• @cannibalkitteh
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    362 months ago

    It really should have to pass some form of nonpartisan review before being able to be introduced. I hate that as a private citizen, I have to track possible legislation and make time during the day to tell them that it’s clearly unconstitutional, have them pass it anyways, and then wait between 2-10 years for the courts to tell them (maybe).

    • @gdog05@lemmy.world
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      162 months ago

      Informally, I believe this has been resolved by having the state attorney general sign off on most legislation as to its constitutionality. In my state, the attorney general is a shitheel. But, he has called out anti-gay legislation as blatantly unconstitutional and a waste of time and money. The lawmakers want headlines and ALEC money. They don’t give two shits about it being lawful or costly or harmful.

      • @cannibalkitteh
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        62 months ago

        I’m not aware of any states where the attorney general can block introduction of legislation.

        • @gdog05@lemmy.world
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          132 months ago

          If I insinuated they could block it, that wasn’t my intention. It is basically a check without teeth. They can make a stink about it and a recommendation to the governor before signing but they have no legislative power.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      22 months ago

      some form of nonpartisan review

      Putting the legislation in front of my nonpartisan review board of Federalist Society Judges, Corporate Board Members, and Silicon Valley AI machines.