Kansas GOP leads overturn of Dem governor’s limits on church, funeral attendance
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly addresses reporters March 17, 2020, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan. (Associated Press)
A Republican-led panel of Kansas
legislative leaders on Wednesday overturned an executive order by the
state’s Democrat governor that called for attendance limits on church
services and funerals amid the coronavirus pandemic. GOP members of the state’s Legislative Coordinating Council, composed of House and Senate leaders, asserted that first-term Gov. Laura Kelly had overstepped her authority by issuing the order, so they blocked it in a 5-2 vote along party lines. “It
appears to be out of line, extreme and clearly in violation, a blatant
violation, of our fundamental rights,” Senate president Susan Wagle, a
Republican from Wichita, told the Topeka Capital-Journal. Kelly
had announced Tuesday that church services and funerals would no longer
be exempted from a state order limiting gatherings to 10 people, the
newspaper reported. In addition to the lawmakers’ vote, state
Attorney General Derek Schmidt issued a memo Wednesday, advising police
in Kansas not to enforce Kelly’s order, arguing that while the order
contained what appeared to be sound public health advice it also seemed a
violation of rights guaranteed under the state’s Constitution. “Because
no Kansan should be threatened with fine or imprisonment, arrested or
prosecuted for performing or attending church or other religious
services, law enforcement officers are advised to ... avoid engaging in
criminal enforcement of its limitations on religious facilities,
services or activities,” Schmidt wrote in the memo, according to the
Capital-Journal. At an afternoon news conference, Kelly denounced
the lawmakers’ action as “shockingly irresponsible” and said it would
likely cost some Kansans their lives. She said her legal counsel would
examine the possibility of a court challenge, the Wichita Eagle
reported. “There are real life consequences to the partisan games Republicans played today,” Kelly said, according to the Eagle.
Kelly also spoke out against Schmidt for issuing the memo to police.
“I
was so deeply troubled to learn that our attorney general has decided
to launch a bizarre, confusing and overtly political attack at such a
moment of tragedy and that Republican legislative leaders have chosen to
follow suit with a shockingly irresponsible decision that will put
every Kansas life at risk,” Kelly said, according to the Capital-Journal. Schmist responded to Kelly's remarks in a statement. "I
am confident Kansans of faith can be trusted to follow ... important
advice without their government threatening criminal sanctions for
disobedience," he wrote.
"I
am confident Kansans of faith can be trusted to follow ... important
advice without their government threatening criminal sanctions for
disobedience." — Derek Schmidt, Kansas attorney general
The
actions by the governor and lawmakers came as confirmed coronavirus
cases in the state surpassed the 1,000 mark and deaths increased to 38,
the Eagle reported. At
least three clusters of infections in the state have been traced to
church gatherings and health officials fear Easter services this coming
Sunday could cause even more infections, the Eagle reported. Governors
in 44 states have called for limits on church gatherings similar to
what Kelly called for, according to the Capital-Journal.
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