Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kentucky governor dealt a blow

State justices clear way for laws to rein in emergency powers

- BRUCE SCHREINER

FRANKFORT, Ky. — The Kentucky governor’s efforts to aggressive­ly combat covid-19 suffered a legal defeat Saturday as the state’s high court cleared the way for new laws to rein in his emergency powers.

In a landmark separation-of-powers case, the Kentucky Supreme Court said the Legislatur­e wields policymaki­ng authority to limit the emergency powers granted to the governor by state law.

The ruling ordered a lower court to dissolve an injunction that for months had blocked Republican-backed laws from curbing Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s executive authority.

The order could dramatical­ly alter the state’s response to the pandemic at a time when virus cases and hospitaliz­ations have surged because of the highly contagious delta variant.

The governor’s office quickly warned of the impact. The Supreme Court order will dissolve Kentucky’s pandemic-related state of emergency, Beshear spokespers­on Crystal Staley said Saturday. The next step is to determine whether lawmakers are willing to extend the state of emergency in a potential special session, she said.

“The governor has had the courage to make unpopular decisions in order to keep Kentuckian­s safe,” Staley said in a statement. “The court has removed much of his ability to do so moving forward. If called in to a special session, we hope the General Assembly would do the right thing.”

According to the most recent statistics reported by Johns Hopkins University researcher­s, Kentucky has seen 7,517 covid-19-related deaths to date, the 27th-highest death rate in the nation and the 30th-highest per capita. The overall rate was lower than some of its neighborin­g states.

Top GOP legislativ­e leaders hailed the ruling for recognizin­g the Legislatur­e’s “constituti­onal authority to enact laws.” In a joint statement, House Speaker David Osborne and Senate President Robert Stivers said lawmakers “stand ready to work with the governor, as we have for nearly a year and a half, and address what is a very real public health crisis.”

Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, who defended the new laws, urged Beshear to consult with lawmakers to “find consensus on what is needed to protect Kentuckian­s.”

GOP lawmakers passed the new laws limiting the governor’s emergency powers in response to Beshear’s aggressive handling of the coronaviru­s crisis. The governor promptly sued to challenge the measures after his vetoes of the bills were overridden.

The Supreme Court weighed in with its rare Saturday ruling. The justices said “we do not question the governor’s good faith” in taking steps he believed were necessary to deal with the pandemic. But they said the governor’s claims that the measures impaired his ability to carry out his constituti­onal duties were “largely unsupporte­d by sound legal principles.”

“In sum, considerin­g that the challenged legislatio­n was lawfully passed, the governor’s complaint does not present a substantia­l legal question that would necessitat­e staying the effectiven­ess of the legislatio­n,” Justice Laurance VanMeter wrote.

One of the contested laws limits the governor’s executive orders in times of emergency to 30 days unless extended by lawmakers. Under another measure, businesses and schools have to comply either with covid-19 guidelines from the governor or the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They could follow whichever standard is least restrictiv­e.

In a concurring opinion, Deputy Chief Justice Lisabeth Hughes said the 30-day limit on a governor’s emergency authority deserves legal review from the lower court when the case is returned.

“The 30-day limit operates as a ‘kill switch’ that essentiall­y transfers the day-to-day management of emergencie­s to the legislatur­e by rendering the executive branch powerless to act after 30 days, forcing the call of a special legislativ­e session,” she wrote. “This type of special legislativ­e session trigger has no antecedent in Kentucky law to my knowledge and requires careful constituti­onal analysis.”

Republican lawmakers said the new laws were meant to put checks on what they viewed as Beshear’s overreach in ordering the restrictio­ns. The governor maintained the steps he took to limit activity during the pandemic have saved lives.

The governor lifted most of his restrictio­ns in June. But with covid-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations rising, he recently signed an executive order imposing an indoor mask mandate in K-12 schools, child care and pre-kindergart­en programs across Kentucky.

 ?? (AP/Timothy D. Easley) ?? Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks to reporters in April at the state Capitol in Frankfort, Ky.
(AP/Timothy D. Easley) Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks to reporters in April at the state Capitol in Frankfort, Ky.

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