As noted previously, an effort for the Legislature to call itself into
special session to pursue an agenda
injurious to efficient policy implementation would turn the body into
little more than 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. The first of four steps, getting a chamber, the House, to sign a
petition to put the matter to a vote, has been achieved.
The author of the effort, state Rep. Dee Richard,
enthusiastically waxes that should it come to pass the session could be used to
reverse recent cost-cutting reformations made to state government. Of course,
nothing of the sort will happen, and not just because the math does not add up
to produce enough votes to override a veto of any of the reforms by their executor
Gov. Bobby Jindal, but also because by the time the session concludes, a large share
of the implementation will have become an accomplished fate.