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Republican lawmakers’ proposed changes to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ budget plan would create a $1.4 billion hole in the plan over the next two years, according to the Legislature’s nonpartisan fiscal bureau.

That roughly matches the amount by which Evers wants to increase state spending on K-12 schools, in another sign that GOP lawmakers will not embrace that proposal. Republicans already said last week that they won’t build from Evers’ overall spending blueprint.

According to last week’s announcement, GOP lawmakers on the Legislature’s budget-writing Joint Finance Committee will scrap more than 130 provisions of Evers’ budget, including an expansion of Medicaid and tax increases on large manufacturers and some high earners. The announcement didn’t include the fiscal effect on Evers’ plan.

Junking those proposals is what’s chiefly responsible for creating the $1.4 billion negative fiscal impact to the state’s general fund relative to Evers’ proposal, according to an estimate distributed to the Joint Finance Committee. Going forward, lawmakers will have to account for that figure with spending cuts, revenue increases or a mix of both.