In
his inaugural address, Gov. John Bel Edwards preached
about how Louisiana needed unity, how its diversity need not descend into
division, and that he would give the “unvarnished truth” about issues and
solutions to pressing public policy problems – and in it proceeded to contradict
all of that.
Edwards sprung no surprises in
terms of policy preferences; indeed, the familiar bromides he presented played
an integral part in the contradictions. His repeating of the statistic often
used to mislead concerning pay between men and women, that when looking only at
total pay to total workforce, the typical woman makes 66 percent of the amount
of money that the typical man does, as something needed some kind of “correction”
ignores
the mountain of statistics that demonstrate with all intervening factors
equal, no significant pay gap exists. In doing so, he promotes division over
unity concerning an alleged “problem” that exists only in the minds of
ideologues besides dodging the truth of the matter.
He argued as a chief concern raising
the minimum wage needs to become a “living” wage, even though fewer
than 1 in 100 mature workers earn it, only 1 in 400 serve as a household’s
primary breadwinner, that for many of those jobs the minimum wage has risen at
a rate five or six times as fast as justified by the gains in worker
productivity over the past quarter-century, and that the most widely-used welfare
programs pay more than the minimum wage in 35 states – Louisiana included
among these. Nothing like trying to unify by starting off stoking some class
warfare, is there?
He pointed that large taxpayer
subsidies to higher education in Louisiana declined – even as the majority of
that amount got made up by tuition and fee increases, which he said “priced
many students out of their dreams,” even though the state’s ranking on average tuition
paid and per capita income shows
institutions underprice tuition relative to income, especially when considering
cost-of-living and other factors. Nor did he mention that Louisiana
ranks 13th in per capita
spending among the states on higher education (2013 data).
While calling for doing better, begrudgingly
he admitted progress in elementary and secondary education – engineered through
policies that he opposed while a legislator such as increased school choice and
greater accountability of schools and teachers. And he would want to take a
step in undoing that improvement by forcing
out the leader who oversaw it.
On and on it went, all of this varnished
truth the way Edwards wants to see the world – thus falling prey to his own
admonishment that “We must be grounded in reality and see the facts as they
are, not as we want them to be” – when the “unvarnished truth” he promised
informs differently and realistically. And, of course, he also could not resist
throwing in his oft-repeated
lie that expanding Medicaid would divert Louisiana federal taxpayer dollars
back to the state, when it actually increases the burden on state taxpayers.
He devoted the least specificity to
the problem he admitted as the state’s biggest, the budget. But his remarks on
these other topics suggested his eventual strategy would lead to tactics
primarily based upon tax increases rather than the undoing of Louisiana’s
bloated spending.
Regular readers know that this
space usually grades for policy content these first-of-the-year gubernatorial speeches,
whether in this form or the usual State of the State address to the
Legislature. It didn’t take much to figure this one out; Edwards only can go up
from here after flunking his first of these.
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