Gov. John Bel Edwards has
held that office for less than a month, and already the first and perhaps most
lethal electoral shark has started circling his weakened position.
Previously having faced
setbacks in terms of House of Representatives leadership and committee
assignments with his inability to place favored allies in positions of
power, Democrat Edwards also suffers from another clipping of his authority:
the assertive posture adopted by new Republican Atty. Gen. Jeff
Landry. It began innocently enough with Edwards proclaiming that he would
ratchet down the practice of recent governors in using outside counsel through
the Governor’s Office and other executive branch agencies to pursue certain
legal matters, leaving Landry more unopposed discretion in dealing with these.
Landry has espoused a novel implementation
of the constitutional
powers of the attorney general. Historically, when other parts of the
executive branch, through their defined statutory powers, engaged in legal
action, the attorney general stayed out of the way. These past heads of the
state Department of Justice also shied away from using their constitutional
authority to initiate or intervene in civil matters outside of largely legal questions
like suing
drug manufacturers for misrepresentation involving state contracts.
But Landry has signaled that he
would take greater advantage of the power “to institute, prosecute, or
intervene in any civil action or proceeding” and “to supersede any attorney
representing the state in any civil or criminal action.” He apparently will
keep going state
actions against Planned Parenthood for alleged contractual violations and
to ward off an injunction against new regulations, not opposed by Edwards.
However, when Landry announced,
after Edwards said his office would cease litigation against the federal
government related to the Common Core State Standards Initiative, that he would
review the matter and decide whether to continue it, Edwards
wrote him a note that stated “in any case, the client, not the attorney,
should ultimately make the decisions on the course of action, and I have decided
this case will not proceed …. my administration can and will defend itself in
court whenever I deem appropriate,” and elaborated that the Governor’s Office would
not pursue that case out of a desire not to “waste any state resources on cases
brought for political purposes” or on “meritless cases meant to advance a
political agenda.”
Yet the problem for Edwards here is
that Landry does have the constitutional authority to assume the case, as he reminded the governor in a reply. Further,
he can do little to stop that because the one area that a governor, with
Legislative cooperation, can use as leverage against a recalcitrant elected
executive is in budgeting, where the Department of Justice has relatively
little exposure. Only about a sixth of its
revenues come from the general fund, the remainder from interagency
payments for services rendered to parts of state government, statutory
dedications that only repeal could eliminate, federal grants, and
self-generated funds.
And that assumes a
Republican-dominated Legislature would go along with that desire. Even Edwards’
line-item veto authority at best would provide a clumsy weapon, for concerning the
budget it either would gut large portions of sections of Justice that had
nothing to do with this kind of litigation or it would end up throwing out the
baby with the bathwater, with Landry in position to win easily a public
relations battle by showing how cuts would stop activities expected by the public
such as assisting in regulation and on criminal trials.
Of course, Republicans well may
want to see Landry succeed in acting independently from Edwards. Electorally,
from the minute he took the oath of office Edwards became an electorally dead
man walking who can resuscitate himself only by achieving centrist policy
successes. If Landry can find and publicize several issues that highlight
ideological differences between himself, where the electorate’s majority agrees
with him on most issues, and Edwards, where only a minority of the electorate
agrees with him on most issues, this obscures any such policy successes Edwards
can engineer. In doing so, Landry positions himself as a strong candidate to
defeat a reelection attempt by Edwards in 2019, or, at the very least, weakens
Edwards for picking off by any Republican.
Past governors never had such a
conflict either because of shared partisanship and ideology with an attorney
general and/or a Legislature that could back them up, so if an attorney general
ever thought to act independently of the governor, they deferred knowing they
could not get away with it without some serious payback. Landry’s open
challenging of Edwards can happen only because of Edwards’ isolation in
government and his initial obstinacy in accepting that he cannot act as
dictatorially as past chief executives, given that position. It’s another sign
of Edwards’ weakness for which he must find a way to compensate if he will make
anything more than a shallow imprint on public policy over the next four years,
much less serve another four after that.
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