Watching Steve Beshear unveil his constitutional amendment to legalize casino gambling yesterday had all the plausibility of a coming out party for Norman Bate's grandmother: the bill has been dead for a while now, but the Governor seems to be completely unaware of it.
Beshear has taken so long to roll this piece of legislation out that he has exhausted the patience even of his allies in the legislature, and attempts to revive it now are looking pretty silly.
At least the last governor realized you couldn't revive a corpse this long after rigor mortis has set in.
Senate President David Williams, now more firmly in control of the Senate, thanks to a bungled attempt by the Governor to interfere in the recent 30th district Senate special election, has said his chamber isn't going to pass it, and now even the fully Democratic House is looking doubtful.
Several reports indicated that House Speaker Jody Richards was noticeably absent from the press conference unveiling the bill. In fact, sources inside the Democratic caucus report that, when the bill was being privately presented to Democratic legislators on Wednesday, Richards had the look of someone who had just bitten into a green persimmon.
Talk is he doesn't like some of the particulars of the bill. That can remedied with changes in committee, but what can't be remedied for the Governor is that one of the House's newest--and possibly most influential--members is not on board.
Greg Stumbo, whose House district in Floyd County stands to get a casino under the bill, is against it. One wonders whether this has something to do with Stumbo's efforts to return himself to power in the chamber, possibly at the expense of Richards, in what may well turn out to be the shower scene in this year's General Assembly.
But regardless of why Stumbo has abandoned Beshear on this issue, it has to be another nail in the coffin for expanded gambling legislation this session.
The chief question now seems to be where to inter the thing. Republicans had already dug a plot over on the North side of the Capitol Building, but now the South end is looking like a more likely resting place.
There are a lot of great slogans useful in promoting a bill, but requies in pacem is not one them.