Commentary
We knew it was coming. The moment lawmakers tried to get clever and thought they could gain support for a Low Carbon Fuel Standard (House Bill 1091) and Cap and Trade (Senate Bill 5126) by linking the policies with a future transportation tax package, it was clear what the governor would do – veto the restriction.
Never mind the fact it appears to be illegal to do this. But since he has previously issued questionable line-item vetoes, there was never any doubt that he would do it again to secure his top environmental priorities without any conditions. That’s exactly what Gov. Jay Inslee did Monday, May 17, when vetoing the linkage.
For background, Washington’s current veto restriction language was adopted by voters via a constitutional amendment in 1974. According to the arguments in the 1974 Voter’s Guide:
“Help Rid Your State of One-Man Lawmaking – Washington is the only state in the nation in which the Governor exercises practically unlimited power to remove portions of laws passed by the Legislature . . . SJR 140 will prevent one person from changing behind the closed doors of his office bills which are the product of an open hearing process, accessible and visible to all citizens.”
As a result of this 1974 constitutional amendment, Washington’s veto restriction now says:
“If any bill presented to the governor contain several sections or appropriation items, he may object to one or more sections or appropriation items while approving other portions of the bill: Provided, That he may not object to less than an entire section, except that if the section contain one or more appropriation items he may object to any such appropriation item or items.”
Will the governor’s new line-item vetoes face the same fate as the ones in 2019 and result in lawsuits?
These vetoes today weren’t the only questionable recent use of the Governor’s bill signing pen(s). The Legislature passed two bills this session to extend high-speed internet in rural areas.
In an unusual move Thursday, the governor signed both bills at the same time, one with his right hand and the other with his left. While most bill signings occur in public and are broadcast on video, Inslee signed these two bills off camera. His office didn’t explain why.
The Office of the Secretary of State, which assigns numbers to bills based on the order in which they were signed into law, plans to ask a judge for guidance on what to do in this circumstance. Secretary of State spokeswoman Kylee Zabel said they have never experienced a situation where a governor signed two bills into law at the same time.
If you’re signing two bills with both hands at the same time off camera to avoid legal clarity, that should be an indication to you that something is happening that shouldn’t. The same goes for stretching the bounds of the constitutional veto power beyond its breaking point.
“One-man lawmaking” indeed.
Jason Mercier is the Center for Government Reform director at the Washington Policy Center. Email him at [email protected].
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