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.