At yesterday’s meeting of the Revenue Estimating
Conference, told that in addition to an already hypothesized $313 million
deficit that as
much as $464 million could develop on top of that, the panel deferred 2-2
to make an official adjustment to the forecast. Edwards’ right-hand man
Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne and
Edwards’ ally Republican Sen. Pres. John
Alario voted to make the recognition, but GOP House Speaker Taylor Barras
and economist Jim Richardson deferred.
Barras said he wanted to take another month to see
whether revenues, which continue to underperform predictions, would
snap back. Richardson said he felt on the fence between officially starting
the deficit reconciliation process and hoping for more revenue but Barras’ position
he found reasonable enough to tip the balance in favor of no declaration. In
any event, even one vote against would block making revised projections, as
only unanimity can change a forecast.
Dardenne
termed this action irresponsible, managing to squeeze in both truth and
fiction by remarking “We don't like cuts, but we can't act like they don't have
to made.” He spoke truthfully in the first part of that sentence: the last
thing the Edwards Administration wishes to do is to shrink government, and it
more easily can prevent that had a deficit forecast occurred.
If making a deficit declaration of this size, a clock would have started
ticking. The Edwards Administration would have 30 days in which to begin
cutting spending and redirecting other dedicated revenues from all but a
handful of funds to cover areas where spending exceeded predicted incoming
revenues. If in that span the gap remained unclosed, then Edwards would have to
call a special session of the Legislature, a good three months prior to the
regular session. Like the regular session, such a special session permits
measures to raise revenues.
That’s the real objective of Edwards: not finding
himself forced to make cuts but to increase the tax bite on citizens to keep
inflated government. Despite giving lip service to the idea that he doesn’t
want one, he could use a looming session as a crutch not to find things to cut
and then pressure the Legislature to increase taxes in the session. But without
the session, as time goes by if revenues continue out of whack, the impetus to
make cuts unilaterally becomes stronger even if a special session eventually
emerges.
That ability exposes the fictive part of Dardenne’s
sentence. Just because a formal process does not begin to deal with a deficit
does not mean one must act as if cuts don’t have to be made. Indeed, the
Edwards’ Administration gave an object lesson in how to prepare for deficits
without triggering the constitutional procedure when, at
the beginning of the budget year, it cautioned state agencies to hold back
five percent of their appropriations for this fiscal year in case last year’s
closed with or this year’s developed a deficit. Edwards also unilaterally could
issue an executive order putting spending constraints into place for the
agencies under his direct control, which, outside of elementary and secondary education,
comprise the vast majority of state spending.
Thus, understand that Dardenne’s objection reflects
purely partisan concerns. The Edwards Administration fears having to make cuts
and, worse, taking blame for these. This is why at least one
media ally took to alleging that cutting through the official process could
not completely wipe out the deficit, even if assisted through supplementation
of the one-third of the Budget Stabilization Fund permitted constitutionally,
$119 million.
That’s nonsense; during the 30-day period and in
the session, the governor or Legislature may engage in the dedicated revenues
redirections of up to five percent of appropriations for almost all funds and
one percent for the Minimum Foundation Program not devoted to instruction
(about 30
percent according to this year’s formula). An MFP diversion alone could
find over $100 million (keep in mind this would represent a two percent cut in
existing funds since half of the year has gone by) and from other funds hundreds
of millions more can come, without even touching the general fund. It only
takes political will to do so.
The Edwards Administration could use the next
month to identify areas to cut, and then if in January the REC recognizes lower
revenues, it could implement these swiftly if not already having done so in
effect by embargoing use of these monies. This requires only a commitment of
reducing the size of government with priority over taking more of what people
earn. Any criticisms about unwillingness to enable calling a special session
sooner show not genuine fidelity to responsible governance but instead to a
political agenda to grow government.
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