The Court Case That Could Shut Down Kansas's Courts
What began as merely a fiscal mess in Kansas has become a full-blown judicial crisis.
On Wednesday, a district court ruled against the state, and threw out a 2014 law passed by Republicans that took the power of appointing chief judges away from the Kansas Supreme Court and handed it to local judges. But that rather simple question of judicial administration could have further-reaching consequences, thanks to a provision in a second law passed by the legislature earlier this spring that would cut off funding for the states entire court system, if the 2014 law was struck down.
Kansas officials were so worried about the consequences of the courts decision that the states attorney general, Derek Schmidt, successfully filed to have the ruling stayed until the courts rule on an appeal and the validity of the 2015 law.
My immediate concern ... is that the court does not appear to have decided the validity of a nonseverability clause contained in a later statute, which means todays decision could effectively and immediately shut off all funding for the judicial branch of state government.
It is critical to keep the state judiciary operating.
Weve previously covered Kansass financial struggles, as a Republican experiment in conservative economic policy failed spectacularly, leaving the state deeply in the red. The fiscal crisis divided and, for a time, paralyzed the GOP-controlled legislature before lawmakers reluctantly agreed to nearly $400 million in sales taxes earlier this year.
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http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/09/the-court-case-that-could-shut-down-kansass-courts/403957/