Human nature dictates that we often don’t recognize qualitative change at its very beginning, but only when observing the obviousness of it as it near completion. Depending on outcome, the Public Service Commission District 5 contest, with north Louisiana as its entire battlefield, could serve as the latter.
That features as its incumbent
the last of Louisiana’s significant populists, Democrat Foster Campbell. He started his
political career during the second gubernatorial administration of Prisoner #03128-095,
who currently is running for Congress under his given name Edwin Edwards, with election to
the state Senate. While entirely different in personal comportment, one thing
they do share is Manichean political rhetoric, blaming the state’s problems on
the alleged ability of certain bogeymen to get too much power and wealth at
the expense of the larger public, necessitating redistributive policy to right
the reputed wrong.
In 2002, he successfully made the
natural move to the PSC, where he could be one of five regulators of an
industry he regularly singled out as a villain, oil insofar as pipeline
regulation. It also gave him an opportunity to rail against other regulated industries
such as utilities, often carping that they were allowed too much profit at the
expense of ratepayers and taxpayers (even as roughly
half of his political contributions since 2009 have come from regulated
industries and interested parties). At the same time, he has championed
certain special interests in decisions that actually cost ratepayers and
taxpayers more, such as in favoring solar energy and energy efficiency concerns.
Most controversially recently, he
led a movement to cut
phone rates and surcharges for sheriffs’ prisoners, arguing that these were
absurdly high. Sheriffs complained the payments were necessary to pay for monitoring
calls, and that if these could not be charged, then taxpayers would have to
make up the difference.
In short, Campbell has acted as
the prototypical liberal populist straight out of Louisiana’s political past.
They live in delusion that some advantaged interest can be gutted and the
wealth spread around, never understanding that the common man they assert they
work for suffers for it through higher taxes, shoddier service, and reduced
economic growth, except for the few who have political connections and receive
government largesse as a result. These dinosaurs trust that government can make
better decisions for people than they can themselves through voluntary market exchanges.
The opponent he drew this fall
for reelection is a young lawyer with no political experience, Republican J. Keith Gates, whose general philosophy
is almost the polar opposite and has worked in the area of conservative
political advocacy. And at first glance, he seems entirely outmatched.
Campbell’s latest
campaign finance report showed him with over a half-million dollars
available, over 40 times what Gates had according
to his own, and had raised this year alone 10 times what Gates did. Labor
unions alone this year have given Campbell much more than roughly half of what
Gates has received in total, with that half from three affiliates of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry
and one of the aggrieved telephone contractors for sheriffs. But in terms of
actual electioneering expenses – consultant fees, materials, postage, polling, media,
etc. – Campbell hasn’t outspent Gates dramatically.
This may change in the final
couple of weeks – or not, if Campbell doesn’t see Gates as a serious threat.
But it’s also due to Campbell’s long-standing preference for and ability at
retail campaigning, where in small-group situations he comes off as salt-of-the-earth and connects well with constituents,
as opposed to his fire-breathing, bomb-throwing image as a politician. Almost
four decades in elective office in northwest Louisiana, being a cousin of 26th
District Attorney Schuyler Marvin (a Republican, also running for reelection
this fall), and now a dozen years in the district doesn’t hurt, either.
In fact, the most serious weapon
at this point that Gates has against Campbell is he’s a Republican in a state
whose majority dislikes Democrats. And that’s where this campaign could signal
the end of the sea change in Louisiana’s political culture that has seen
populism’s overdue decline.
Gates clearly is outgunned in
campaign resources and can fall back on no real specific examples of the impact
of his policies. But if the Democrat label has become toxic enough, then he
still can win. If not, and in north Louisiana the dying embers of liberal populism burn
brighter than anywhere else in the state, the transition has yet to complete.
But if he were to create the upset under such unfavorable conditions, that would tell us that, finally, liberal populism
as a meaningful political force has met its richly deserved demise.
No comments:
Post a Comment