Current:Home > FinanceRepublicans file lawsuit challenging Evers’s partial vetoes to literacy bill -EquityExchange
Republicans file lawsuit challenging Evers’s partial vetoes to literacy bill
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:49:45
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Republican legislators have filed a second lawsuit challenging Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ partial veto powers, this time alleging that he improperly struck sections of a bill that set up a plan to spend $50 million on student literacy.
Republican lawmakers filed their suit Tuesday in Dane County Circuit Court. The action centers on a pair of bills designed to improve K-12 students’ reading performance.
Evers signed the first bill in July. That measure created an early literacy coaching program within the state Department of Public Instruction as well as grants for public and private schools that adopt approved reading curricula. The state budget that Evers signed weeks before approving the literacy bill set aside $50 million for the initiatives, but the bill didn’t allocate any of that money.
The governor signed another bill in February that Republicans argue created guidelines for allocating the $50 million. Evers used his partial veto powers to change the multiple allocations into a single appropriation to DPI, a move he said would simplify things and give the agency more flexibility. He also used his partial veto powers to eliminate grants for private voucher and charter schools.
Republicans argue in their lawsuit that the partial vetoes were unconstitutional. They maintain that the governor can exercise his partial veto powers only on bills that actually appropriate money and the February bill doesn’t allocate a single cent for DPI. They referred to the bill in the lawsuit as a “framework” for spending.
Evers’ office pointed Thursday to a memo from the Legislature’s nonpartisan attorneys calling the measure an appropriations bill.
Wisconsin governors, both Republican and Democratic, have long used the broad partial veto power to reshape the state budget. It’s an act of gamesmanship between the governor and Legislature, as lawmakers try to craft bills in a way that are largely immune from creative vetoes.
The governor’s spokesperson, Britt Cudaback, said in a statement that Republicans didn’t seem to have any problems with partial vetoes until a Democrat took office.
“This is yet another Republican effort to prevent Gov. Evers from doing what’s best for our kids and our schools — this time about improving literacy and reading outcomes across our state,” Cudaback said.
The latest lawsuit comes after Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce, the state’s largest business group, filed a lawsuit on Monday asking the state Supreme Court to strike down Evers’ partial vetoes in the state budget that locked in school funding increases for the next 400 years.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Maryland, Virginia Race to Save Dwindling Commercial Fisheries in the Chesapeake Bay
- Breaking Down the 2023 Actor and Writer Strikes—And How It Impacts You
- Barbie has biggest opening day of 2023, Oppenheimer not far behind
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- OutDaughtered’s Danielle and Adam Busby Detail Her Alarming Battle With Autoimmune Disease
- Senator’s Bill Would Fine Texans for Multiple Environmental Complaints That Don’t Lead to Enforcement
- How artificial intelligence is helping ALS patients preserve their voices
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Shawn Johnson Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 3 With Husband Andrew East
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Why It’s Time to Officially Get Over Your EV Range Anxiety
- Why It’s Time to Officially Get Over Your EV Range Anxiety
- OutDaughtered’s Danielle and Adam Busby Detail Her Alarming Battle With Autoimmune Disease
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Nina Dobrev Recalls Wild Experience Growing Up in the Public Eye Amid Vampire Diaries Fame
- Patrick and Brittany Mahomes Are a Winning Team on ESPYS 2023 Red Carpet
- Logging Plan on Yellowstone’s Border Shows Limits of Biden Greenhouse Gas Policy
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
How artificial intelligence is helping ALS patients preserve their voices
Treat Williams’ Daughter Pens Gut-Wrenching Tribute to Everwood Actor One Month After His Death
This Winter’s Rain and Snow Won’t be Enough to Pull the West Out of Drought
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
In Louisiana, Climate Change Threatens the Preservation of History
Mono Lake Tribe Seeks to Assert Its Water Rights in Call For Emergency Halt of Water Diversions to Los Angeles
In the Amazon, Indigenous and Locally Controlled Land Stores Carbon, but the Rest of the Rainforest Emits Greenhouse Gases