Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

State GOP seeks to join suit on stimulus

- Patrick Marley

MADISON - Republican lawmakers in Wisconsin took steps this week to join with other states in a lawsuit challengin­g an aspect of President Joe Biden’s stimulus package that limits state tax cuts.

Legislativ­e leaders agreed Thursday to hire attorneys at taxpayer expense to participat­e in the case, continuing their practice over the last two years of using private lawyers instead of leaving litigation decisions to Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul.

Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is providing states with nearly $200 billion in aid to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic and revive the economy. It includes a provision that bars states from using the fedlaw eral help to offset tax cuts.

That part of the legislativ­e package prompted 13 states to sue the administra­tion in March, saying the limit is too restrictiv­e.

Now, top Wisconsin Republican­s are trying to join that lawsuit.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos of Rochester and Senate President Chris Kapenga of Delafield on Wednesday asked a committee of leaders of the two houses to approve the hiring of attorneys. The committee on Thursday approved the measure 6-4, with all Republican­s in favor and all Democrats against.

The measure gives Vos and Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu of Oostburg the power to hire attorneys and ask a federal court in Alabama to let them join the case. Other legislator­s won’t get a say in what firms to use or how to handle the case.

Republican­s have used private attorneys in recent years to participat­e in lawsuits over redistrict­ing, abortion, environmen­tal policies and lame-duck laws that limited the powers of Kaul and Democratic Gov. Tony Evers. Often they have paid their attorneys $500 an hour.

The move comes two weeks after a Dane County judge dissolved contracts Vos and LeMahieu had with their redistrict­ing attorneys. The judge found state law didn’t allow lawmakers to hire those attorneys because so far there is no litigation over redistrict­ing.

Vos and LeMahieu have a clearer legal path to hire attorneys to fight the Biden administra­tion because a lawsuit has already been filed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States