In essence, he has announced the task to meeting is a quarter-way there
with the assent
of 38 House members to the petition. A similar performance by senators by
the end of Friday will set up the vote to hold it. Regardless of whether that
happens, at the close of Friday if he’s smart Richard will hail the effort as a
sign of vigor in and independence of the Legislature, and leave it at that.
Of course, in real life it’s nothing of the sort. Instead, his limited
success to date is part of the dying bray of liberalism and populism as
significant political forces in the state. The rationale for the session, as previously
noted, is to pass laws that would make the Legislature the equivalent of
the Transportation Security Administration for
Louisiana on budget implementation, with the chambers frisking executive
decisions to find any evidence of policies that could right-size state
government and/or impede their abilities to feed statewide or
constituency-based special interests at taxpayer expense that assist in their
reelections, and then to try to eliminate any offensive implementation
decisions that threaten their reelections and/or trouble their faiths in big
government.
But that plane started leaving the gate as a result of the 2007 state
elections and had taken off after the 2011 set, giving the state a governor and
legislative majorities willing to question, if not overthrow, the stale notion
that state government should do things better done by the private sector and
that a primary role of it was to provide jobs directly. This is not to say that
some of these legislators don’t have feet of clay when the consequences of this
transformation appear in their districts, but that, in the final analysis, the
transformation will happen regardless of whether they are on board for every
issue.
The math here simply is on the side of the reformers. If securing the
dual majorities calling the session, a million dollars of the people’s money
goes out the door for nothing more than a gripe session paid for by taxpayers.
Nothing of consequence will happen because, if by chance a majority could be secured
on any item introduced in the session that in any meaningful way alters the
present policy implementation regime, it will be vetoed by Gov. Bobby
Jindal. And in each body there are at least a third of its members who are
committed enough to reform and/or who understand the parochial must give way to
the good of the entire state who will uphold all potential vetoes.
So legislators need to think carefully about how to proceed here, for a
session like this instead of enhancing the Legislature as a policy-maker will
discredit it. The true believers of the left will have duped useful idiots from
the Republican majority into taking the Legislature’s power as an institution
and delivering it as a holocaust for the liberal/populist faith, as the state’s
people will feel betrayed by legislators that so much money was wasted on an
exercise in minority-party propaganda and group therapy session. The
Legislature’s left will care little and gladly trade legislative power for feel-good
ranting, knowing it has no chance to govern, but more serious legislators on
the right will suffer the consequence of further diminishment of that power.
Jeff -- you still need to explain just who are the "leftists". EVERYONE IS TO THE LEFT OF YOU AND BOBBY JINDAL.
ReplyDeleteJeff Sadow is Bobby's boy. Of course Dee should consider what he has a victory, but leave it at that? Jeff, we know who you are. Just tell us that this message is the work of Jindal's press secretary.
ReplyDelete