโ€™s only statewide elected Democrat.
  • Loosened child labor laws.
  • Tried to ban gay marriage.
  • Declined federal dollars to feed kids over the summer citing obesity concerns.
  • Tried to prevent people who receive public assistance from being able to buy fresh meat.
  • Continued to underfund public schools and passed legislation to divert hundreds of millions of dollars to private school scholarships.
  • Banned books in schools and accused public school educators of indoctrinating and grooming students while also pushing legislation to give guns to those same teachers.ย 

This list is a small sample of Iowa Republicans’ recent legislative priorities and what they have done with unchecked power. Many of the bills have been cookie-cutter legislation run in other Republican-led states and drafted by well-funded right-wing think tanks.

โ€œEvery bill that we have introduced over the last several years has been really to give Iowans a better deal and been very focused on issues that they have talked to us about trying to solve,โ€ said Sen. Pam Jochum, leader of the Iowa Senate Democrats.

โ€œMany of the issues that we have seen introduced on the floor for debate this session have been very much culture issues and Iowans are sick of the culture war. They want us to address child care and housing and funding for our schools and our mental health system.โ€

Jochum has served in the Iowa Legislature since 1993 and said it wasnโ€™t always like this.

โ€œIโ€™ve been here long enough to know that there really was a day when Democrats and Republicans really did work together to solve problems,โ€ she said. โ€œWe really did. We understood that no one party had all the answers and there was more of a give and take.

โ€œIdeas that the minority party may have had was actually heard and oftentimes would be incorporated into a bill or accepted as an amendment to the bill. This way we are operating today is just simply wrong. It does not solve the problems facing our state and itโ€™s not being responsive to the needs of Iowans.โ€

Correction: The Iowa Republican abortion ban was six weeks, not 15 weeks.

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Zachary Oren Smith
Zachary Oren Smith Political Correspondent
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