The all-but-announced gubernatorial
candidate in the span of last week found two opportunities to prod voters with
the thought that he could run state government, and potentially well. In
essence, one
fell into his lap when comments by reality television star/accidental
political kingmaker Phil Robertson sparked controversy, leading the network
that broadcast his show to say he was “suspended,” meaning somehow he wouldn’t
appear in episodes for some indeterminate period. This prompted the Robertson
clan to announce they might well look for a new network home for the show if it
continued.
And Dardenne was there, if
needed, the help grease the skids. With the only constitutional responsibility
to wait until the governor was not able to serve in that capacity temporarily
or permanently, the office of lieutenant governor was assigned the duty of
overseeing the Department of Culture, Recreation, and Tourism. Facing budgetary
stress, Dardenne went a step further and subsumed he secretary’s job into his.
Normally only in a position to lodge
complaints against budget cuts, this incident gave him a chance to
accentuate the positive beyond the usual low-priority issues of the department.
As the series has become the most watched ever on cable television, it has
turned into having a non-trivial impact on Louisiana’s tourism industry and
certainly does showcase the state, so Dardenne cannily offered his services as
intermediary to help facilitate the show’s continued airing the way the family
intends if that what it wants.
The political cost to do this was
exactly zero and helped to link slightly Dardenne with the clan, which isn’t
exactly a political negative to many state voters. It even it turns what
can be a negative to many into a positive – Dardenne was the author
of the law creating the motion picture tax credit that has resulted in the
state forgoing
more than half a billion dollars more than revenues received as a result since
its inception, incentives of which apply to shows like the Robertsons’ Duck Dynasty – by illuminating one of,
if perhaps the only, example of where visual production tax credits actually
may pay for themselves. Finding quickly a popular use of his auhtority signals
he has the capacity to use his powers productively.
While less attention-getting,
another bit of state news also brought Dardenne’s managerial skills favorable
publicity. The Legislative Auditor’s office came
out with an unfavorable report on the activities of the Louisiana Seafood Promotion and
Marketing Board, detailing shoddy accounting practices, lax control, and
potential ethics violations. The Board is under Dardenne’s jurisdiction.
But that came about only in the
last six months. The questionable practices occurred prior to Dardenne’s
department taking over supervising the board, when it acted semi-autonomously
from the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. Dardenne cleaned
house and asked for the audit when he assumed responsibility, exemplifying
a commitment to competence in governing, which seems further enhanced by his
implementation already of practices suggested by the auditor.
In the classic sense, while a number
of voters discount, if not ignore entirely, ideological considerations when
casting their ballot choices, elections in democracies are supposed to turn on candidate
issue preferences, and the 2015 contest looks to provide variety in this
regard, from sets that reflect faith
in big government to empowerment
of individuals first. On this presumed continuum of contenders’ ideologies,
Dardenne is considered to fall between the more extreme points, with the
putative favorite Sen. David
Vitter the most consistent conservative of the bunch.
Yet suspicion genuine
conservatives might have of Dardenne’s moderating tendencies could receive some
mitigation by an emphasis on competent governance. For the one thing Vitter
never has done in a political career almost as long as Dardenne’s is serve in
an executive capacity either in the public or private sector. It has been over four
decades since a successful gubernatorial candidate (Prisoner #03128-095) did
not have a managerial background with executive responsibility in a large
organization, since which state government has become increasingly larger and more
complex.
It’s a selling point that Dardenne, whose job also provides opportunities to show he can make government work more efficiently, can use in a campaign, and these recent actions can bolster that record in an aspect of the campaign that as yet has received little attention.
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