This article by Simon Davis-Cohen was published in Truth-Out on March 19 2017. Simon is a remarkable up-and-coming young journalist whose writings now appear in many independent journals. He is the founder of ReadTheDirt.org.

Right now, there are two bills filed in the Florida legislature that propose sweeping new restrictions on local governments. One (House Bill 17) would bar them from regulating “businesses, professions, and occupations,” the other (SB 1158), would expressly preempt “the regulation of matters relating to commerce, trade, and labor.” The broad language of the bills has local advocates up in arms and newspapers like the Naples Daily News asking whether “local regulations [are] a thing of the past.” The legislative session to discuss and advance the bills began March 7.

Though egregious, what may be most noteworthy about the bills is how ordinary they actually are. Bills like them have become commonplace in the United States.

Local governments have become a battleground, and corporate interests seeking to dampen their influence have been proposing and passing bills like these for years. Countless local minimum wage hikes, worker protection bills, rent laws, police oversight initiatives, fossil fuel extraction bans and other progressive reforms have passed across the country since 2008. In Florida, local ordinances on wage theft, expanded paid leave, fracking, gun regulations and more have been central to the left’s platform. Now more than ever, going local has become a key way to make gains and resist — especially under Trump.

In response, corporate and right-wing interests have used their disproportionate (and often gerrymandered) control over state legislatures to pass “state preemption” bills like HB 17 and SB 1158 to quell local activism. Increasingly, the basic powers of local governments are becoming a keystone in the fight over a slew of issues, including the maintenance of democracy itself.

As “preemption” spreads and becomes all the more encompassing — or in other words, as more states remove specific or broad powers from local governments — it is beginning to smother basic elements of local democracy. “Home Rule,” which exists to safeguard an assumption of power for local governments, is being silently reversed. …

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