Kentucky HB 1 Veto Override and Sen. Lindsay Tichenor’s “Don’t Call Us” Tweet
What a state senator’s response to constituent calls reveals about legislative certainty and public participation in Kentucky
What a single tweet reveals about how certainty is reshaping Kentucky politics
When the Kentucky Senate voted on HB 1, the bill implementing a new federal tax-credit scholarship framework, State Senator Lindsay Tichenor posted on X:
“Don’t call us. It’s going to pass and then we’ll override the veto.”
That sentence deserves to sit on its own for a moment.
“Don’t call us.”
Not: We’ve heard you.
Not: We disagree with you.
Not: Here’s why we’re voting this way.
“Don’t call us.”
In a representative democracy, that phrase sticks in the craw of many of Kentucky’s citizens.
Because calling is participation.
Calling is how constituents register concern, ask questions, push for amendments, and document dissent. There is nothing glamorous about picking up the phone and calling. It doesn’t usually trend. But it is one of the few direct lines between voter and legislator.
When a state senator tells constituents not to call because the bill “is going to pass,” the message isn’t just about one education policy.
It signals inevitability.
The Assumption of a Finished Vote
Supporters described HB 1 as expanding parental choice through a federal tax-credit scholarship mechanism, an opportunity Kentucky should seize. That is a defensible position.
But legislative votes are not simply expressions of majority power. They are exercises in representation. Even when the numbers are there, process matters.
Phone calls may not flip outcomes. They create public record. They influence amendments, committee decisions, fiscal notes, and future campaigns. They establish that dissent existed.
Telling constituents not to call because passage is certain makes the vote sound mechanical rather than representative. It suggests the decision has already moved beyond public reach.
“It’s Going to Pass”
That phrase now echoes through Kentucky politics.
It surfaces in fast-moving sessions when supermajorities operate with numerical confidence. It appears when veto overrides are assumed before a governor acts.
Vote counts matter and numerical advantage is real.
But inevitability language reshapes the psychological environment. When something is “going to pass,” participation feels symbolic. The incentive to read, call, testify, or engage declines.
Tone becomes posture and posture becomes culture.
The Veto Override Mindset
The second half of the tweet was equally revealing:
“…and then we’ll override the veto.”
In Kentucky’s supermajority environment, overrides are routine. Anticipating one is not improper.
Pre-announcing it, however, signals that executive review is discounted before it occurs. The veto exists to introduce pause and reconsideration. It can prompt revisions.
When override language becomes automatic, the veto shifts from safeguard to ceremony. That may reflect political reality but it also communicates consolidation of power.
Citizens recognize that signal.
This Is Not Only About HB 1
The tweet landed in the context of an education finance bill. But the pattern it reflects extends further.
During debate over HB 2, the Medicaid alignment bill, supporters described the legislation as necessary and straightforward compliance with federal requirements. Critics raised concerns about implementation and administrative burden.
In those debates, the sense that the outcome was already determined surfaced repeatedly. Agency rulemaking will follow. Budget adjustments will follow. The vote was not treated as a moment of uncertainty.
During the DOJ lawsuit over Kentucky voter registration records, both sides expressed confidence in their legal position. That confidence is expected in litigation.
What matters is how public rhetoric compresses the complexity of the dispute. When election oversight questions are framed as obvious, the public is invited to take sides rather than understand the mechanics.
In Oldham County, discussion of the 287(g) agreement often returns to fiscal stability and public safety. Those are significant considerations. They are not the only ones. Civil liability, long-term federal policy shifts, and local accountability remain relevant even when detention projections look stable.
When only one dimension of a policy is treated as decisive, the rest of the discussion narrows.
The Cultural Effect of “Don’t Call”
The phrase “Don’t call us” does more than dismiss phone traffic.
It signals that deliberation is complete.
In a healthy representative system, there is always room for input. Even when votes are predictable, legislators routinely say, “We appreciate hearing from you.” They explain their reasoning. They leave the door open to continued dialogue.
“Don’t call us” closes the door.
It replaces persuasion with declaration.
That shift might feel small in a single tweet but over time, it accumulates.
When constituents are told their input is unnecessary, some will believe it.
And once citizens begin to assume their participation is irrelevant, democratic habits weaken.
Why Tone Matters
Kentucky’s General Assembly operates under supermajority conditions. That reality creates legislative efficiency. It also creates responsibility.
With strong numbers comes the ability to pass bills quickly and override vetoes consistently.
That capacity doesn’t eliminate the obligation to engage.
Tone becomes especially important in that environment. Confidence in outcome can coexist with respect for process. Numerical advantage doesn’t require dismissiveness.
The words lawmakers choose shape expectations about citizen involvement.
When the message is inevitability, engagement declines.
When the message is openness, participation continues even in disagreement.
Participation Without Guarantee
There is a temptation, particularly during fast legislative sessions, to disengage once the vote count appears locked in.
The tweet reinforces that temptation.
If passage is assured, why bother?
The answer is not that every call will change a vote.
The answer is that participation doesn’t exist only to flip outcomes. It exists to document public sentiment, to inform future candidates, to shape media coverage, and to influence how policies are implemented after passage.
Administrative rulemaking responds to public scrutiny. Judicial challenges incorporate public record. Future elections reflect accumulated dissatisfaction.
A vote is a moment. Governance continues after the gavel falls.
The Larger Question
The issue raised by Sen. Tichenor’s tweet is not ideological. It is structural. It concerns whether legislative outcomes are treated as conversations or conclusions.
Are constituents invited into the process, or informed of the result?
When lawmakers project certainty about passage and override before a bill completes its journey, it alters how citizens perceive their role.
Kentucky’s future will be shaped not only by which bills pass, but by how those bills pass.
Supermajorities don’t eliminate the need for humility. They increase it.
Staying in the Habit
The most significant risk in moments like this is not a single bill.
It is the erosion of habit.
The habit of calling.
The habit of reading.
The habit of showing up.
The habit of questioning.
Those habits sustain representative government.
When elected officials tell citizens not to call because the outcome is settled, the message tests those habits.
The question for Kentucky is not whether HB 1 passes. By the time you read this, it may already have cleared the next stage.
The question is whether we internalize the idea that our voices only matter when the margin is thin.
Democracy doesn’t depend solely on close votes. It depends on citizens who remain engaged even when the vote count looks secure.
“Don’t call us” may reflect confidence but it shouldn’t define the culture.
The future of this state is not written by tweets. It is shaped by whether we keep picking up the phone anyway.


Because our legislature has exempted itself from open records laws, they know they can't be held accountable for constituent sentiment or feedback. Our calls and emails certainly can make them understand how popular or unpopular something is, but they know there is no mechanism to actually see those emails, messages, call counts, etc. available to us.
Makes no sense that I can see this information for other government bodies, but not the legislature. What are they hiding?
The lack of respect for their own constituents is damning. I hope people are catching on to how the Republican Supermajority feel about them.