Altogether, 49 of the 144 legislators signed the effort that would have
inserted much more decisively the Legislature into the policy implementation
process. That’s greater than a third of seated members, but it did not allow
for advancing to a vote whether to have the session since a third was needed in
both chambers and the House was five to the good yet the Senate four to the
bad. The session would have allowed rewriting of laws to allow for greater
legislative insertion into the policy implementation process and could have
undone the budgetary adjustments, many of which downsized or closed government facilities
in a handful of legislators’ districts.
Observers who for political reasons desire fomenting opposition to Gov.
Bobby
Jindal simply for the sake of conflict and inefficiency in state government,
or the gullible who thought anything meaningful could happen by the session’s
emergence, even if just the symbolism of a chimerical “legislative independence”
appeared as a result, rooted for success in the matter. Of the legislators
involved, the large majority of signatories being Democrats, representing about
half of all the legislators of that party, fit the former motive. But the GOP
signatories had a very different motive – raising their political profiles
while coming across as “concerned” about how the cuts impacted their
constituencies.
As previously
noted, this small group wanted to have its cake and eat it, too. Any
session would have furthered the Democrat agenda of obstructing state
government right-sizing and provision of a platform to score political
propaganda points. Also as previously
noted, nothing could have come out of it anyway because Jindal’s veto power
would have swept away any of the bad ideas it issued. It would have harmed the
state through a waste of funds on the session, and injured the Legislature and
especially its presumably conservative members who assisted in bringing it
about by the corresponding public backlash against the waste. Worst of all, its
specific ideas were impractical and any general policy that came out of it, according
to what would be permitted by the call, would have been unwise. In short,
anybody who calls themselves a conservative Republican who supported the idea
went against both wisdom and principle to the detriment of his political career
and the production of good public policy.
However, if the illusion of “caring” could be created by asking for a
vote while avoiding the consequences above by not having the session, those
gambling Republicans could have the best of both worlds. And for a handful, it
paid off. Do not be surprised if they coordinated their choice with other House
and Senate members, calculating at least one chamber would come up short (for
the hard left in both houses, this was a no-brainer: as it cannot govern with
its policies, without any responsibility for consequences a vote to increase bomb-throwing
opportunities would maximize its ability to stop the erosion of the populist
swollen state government it prefers).
But while handing these Republicans your stake and the dice, take the
opportunity to educate them on the proper scope and role of a Legislature.
Remind them that in a representative democracy, a legislature’s main job is to formulate
policy, contrasted with the executive branch’s main task of implementing policy.
Inform them that, as the session call requested, the more that legislators are
invited to intrude into the implementation process, the more likely the result
tends to satisfying parochial interests at the expense of statewide interests. Instruct
them that the Legislature already has plenty of policy-making tools –
appropriations language, the ability to override full and line-item
gubernatorial vetoes, and the power of impeachment and removal of executive
officers – to affect executive implementation behavior that encourages a
statewide perspective.
1 comment:
So a bunch of backwards Louisiana Republican legislators have challenged the governor Sadow worships. How fitting that Jeff as shill feels they need a lecture on democracy. You see, in Jeff's world, whatever politician Jeff worships should never be questioned or challenged, and if they do then it's only because they are jerks undeserving of whatever democratic rights Jindal lets them have. The nerve of some people, they just don't appreciate his highness.
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