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		Lame-duck Wisconsin governor signs bill 
		undercutting incoming Democrat 
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		 [December 15, 2018] 
		By Joseph Ax 
 (Reuters) - Outgoing Wisconsin Republican 
		Governor Scott Walker on Friday signed legislation that will weaken the 
		powers of his newly elected Democratic successor, dismissing critics who 
		called the move a last-minute partisan power grab.
 
 Democrats said the legislation and a similar set of pending measures in 
		Michigan undermine the results of the Nov. 6 elections, when they 
		captured the governorship in both states for the first time in eight 
		years. The efforts take a page out of the playbook of North Carolina 
		Republicans, who two years ago acted to limit the power of the incoming 
		Democratic governor.
 
 Republicans in both Wisconsin and Michigan, who will maintain their 
		legislative majorities next year, have defended the moves as good-faith 
		efforts to ensure that the legislative and executive branches remain 
		equals.
 
 Wisconsin Governor-elect Tony Evers, who will take office Jan. 7, has 
		threatened legal action and said on Friday he will be "reviewing our 
		options."
 
 
		
		 
		"Wisconsinites deserve a government that works for them, and they 
		deserve their officials to be willing to set aside partisanship," he 
		said at a brief news conference.
 
 The Wisconsin bills, which passed the legislature on Dec. 5 largely 
		along party lines, will limit the governor's ability to pass 
		administrative rules and block him from killing a work requirement for 
		Medicaid recipients.
 
 The legislation also allows lawmakers, rather than the attorney general, 
		to decide whether to withdraw the state from lawsuits. That will prevent 
		Evers and the incoming Democratic attorney general, Josh Kaul, from 
		fulfilling a campaign promise to end Wisconsin's challenge to the 
		Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare.
 
 "It's worrisome, because it appears to escalate the tactics that the 
		parties are willing to use against one another," said Barry Burden, 
		director of the Elections Research Center at the University of 
		Wisconsin-Madison.
 
		Walker dismissed what he called "hype and hysteria" surrounding the 
		legislation, saying it would have a minimal effect.
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			Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker speaks during the Conservative 
			Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, 
			U.S., February 23, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts 
            
 
            "The overwhelming authority that I have today as governor will 
			remain constant," he said.
 The legislation will also limit early voting to two weeks before 
			Election Day, despite a judge's ruling in 2016 striking down a 
			similar law.
 
 The organization that successfully challenged the previous 
			incarnation, One Wisconsin Institute, said on Friday it will do so 
			again.
 
 Michigan's Republican-controlled legislature is expected to pass 
			measures soon that would curb the powers of the incoming Democratic 
			governor, attorney general and secretary of state. Governor Rick 
			Snyder, a Republican, has not indicated whether he would sign the 
			bills.
 
 In North Carolina, much of the legislation passed by Republicans in 
			2016 to weaken the incoming Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, has 
			been tied up in court challenges.
 
 Cooper on Friday vetoed a voter identification law passed by 
			Republican legislators, who want to push through the bill before 
			they lose the supermajority that gives them the power to override a 
			veto in January.
 
 Backers of the voter ID law say it is intended to prevent fraud. The 
			fight comes amid investigations into alleged absentee ballot fraud 
			in a congressional race.
 
 The state elections board has refused to certify the results and has 
			scheduled a hearing for Jan. 11.
 
             
            
 (Reporting by Joseph Ax in New York; editing by Leslie Adler)
 
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