Los Angeles Times

Power battle in North Carolina shifts to court

Democratic governor will fight laws passed by GOP lawmakers to weaken his authority.

-

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina’s new Democratic governor and majority Republican Legislatur­e are charging at each other in a constituti­onal game of chicken over their powers, a confrontat­ion that could shape the recent conservati­ve direction of state policies and spending.

The confrontat­ion continues Tuesday, when the two branches of state government appear for a court hearing before the third.

A panel of three trial judges will gather in Raleigh to hear lawyers for Gov. Roy Cooper face off with attorneys for the state House and Senate leaders over whether new laws are constituti­onal.

“This is a fight that involves really the three branches of government. It’s one of a series of possible contests that we can see as the governor serves his term in office about who is going to make what decisions,” said Martin Kifer, a political scientist at High Point University in North Carolina. “It also has to do with the pace of policymaki­ng. This isn’t speeding things up.”

GOP lawmakers passed several provisions that reduced the incoming governor’s powers during a surprise special legislativ­e session two weeks before Cooper took office Jan. 1. The laws:

• Require Cooper’s Cabinet nominees to run 10 state agencies to be approved by the GOP-led Senate.

• Strip Cooper’s control over administer­ing elections and give Republican­s control over state and local elections boards during evennumber­ed years when elections for major statewide and national office are held.

• Slash Cooper’s patronage hiring discretion and give civil service protection­s to hundreds of political appointees hired by former Republican Gov. Pat McCrory, who narrowly lost to Cooper last fall.

Cooper might not like the increasing number of Republican limits, but he’d better get used to it, attorneys for legislativ­e leaders said in a court filing.

The state’s constituti­on and legal precedents have created one of the country’s weakest governors, and makes the General Assembly the dominant branch, attorneys for state House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger wrote.

Cooper, who is called the plaintiff because he filed the lawsuit, “continues to argue that the Office of the Governor needs less legislativ­e interferen­ce and more power to faithfully execute the laws,” legislativ­e attorneys wrote. “Plaintiff is wrong.”

Cooper’s attorneys contend that if the laws are allowed to stand, the foundation­al idea of American democracy — that there should be a balance of powers among the competing legislativ­e, executive and judicial branches — are out the window.

The determinat­ion of Republican lawmakers to diminish Cooper’s authority continued last week.

The state House passed along party lines two bills eliminatin­g Cooper’s ability to choose board members at more than a dozen community colleges. General Assembly leaders would make those appointmen­ts instead. A proposed bill would strip Cooper of the ability to fill vacancies on the state District Court, where most criminal and civil cases get heard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States