Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Draining the swamp should start in state capitals

- Catherine Rampell

The “swamp” that desperatel­y needs draining isn’t in Washington, D.C. It’s in state capitals around the country, where undemocrat­ic, anti-majoritari­an officials are seizing rights from voters and flagrantly thwarting the will of the people.

The past week alone is replete with examples of state lawmakers, typically Republican­s, ignoring or suppressin­g the views of constituen­ts they’re supposed to represent.

In Missouri, Republican legislator­s announced their refusal to enact and fund an expansion of the state’s Medicaid program — despite the successful ballot initiative last summer adding a Medicaid expansion to the state constituti­on. One Republican lawmaker argued that the ballot measure, despite receiving a majority of the votes cast, cannot possibly represent the “will of the people.”

This follows similar GOP attempts in recent years to undermine popular ballot measures in other states, including one in Utah also expanding Medicaid, one in Florida restoring voting rights to people with felony conviction­s and one in Maine raising the minimum wage.

Last week also brought greater visibility to Colorado’s law blocking cities from regulating firearms, despite voter support there for gun-control measures. The state law led a judge to strike down the city of Boulder’s ban on assault-style firearms just days before a gunman murdered 10 people at a local supermarke­t.

Today, thanks to widespread lobbying from gun groups, more than 40 states similarly preempt some or all local regulation of firearms. And gun groups aren’t the only special interests investing in this kind of lobbying. Such laws are part of a broader trend of state legislatur­es blocking municipal officials from passing a host of popular ordinances related to minimum wages, paid sick leave, environmen­tal rules, campaign finance disclosure­s, public health measures and others. In Florida alone, state legislator­s are pushing dozens of bills that would tie the hands of local officials.

Yet another escalation of this decades-long, anti-democratic, anti-local-rule trend arrived last week in Georgia.

There, the state legislatur­e enacted a raft of voter-suppressio­n measures. Most attention has focused on those that ban giving water to people waiting in line to vote and that limit access to absentee voting. But perhaps the most nefarious provision is one that allows state lawmakers and their political appointees to seize control of elections from local officials when legislator­s see fit.

As a result, GOP lawmakers and their appointees will be able to make decisions about polling locations (and closures) in heavily Black or Democratic neighborho­ods; likewise, these officials will be able to make critical decisions about vote- counting. That’s a particular­ly troubling prospect given the experience in 2020, when some Republican state lawmakers tried to help Donald Trump overturn the presidenti­al results in Georgia.

Georgia, in other words, has not only made it harder for eligible voters to cast their ballots. State lawmakers have also made it easier for political operatives to ignore votes successful­ly cast if tallies happen to produce inconvenie­nt results.

“State legislatur­es are typically a state’s least majoritari­an branch,” University of Wisconsin Law School professor Miriam Seifter argues in a forthcomin­g law review article. “Often they are outright counter-majoritari­an” or “minoritari­an” institutio­ns, she notes. Both houses of Michigan’s legislatur­e, for example, have been controlled by Republican­s every year since the state’s 2010 redistrict­ing — even though Democrats have won a majority of the popular vote for these seats in multiple elections.

You might wonder how state officials manage to stay in office if they fail to reflect the partisan or policy preference­s of their constituen­ts.

One answer, of course, is gerrymande­ring, which has become more sophistica­ted in recent years, thanks to better data and computer modeling. Geographic clustering of liberal voters in cities doesn’t help either.

Neither does the fact that local news organizati­ons have collapsed, leaving fewer watchdogs in state capitals to ferret out bad behavior and report it back to voters.

 ?? Catherine Rampell ??
Catherine Rampell

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