Last
month, in the general election for this seat triggered by its early surrender
by current Louisiana Department of Veterans’ Affairs Secretary Rodney Alexander,
the majority of voters, mirroring the district’s demographics, chose candidates
that held themselves out as conservatives on all issues. However, the majority
of them split between the leading vote-getter, state Sen. Neil Riser, who despite having served only
six years in the Legislature as his sole elective office was seen as the most
establishmentarian candidate, and the one behind him but ahead of all others Vance McAllister, who many saw as
the most outside of politics with no elective experience at all. Fueling these
perceptions were the vast number of endorsements from other elected officials
and influential organizations that Riser received, while McAllister drew
support from populist, politically inexperienced sources such as area reality
television stars.
As
both had run as conservatives, differing impercetibly on issues, this crude “insider/outsider”
cleavage served as the only real distinction to a large swath of the
electorate. And given that, the numbers from that initial contest, no doubt
supplemented by polling done by both Riser, who has pulled in large funding
from across state and country, and McAllister, who almost exclusively funded
his own campaign to match Riser dollar for dollar, showed that Riser
had the advantage, and that a lot of things would have to go wrong for him
and/or right for McAllister for Riser not to win the runoff – if that dynamic
held.
So
McAllister had to change the dynamic. The nature of his campaigning up to that
point had been to try to present himself labelled as “conservative” yet as
enough of an empty vessel to cater to non-conservatives by promulgating select
issue preferences that violated conservatism. Thus, the idea was to make
him appear as all things to all people – to the typical voter who only
minimally informed himself, who given the numbers would be conservative, to
appear as a conservative but to attentive liberals to give them a way to prefer
him over the consistently conservative Riser.
Riser’s
campaign seemed to figure out this fundamental inconsistency and sought
to guide voters to its implication, an intellectual dishonesty in
McAllister, and to make him appear as wobbly and unprincipled as any career politician
can be, completely turning around on him the “outsider” strategy that
sanctifies nonpoliticians as not being corrupt on adhering to principle. That
this appeared to have an impact on McAllister’s campaign became evident when in
a televised debate last week he went all in on deviation from conservatism and
made a naked grab for the small but potentially significant leftist portion of
the district’s electorate.
On
a question dealing with one of the derivatives of the Patient Protection and (Un?)Affordable
Care Act, that states may expand Medicaid coverage, Riser said he agreed with Gov.
Bobby
Jindal that the state should not engage in that, but McAllister
championed expansion articulated earlier
that day, and yet again, by Pres. Barack Obama.
This, despite the fact it had nothing to do with the job for which the pair
vies and so McAllister’s deliberate disagreement shows willingness to put the
information out there for a political purpose.
The
facts are that, unless one is wedded to the prejudice of big government running
health care, expansion
is demonstrably bad for both taxpayers and clients. The most reliable study
of the matter, by the state’s Department of Health and Hospital, shows that,
even under the most optimistic scenario, by 2023 the state will be paying an additional
$93 million a year extra, by then growing at 15 percent per year, above what
refusing expansion would cost. Worse, as a recent New England Journal of Medicine study noted, people who receive
care through Medicaid actually have worse outcomes than those not covered by
any insurance – such as those bypassed by not expanding Medicaid who choose not
to pay for their own insurance who instead utilize their legally entitled uncompensated
care at health care facilities. It’s a no-brainer to understand on multiple
levels the bad deal that Medicaid expansion is for Louisiana.
Yet
McAllister, who weeks earlier had hinted at this, went whole hog on this, and then
further criticized the state’s plan to privatize operations of almost all of
its public hospitals (including the two in the district), which was another issue
that this office has nothing to do with. This despite the fact privatizing
operations will save
the state on average well over $100 million a year and likely increase the
quality of care (as well as reduce the state’s massive unfunded accrued liability
in pensions). But Riser was for this as a state senator, so this was time for
another desperation heave by McAllister in pandering to the left to oppose it.
So
if you are a conservative casting about for a candidate in this contest, be
aware that if McAllister is not a liberal wolf in conservative sheep’s
clothing, at the very least he is willing to go whichever way the wind blows
and to sacrifice principles, if he has them, in saying anything to get elected.
So such a voter’s choice is to go with a politician you can’t trust or who’s
maybe a liberal, or one that has been a solid conservative.
Good call, Prof. LOL!!!
ReplyDeleteAbout the only ones who thought he could do it probably were his campaign staff. Give them credit, as the analysis I just posted shows, he went out and got the non-white vote and those typically less interested in politics, and did it in a way to expand his base from the general election. It made history; no House candidate from LA with those general election numbers ever came back to win, much less going away.
ReplyDelete