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In the fall of 2010, Chris Larson was serving in relative obscurity as a member of the Milwaukee County Board. By March 2011, he was a political celebrity, lauded by some -- and vilified by others -- as one of 14 Democratic state senators who fled to Illinois for more than three weeks to thwart a quick vote on Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to curtail collective bargaining rights for public employees. Today’s Heroes: the Wisconsin 14 trumpeted the national AFL-CIO website. When are they going to come back? Are they coming back from somewhere downstate? This seems ludicrous, MSNBC host and political commentator Chris Matthews said on his March 9 show , 21 days after the Democrats left. This is something that happens in a banana republic. When are we going to have a Legislature meeting in Wisconsin and decide this? As senators on both sides face possible recall elections, Larson is now defending leaving the state not only as the right thing to do -- but as a matter of the lawmakers exercising their state constitutional rights. The Democrats returned March 12 after Republicans removed fiscal items from the bill, allowing them to vote without needing 20 members present -- the 3/5ths quorum requirement that allowed for the departure. There are 19 Republicans in the Senate. Interviewed March 11 at an Illinois rest stop on his way home, Larson told a WTMJ-TV (Channel 4) television reporter he would do it all again to stall moves by the GOP majority in Madison. That’s a tool that our constitution gives us, Larson said. It’s a little bit different than the U.S. filibuster, but it’s the Wisconsin filibuster and that’s how it works. The reporter followed up: Leaving the state is the new Wisconsin filibuster? Larson, cracking a brief smile, responded: It is. Most people are familiar with the filibuster, a legislative tactic common to the U.S. Senate and some state legislatures that allows a minority-party’s objection to stall or kill final action unless a super-majority wants to proceed. In the U.S. Senate, it used to involve round-the-clock speeches but now is a simple procedural maneuver. During the heated and massive Madison protests, we heard some casual references to the boycott as a filibuster with feet. But did Larson mean to assert that Wisconsin’s Constitution, adopted in 1848, provides for a filibuster? He did, according to his chief of staff, Justin Sargent: This is in Article 8, Section 8 of the State Constitution . This constitutional filibuster essentially stops passage on a bill that is fiscal, if the body is lacking a 3/5ths quorum. In special session, this is the only defense the minority has to stop or even temporarily delay a bill. Larson himself was less emphatic when we asked him about the filibuster comparison. He said he meant only to draw an analogy between the boycott and a filibuster. We decided to test his claim given the historic nature of the boycott and the prospect it could happen again. Let’s start with what both sides -- and experts -- agree on: Wisconsin by legislative rule does limit debate. But it does not provide for a filibuster by statute, rule or any constitutional provision. Cutting off debate is rare, but it happens. The constitutional section Larson cites requires a 3/5th’s quorum to vote on certain tax and fiscal items -- not to pass the measure, but to act on the measure. It was that provision Democrats took advantage of in staying away. Beyond that, the debate turns to warring legal interpretations. But we can learn from those as well. Lawyers and officials on the Republican side say not only is there no constitutional filibuster, but the Democratic boycott violated the constitutional oath of office and a Senate rule that bars absenteeism without leave. It’s a grossly frivolous and very dangerous misstatement that they could absent themselves purposely from the body to avoid a quorum, said Jim Troupis, a lawyer who advised Senate Republicans. If there was no duty to attend, there would be no duty to have a Legislature. This would lead to an executive branch dictatorship, he contended. During the legislative battle, an Oconto County Circuit Court judge ruled that State Sen. Jim Holperin (D-Conover) appeared to be violating a rule that requires senators to attend sessions. But he wrote that it is the Senate -- not the courts -- that enforce those rules. A lawyer who has advised the Democrats, Jeremy Levinson, agreed lawmakers have to show, but said the penalties for absenteeism are so weak that ultimately it is up to voters to decide whether lawmakers have shirked their duty. Levinson argues the constitution, in effect, allows boycotts because it lets legislators make their own rules -- and the rules have not effectively barred such behavior. University of Wisconsin political scientist Donald Downs, a constitutional scholar affiliated with the law school, agreed, with qualifications. It’s a new constitutional argument, Downs said. I would say the burden of proof is on him to show it’s a right, but the Wisconsin Supreme Court has been open-minded concerning the power of each house to determine it’s own rules. Labor lawyer and author Tom Geoghegan, a prominent liberal critic of unlimited filibustering, said the boycott move was permitted by the state constitution. It’s a provision that’s an extra check on the majority just slamming something through, he said. But Andrew Welhouse, spokesman for Republican Sen. Scott Fitzgerald, the majority leader, said the quorum requirement was turned on its head by Democrats. It was originally intended as a way to protect the minority from the majority by making sure that a proper number of officials were there to do business, not enable the minority to stand in the way of the majority, he said. Looking back into history, what was the original stated purpose of the provision requiring 20 senators in attendance? The constitutional provision dates to Wisconsin’s statehood in 1848 and was modeled after a New York state provision. In a later discussion at the New York constitutional convention of 1915, it was said that a 3/5th’s quorum approach was designed to prevent hasty and careless legislation and to insure a larger attendance when a bill was to be voted upon, according to documents archived by the New York State Library. Indeed, the Wisconsin boycott that would follow nearly a century later is an echo of sorts to concerns raised at the time. Opponents of the super quorum argued that a small minority merely by refusing to make an appearance could obstruct a vote and defeat legislation. (italics added) So those are some of the arguments. Let’s get to the nub of the matter. Was the Democrats’ move a constitutional filibuster that’s only a little bit different than the U.S. Senate filibuster, as Larson said? The general idea is the same -- a procedural mechanism for stalling a vote. But it’s not a filibuster, said Geoghegan, as well as Mordecai Lee, a former Democratic state senator from Milwaukee. Closer to a filibuster, Lee said, was the 61-hour debate that Assembly Democrats forced on Walker’s budget-repair bill. Lester Pines, an attorney for the Madison teachers union, said the boycott delayed the vote, but he agreed that the Wisconsin Constitution wasn’t intended to provide a filibuster. He called the Democrats’ action civil disobedience. We asked Larson to explain why, if the action was provided for in the constitution, he and the others had to leave the state to exercise a Wisconsin constitutional right. He said the Democrats were just being extra safe because Republicans appeared to have the ability to compel attendance but it was unclear to what lengths they would go and what the legalities were. Court rulings are lacking on whether they could have stayed in state and avoided being forced back to the Capitol, he said. Of course, by noting they could have been compelled to return, Larson undermines the main argument that they were free to leave. Where does all this leave us? Larson attaches a clever label to the three-week Democratic boycott, calling it the Wisconsin filibuster and saying the state constitution explicitly gives senators that tool. Like the U.S. filibuster, the Dems’ move was a procedural tactic to delay a vote. But that’s about where the similarities end. There is no dispute -- even among Democrats -- that Wisconsin lacks a filibuster provision used in other states and in the U.S. Senate. Indeed, Democrats felt shaky enough about their legal ground that they left the state to avoid being compelled to return to Madison. The quorum provision in the constitution did create an opening for the Democrats to no-show. So, in that sense, Larson is correct that the constitution gave them a tool to delay the vote. But a critical fact that would give a different impression is left out: Wisconsin has no filibuster provision. That’s a Barely True. Editor's note: This statement was rated Barely True when it was published. On July 27, 2011, we changed the name for the rating to Mostly False.
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