Rep. Drew Gattine, D-Westbrook, sits at his desk in the House chamber after the swearing-in of the new Maine Legislature on Dec. 7, 2022. Credit: Troy R. Bennett / BDN

AUGUSTA, Maine — After a marathon series of votes, Democratic lawmakers enacted a $11.3 billion state budget Thursday over Republican opposition after a short-term deal to bail out MaineCare fell apart earlier this month.

It represents another case of Democrats who narrowly control the Legislature using their majorities in recent years to pass spending plans without Republican votes needed for the spending to become available immediately. Instead, the budget will go into effect by the start of the new fiscal year on July 1 under a parliamentary procedure by Democratic leaders.

The Maine House of Representatives initially passed the plan 74-69 on Thursday before taking hours to vote down several Republican amendments, something that was complicated by a lengthy debate over the censuring of Rep. Laurel Libby, R-Auburn, for posts singling out a transgender high school athlete last month. The Senate enacted it 18-17 at night.

The raw debate that stretched past 12 a.m. Friday laid bare a deteriorating political environment in Augusta. House Republicans opposed the budget, citing how Democrats bypassed them as well as Libby’s punishment that bars her from voting and speaking on the floor and the treatment of Medicaid budget issues.

“While one of us is silenced, we all are silenced,” House Minority Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham, R-Winter Harbor, said in a floor speech.

The 400-page budget includes what was in the failed supplemental budget — funding to fill the $118 million MaineCare gap and $2 million to fight spruce budworm infestations amid the state starting this month to withhold and cap certain payments to health providers and the spraying of budworm larvae needing to occur in May. 

It holds most other programs at their current funding levels, although it implements a 1.95 percent cost-of-living adjustment for direct care workers and maintains free community college for Maine high school students graduating this year. Democrats are likely to try to pass a budget addition later this spring.

The most controversial aspect of the document is how it treats MaineCare. While it bails out the program facing major cost and enrollment overruns, it does not continue that increased funding into the second year of the budget. 

Rep. Drew Gattine of Westbrook, a top Democratic appropriator, said the decision to only fill the MaineCare deficit for one year relates to “uncertainty” on Capitol Hill around Medicaid funding. 

“One of the most important things this bill does is provide stability and certainty,” Gattine said in a Thursday floor speech.

While making annual a 3.25 percent tax on acute care hospitals that lawmakers passed a few years ago, the budget does not include the controversial $1 per pack increase in Maine’s cigarette tax, child care cuts and other tax hikes Mills pitched in her $11.6 billion, two-year plan through 2027. 

That is likely to be debated among other Democratic priorities later this year. Ahead of the statutory adjournment date in June, lawmakers will now shift their focus to passing more bills and adding more to the state budget, though lawmakers are leaving only about $127 million in projected unspent revenue across two years.

There was some Democratic opposition to the budget in the Senate, where two Democrats, Craig Hickman of Winthrop and Stacy Brenner of Scarborough, opposed it. But the majority party was able to pass the budget by a single vote.

Mills had proposed a supplemental budget for the current fiscal year that fills the state’s Medicaid program deficit, but after the plan initially looked to have bipartisan support, Republicans turned on it last month while insisting Democrats add in annual General Assistance limits and MaineCare work requirements for the program serving more than 400,000 Mainers.

The Legislature had failed to enact the short-term budget during each of the past few Tuesday floor sessions, before the Senate finally let it effectively die last week, although Republicans and Democrats in the House agreed to pass an amended version with General Assistance limits.

Democratic leaders then quickly moved ahead with the “continuing services” plan last Friday. However, Republicans complained about how the amended plan takes out the General Assistance limits on housing support while only including language to expand training for program administrators. GOP appropriators also argued they had little time to review the new plan before Democratic appropriators advanced it Friday night.“We’ve become Washington,” Rep. Ken Fredette, R-Newport, a former House minority leader who helped turn his caucus last month against the short-term budget, said. “We have become the definition of dysfunction.”

Billy Kobin is a politics reporter who joined the Bangor Daily News in 2023. He grew up in Wisconsin and previously worked at The Indianapolis Star and The Courier Journal (Louisville, Ky.) after graduating...

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