Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Beshear critics vow to work with him to fight pandemic

- BRUCE SCHREINER

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Top Republican lawmakers are promising to work with Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear to fight covid-19 after a court ruling cleared the way for new limits on the Democratic governor’s emergency powers.

Beshear’s allies said they’ll be watching to see if the governor’s critics follow through.

Kentucky Republican­s cheered the state Supreme Court ruling Saturday that ordered a lower court to dissolve an injunction that for months had blocked the GOP-backed laws. It comes as the highly contagious delta variant drives up coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations in Kentucky.

The court’s decision “signals it is time for the Republican leadership to publicly put forth their plan to protect the commonweal­th from this pandemic and the deadly delta variant,” said Rep. Joni Jenkins and Sen. Morgan McGarvey, the top Democrats in the Kentucky House and Senate.

“We know what they don’t support; show us your plan,” they added.

The top legislativ­e Republican­s — House Speaker David Osborne and Senate President Robert Stivers — said lawmakers are “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.” The GOP holds supermajor­ities in both chambers and Republican­s accused Beshear of taking a go-it-alone approach in dealing with the pandemic.

“Let us be clear that today’s ruling in no way diminishes the seriousnes­s of this virus or its impact on our commonweal­th, and the General Assembly will continue to work to maintain both the safety and rights of all Kentuckian­s,” Osborne and Stivers said in their joint statement Saturday.

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

“This is not a novel concept. In fact, it’s the bedrock of our system of government,” he said.

Beshear spokeswoma­n Crystal Staley said the court’s order would dissolve the pandemic-related state of emergency. That would affect actions including measures to fight covid-19 in long-term care facilities and worker’s compensati­on for front-line workers who contract the virus, she said.

The next step is to determine whether lawmakers are willing to extend the state of emergency as the governor assesses whether to reconvene them, Staley said.

“If called in to a special session, we hope the General Assembly would do the right thing,” she said.

One of the new 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.

Beshear imposed capacity limits and other restrictio­ns during much of the pandemic to try to stop the virus’s spread. He lifted most of his restrictio­ns in June.

With covid-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations rising, Beshear recently signed an executive order imposing an indoor mask mandate in K-12 schools, child care and pre-kindergart­en programs across Kentucky. That set off a new round of legal wrangling.

Even the state’s deputy chief justice, Lisabeth T. Hughes, pleaded for cooperatio­n. In her concurring opinion Saturday, she warned the covid-19 scourge continues, creating “seemingly limitless thorny issues.”

“As a justice, and more pertinentl­y as a lifelong Kentuckian, I implore all parties to this matter to lay down their swords and work together cooperativ­ely to finish this immensely important task for the benefit of the people they serve,” she wrote.

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