The good news is somebody made to
obvious move to sue the Louisiana Legislature for ignoring
the Constitution regarding the passage of legislation. The bad news is they
picked the wrong item to contest that more than likely will end in their defeat,
and with that brings up the question why try the half-court shot when an
available slam dunk wins the game?
Yesterday, perhaps the most
important specific business lobby in the state, the Louisiana Chemical Association, filed suit
against the Legislature and other state entities for having put into effect HCR 8,
which lopped off a quarter of the exempted tax for utilities that businesses
otherwise would pay. The aggregate one percent is expected to raise just over
$100 million this fiscal year. It based this mainly on the fact that to repeal
a tax exemption requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber, which did not
happen in the House of Representatives.
But just as the Constitution helps
them with the supermajority requirement in Art. VII Sec. 2, it
strikes a critical blow against it in Art. III Sec. 20, which
states that laws may be suspended by the same voting requirement with which
they were enacted. A suspension differs from a repeal in that it only is
temporary, lasting no more than 60 days past the end of the legislative regular
session after enacted, and does not require gubernatorial action. By contrast,
a repeal is permanent or lasts for a period greater than a year.