As the run-up to the inauguration of
Gov.-elect John Bel Edwards proceeds, increasingly the left and its media
allies will try to propagate the narrative that the best policy outcomes will
come from the Republican-led legislature bending to the will of the new
Democrat governor, ignoring the flaw fatal to that argument.
My Advocate colleague Stephanie
Grace attempts
this in defending the attempt of Edwards to swing the election of House
Speaker to a Democrat, despite the fact that Republicans have about 60 percent
of the seats in the body. This affront to the notion of majority rule and
popular representation she justifies on two bases, that it has happened before
and it would provide for more “productive” government.
I
addressed that first notion recently, pointing out that when the minority
Republicans corralled the job in 2007 they trailed Democrats by just one seat
and no party had an absolute majority, the only time this occurred in modern
House history. A precedent of a party as small as the House Democrats today
nevertheless having one of its own made chamber leader did occur during Republican
former Gov. Mike
Foster’s second term, but Foster himself did not differ tremendously in
ideology with the then-majority Democrats, having been one himself right up to
his first election.