Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
28.11.16
Back to the future appointment reminds of regression
Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards made the old new with a recent
appointment, continuing to demonstrate the retrogression his administration
brings to Louisiana.
In agencies part of the Division of Administration,
leaders serve at the pleasure of the governor, so with Edwards’ assuming the
job at the beginning of the year, one by one heads selected by Republican
former Gov. Bobby
Jindal, unless told not to by the incoming regime, stepped aside. For his
pick to helm the Office of Group Benefits, which oversees employment benefits
of state employees save for retirement matters, he chose former OGB Chief
Executive Officer Tommy Teague.
Previously appointed by Democrat former Gov. Kathleen
Blanco, Jindal assented to him continuing in the job until he began to buck
the Jindal Administration on streamlining
the agency and reining in excess balances held back from ratepayers.
Officials wanted to privatize most functions as had almost every state and to
institute a more realistic reserve level; at around half a billion dollars,
this was at least twice as high as industry norms, a trend Teague had tried to
feed by asking
for rate increases annually that DOA usually pared down considerably.
As a result, DOA replaced Teague, who then tried
his best to halt the process through aiding a campaign of misinformation and
baseless accusations made by legislative opponents of Jindal – with Edwards as
one of the prime complainers. In the end, the transformation occurred and the
state ended up saving over $100 million with ratepayers enjoying a 9 percent
reduction in rates that would ameliorate
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”)-inspired
unnecessary increases since.
Having resisted right-sizing government and
letting state employees keep more of what they earned, what did Teague do for
an encore? He slid on over to the Obamacare-established Louisiana Health Cooperative
as one of its top executives, helping to preside over its predictable
crash-and-burn given the flawed ideology behind its health care model that
ensured its failure. This ended up costing federal taxpayers almost $66
million.
Not long after the collapse, Edwards attained the
Governor’s Mansion, and so who better to try to reinvigorate big government at
OGB than Teague? Of course, the agency has lost much of its power since his
leaving so he has much less ability to expand this little corner of state
government. Regardless, this signals the mentality of Edwards willing to grow
government and Teague’s
aggressiveness in using dubious tactics to protect a legacy of oversized
government in Louisiana makes him a good choice for Edwards.
The appointment reminds of the back-to-the-future
ethos of the Edwards Administration that runs counter to a majority of the
electorate’s desire as indicated by the solid Republican majorities in the
Legislature that will spend the next three years checking excesses that Edwards
has tried and will try to foist upon the state in his quest to bring back the
bad old days. Unfortunately, in a state struggling to recover from that legacy,
this only will retard progress.
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