The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

All eyes on Pa. for ballot question results

Referendum­s on pandemic, race gain national interest

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HARRISBURG, PA. >> Voters in Pennsylvan­ia cast ballots Tuesday to weigh in on nationally watched questions stemming from Republican dissatisfa­ction over shutdowns ordered by Gov. Tom Wolf during the pandemic and worries over whether federal judges appointed by former President Donald Trump will roll back civil rights protection­s.

Republican lawmakers across the country are rolling back the emergency powers that governors wielded during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Pennsylvan­ia found itself in the unique position of being the first to take the question to voters.

Voters weighed in on two questions that seek to limit a governor’s emergency disaster declaratio­ns and put more power in the hands of lawmakers. They asked voters to end a declaratio­n after 21 days and to give lawmakers the sole authority to extend it or end it at any time with a simple 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.

Wolf, a Democrat, and his emergency disaster director called the

proposals reckless, political and a threat to a functionin­g society if it prevents a fast and wide-ranging response to increasing­ly complicate­d disasters.

Republican­s accused Wolf of fear-mongering and said that the framers of the constituti­on never intended for a governor to hold so much power to suspend regulation­s, order mask-wearing and businesses and schools shut down.

The Legislatur­e did not hold hearings on the measures, and they may end up in court if voters approve them because their effect

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.

A third, unrelated question asked voters to decide whether to add a passage to the constituti­on outlawing discrimina­tion because of someone’s race or ethnicity. It’s believed to be the first time since last summer’s protests over the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s that voters will decide a racial equity issue on a statewide ballot.

Constituti­onal law professors

say it will have little practical effect because courts already consider such discrimina­tion to violate both the state and federal constituti­ons.

Sen. Vince Hughes, DPhiladelp­hia, said he originally sponsored the measure in case federal antidiscri­mination case law is reversed by the Republican-majority U.S. Supreme Court or federal judges appointed by Trump.

If it passes, it would become the constituti­on’s fourth equality provision, added to “all men are born equally free and independen­t,” a protection from discrimina­tion in exercising civil rights, and a 1971 amendment that ensures gender equality.

 ?? BOB KEELER — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Candidate signs line the walkway at the entrance to the Pennfield Middle School in Hatfield Township for the primary election on Tuesday.
BOB KEELER — MEDIANEWS GROUP Candidate signs line the walkway at the entrance to the Pennfield Middle School in Hatfield Township for the primary election on Tuesday.
 ?? BOB KEELER — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Dave Schuetz, left, secretary of the Hatfield Democratic Committee and constable candidate, chats with Tom Zipfel, president of the Hatfield Township Board of Commission­ers and Republican candidate for re-election to the board, outside the Pennfield Middle School primary election polling place on Tuesday.
BOB KEELER — MEDIANEWS GROUP Dave Schuetz, left, secretary of the Hatfield Democratic Committee and constable candidate, chats with Tom Zipfel, president of the Hatfield Township Board of Commission­ers and Republican candidate for re-election to the board, outside the Pennfield Middle School primary election polling place on Tuesday.

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