The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Governor wins round in power struggle

N.C. Republican­s passed law before Democrat took over.

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Six weeks into North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper’s term, the Democrat and Republican-controlled legislatur­e are locked in a partisan power struggle, leaving a cloud of uncertaint­y over state government.

Cooper won the latest battle Wednesday as a threejudge panel temporaril­y blocked a new law that required Senate confirmati­on for the governor’s Cabinet members, using a process similar to what the U.S. Senate does for the president’s Cabinet choices.

The state law was passed in the waning days of GOP Gov. Pat McCrory’s administra­tion and seen by Democrats as a way to undermine the new governor’s authority. Cooper sued over this and other laws that reduced his powers after he was sworn in Jan. 1.

The decision by the judges was released an hour before senators were scheduled to question Cooper’s pick to lead the department of military and veterans’ affairs, but he was absent. Committee co-chairman Sen. Wesley Meredith read a brief statement in which he said senators would still get answers about the qualificat­ions of secretarie­s and the meeting abruptly ended.

Cooper appointed eight of his 10 Cabinet members before the legislatur­e came into session in January and they were sworn in. Some legislator­s call them acting heads. Under the law passed in December, they can be dismissed if the Senate does not confirm them.

While the agency leaders wonder about their jobs, the standoff hasn’t halted state government operations. But this much remains certain: the court battle has kept the rancor between Cooper and the General Assembly front and center.

The three Superior Court judges have scheduled another hearing in the case Friday and will decide whether to postpone enforcemen­t of the law until they can reach an ultimate decision.

Republican leaders called the judges’ decision “a blatant overstep of their constituti­onal authority.”

House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger said in a joint statement, “if these three men want to make laws, they should hang up their robes and run for a legislativ­e seat.” Berger and Moore also said “their decision to legislate from the bench will have profound consequenc­es.” They didn’t explain further.

Cooper said the court “should not be intimidate­d by threats from legislativ­e leaders.”

“We need to put these partisan confirmati­on games behind us” and pass other legislatio­n, Cooper said, including the repeal of a law limiting LGBT rights and which public bathrooms transgende­r people can use, known as House Bill 2.

The GOP-led General Assembly and the governor have been fighting in court on other matters. The same three-judge panel blocked another new law that shifted oversight of elections away from the governor and toward the legislatur­e. In federal court, a judge agreed with Moore and Berger last month and blocked attempts by Cooper or President Barack Obama’s administra­tion to approve Medicaid expansion in the state.

Republican lawmakers say the state Constituti­on gives the senators “advice and consent” powers over gubernator­ial appointmen­ts. The leaders say the public has the right to see a governor’s Cabinet face questions in an open forum.

Senators have laid out a schedule to examine Cooper’s eight picks through mid-March. They said they weren’t aiming to be confrontat­ional and wanted to determine if Cooper’s choices were capable of performing the job, lacked conflicts of interest and planned to follow the law.

“The nearly identical federal process that is taking place in Washington, D.C., even as we speak shows the public is paying attention and we ought to do everything we can to give the people confidence that our state leaders will be accountabl­e to them,” said Meredith, a Republican.

 ?? ETHAN HYMAN / TNS ?? Roy Cooper greets supporters during an election party hosted by the North Carolina Democratic Party at the Raleigh Marriott City Center in downtown Raleigh, N.C., on Nov. 8, 2016.
ETHAN HYMAN / TNS Roy Cooper greets supporters during an election party hosted by the North Carolina Democratic Party at the Raleigh Marriott City Center in downtown Raleigh, N.C., on Nov. 8, 2016.

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