HELENA, Mont. — Following Montana Republicans' dominance in the fall election, a group of GOP lawmakers kicked off the 2025 Legislature with an unexpected move: ceding power to Democrats.
The minority took full advantage, remaking legislative committees and banding with a handful of moderate Republicans to thwart GOP leaders' efforts to make Montana's judicial system more partisan. Similar alliances bolstered Medicaid expansion, raised teacher pay and passed a state budget increase that includes investments in affordable housing and health care.
The partnership seemed to defy divisions between America's two major political parties that have played out in Washington, D.C., and in many statehouses. But it may prove fleeting if elections in the Big Sky State continue mirroring national trends that have hardened party lines. Montana's conservative and moderate Republicans alike express allegiance to President Donald Trump.
Lawmakers meet for just a few months every two years inside Montana's Capitol, perched on a hill overlooking Helena, a city of about 35,000 people founded during an 1864 gold rush. It remains a true citizen legislature, opening the playing field for compromise, said political analyst Jeremy Johnson.
''Montana's becoming an outlier on how a state legislature is operating with this sort of dynamic,'' said Johnson, an associate professor at Carroll College.
A 'weird' session for Republicans
As lawmakers wrapped up the session Wednesday, GOP legislative leaders went home frustrated at their failure to remodel the state's judiciary, rein in spending or fix rising property taxes.
Republican Sen. Barry Usher, a GOP whip, said the majority got ''steamrolled" during the 85-day session.