It began when Kennedy, no stranger
to offering advice to other policy-makers even when it has little to do
with if anything with his official duties, took matters a step further and
criticized Jindal and his crew for their deserved reluctance to flush available
but poorly-allocated revenues out of the budget that would lead to cutting
higher-priority functions in state health care and higher education. Ever since
he lost
in his third attempt to move beyond the office he has held now for over a
dozen years in 2008, unusually for an executive branch officeholder Kennedy has
peppered the universe with ideas about how other parts of Louisiana government
should do their jobs, but until now never had moved to outright political
attacks on others with the accusation that they were whipping up fear to
prevent the budget reductions.
This atypical behavior of a statewide elected official stems from Kennedy’s
absolutely naked ambition to achieve higher office, with the governor’s
office presumably in his sights in 2015 (as his rhetoric in these
commentaries that began only after his last unsuccessful run for the U.S.
Senate, we can assume he is not interested in a rematch in 2014 with Sen. Mary Landrieu). This
isn’t necessarily a bad thing; having such a carrot dangled spurs candidates
into coming up with good policy suggestions. And, when he
first came up with a comprehensive list of policy changes to try to reduce
state spending without, he argued, big cuts in health care and higher
education, while uneven both in quality and realism, there were some good ideas
on it.
But now a year-and-a-half has passed and Kennedy, in his recent
critique, continues to peddle essentially
the same list – even though plenty of public airing has demonstrated some
of it is unworkable and some of it already has been or continues to be
implemented, even as a couple of items remain to be tried in a meaningful way.
The official Administration response even alludes to Kennedy’s hash and rehash
of the questionable or implemented items as acting as if no substantive
rebuttal to them exist (a listing of these appears in parts of a note sent to
Kennedy – unlike him, the Division of Administration does not post these kinds
of communications on its website – reproduced here).
Indeed, Kennedy never has tried substantively to defend these ideas but simply
has restated them again and again, and, as of the date of this posting, has not
responded to the latest rather convincing and withering riposte of his repeated assertions.
That’s not inconsistent with the sometimes careless approach Kennedy
takes on state fiscal issues that on occasion has made him appear to live in a
glass house, if not shockingly ignorant about state government. The note in
response gave examples about how Kennedy’s preaching on spending restraint and
contracts reduction was at odds with some of his own actions in running
Treasury. And perhaps the most prominent
instance of an assertion he would like to have back came when he spoke both
in a public forum (as reported in the media) and then on the radio of there
being over 30,000 politically-appointed jobs in the state’s government. In
fact, he appeared to get the concept of “unclassified” state employees confused
with the idea of a “political appointee” – while some in the unclassified
service are appointed at-will without demonstration of merit, the positions of
most do follow merit procedures. For someone with then about a dozen years in
as the elected head of a state department, to make such a simple error really
calls into question his credibility on the larger aspects of the fiscal issue.
All of which smacks of the quality that cost him that 2008 election: an
appearance that he is a political opportunist instead of a genuine, principled fiscal
conservative and perhaps one that stays with a message that has some political
popularity regardless of the quality of its content. Yet if that’s his
strategy, it’s not one without political merit in Louisiana, for it comports to
the state’s populist history and exploits the present division within
conservative ranks between the visceral, populist wing of it and the more
informed, principled cohort of it
Kennedy clearly seems to be courting the support of the populists who
invest more emotionally and more on personalities (valorized or demonized not
just for presumed issue preferences, but for personal reasons as well) in their
political calculus. This requires construction of a narrative, which shares a
tactic with the political left, that cannot be permitted to be altered
substantially despite contrary fact and logic. While Louisiana’s political culture
as a whole continue to evolve away from the populist persuasion (even as,
within the past three decades, a good portion of it has migrated from left to
right), it remains a potent vein in which to tap for politicians, and Kennedy’s
behavior in regards to the state fiscal issue, if not designed to reach that,
otherwise seems ideal to do so.
"as his rhetoric in these commentaries that began only after his last unsuccessful run for the U.S. Senate"
ReplyDeleteKennedy was out spoken on state government before his Senate run. He fought Blanco and Odom on the bond commission.
But don't let facts get in your way of being Jindal's best water boy.
The prior comment is right. Your purported factual assertion is wrong, as usual.
ReplyDeleteWhat's new?
You never let the real facts get in your way.
Bobby was the guy saying that spending one-time money was wrong and had to be avoided - that was his position over four years ago prior to using such money in every one of his five budgets since then.
That's a fact, Jack!!!
Don't forget Jindal's railing against Blanco for trying to bust the spending cap.
ReplyDeleteWhat did the Administration push the legislators to do Jindal's first Regular Session as Governor? Bust the spending cap.