Iowa governor blocks bill aimed at stopping anti-Trump suits
DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds vetoed a measure Wednesday intended to stop the state’s Democratic attorney general from filing or joining lawsuits challenging President Donald Trump’s policies, but she did so only after gaining an assurance the state’s participation in such actions would end.
Reynolds had been under pressure from current and former attorneys general around the country to reject the provision that Republicans pushed through in the final days of the legislative session out of exasperation that Attorney General Tom Miller had joined lawsuits that aligned the state against Trump administration policies. If signed into law, Iowa would have been the only state with such limits.
Although Reynolds vetoed sections of a justice system budget bill that included the limits on the attorney general’s authority, Miller acknowledged he had reached an agreement with the governor before she took action. Under that deal, Miller would get the governor’s consent before bringing out-of-state cases in which the state of Iowa is the plaintiff.