Democrats received a small amount
of cheer from their state Sen. John
Milkovich having taken the long-time GOP seat in District 38. Previous runs
for office had established him as a social conservative and pronouncements
about reining in profligate spending in state government along with a Caddo
parish base (his runoff GOP opponent coming from Desoto Parish) gave him enough
support for the win. In District 36, Republican state Sen. Ryan Gatti won his contest by relentless
criticism of his Republican runoff opponent’s voting record on taxes, alleging
he was the “true conservative” in the contest.
However, delving deeper into Gatti’s
campaign rhetoric and associations revealed him as somewhat of a Trojan Horse.
He criticized state education reforms built upon accountability and school
choice, a major conservative policy victory of the past few years. Further, he
aided the victorious campaign of his Democrat former classmate and now Gov. John Bel Edwards,
leading to fears that he could become a reliable vote for the agenda of one of
the most liberal members of the House of Representatives over the previous
eight years.
Whether he had carefully
constructed a façade of conservatism that led him to serve as an officer of the
local GOP he started to answer when last week the Senate dealt with HB 62 by
state Rep. Katrina
Jackson. The bill came from the House increasing the sales tax one cent,
with only one minor exemption, to five cents for 18 months. But a Senate
committee stretched out the life of the hike to five years, although it could
decline before then if other revenues increased beyond the current base level.
No genuine conservative could
approve of such a measure. While understandable to increase it because the
state faces a deficit of over $900 million for this fiscal year ending in fewer
than four months and a sales tax only could capture a large sum of money in
this time span, keeping it any longer than constitutionally required for a
short-term emergency – 26 months in this case – only serves
Edwards’ plan of growing government. The fig leaf of stepping down the
penny increase in quarter increments does nothing to shrink government –
Louisiana has the 16th
highest per capita spending of the states and District of Columbia – because
it sustains the unnecessary higher level of expenditures and serves as a
receptacle for trading out with something like income tax increases.
And with a vote for
the measure in the full Senate, Gatti demonstrated the emptiness of his
campaign slogan, joining several other Republican-in-name-only senators in
helping that version of the bill pass, which ended up in unanimous rejection by
the House that has it currently subject of a conference committee. It also
confirmed his comfort in serving as Edwards’ bootlicker for the next four
years, a role a majority of his constituents undoubtedly would not support.
Only nine of the 25 Republicans in
the Senate adhered to conservative principles in opposing the bill in that
form, joined by a sole Democrat – Milkovich, who seems much more willing than
Gatti to put his money where his mouth is. It’s also good politics, for his
district as a whole on tax-and-spend issues has similar sentiments to Gatti’s,
and voting consistently like this will assure Milkovich of reelection regardless
of his party label.
Should these voting patterns
continue, it won’t be long before the citizens of District 36 will wish they
could trade senators with District 38.
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