Current:Home > InvestRepublicans file lawsuit challenging Evers’s partial vetoes to literacy bill -WealthConverge Strategies
Republicans file lawsuit challenging Evers’s partial vetoes to literacy bill
View
Date:2025-04-19 15:18:20
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! (332)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly rise after US stocks wobble as Treasury bond yields veer
- Eagles trade for two-time All-Pro safety Kevin Byard in deal with Titans
- John Stamos Details Getting Plastic Surgery After Being Increasingly Self-Conscious About His Nose
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Niners' Fred Warner's leaping tackle shows 'tush push' isn't always successful
- Eighth 'Mission: Impossible' film postponed to 2025 as actors strike surpasses 3 months
- Officers shoot armed suspect in break-in who refused to drop gun, chief says
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Unusual tortoise found in Florida identified as escape artist pet that went missing in 2020
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Candidate for Pennsylvania appeals court in November election struck by car while placing yard signs
- Mary Lou Retton is home, recovering after hospitalization, daughter says
- The 1st major snowstorm of the season is expected to hit the northern Rockies after a warm fall
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- California orders Cruise driverless cars off the roads because of safety concerns
- Hate crimes in the US: These are the locations where they're most commonly reported
- Georgetown women's basketball coach Tasha Butts, 41, dies after battle with breast cancer
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Nearly 7,000 Stellantis factory workers join the UAW strike
A man shot himself as Georgia officers tried to question him about 4 jail escapees. He turned out to be a long-missing murder suspect.
Phillies sluggers cold again in NLCS, Nola falters in Game 6 loss to Arizona
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Eighth 'Mission: Impossible' film postponed to 2025 as actors strike surpasses 3 months
Broncos safety Kareem Jackson suspended four games for unnecessary roughness violations
Michigan woman becomes first grand prize winner of state's Halloween-themed instant game