From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 8 min
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| 2022 Nebraska legislative session |
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| General information |
| Session start: January 5, 2022 Session end: April 20, 2022 |
| Leadership |
| Senate President Mike Foley (R) House Speaker |
| Elections |
| Next Election: November 8, 2022 Last Election: November 3, 2020 |
| Previous legislative sessions |
| 2021 • 2020 • 2019 • 2018 |
| Other 2022 legislative sessions |
In 2022, the Nebraska Legislature was scheduled to convene on January 5, 2022 and adjourn on April 20, 2022.
The legislators serving in this session took office following the 2020 elections. Although the Nebraska legislature is officially nonpartisan, Republicans won a 32-17 majority in the Senate. The party also controlled the governorship, creating a Republican state government trifecta. At the start of the 2022 session, Nebraska was one of 24 state legislatures where one party had a veto-proof supermajority.
Nebraska was one of 23 Republican state government trifectas at the start of 2022 legislative sessions. A state government trifecta occurs when one political party holds the governor's office, a majority in the state Senate, and a majority in the state House. For more information about state government trifectas, click here.
Nebraska was also one of 24 state legislatures where one party had a veto-proof supermajority. Veto overrides occur when a legislature votes to reverse a veto issued by an executive such as a governor or the president. If one party has a majority in a state legislature that is large enough to override a gubernatorial veto without any votes from members of the minority party, it is called a veto-proof majority or, sometimes, a supermajority. To read more about veto-proof supermajorities in state legislatures, click here.
The following tables show the partisan breakdown of the Nebraska Legislature in the 2022 legislative session.
| Party | As of January 2022 | |
|---|---|---|
| Democratic Party | 17 | |
| Republican Party | 32 | |
| Independent | 0 | |
| Vacancies | 0 | |
| Total | 49 | |
The list below shows up to 25 pieces of legislation in the 2022 legislative session that most recently passed both chambers of the legislature, were signed by the governor, or were approved by the legislature in a veto override. If no bills are displayed below, no legislation met these criteria in 2022. This information is provided by BillTrack50.
A standing committee of a state legislature is a committee that exists on a more-or-less permanent basis, from legislative session to session, that considers and refines legislative bills that fall under the committee's subject matter.
At the beginning of the 2022 legislative session, there were 14 standing committees in Nebraska's state government.
In every state but Delaware, voter approval is required to enact a constitutional amendment. In each state, the legislature has a process for referring constitutional amendments before voters. In 18 states, initiated constitutional amendments can be put on the ballot through a signature petition drive. There are also many other types of statewide measures.
The methods by which the Nebraska Constitution can be amended:
| Nebraska Constitution |
|---|
| Preamble |
| Articles |
| I • II • III • IV • V • VI • VII • VIII • IX • X • XI • XII • XIII • XIV • XV • XVI • XVII • XVIII |
Nebraska offers three different paths to amending its constitution:
Historical context:
Between 1996 and 2020, the following occurred:
| Ballot measures in Nebraska, 1996-2020 | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Total number | Approved | Percent approved | Defeated | Percent defeated | |||||
| All measures | 79 | 45 | 56.96% | 34 | 43.04% | |||||
| Initiatives | 21 | 12 | 57.14% | 9 | 42.86% | |||||
| Veto referendums | 2 | 0 | 0.00% | 2 | 100.00% | |||||
| Legislative amendments | 56 | 33 | 58.93% | 23 | 41.07% | |||||
The table below depicts the historical trifecta status of Nebraska.
Nebraska Party Control: 1992-2024
Seven years of Democratic trifectas • Twenty-seven years of Republican trifectas
Scroll left and right on the table below to view more years.
In 1934, Nebraska voters approved a constitutional amendment that transformed Nebraska's bicameral, or two-chamber, state legislature into a unicameral, or single-chamber, Nebraska State Senate. The amendment also established the state legislature as a nonpartisan body. The new unicameral Legislature met for the first time in 1937.[1]
While Nebraska's Unicameral is officially nonpartisan, most of its lawmakers are affiliated with the state affiliate of either the Democratic or the Republican Party. In 2015, Ballotpedia began to identify the party affiliation of the Legislature's 49 members. Ballotpedia assigned party affiliation based on voter registration, member lists provided by the Nebraska Democratic Party and Nebraska Republican Party, as well as information provided by nonprofit organizations.
Prior to the 2016 elections, Republicans controlled the Legislature by a 35-12 majority with one independent member and one Libertarian member. Republicans lost three seats in the 2016 elections, but maintained control of the chamber. After the 2020 elections, they had a 32-17 majority. The table below shows the partisan history of the Nebraska State Senate following the 2014 general election.
Nebraska State Senate election results: 2014-2020
| Party | 14 | 16 | 20 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Democrats | 12 | 15 | 17 |
| Republicans | 35 | 32 | 32 |
| Other | 2 | 2 | 0 |
In presidential elections between 1868 and 2016, Nebraska voted Republican 82 percent of the time and Democratic 18 percent of the time. In the five presidential elections between 2004 and 2020, Nebraska voted Republican all five times.[2]
| Elections | Nebraska State Government | State Legislatures | State Politics |
|---|---|---|---|