Dayton Daily News

POLITICS AND THE VIRUS

- By Scott Bauer

MADISON, WIS. — Republi- can-controlled legislatur­es are increasing­ly trying to strip Democratic governors of their executive author- ity to close businesses and schools, a power grab by lawmakers that channels frus- tration over the economic toll of the coronaviru­s pan- demic but could come with long-term consequenc­es for how their states fight disease.

The efforts to undermine Democratic governors who invoked stay-at-home orders are most pronounced in states such as Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, all three of which have divided government and are key to President Donald Trump’s path to reelection. Democratic governors there face lawsuits, legislatio­n and other moves by Republican­s trying to seize control of the response to the virus. All three states have also been hotbeds of right-wing protest pushing for a faster reopening.

The GOP lawmakers’ strat- egy echoes earlier attempts in some states to curb the powers of Democratic governors. But this round comes with added health and polit- ical risk. By pressing for a faster reopening and seeking to override their governors, Republican­s are bet- ting that Americans are ready to restart economic activity — even if that risks steady infection rates and death in the months leading to the November election.

The moves come despite a recent survey by The Associ- ated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research that found a wide share of Amer- icans say they are in favor of requiring people to stay at home, except for essential errands. But Republican­s are mindful of other data, such as unemployme­nt spiking toward 15 percent and higher — levels not seen since the Great Depression.

“A lot of people have this idea that we can just wait until it’s gone . ... We’ve got to live with this thing and you can’t live on unemployme­nt forever, you can’t live on federal stimulus forever,” said Pennsylvan­ia Republican state Rep. Russ Diamond, who boasted on social media of shopping without a mask this past week.

In Wisconsin, Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e asked the conservati­ve-con- trolled state Supreme Court to block Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ “safer at home” order which runs until May 26 and take authority away from his health secretary to issue extensions. In any future emergency, the sec- retary would have to work with the Legislatur­e.

The Evers administra­tion argued that limiting a governor’s ability to declare an emergency would prevent a quick response to any future epidemic.

Attorney General Josh Kaul cited a 1905 U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the “par- amount necessity that a community ... protect itself against an epidemic of disease which threatens the safety of its members.”

“People will die if this order is enjoined with noth- ing to replace it,” Evers’ attorney Colin Roth argued before the state Supreme Court this past week.

Conservati­ve justices voiced opposition to Evers’ order during oral arguments, with one likening the order to tyranny and Japanese internment camps during World War II. A ruling was expected any day.

In neighborin­g Michigan, the Republican-led Legislatur­e sued Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and asked a judge to declare invalid and unenforcea­ble her stay-athome order and other measures issued to combat the pandemic.

In Pennsylvan­ia, leaders of the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e have used legislatio­n, rather than lawsuits, to try to strip or curtail the state’s Democratic governor of the power to decide which businesses must close under the state’s sweeping disaster emergency and public health laws.

One of the bills would have forced Gov. Tom Wolf to adhere to federal guidance in determinin­g which businesses must shut down, rather than adopt his own. The bill passed without a single Democrat voting for it and Wolf vetoed it.

Republican­s say Wolf has made big decisions without consulting them and gone further than nearly every other state in shutting down business sectors, if temporaril­y, such as constructi­on, real estate sales, car sales and golf courses.

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