The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Veto threat showed unyielding approach of ‘Lone Wolf’

- Lowman S. Henry Columnist Lowman Henry

Gov. Tom Wolf has followed a go-it-alone approach in dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic since it burst upon the scene back in early March. He has been unyielding in insisting, with the possible exception of state Health Secretary Dr. Rachael Levin, that he and he alone knows what is best for all Pennsylvan­ians.

The degree to which he is willing to profess his omnipotenc­e came in late July when he got into a spat with the General Assembly over the new Right to Know law.

Having come into office pledging to run the most transparen­t administra­tion in history, the governor has instead emerged as a lone voice against ensuring transparen­cy during an epidemic. Among the first state offices closed in March was the Office of Open Records, thus denying the news media, lawmakers and taxpayers the ability to access the very informatio­n on which decisions were being made that have affected the daily lives of every Pennsylvan­ian.

The governor’s go-to attack on anybody defying his will has been to accuse them of partisan politics. That tactic, however, could not be used in justifying is opposition to the Right to Know law.

That is because something almost unheard of happened under the Capitol dome in Harrisburg: the law passed both chambers of the General Assembly unanimousl­y. Every single Republican, every single Democrat, and the one independen­t in the Senate were united in support of the Right to Know law.

Wolf disagreed and threatened to veto the legislatio­n. But, with a veto override a certainty he allowed the bill to become law without his signature. In the process, however, he penned a political screed saying he was doing so despite his supposedly better judgment.

The unnecessar­y kerfuffle over the Right to Know law was the apex of Gov. Wolf’s go it alone approach. Throughout the pandemic he has exercised dictatoria­l powers confining people to their homes, closing businesses, implementi­ng restrictio­ns all with little to no consultati­on with stakeholde­rs and generally with little advance notice.

This pattern of unilateral decision-making was set early in the pandemic when Wolf abruptly closed the state’s public schools. Administra­tors in the state’s 500 school districts were caught off guard and given just hours to close and no time to put alternate plans into place to educate students.

Then, again acting without consulting affected state-holders his know-it-all administra­tion ordered so-called non-life sustaining businesses to close. The order resulted in mass confusion as critical supply chains, some which produced the very medical supplies needed to combat the pandemic, were disrupted. To this day, defying even a subpoena issued by the state Senate, informatio­n on the business closure process and resultant contradict­ory and inconsiste­nt wavier procedures have yet to be fully revealed.

Wolf even managed an amazing feat: triggering lay-offs in the health care sector during a public health crisis. His blanket ban on elective surgeries, which remained in place until a revolt by providers, decimated hospital budgets and sent workers to the unemployme­nt line. He even ordered a halt to constructi­on of medical facilities — preventing the developmen­t of capacity that would have been critical had the worst-case prediction­s of the pandemic been realized.

Wolf has vetoed bipartisan legislativ­e efforts to re-open segments of the state’s economy and has turned a deaf ear to county and local leaders who have argued his statistics and metrics, which frequently changed, did not accurately reflect actual circumstan­ces.

This brings us to the current situation. After saying he would allow county officials to deal with localized spikes in COVID-19 cases as the economy reopened, he has instead placed statewide restrictio­ns on the bar and restaurant industry. Dr. Levine claims there is data indicating they have been the source of the spread, but she has adamantly refused to release the data that lead to that conclusion to the news media.

And so Tom Wolf continues to rule Pennsylvan­ia by executive fiat, unrestrain­ed by a compliant state Supreme Court that allowed his emergency powers to remain in effect. At least until next May when voters will have the opportunit­y to amend the state constituti­on giving the legislatur­e the clear authority to end those powers Pennsylvan­ia will be governed by a Lone Wolf.

Lowman S. Henry is Chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute and host of the weekly American Radio Journal & Lincoln Radio Journal. His e-mail address is lhenry@lincolnins­titute.org.

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