5 things to know in wake of veto session

A months-long campaign over the governor's vetoes concluded with Missouri lawmakers overriding a record number of vetoes but falling short on two of the highest-profile measures that sought to cut taxes and nullify some federal gun-control laws.

Here are five things to know from Missouri's veto session:

10 OVERRIDES, 23 SUSTAINED

The Republican-controlled Legislature overrode 10 of the Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon's 33 vetoes. The resulting new laws restrict lawsuits, allow elected officials to vote during meetings by videoconference, and increase the maximum punishment for stealing livestock. They also will replace the state's ban on foreign ownership of farmland with a 1 percent cap while requiring state approval, prevent officials from barring celebration of federal holidays, and increase the allowed maximum fee for installment loans. Also overridden were a budget item, a bill dealing with foster parents and a measure designed to safeguard county budgets from some clerical errors. However, vetoes were sustained for bills that sought to cut taxes; nullify some federal gun laws; require that public employees give annual consent before union dues are collected; broaden what constitutes misconduct for unemployment benefits; bar policies infringing property rights that are traceable to a United Nations resolution; and preventing use of foreign law "repugnant" or "inconsistent" with the Missouri or U.S. constitutions.

NARROWEST OF MARGINS

Several overrides were decided by a single vote. Five overridden bills reached the bare minimum in either the House or Senate, including a bill to shield volunteer health care providers from lawsuits. It took the House two tries after its initial vote was one short of the mandatory 109 votes. The second go-round reached the minimum mark. Veto overrides were one short in the Senate for legislation dealing with guns and unions. The House was one shy on the bill dealing with foreign laws.

NEW LAWS

Missouri law states that the nine overridden non-budget bills will take effect in 30 days. The 10th override was of Nixon's veto of a $1 million budget item to help rebuild the Pike-Lincoln Technical Center that was damaged by fire, which was part of the 2014 budget that took effect this past July. However, the governor's budget director says Nixon is freezing the money, so the money still may not be spent on the project.

MAKING HISTORY

Nixon became the most overridden governor in recent Missouri history. Since Missouri began requiring a two-thirds majority for veto overrides in 1875, the previous single-year high mark was three overrides set in 2003. Missouri's highest mark for veto overrides came in 1833, when a simple majority was required and legislators overrode a dozen vetoes of bills granting divorces.

ANTICIPATING THE FUTURE

Republican legislative leaders fell short on the two bills with the most profile: a tax cut and a gun bill. After the tax cut fell well short of a two-thirds majority in the House, Speaker Tim Jones called it a "temporary setback" and was joined by the state's largest business associations in vowing to try a new tax-cut in 2014. House Majority Leader John Diehl said the outcome was specific to that legislation and that "there are 109 members who support an income tax cut." On guns, Republican Sen. Brian Nieves said "this fight ain't over." Senate President Pro Tem Tom Dempsey voted against overriding the gun veto because of concerns about constitutionality and how it would affect local police and prosecutors, but he said he would help fast track a gun-rights bill next year.