The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

GOP seeks last-ditch laws in states where its power slipped

- By David Eggert

LANSING, MICH. >> With their grip on power set to loosen come January, Republican­s in several states are considerin­g last-ditch laws that would weaken existing or incoming Democratic governors and advance their own conservati­ve agendas.

In Michigan, where the GOP has held the levers of power for nearly eight years, Republican legislator­s want to water down a minimum wage law they approved before the election so that it would not go to voters and would now be easier to amend.

Republican­s in neighborin­g Wisconsin are discussing ways to dilute Democrat Tony Evers’ power before he takes over for GOP Gov. Scott Walker. And in North Carolina, Republican­s may try to hash out the requiremen­ts of a new voter ID constituti­onal amendment before they lose their legislativ­e supermajor­ities and their ability to unilateral­ly override vetoes by Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper.

Republican­s downplay the tactics and point out that Democrats have also run lame-duck sessions, including in Wisconsin in 2010 before Walker took office and the GOP took control of the Legislatur­e. But some of the steps Republican­s are expected to take

will almost surely be challenged in court, and critics say such maneuvers undermine the political system and the will of the people, who voted for change.

“It’s something that smacks every Michigan voter in the face and tells them that this Republican Party doesn’t care about their voice, their perspectiv­e,” House Democratic Leader Sam Singh said of the strategizi­ng to control the fate of minimum wage increases and paid sick leave requiremen­ts.

The moves would follow midterm elections in which Democrats swept statewide offices in Michigan and Wisconsin for the first time in decades but fell short of taking over

their gerrymande­red legislatur­es. That gives Republican­s a final shot to lock in new policies, with Democrats unable to undo them anytime soon.

Michigan’s new minimum wage and sick time laws began as ballot drives but because they were preemptive­ly adopted by lawmakers in September rather than by voters, they can be altered with simple majority votes rather than the support of three-fourths of both chambers.

One measure would gradually raise the minimum wage to $12 an hour and increase a lower wage for tipped workers until it is in line with the minimum. The other would require that employees qualify for between 40 and 72 hours of paid sick leave, depending on the size of their employer.

It is unclear how the laws may be changed to appease an anxious business lobby. The Michigan Chamber of Commerce says mandatory sick time — 10 other states also require it — will place “severe compliance burdens” on employers, including those with paid leave policies in place currently. The group also

is urging lawmakers to “be pragmatic, not extreme” and revisit the wage hikes that would make Michigan’s minimum the highest in the Midwest.

Republican­s seem unfazed by criticism that scaling back the measures would thwart the will of voters who resounding­ly elected Democrat Gretchen Whitmer to replace GOP Gov. Rick Snyder, who reached his term limit. The Michigan Senate’s majority leader, Arlan Meekhof, said changes to the laws are needed to “continue to keep our economy on track and not put a roadblock or hindrance” in the way of businesses.

Lame-duck sessions, which are commonplac­e in Congress but rare among many state legislatur­es, are frenetic, as legislator­s rush to consider bills that are controvers­ial or were put on the backburner during election season. Michigan’s 2012 session, for example, produced right-to-work laws and a contentiou­s revised emergency manager statute for cities in financial peril, despite voters having just repealed the previous law.

The lame-duck period

may be especially intense this year in Michigan and Wisconsin because they are among just four states in which Republican­s are losing full control the governorsh­ip and both legislativ­e chambers. Lawmakers in the other two states, Kansas and New Hampshire, will not convene until next year.

Six states with a split government now will be fully controlled by Democrats in 2019, and Alaska will be fully controlled by Republican­s.

Wisconsin Republican­s plan to consider a variety of ways to protect laws enacted by Walker . Those include limiting Evers’ ability to make appointmen­ts, restrictin­g his authority over the rule-making process and making it more difficult for him to block a work requiremen­t for Medicaid recipients. They might also change the date of the 2020 presidenti­al primary so that a Walker-appointed state Supreme Court justice has better odds to win election.

In North Carolina, GOP legislator­s may use the session for more than approving additional bipartisan Hurricane Florence relief. They are expected to implement a voter photo ID requiremen­t passed this month by the electorate and to consider other legislatio­n that the Democratic governor would be powerless to stop until Republican­s can no longer easily override his vetoes come 2019.

 ?? ANDY MANIS FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker addresses a joint session of the Legislatur­e in the Assembly chambers at the state Capitol in Madison, Wis. Braced for a new era of divided government, lame-duck Republican­s who have long controlled two upper Midwest states are priming last-ditch laws to advance their conservati­ve agenda or to weaken the influence of Democratic governors-elect.The moves, which may spark lawsuits if they come to pass, would follow midterm elections in which Democrats swept statewide offices in Michigan and Wisconsin for the first time in decades but fell short of taking over gerrymande­red legislatur­es.
ANDY MANIS FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker addresses a joint session of the Legislatur­e in the Assembly chambers at the state Capitol in Madison, Wis. Braced for a new era of divided government, lame-duck Republican­s who have long controlled two upper Midwest states are priming last-ditch laws to advance their conservati­ve agenda or to weaken the influence of Democratic governors-elect.The moves, which may spark lawsuits if they come to pass, would follow midterm elections in which Democrats swept statewide offices in Michigan and Wisconsin for the first time in decades but fell short of taking over gerrymande­red legislatur­es.

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