Current:Home > NewsGov. Evers vetoes $3 billion Republican tax cut, wolf hunting plan, DEI loyalty ban -Secure Growth Solutions
Gov. Evers vetoes $3 billion Republican tax cut, wolf hunting plan, DEI loyalty ban
View
Date:2025-04-19 13:13:38
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin’s Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vetoed 41 bills passed by the Republican-led Legislature on Friday — rejecting a $3 billion Republican tax cut, political loyalty pledges for higher education employees, and a plan setting how many wolves can be hunted each year.
Evers signed a bipartisan bill to provide $400,000 supporting Holocaust education in Wisconsin schools. A 2021 law requires teaching about the Holocaust in grades 5 through 12 statewide. The money approved by Evers will go to the Nathan and Esther Pelz Holocaust Education Resource Center to support that education.
He also signed a bipartisan bill designed to increase the number of mental health crisis centers across the state.
During more than five years as governor with a Republican-controlled Legislature, Evers has vetoed more bills than any governor in Wisconsin history.
Evers vetoed a bill that would have prohibited the Universities of Wisconsin and other higher education institutions from conditioning employment and admission decisions on diversity statements. Right now, UW doesn’t have any such spoken loyalty pledges in higher education, making the bill unnecessary, Evers said.
Republicans passed the measure as part of their effort both in Wisconsin and across the country to restrict diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives on university campuses.
Evers also vetoed a bill that would have allowed school boards to hire superintendents who don’t have a license from the state education department. Evers, who previously worked as a principal and school district superintendent, said he objected to not having standards for the position in charge of school operations.
Republican backers pitched it as a way to help deal with turnover in superintendent positions across the state.
The bill, opposed by groups representing school officials including superintendents, would have created the same exemption from the superintendent license requirement in place only at Milwaukee Public Schools, the state’s largest district.
Another bill signed by Evers would allow people to be charged fees to redact recorded audio and video content provided under open records requests. Media organizations and open records advocates opposed the bill. It passed with bipartisan support and was backed by law enforcement agencies.
Evers had vowed to veto the GOP tax cut bill, one of several tax cut measures passed by Republicans this session that the governor rejected.
The scuttled tax plan would have dropped the state income tax from 5.3% to 4.4% for individual income between $27,630 and $304,170, and for married couples between $18,420 and $405,550.
The bill would also have excluded the first $150,000 of a couple’s retirement income from taxes, which would apply to people over 67.
The measure would have reduced tax collections by $3.2 billion over two years, which the governor called “fiscally irresponsible” in his veto message. He said the state would’ve been unable to meet its basic obligations like funding schools and prisons.
Evers noted how earlier this month he did sign a more limited, bipartisan tax cut that will expand the state’s child care tax credit.
The wolf bill Evers vetoed would have required state wildlife managers to set a firm numeric goal for the state’s wolf population. Republicans passed the measure after the state Department of Natural Resources did not set a hard cap on the state’s wolf population in its new management plan.
State wildlife officials told lawmakers that a lack of a hard limit gives the DNR more flexibility to manage the species, allows local wolf packs to fluctuate and gives the population a better chance at maintaining wolf abundance for years to come.
Hunting advocates support setting a population limit, saying the lack of a goal leaves both wolves and people unprotected.
Evers, in his veto message, said setting a numeric goal does not consider the social, scientific, biological and legal complexities of a recovered wolf population. He also said he objected to the Legislature micromanaging the DNR.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- What stores are open on Thanksgiving and Black Friday 2023?
- Nacho average bear: Florida mammal swipes $45 Taco Bell order from porch after Uber Eats delivery
- US asks Congo and Rwanda to de-escalate tensions as fighting near their border displaces millions
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Jewish protester's death in LA area remains under investigation as eyewitness accounts conflict
- Pakistani premier tries to reassure Afghans waiting for visas to US that they won’t be deported
- Stormi Webster Joins Dad Travis Scott for Utopia Performance
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Do you have a $2 bill lying around? It could be worth nearly $5,000 depending on these factors
Ranking
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Mexico’s hurricane reconstruction plans prioritize military barracks, owners left to rebuild hotels
- Half the people on the planet eat rice regularly. But is it healthy?
- Jenna Bush Hager shares photos from Bush family's first dinner together in 'a decade'
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- To help 2024 voters, Meta says it will begin labeling political ads that use AI-generated imagery
- To figure out the future climate, scientists are researching how trees form clouds
- Dean McDermott Packs on the PDA With Lily Calo Amid Tori Spelling's New Romance
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
New Beauty We’re Obsessed With: 3-Minute Pimple Patches, Color-Changing Blush, and More
Patrick Dempsey named Sexiest Man Alive by People magazine
My eating disorder consumed me. We deserve to be heard – and our illness treated like any other.
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Where the Republican presidential candidates stand on climate change
A prosecutor says a foreign link is possible to the dozens of Stars of David stenciled around Paris
Go digital or else: Citibank tells customers to ditch paper statements or lose digital access