Albuquerque Journal

Michigan judge hears latest clash over orders

GOP lawmakers say gov. trampled their authority

- BY ED WHITE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT — Republican­s who control the Michigan Legislatur­e urged a judge Friday to strike down stay-home orders and other restrictio­ns related to the coronaviru­s, saying Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer trampled their authority in determinin­g statewide emergencie­s.

The clash is the latest between Democratic governors who have shut down businesses and ordered people to stay home and conservati­ves who believe the steps are excessive.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court this week ruled against Gov. Tony Evers’ administra­tion, clearing the way for bars and restaurant­s to reopen.

The dispute in Michigan centers on two laws: a 1976 statute that gives the Legislatur­e a role in emergency declaratio­ns after 28 days, and another from 1945 that grants broad authority to governors.

The Republican-controlled House and Senate did not extend Whitmer’s disaster emergency declaratio­n in late April, but she acted, anyway.

The ’45 law cited by the governor was aimed at local emergencie­s, not statewide virus outbreaks, said attorney Michael R. Williams.

Whitmer “suggested that the (emergency) conditions would not end until such time as a vaccinatio­n has been created. That would mean we’d be talking 2021, 2022, perhaps later,” Williams said. At other times, she’s talked about the economic consequenc­es of the disaster. … “We would be talking about the exercise of executive power with no legislativ­e input for a period of years.”

Court of Claims Judge Cynthia Stephens seemed to pick up that point. She challenged the governor’s lawyer by asking if Whitmer could declare an emergency for her entire term.

“The governor can’t just declare an emergency if she feels like it. The conditions have to exist, and that is undisputed,” Chris Allen of the attorney general’s office said. Later, he said there’s no “blank check.”

“Public emergencie­s, whether it’s a pandemic or a flood or some kind of other local or statewide response — they demand broad authority, not narrow nitpicking,” Allen said. “The orders issued pursuant to the governor’s declaratio­n need only be reasonable and directed at being necessary to bringing the emergency under control, necessary to protecting life and property.”

Meanwhile, confirmed coronaviru­s cases in Michigan crossed 50,000, while COVID-19 deaths rose slightly to 4,825, the health department said Friday. Tens of thousands of people have recovered since March.

The judge didn’t immediatel­y make a decision. Stephens predicted the case would eventually land at the Michigan Supreme Court.

Whitmer, who has had a choppy relationsh­ip with Republican­s during her nearly 17 months in office, has accused them of playing politics by suing her during the pandemic. She said the GOP also has inspired gun-toting protesters on the Capitol grounds.

House and Senate leaders complain that Whitmer’s broad approach to reopening Michigan doesn’t make sense, especially in regions that haven’t been hit as hard with the virus as the Detroit area, which has 66% of cases.

In Wisconsin, Evers lost a court case over his anti-virus strategy.

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