OREGON Thursday, January 20, 2022 ThE OBsErVEr — A7 Kotek: ‘I believe in the things we have done’ Departing House speaker says her run for governor will focus on continuity and implementation By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Even a short list of the bills passed by the Oregon Legislature during the record nine years Tina Kotek has been speaker of the House would read much like the achievements of a two-term governor. But it’s no coincidence Kotek is yielding the speak- ership a year early to focus on her bid for the Demo- cratic nomination for gov- ernor in the May 17 pri- mary. Her final day in the House is Friday, Jan. 21. She has held the District 44 seat in North and North- east Portland since 2007 and has led the House since 2013. “We’ve done a lot of good things for Orego- nians. It’s definitely been a productive run,” Kotek said in an exit interview. “But we have to complete our promises. That is what the next governor has to do. I believe in the things we have done and I want to make sure they continue and get fully implemented.” Under a House rule, Kotek could not raise money for her campaign if she remained for the 35-day 2022 session, which starts Feb. 1. According to the Oregon Elections Division, she had $758,000 on hand by mid-January, compared with $460,000 for state Treasurer Tobias Read. A total of 11 Democrats have filed so far, excluding Nich- olas Kristof, the former New York Times colum- nist, who was deemed inel- igible to run by Secretary of State Shemia Fagan. The Oregon Supreme Court Townnews.com Content Exchange Tina Kotek is yielding the speakership a year early to focus on her bid for the Democratic nomination for governor in the May 17, 2022, primary. Her final day in the House is Friday, Jan. 21. She has held the District 44 seat in Northeast Portland since 2007 and has led the House since 2013. soon will determine the fate of Kristof’s candidacy, which has reportedly raised more than $2.5 million. Some opponents allied with business have taken aim at Kotek with the mon- iker “no special K,” though it’s unclear who they prefer. No Republican has won the governorship in 40 years. Former Democratic Sen. Betsy Johnson of Scap- poose, who plans an inde- pendent bid, has raised at least $2 million. Democratic Gov. Kate Brown is barred from run- ning again after almost two full terms. The other major official in the lawmaking process is Senate President Peter Courtney, a Democrat from Salem who is retiring after a total of 38 years, a record 20 of them as Senate leader. The previous record tenure for a House speaker was six years (1985-91) by Democrat Vera Katz, who went on in 1992 to the first of three terms as mayor of Portland. Katz died in 2017 at age 84. Kotek says she is run- ning as the candidate who understands the process and the issues — and can get things done. “With new legislative leadership in 2023, it will be helpful to have a gov- ernor who has been in the Legislature and has been in their positions,” Kotek said. “There is going to be change, but I hope there is continuity provided by a governor who understands what it means to be a legis- lative leader.” Making the leap Of Oregon’s nine most recent governors going back to Republican Mark Hatfield in 1959, all but two were in the Legisla- ture first. But only Vic Atiyeh went directly from the Legislature to the gov- ernorship in 1978, and the former Senate Republican leader lost his first state- wide bid in 1974. Demo- crat John Kitzhaber left the Senate presidency before his first election as gov- ernor in 1994. The other five, including Brown, held statewide office first. Courtney and Kotek did not always see eye to eye. But in a statement after Kotek’s Jan. 6 announce- ment, he said, “She has been an advocate in many ways before anything else.” Before she won her second bid for the House in 2006 — she lost in an adjoining district in 2004 — Kotek was an advo- cate for the Oregon Food Bank and Children First for Oregon. In her first term in 2007, Kotek led the effort to overhaul how Oregon gives cash assistance to low-in- come families. In the 2009 and 2011 sessions, prior to becoming Democratic leader and then speaker, she co-led the human ser- vices budget subcommittee. “It is an amazing journey from being an advocate to the person who can write the bills and pass the budgets to do these things. We have protected very important safety-net programs for Oregonians,” Kotek said. “Certainly we have plenty of things we have to continue to work on. I believe the status quo is not sufficient. I want to make things better.” Among the non-budget bills Kotek says help working families are paid sick leave in 2015, a three- tiered minimum wage in 2016, rent stabilization and paid family and medical leave, both in 2019. The latter program is scheduled to start paying benefits in fall 2023. House Democrats replaced Dave Hunt with Kotek as their caucus leader the day the 2011 ses- sion ended. She became their choice for speaker after the 2012 election, when Democrats gained four seats to take control. Her majorities have ranged from 34 to 38, the latter in 2019 tying the Dem- ocratic mark reached in 1975. Democrats currently number 37 — and women from both parties consti- tute a majority in the entire chamber. She is the first lesbian in the nation to lead a state legislative chamber. Problem-solving focus Despite accusations of partisanship — predictably from Republicans, some- times from fellow Demo- crats — Kotek said her leg- islative focus has always been on problem-solving. “If I spend 10 minutes to celebrate the passage of an important bill, my next question is: What’s next?” she said. “For me, it’s: ‘How do we fix it? What do we need to do?’ I think people respond to that.” Kotek said the numbers of Democrats do not tell the whole story. “I may have made it look easy,” she said. “But it’s a lot of hard work — constant conversations with people, and constant discussions to keep them engaged. It was gratifying that we could get so much done.” Among the legislative achievements during her tenure was the 2019 pas- sage of the Student Suc- cess Act, which tied $1 bil- lion raised annually from a new corporate activity tax to specific improvement programs to boost stu- dent performance. Gover- nors and legislatures have sought ways to boost school funding for decades, and particularly after Oregon voters in the 1990s imposed limits on local prop- erty taxes and shifted the burden of school operating costs to the state budget. The 2021-23 budget con- tains a record $9.3 billion for the state school fund, excluding proceeds from the new tax. “This Legislature has really stepped up and pri- oritized public education,” Kotek said. “It would have been nice to have done that two years earlier. Then it would have been in place before the pandemic hit,” when new staffing for schools has taken a back seat to keeping schools open. Recent sessions also approved hundreds of mil- lions more in state aid for housing and homelessness programs during the pan- demic. But Kotek said there is more to be done, given that housing is in short supply and rose in cost drastically. “Resolving the housing crisis is such an integral part of the future of this state, so I will be working on it” if she is elected gov- ernor, she said. Frustrations If there is one frustration Kotek has encountered as a legislative leader, it is the slow pace of change. Many of the bills she lists as achievements took three to five years to come together. “Sometimes I wish things could go faster, because people need help. People wonder why things take so long, but it’s not for lack of trying,” she said. Even with a mostly sup- portive governor, Kotek said, bills have to pass the House and the Senate, where majority Democrats also have been split. “You have to work together as a team to get things done,” she said. One other event will mark Kotek’s tenure. On June 10, 2021, the House voted 59-1 to expel Rep. Mike Nearman, a four- term Republican from Polk County, after he was found to have aided anti-lock- down protesters — some of them armed — into a closed Capitol during a Dec. 21, 2020, special ses- sion during the pandemic. It was the first expulsion since Oregon became a state in 1859. “I think it sent a strong message that as a bipartisan group, someone putting people at risk like that was unacceptable,” Kotek said. “Once it was clear what Rep. Nearman was doing, there was no question he needed to be expelled. I hope we never have to experience that again.” WHERE WILL MOMENTUM TAKE YOU? HOME EQUITY LINE OF CREDIT Don’t keep those home renovations or that dream vacation waiting! hzcu.org/momentum *OAC. Introductory rate valid for 6 months from the date the loan is booked. 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