
Matthew Norman photo
Tony Evers in front of several "veto" stamps.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vetoed 73 bills passed by the Republican-controlled Legislature, and rewrote four spending bills with partial vetoes, over the last two years. No governor’s veto has been overridden by lawmakers since 1985, and that won’t change.
Since taking office in January 2019, Evers has vetoed 219 bills outright and seven others partially — vetoes denounced by Republicans who passed those bills.
An Evers aide said he vetoed 126 bills and one other partially — the state budget — in the 2021-22 legislative session and 20 bills, and two others in part, in the 2019-20 session.
Midway through his second four-year term, Evers can veto Republicans’ bills with impunity for several reasons.
First, the Democrat’s job approval rating with registered voters, as measured by Marquette University Law School polls, has been 52% and 53% for three polls — significantly higher than the Legislature’s 34% approval rating in Marquette’s latest poll.
Second, although there are 22 Senate Republicans — the two-thirds majority needed to override a veto — that is not true in the 99-member Assembly, where Republicans and Democrats are scrambling to introduce themselves to and impress voters in new legislative districts before Nov. 5 elections.
No Republican Assembly member wants to return to the Capitol until January.
First-term Republican Rep. Jerry O’Connor scored some of those vetoes this way: Nine “election integrity” bills; eight natural resources or “gun rights” bills; seven bills each that dealt with School Choice, “jobs and workforce” or “medical/health care” issues; and six bills each that dealt with tax cuts and “diversity, equity or inclusion” or “woke” issues.
“This governor continues to set records for the number of vetoes he executes,” said O’Connor, who listed each of the governor’s 73 vetoes this session.
Evers “overrides the elected legislators who represent the majority of Wisconsin voters,” O’Connor added. “He uses the veto pen and executive orders in a dictatorial style. This is not how government should work. We need change in Madison.”
Consider how Evers justified his recent veto of one Republican bill, sponsored by Sen. Cory Tomczyk and Rep. Clint Moses, that would have eliminated the requirement that employers obtain a work permit to hire 14- and 15-year-olds.
The veto came despite a widespread worker shortage statewide. But aides to Evers noted a U.S. Department of Labor report found that the number of minors working in violation of child-labor laws doubled between 2021 and 2023 and that many of them worked in “hazardous or dangerous” jobs.
Announcing his veto at a union event, Evers noted that he proclaimed 2024 the Year of the Worker because “real, meaningful and long-term solutions” are needed to address the workforce shortage.
“In April last year, our state unemployment rate hit a historic-low of 2.4%. Last year, Wisconsin had the all-time lowest number of unemployed workers ever in modern history. And our state’s labor force participation rate also consistently remained above the national average throughout the year,” Evers said, adding: “Wisconsinites work hard…. [My] comprehensive workforce plan would invest in child care statewide to prevent the industry’s looming collapse, expand paid family leave to help us compete with our neighboring states, invest in our higher education institutions, and bolster high-demand industries. Unfortunately, Republicans have rejected my plan.”
But Evers dismissed the bill to eliminate work permits for 14- and 15-year-olds as no “serious proposal to address generational statewide issues” and “wrong for our kids and wrong for our state.”
At an Assembly committee meeting on his bill last year, Moses noted that Wisconsin abolished work permits for 16- and 17-year-olds in 2017. That got Wisconsin “about halfway there,” he added.
“If a teenager wants a job, they should be able to apply to a job and start working,” Moses told the committee. “They shouldn’t need approval by their school and state to obtain a job.”
But, foreshadowing the governor’s veto, Democratic Rep. Francesca Hong said the bill should be killed. The change is “an absolute erosion of our willingness to help protect kids,” Hong said.
A 2023 report by the nonpartisan Legislative Reference Bureau confirmed that Evers vetoes at a record-setting pace. “While Wisconsin governors have historically vetoed an average of 3.7% of bills passed by the Legislature, Gov. Evers vetoed 32% of bills passed by the 2021–22 legislature. No governor has come close to matching this veto rate.”
Steven Walters started covering the Capitol in 1988. Contact him at stevenscotwalters@gmail.com.