A couple
of interest groups graded Louisiana’s legislators harshly for their votes last
session. But a more comprehensive overview shows things weren’t as “bad” as
these groups make them out to be.
This month, stalwart grader the
Louisiana Association of Business and Industry put out its annual
scorecard, while Americans for Prosperity launched its initial version. Both hew to conservative
issue preferences, with the former representing business interests and the
latter ideological conservatives.
LABI provides a listing for every
legislator and grades them on a long list of votes, some procedural, some
final, with some counting for as little as less than one percent of the
cumulative score and the most about ten percent (weighings varied between
chambers). By contrast to this completeness, AFP does not attempt an aggregate
listing nor a grade; it simply shows how legislators who represent a postal
address voted on eight measures, most of these also appearing on LABI’s.
So for AFP’s site, this would
require parsing through dozens of addresses to see all, but with knowledge of
the picked final votes on bills, it’s clear that the majority of lawmakers had
more misses than hits according to the group. In the case of LABI, it computes
clear statistics for each that assigns a letter grade, leading to “failing”
grades (below 60) for about half of the Legislature. This measure also has the
advantage of comparisons the previous years, which reveal that the 51 aggregate
score was the lowest since 2004 by far, and a full 15 points lower than in
2014.
But both paint an unnecessarily
pessimistic (if you agree with the groups’ goals) picture of legislators this
year, because both concentrate heavily, if not exclusively in the case of AFP,
on votes that deal with budgets and tax measures. About two-thirds of the LABI
Senate score and over four-fifths of the House score was based on these. And
while such votes are important and were disappointing in the main to
conservatives who wanted to see smaller government instead of tax increases,
they don’t tell the whole story.
Every year, as part of my other
blog that reviews and reports upon legislation when the Legislature is in the
session, the Louisiana Legislature Log,
I compile a voting
scorecard. It attempts to be a comprehensive overview of votes, along a
dimension the endpoints of which are conservatism/reformism and liberalism/populism,
picking out bills of some importance that present a choice in regards to these
concepts and where there was at least some disagreement among legislators.
These also are weighed by importance, although none singly this year was less
than five percent nor more than 15 percent. More importantly, the influence of
changes in tax rates or impositions is significantly smaller, at just 40
percent of the aggregated score for senators and 50 percent for
representatives. Nor are they limited, as in the case of LABI, just to issues
with a business connection, although many have at least an indirect one. As for
LABI higher scores represent more conservative preferences, with the LLL higher
scores represent more conservative/reform preferences.
This
year, the average LLL aggregate score was almost 57, so not far off the
LABI average aggregation. However, this does not represent much of a departure
from historical norms, being just 2.5 points below the 2014 score. In fact, it
was about four points higher than the average since 2004 inclusive, where understandably
until Republicans gained a majority in both chambers in 2010, the lifetime average
had been a bit below 50 whereas for LABI this was the first time its scale has
gone below 60 in that period.
Keep in mind that the indices don’t
measure exactly the same thing, which sometimes leads to a wildly differing
scores for the same legislator. For example, state Rep. Sam Jones was
lauded by LABI as the only high-scoring Democrat for last session, yet he
mustered only a 45 according to the LLL, half his LABI score. By contrast, Democrat
state Rep. Pat
Smith, a historically low LLL scorer who actually finished with the lowest
score in 2014, cast votes in a way that the LLL index ranked her on the
conservative/reform side of the leger at 65 while LABI scored her at about half
of that. But more often than not, the two indices agree on the relative
placement of a legislator; for example, Republican state Sen. Dale Erdey was the third-ranked LABI
scorers among senators at 80, while he scored perfectly on the LLL index, and
perfect LABI scorer Republican state Rep. Ray Garafalo managed
sixth highest at 75 in the House on the LLL index.
However, the LLL index does try to
be more comprehensive in its approach and (obviously as I would think) gives a
more well-rounded view of legislators’ voting habits. Most years, that gets
them as a whole into more trouble among conservatives than LABI’s scores would
indicate, but the extreme binging on tax increases this year punished them disproportionately
with LABI. So, maybe their overall performance this year wasn’t great, and
criticism levied by LABI and others that they gave short shrift to spending
reductions at the expense of enthusiasm for tax increases certainly is valid,
but they may not have failed as much as observers interested in a full spectrum
of conservative issues might have gathered from the publicity by LABI and AFP.
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