Recent remarks by the leader of Louisiana’s legislative Democrats, state Rep. John Bel Edwards, not only confirms he acts as one of the biggest gasbags in state politics, but also in the process tried to sell a bill of goods no informed and thinking person would buy.
Edwards snared an invitation to
speak to the media, no doubt as a tactic to make his campaign for governor anything
else but moribund, and proceeded to unload a slurry of drivel. He claimed the
current budgeting practices of Gov. Bobby
Jindal were designed to forestall a day of reckoning which the next
governor would have to address, mainly because of around $1 billion in funds
that he alleged would not reappear next year. He said he would address this by jettisoning
what he called outdated or ineffective tax breaks and by expanding Medicaid. He
railed against “privatization.” He termed himself a candidate of the middle, saying
that’s where governance needs to be.
All of which demonstrates that
after over six years in office, Edwards doesn’t seem to know much about how
Louisiana’s fiscal system works, covers that ignorance with large doses of
disingenuousness, and thinks he can fool a lot of people a lot of the time. The
“one-time money” claim illustrates all three tendencies. The amount to which he
refers is money used that does not come directly from the general fund or directly
from dedicated funds to dedicated purposes, yet he made it sound like it
dropped from the sky in order to fund continuing operations.
In fact, the truth is few of
those dollars came from genuinely bonus events (although it could be argued
that roughly the fifth of it those came from the ongoing tax amnesty program was kind of bonus, even as many of those would
eventually have been collected, not just so soon). Most came from predictable,
recurring sources that are, in some sense and form, misallocated to low
priority, if not entirely imaginary, needs. Unfortunately, over the decades
legislators have created a system of dedications and other budgetary devices
that shovel money into places where it sits idly for some specified purpose –
and may sit there forever because the purpose is of such low priority not all
the money for it reasonably can be spent – unless legislators approve transferring
some of it for much higher-priority needs.
This system continues because it’s
a way for legislators to evade responsibility for making hard choices. They’d
rather throw their hands up into the air to signify impotence while
simultaneously claiming these are tied by these dedications and they can do
nothing in response but funds sweeps or pretend they don’t exist, when in
reality they could repeal dozens, if not hundreds, of dedications and then
decide how many of these dollars really are needed to fund general state
activities and the optimal way by which to collect them – but at the risk of
catching heat from special interests and having to make more allocative choices
every year (and multiplying dramatically the chances to offend the recipients
of government spending, instead of letting these sleeping dogs lie by passing a
dedication and washing their hands of it all). Edwards is just as much a coward
as they are in failing throughout his career to stump for major fiscal reform
along these lines, but is only like some of them (colloquially known as “fiscal
hawks”) in trying to exploit the very issue they have caused for political gain
without having the guts to seek to apply the correct solution.
Lack of responsibility aside,
actual revenues coming into the state on a recurring basis are hardly lower
than spending. And what draining of funds does happen often is for a very good
reason. Edwards himself provided an excellent example of this with his critique
of diminishing the reserves held by the state’s Office of Group Benefits for
health care policy payouts, while characteristically drawing the opposite of
the real lesson.
He criticized the reduction of
this over the past two years by about half from roughly $500 million as a
result of privatization of the book of business and claims processing, and
predicted state employees and retirees would end up paying more. Of course they
will eventually – and much
more quickly and severely because of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act about which Edwards sings praises – but these rates actually are lower in
part because of the savings from the OGB privatization and decision to lower
the reserve.
Not surprisingly, Edwards neglected
to incorporate two facts into his rant that destroy his thesis. First, even as
premium rates will go up 5 percent in a few days with the start of a new plan
year, they’ve gone down 9 percent in the two previous years after
privatization. It will be at least a year before employees and retirees are
paying even as much as they had been three years ago, with this reduction
having the effect of halving the reserve (because more in payments went out
that were coming in with the reduced premiums). The impending increase will
slow this.
But, second, as previously
noted, the reserve was too high to begin with given actuarial standards. In
other words, in his denunciation of the siphoning of the reserve, Edwards
essentially argued that (1) employee, retiree, and taxpayer money (state
government roughly matches the premium payment of these others, meaning that
they get top-shelf insurance basically at half off) should sit idly,
undoubtedly because of his fondness for increasing the size of government, (2)
that employees and retirees did not deserve the average $1,000 less each paid
over the past two years because of the premium reduction, and (3) taxpayers
should have forked over the $114
million saved by OGB privatization and other efficiency measures that barely
reduces the gravy train of benefits received in these plans. And he asks to be
taken seriously when he claims he can do a better job of budgeting than Jindal?
Especially when considering his
presumed ideas about what he sees as the problems in the budget. So what are
the reputedly outdated or ineffective breaks to be gotten rid of? Some might be
easy to guess, like the motion picture tax credit. But what about one
of the least effective, the earned income tax credit, or one as useless
as the solar tax credit – subsidizing causes Edwards has in the past
supported? Nor could he find enough, unless he goes against his political ideology,
to make up for the difference. In reality, there's not enough, and so he'll fall back on, but will do everything possible not to admit to, higher taxes and a reluctance to cut government spending or to act to remove the snouts of special interests he supports from the trough.
Perhaps the most odious and
ignorant of his remarks came concerning an alleged positive contributor to his
budget, Medicaid expansion. Ignorant, because he cannot put aside the
inconvenient truth that Medicaid
expansion will not supplement the budget, but will drain it severely and will
produce worse health outcomes for recipients. Odious, because of his equating “Christian
faith” with big government for a policy that would encourage theft from taxpayers
to incentivize harm to the presumed beneficiaries (to avoid such folly, maybe
he ought to pay closer attention to Exodus
20:15 and Mark
12:17 and to ensure he puts his faith in God before that in government).
Yet perhaps he intuits that the
expansion of Medicaid as dictated by current federal law might not be such a
good thing, because he also volunteered that the state could craft a state-specific
Medicaid expansion program, perhaps involving the creation a private insurance
model that includes co-pays and work requirements for participants, stating “You
can fashion this program in a very conservative way that protects Louisiana
values.” Except the dunderhead forgot
that’s already in the works, and he
voted for it.
And which brings us to the
biggest howler he issued, that he’s candidate in the “middle,” attempting to
reinforce that with a trick straight out of the Southern liberal Democrat
manual by asserting pro-life credentials. Endlessly repeating this and/or other
socially conservative preferences is a standard ploy among his kind to fool
people into ignoring doctrinaire liberal populist preferences on all other
issues. The record actually shows that he is a stark, raving liberal populist,
as indicated by his lifetime 29 score on the Louisiana
Legislature Log voting scorecard (where 0 means all votes were for the
liberal/populist issue preference). If Edwards sees himself as a political
centrist, he must think that Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong were limousine
liberals.
So all the media really got
treated to in Edwards’ unleavened sermon was an unserious mixture of ignorant
and/or disingenuous piffle, designed to deflect, distract, and delude observers
into thinking he’s not peddling tax-and-spend bigger government that empowers
politicians like him and special interest fellow travelers instead of people. Not
that they seemed stirred enough to call him on it (although they caught
him out on his inattentiveness concerning a bill that had the effect to
create a pension benefit for two State Police members); hopefully as long as he
stays in the contest they’ll find the curiosity to challenge his unsupportable
narrative.
1 comment:
You know, you're probably right, he should have shown the intellect shown by your boy Vitter in the same forum when said he "hadn't done his homework on the issues." I was looking and didn't find the column where you insulted and attacked Vitter for that performance. Did you forget to leave that one up, because we know a "fair and balanced" observer of Louisiana government wouldn't be playing politics?
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