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).
5.12.16
Conflict coming between Edwards' approval, agenda
Something’s going to have to give, and likely that
means public approval of Democrat John Bel Edwards will fall
unless he changes his agenda.
In a recent
poll, Edwards checked in with about five-eighths of registered voters
approving of his job performance, versus a third who disapproved. His rating
came in a bit overstated, however, as the sample contained 49 percent Democrats
compared to just 44
percent statewide, and that a significant gap appeared in judging him
favorably between Democrats much more friendly to him and Republicans. Also
worth considering: Democrats tend to turn out to vote in disproportionately
fewer numbers than Republicans, by a small margin.
Still, it’s better than being barely above water
as he was months ago, when then well under half approved. But going forward his
agenda the public soundly rejects, creating a major problem for his elective
career.
In the past year, Edwards stubbornly pitched tax
increases right and left as a solution for spending higher than projected
revenues. Some smaller spending cuts he offered; other he involuntarily
swallowed at the hand of a Republican-led House of Representatives unwilling to
pass higher taxes. Despite that, he still punched
through in the neighborhood of $800 billion in increases and whined he
could not get more – on top of $1.6 billion he voted for as a legislator that he,
with his fellow state policy-makers, crammed down the throats of taxpayers the
previous year.
At the time in the first quarter of 2016, public
opinion seemed wary but unalarmed about any more tax increases, with about
three-eighths saying they paid too much in taxes but almost as many saying they
paid enough. Further, they favored increases in government spending in several
high-profile areas.
Apparently, in the aftermath of the tax increases
biting at the beginning of the year’s second quarter, the mood since has turned
much more hostile to such hikes. In this latest poll, fully three fifths of
respondents said the state spends too much while just a quarter said it needed
more revenues. That clear message tells policy-makers that people don’t want
higher levels of taxation and smaller government.
However, the Edwards Administration shows no signs
that it heeds the demand. It already looks
to go on the record supporting an increase in gasoline taxes and displays
no evidence of seriously wanting to cut spending except when forced to by
fiscal constraints.
So, Edwards must make a choice. Just because the
public approves of a politician doesn’t mean a majority of it will vote for
him, because if convinced someone about as popular represents an improvement,
he’ll lose. For example, the same recent poll pegged Republican Atty. Gen. Jeff Landry at about the same
disapproval level as Edwards (their difference in approval coming because about
10 percent more of the sample cited too little familiarity with Landry to judge
him than it did with Edwards). With these numbers as revealed in the poll, put
Edwards’ demonstrated tax-and-spend agenda and his Democrat affiliation up
against Landry’s well-known (and record in his one term in the U.S. House of
Representatives) desire to right-size government and his GOP label, and Edwards
probably loses.
Only by his agenda transforming to hold the line
on taxes – including allowing a roll back of the temporary increases he
supported – and thereby necessarily containing big government can Edwards hold
his own in 2019. If he fails to follow this course, look for a steady decline
in his popularity and, barring unusual circumstances, certain defeat in his
reelection attempt. It’s all up to him to choose his future fate in office.
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