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.