One of Iowaโ€™s newest legislators said in IowaWatchโ€™s weekend radio report that administrative bureaucracy and lobbyists have too much power at the Statehouse in Des Moines.

Rep. Jon Jacobsen, R-Council Bluffs

โ€œItโ€™s actually worse than I thought,โ€ state Rep. Jon Jacobsen, R-Council Bluffs, said in an interview for the IowaWatch Connection radio program that airs on 20 radio stations. Jacobson join the Legislature after a special election on June 27, 2017, to fill a seat vacated by the death of former Rep. Greg Forristall, R-Macedonia, who died of cancer May 10, 2017.

Republicans control both the Iowa Senate and Iowa House.

โ€œI came in as a reform-minded person and itโ€™s just appalling to me,โ€ Jacobsen said. โ€œYou know, the (Statehouse) dome is golden but under the gold there is a lot of mold. There still is a lack of common effort for the common good. This place doesnโ€™t need any more lobbyists and lawyers. It needs an exorcist, frankly.โ€

Sen. Bill Dotzler, D-Waterloo

Everything in the Legislature, he said, does not have to be adversarial. โ€œI think people need to find a little more lightness of being, and a little more joy and a little more humor.โ€

State Sen. Bill Dotzler, D-Waterloo, said in the same radio program the Statehouse has gotten more partisan since he joined, first as a state representative in 1997. He joined the Senate in 2003.

โ€œWhen I first got elected, I thought House Republicans were, like, the evil empire. But I found out that they were willing to work with the minority party very fast,โ€ Dotzler said.

โ€œNow, today, in the Senate side, Sen. Dix was very partisan on his ideas,โ€ he said, referring to former Senate Majority Leader Bill Dix, of Shell Rock, who resigned when a video showing him kissing a lobbyist at a Des Moines bar was published by the Democratic news website, Iowa Starting Line. โ€œIf you had a bill, a Democrat, you know, put up for consideration it got killed. And he even, really had a really tight control on his caucus.โ€

Senate Majority Leader Jack Whitver, R-Ankeny

Dix said he sees positive change with Jack Whitver, R-Ankeny, assuming the role as senate majority leader in the wake of Dixโ€™s resignation.

โ€œChanges like this give you a chance to step back and reflect on where youโ€™re going and maybe make an adjustment,โ€ Dotzler said.

Lyle Muller, of IowaWatch, contributed to writing this story, with reporting from Jeff Stein interviews. 

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