Gov. Tony Evers sues Legislature over rulemaking again

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers address the Legislature in his 2024 State of the State message. (Baylor Spears | Wisconsin Examiner)
Gov. Tony Evers is suing the Wisconsin State Legislature for clarification on administrative rulemaking powers after a state Supreme Court decision earlier this year found that lawmakers were unconstitutionally blocking administrative rules indefinitely.Β
Since the Wisconsin Supreme Courtβs Evers v. Marklein II decision in July, Evers has taken steps to implement 12 administrative rules that were approved by him, but without getting the sign off from committees. His administration has said the additional approval isnβt needed.Β
However, Republican lawmakers have objected to Evers implementing the rules without going through the legislative committees, instructing the Legislative Reference Bureau not to publish any rule that hasnβt gone through a review by the Legislature in accordance with Wisconsin law.Β
βThe Legislature cannot continue to indefinitely obstruct my administration from doing the peopleβs work β and the Wisconsin Supreme Court agrees, but Republican lawmakers are continuing their unlawful behavior anyway,β Evers said in a statement about the court filing. βAt the end of the day, this lawsuit is about following the law and making sure thereβs accountability for elected officials if they fail to do so. It shouldnβt take going to court to get Republican lawmakers to comply with state law and Supreme Court decisions, but it seems like thatβs what itβs going to take, unfortunately.βΒ
Evers argues in the filing in Dane County Circuit Court that the state law that barred agencies from publishing rules that hadnβt gone through the Joint Committee on the Review of Administrative Rules was invalidated under the state Supreme Court ruling.Β
βNo statute bars agencies from promulgating final administrative rules pending a legislative committeeβs review,β the filing argued. βAnd even if any such statute existed, it would be facially unconstitutional under Evers IIβ¦ a legislative committee cannot have discretion over a pre-promulgation pause without violating constitutional bicameralism and presentment procedures. Such a statute would also unconstitutionally intrude on the executive branchβs authority to execute statutes that authorize administrative rulemaking.β
Evers is asking for a declaration and an injunction that orders the Legislative Reference Bureau must publish the nine rules the Evers Administration has already submitted and all administrative rules that have completed all preceding rulemaking procedures and been approved by the governor.Β
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) and Senate President Mary Felzkowski (R-Tomahawk) said in a statement that Evers is directing agencies to violate βvalidβ parts of Wisconsin law that βno court has ever questioned, let alone found to be invalid in any respect.β
βJust because Governor Evers is now a lame duck who no longer believes he is accountable to the people, it does not give him the right to ignore laws that the Legislature enacted, and a prior occupant of his office signed,β the Republican leaders said. βThatβs not how the rule of law works.β
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