The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

EFFORT TO WEAKEN GOVERNORS STIRS SEPARATION­OF-POWERS DEBATE

- By IVAN MORENO

MILWAUKEE (AP) — If Democrats sue to prevent Republican­s from diluting the powers of newly elected governors and attorneys general in Wisconsin and Michigan, the lawsuits will probably center on one question: Are lawmakers usurping authority that belongs to the executive branch?

The legal threat arose after Republican­s passed bills Wednesday that would give lawmakers leverage over actions previous governors and attorneys general could carry out on their own. If the bills are signed by outgoing GOP Gov. Scott Walker, lawmakers will decide when the state can withdraw from lawsuits, and the new Democratic governor will have to ask permission to adjust programs that are run jointly with the federal government, such as Medicaid.

“Separation of powers is an essential part of overall governance and built into the constituti­on,” said Caroline Fredrickso­n, president of the American Constituti­on Society, a liberal legal organizati­on. “I think that’s going to be issue one.”

Walker, who was defeated last month by Tony Evers, has indi-

cated support for the GOP measures, which would also empower lawmakers, not new Attorney General Josh Kaul, to decide whether to pull Wisconsin from a lawsuit challengin­g the Affordable Care Act, a promise of both Democrats’ campaigns. Evers said he was going to issue that order on his first day. Now he may have to support a lawsuit to get that power back.

“If you look at this package of legislatio­n, the Legislatur­e is trying to say, ‘You have to get our permission to do stuff. We’re your supervisor­s. The Legislatur­e is not the supervisor of the governor,” said Lester Pines, a Madison attorney who frequently represents Democrats.

Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e say they are confident they will survive the legal challenges.

“They have the right to go to court. We’ve already vetted these with legal experts that we believe have shown that they are clearly constituti­onal,” Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said.

The GOP actions in Wisconsin mirror what the party has done after losing control of the governor’s office in Michigan this year and two years ago in North Carolina, where the state is still mired in lawsuits. Courts have sided with Democrats there when judges found that lawmakers prevented the governor from carrying out executive branch duties.

North Carolina Republican­s defended their actions by saying they were simply rebalancin­g constituti­onal powers between the executive branch and the Legislatur­e — an argument the Wisconsin GOP has also made.

The threat of lawsuits also looms in Michigan, where Republican­s are considerin­g proposals to strip campaign-finance oversight from the new Democratic secretary of state. With a Democrat taking control of the attorney general’s office, lawmakers also want to have authority to intervene in lawsuits.

Groups that collected hundreds of thousands of voter signatures for minimum wage, paid sick leave and anti-gerrymande­ring initiative­s could also sue if Republican Gov. Rick Snyder signs bills that would significan­tly scale them back. The GOP-led Legislatur­e adopted the citizenini­tiated measures before they could go to voters, so they could be more easily amended after the election.

“If any of this legislatio­n passes, I think there are going to be a number of state constituti­onal challenges, separation of powers being just one among them,” said Mark Brewer, a lawyer for the minimum wage and earned sick time groups and a former Michigan Democratic Party chairman.

Howard Schweber, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said Republican­s “seem to be under the

DEBATE » PAGE 8

 ?? STEVE APPS/WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE ?? FILE - In this Oct. 19, 2018, file photo, Democratic challenger Tony Evers, left, and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, shake hands during gubernator­ial debate in Madison, Wis. Republican­s pushing to hang on to power in Wisconsin and Michigan aren’t stopping at curbing the authority of incoming Democratic governors. They’re also trying to hamstring Democrats who are about to take over as attorneys general.
STEVE APPS/WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE FILE - In this Oct. 19, 2018, file photo, Democratic challenger Tony Evers, left, and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, shake hands during gubernator­ial debate in Madison, Wis. Republican­s pushing to hang on to power in Wisconsin and Michigan aren’t stopping at curbing the authority of incoming Democratic governors. They’re also trying to hamstring Democrats who are about to take over as attorneys general.
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