Business Group Suing Over Governor's Partial Veto to Extend School Funding
Wednesday, April 17th, 2024 -- 12:00 PM
(Sarah Lehr, Wisconsin Public Radio) A business group is suing over a partial veto used by Wisconsin’s Democratic governor last year to extend a funding bump to public schools for more than 400 years.
According to Sarah Lehr with Wisconsin Public Radio, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce filed the suit Monday before the state’s Supreme Court on behalf of two Wisconsin taxpayers.
It argues the maneuver by Gov. Tony Evers violated Wisconsin’s Constitution. Currently, the state limits the amount of money school districts can bring in, without first getting voter approval to raise property taxes.
The version of the two-year state budget approved by lawmakers last year would have allowed districts to collect an additional $325 per student until 2025. But, in July, Evers used a partial veto to slash a few numbers and a hyphen, changing 2024-25 to an end date of 2425.
“His veto basically allows the districts to do that for 400 years running without having to check in with the voters and ask their permission,” WMC lobbyist Scott said in an interview with WPR. “And we think that’s undemocratic. We think that the people’s voice should be heard.” In other states, governors have the ability to strike parts of legislation by vetoing line by line.
But use of the partial veto, in which a governor strikes individual characters, is unique to Wisconsin. It’s been deployed by Democratic and Republican governors in the past, including by former Republican Gov. Scott Walker who used it to extend an end date for a state program by a thousand years, from 2018 to 3018.
Former Republican Gov. Tommy Thompson used a tactic referred to as the “Vanna White” veto, referencing the “Wheel of Fortune” gameshow host who reveals words letter by letter. That technique, in which the governor struck individual letters to create new words, was banned when voters approved a constitutional amendment in 1990.
WMC’s lawsuit argues Evers’ use of the partial veto for school funding violates the 1990 amendment, as well as a section of Wisconsin’s Constitution that says appropriation bills must be approved by the governor in whole or “in part.”
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