Wisconsin
Related: About this forumEvers promises to fight election constitutional amendment
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers promised to fight a proposed constitutional amendment supported by conservatives that would change election law, even as the measure could be put on the ballot for approval without the Democratic governor's signature.
Evers, in a year-end interview with The Associated Press, said he also opposed handing election duties to the nearly powerless secretary of state's office as a Republican candidate has proposed.
We have a good system, Evers said on Tuesday. Its my goal to keep it.
Evers, who vetoed six Republican-authored election bills this year, also promised to reject attempts to change the current system, including giving the GOP-controlled Legislature the power to run elections.
Evers' authority is the only thing standing between the Republican Legislature and wholesale changes to the current election administration system, which was created by the Republican Legislature. High-ranking Republicans, including Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, have called for commissioners to resign and have floated proposals to reconstitute the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission and potentially hand the power to run elections to the Legislature.
Read more: https://www.bgdailynews.com/news/state/evers-promises-to-fight-election-constitutional-amendment/article_e3f9bc1c-ee5e-58dc-8e7c-7113ed6ca07c.html
(Bowling Green Daily News)
secondwind
(16,903 posts)Poiuyt
(18,272 posts)Jimbo S
(3,014 posts)Doesn't require a governor's approval, if the people vote for it. It's a check-and-balance.
Poiuyt
(18,272 posts)Is it a straight majority during a referendum or something?
Two consecutive sessions of the Legislature must vote to pass.
Then it goes to the ballot, simple majority to pass.
I think "Marcy's Law" is the latest to go this route. The state's DOMA also went this route, until the SCOTUS ruling nullified it.