In reaction to some choice line-item vetoes, no doubt detractors of
Gov. Bobby
Jindal will voice the usual canards about how the governor’s position in
general is too powerful and specifically especially how Jindal is mean and
vindictive. But if they wish to place accuracy over emotion and ideology, they’ll
come to understand that the real culprits in setting up the exercise of
gubernatorial political power don’t include but rather majorities in each
chamber of the Legislature.
HB
1 featured ten vetoed line items, although almost all of them dealing with
amendments that restricted the scope of executive branch discretion, showed
favoritism to certain health care providers, or with funding legislation already
vetoed. But it was items dealing with spending by the Departments of Culture, Recreation,
and Tourism and Treasury that caught attention.
Out of the former, $2 million for marketing in the Office of Tourism got
hacked away. For months, the official serving as the secretary of the
department Lt. Gov. Jay
Dardenne, has moaned
about how the budget directed him to use part of his dedicated funding stream,
from a .03 percent sales tax levy (classified as going to the Tourism Promotion
District), to fund big sporting and cultural events – a reasonable use as these
events attract tourists. From the latter, whose head Treasurer John
Kennedy carps consistently, with
ideas from the attention-grabbing while highly impractical to the competent,
about how cuts can be made in government but Jindal and legislators won’t do it,
got whacked around $511,000 said to be a “retirement adjustment” (meaning
making up for unfunded accrued liabilities) excised because, the veto message said,
the amount was overestimated from the three-year average and was inflated because
it was funding four vacant positions.