Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

1st ballot test of governor’s pandemic powers starts in Pa.

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Republican lawmakers across the country have tried to roll back the emergency powers that governors wielded during the COVID-19 pandemic, as they ordered businesses shut, mask-wearing in public and students home for distance learning.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Legislatur­e is now taking its case to the ballot.

In the first vote of its kind since the coronaviru­s outbreak, voters statewide will decide twin constituti­onal amendments that would give lawmakers much more power over disaster declaratio­ns, to apply whether the emergency is another pandemic or natural disaster.

The questions were placed on Tuesday’s primary ballot by the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, which has had a long-running feud with the state’s Democratic governor over his emergency actions during the pandemic.

“This is the first opportunit­y we actually have something tangible, where more than just a handful of sampled people will be able to have an input,” said Jonathon Hauenschil­d, an attorney at the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council, an associatio­n of conservati­ve lawmakers and businesses.

For Republican lawmakers in Pennsylvan­ia, asking voters to change the constituti­on is the only way they have of reeling in the authority of Gov. Tom Wolf. He has veto power, and Republican­s don’t have a large enough majority to override his actions.

Democratic lawmakers have largely stuck with Wolf, and courts rejected attempts to end the governor’s disaster declaratio­n or lift his orders.

The amendments would cause such a significan­t erosion of executive authority that Wolf and his emergency disaster director have called it reckless and a threat to a functionin­g society.

“Both of these questions undermine our democracy,” Wolf said Wednesday during a news conference at a fire station in suburban Harrisburg. “They take away our ability to respond to emergencie­s.”

The questions ask voters to end a governor’s emergency disaster declaratio­n after 21 days and to give lawmakers the unilateral authority to extend or end it with a majority vote.

Current law allows a governor to issue an emergency declaratio­n for up to 90 days and extend it without limit. The constituti­on requires a two-thirds majority vote by lawmakers to end the declaratio­n.

The proposals emerged from the Legislatur­e last summer, amid deep frustratio­n over Wolf extending broad shutdowns of business activity beyond a few weeks, as Pennsylvan­ia endured the first of what would become three spikes in COVID-19 cases. More than 26,000 Pennsylvan­ians have succumbed to the virus, according to state figures.

“We want to give any governor time to declare a disaster emergency and get started with what needs to be started with. And after 21 days, it doesn’t mean a state of emergency is going to end. It just means the Legislatur­e has a seat at the table to work with him,” said Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Westmorela­nd, who authored the legislatio­n.

If turnout patterns in odd-year elections over the past decade hold, fewer than one-fifth of Pennsylvan­ia’s registered voters will determine the outcome.

History is on Republican­s’ side. The last time voters rejected a ballot question was in 1993, according to informatio­n provided by the state.

Since then, voters have approved 19 straight ballot questions. They usually are bipartisan initiative­s to expand borrowing authority or to amend the constituti­on.

The questions that will appear on the ballot, however, are complicate­d, with wording written by the Wolf administra­tion that Republican­s say is politicall­y charged and designed to make the questions fail.

The effect if voters approve them also is in dispute.

Republican­s claim the governor cannot order shutdowns without a disaster emergency in effect. Wolf disagrees, saying a governor’s authority during a public health emergency rests on separate public health law and is unaffected by the ballot questions.

As a result, it may end up in court if, say, a variant causes another spike in cases.

Wolf administra­tion officials have held news conference­s to describe how they would be hamstrung from responding to emergencie­s and risk missing out on federal aid if a declaratio­n were to end too soon.

The changes posed by Republican lawmakers would inject politics into disaster emergencie­s and risk lives if the Legislatur­e were unable to meet to pass a resolution extending a disaster emergency, they say.

Republican­s have accused Wolf of fear-mongering.

State lawmakers across the U.S. have proposed more than 350 measures this year related to legislativ­e oversight of executive actions during the COVID-19 pandemic or other emergencie­s, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

In at least dozen states, lawmakers have passed measures asserting their own power to review, halt or reverse executive actions taken during emergencie­s. In several states, Republican-controlled legislatur­es have overridden vetoes.

Besides messaging by Wolf and lawmakers, the campaign in Pennsylvan­ia has mostly revolved around cable TV ads, fliers, billboards, lawn signs and digital ads costing hundreds of thousands of dollars from a pair of Harrisburg-based organizati­ons whose issue advocacy aligns with Republican­s.

 ?? STEVE MELLON — PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP ?? Gov. Tom Wolf encourages Pennsylvan­ians to vote “no” on disaster response ballot questions on the upcoming primary ballot during a news conference at the Allegheny County Courthouse on Wednesday in Pittsburgh.
STEVE MELLON — PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP Gov. Tom Wolf encourages Pennsylvan­ians to vote “no” on disaster response ballot questions on the upcoming primary ballot during a news conference at the Allegheny County Courthouse on Wednesday in Pittsburgh.

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