In this Jan. 7, 2019 file photo, Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul speaks during his address at the inauguration of Gov. Kaul had been blocked from taking action under a law passed by the Republican Legislature in a lame-duck session shortly before he took office. With the laws blocked, Evers could fire him immediately but the governor said he had no plans to replace him. The lame-duck session laws gave lawmakers, rather than the governor, the power to withdraw the state from lawsuits. The state Democratic Party has filed a fourth lawsuit challenging the lame-duck laws in federal court.
Source: thestar March 25, 2019 14:57 UTC