Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lame-duck laws mostly upheld by justices

State Supreme Court tosses document rules

- Patrick Marley

MADISON - The state Supreme Court upheld many of the lame-duck laws that limited the power of the governor and attorney general Thursday, but the justices tossed out provisions that dictated how government documents had to be written.

The ruling was a victory in many ways for Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e. It was a setback for Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul and provided mixed results for Democratic Gov. Tony Evers.

The sprawling set of decisions included some unusual alliances. The justices unanimousl­y agreed that some parts of the lame-duck laws are constituti­onal. They split 5-2 along ideologica­l lines over other parts, and two conservati­ves sided with the court’s two liberals on the rules for writing government documents.

The Supreme Court returned the lawsuit to a Dane County judge and left open the possibilit­y of years of litigation over the lame-duck laws with additional lawsuits.

The high court is not done deciding how much power Evers has. On Friday, it plans to release a ruling that will determine how much the governor can use his partial veto authority to rewrite legislatio­n.

Thursday’s decision is one of the last to be issued with conservati­ve Justice Daniel Kelly on the court. Kelly lost his April election and will be replaced in

August by liberal Dane County Circuit Judge Jill Karofsky. That will narrow conservati­ve control of the court from 5-2 to 4-3.

The court handed down Thursday’s ruling in two main parts, with Kelly writing the portion that was favorable to Evers. His opinion threw out rules lawmakers put in place that had required the Evers administra­tion to get public comment before publishing “guidance documents” — a broad set of documents and websites that explain and interpret state laws and rules.

With those rules, lawmakers had attempted to “demote the executive branch to a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Legislatur­e” and that’s something they can’t do, Kelly wrote.

“Capturing the executive’s ability to communicat­e his knowledge, intentions, and understand­ing of the laws he is to execute makes him a drone without the energy or independen­t wherewitha­l to act as a co-equal member of government,” Kelly wrote.

Evers’ attorney, Lester Pines, called Kelly’s opinion the most important part of the decision and “an overwhelmi­ng victory for Gov. Evers.”

“It was an absolute repudiatio­n of what the Legislatur­e did,” he said.

In a statement reacting to the decision, Evers noted his opponents had tried to block his authority in numerous ways, including by approving the lameduck laws, challengin­g his veto powers and striking down the stay-at-home order his administra­tion put in place to try to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Clearly Republican­s are going to continue working against me every chance they get, regardless of the consequenc­es,” Evers said in his statement. “But I’m not going to let that stop me from continuing to do what I promised I would when I ran for this office — I am going to keep putting people first and doing what’s best for the people of our state.”

For his part, Kaul said the Supreme Court had “punted” on many of the issues related to the attorney general because the justices left open the possibilit­y of future challenges.

“In all likelihood there’s going to be more litigation over this and there’s going to be more wasted time and effort as a result of the lame-duck laws,” he said.

He said he was confident the lameduck laws regarding court settlement­s would be thrown out eventually.

State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, a Republican from Juneau, hailed the decision, saying the lameduck laws make Wisconsin’s government more accountabl­e.

“A rogue attorney general can no longer unilateral­ly settle away laws already on the books and unelected bureaucrat­s can’t expand their powers beyond what the people have given them through their representa­tives,” Fitzgerald said in a statement.

GOP Assembly Speaker Robin Vos of Rochester said in a statement that the ruling showed the legislativ­e and executive branches are on equal footing.

“The governor and attorney general can continue to try to work around the Legislatur­e and violate laws when doing so, or they can begin to understand that there are checks and balances set forth in our representa­tive democracy, just as the state high court reminded them today,” his statement said.

Laws cut powers of Evers, Kaul

Republican lawmakers in 2018 passed the laws in question after Evers and Kaul were elected but before they were sworn in.

Labor unions sued, arguing the measures violate the state constituti­on’s separation-of-powers doctrine, which spells out what authority each branch of government has.

Dane County Judge Frank Remington issued an initial ruling in favor of the unions in 2019, but three months later the Supreme Court took over the case and reinstated most of the lame-duck laws for the time being.

In Thursday’s ruling, the high court found many of the lame-duck laws were valid and returned the case to the lower court so parts of the lawsuit can continue.

The lame-duck laws require a committee of legislator­s, rather than the attorney general, to sign off on some court settlement­s and they allow lawmakers to easily intervene in lawsuits involving the state.

The Supreme Court upheld those parts of the laws 5-2. In the majority of that part of the decision were Kelly and the court’s other conservati­ves, Chief Justice Patience Roggensack and Justices Rebecca Bradley, Brian Hagedorn and Annette Ziegler. In dissent were the court’s liberals, Justices Ann Walsh Bradley and Rebecca Dallet.

Writing for the majority, Hagedorn called that part of the decision “limited” and concluded other challenges to how litigation is handled by the state could be brought.

The lame-duck laws also give lawmakers the ability to more easily block rules written by the Evers administra­tion. They say courts can’t defer to state agencies when they interpret state laws. And they give lawmakers the ability to block the administra­tion from changing security policies in the state Capitol.

The justices unanimousl­y agreed all those provisions are constituti­onal, though they said more specific challenges could be made to those parts of the laws in the future.

The lame-duck laws also include rules instructin­g the Evers administra­tion to rewrite thousands of government documents and websites. Those rules required the administra­tion to provide citations to statutes or case law any time it offered an opinion on laws and regulation­s — a requiremen­t that Evers said could cripple the functionin­g of state government.

The justices on a 4-3 vote struck down the requiremen­ts for government documents. The lineup for that part of the decision was highly unusual, with Kelly joined by Dallet, Rebecca Bradley and Ann Walsh Bradley. (The Bradleys are not related.)

The lame-duck laws have been challenged in other cases and courts have largely sided with Republican­s in those cases. Last year the Supreme Court found the laws were enacted properly and a federal judge threw out a lawsuit alleging the laws unfairly discrimina­ted against Democratic voters.

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