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).
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7.12.16
Trump picks portend good things for Louisiana
The news just keeps getting better for Louisianans
regarding the shape of the incoming Pres.-elect Donald Trump Administration, with the
selection of Dr. Ben Carson as Sec.-designate of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
Before that pick, dating prior to the Republican’s
election last month, Louisiana experienced a steady stream of good news regarding
the assumed direction of national public policy under a Trump Administration.
Tapping significant anthropogenic climate change realist Myron Ebell to direct
incoming environmental policy and personnel meant a step back away from the punitive,
ideologically-driven Environment Protection Agency regulation of greenhouse
gases, challenged in court by Louisiana, and in approving of pipelines that
would bring substantial energy resources to the state for processing and
export. It also means putting a lid on alarmism
by the federal government on the hydraulic fracturing process of extracting
energy, which plagued
efforts in some parts of the state.
Naming Republican Rep. Tom Price to head the Department of
Health and Human Services will help Louisiana pull
back from the after-effects of ruinous
Medicaid expansion. If that survives at all, it likely would come in a form
of vouchers backed by block grants that allow states to shape their coverage
parameters and responsibility, perhaps along the lines of the plan initially
offered by incoming Vice Pres. and current Republican Indiana Gov. Mike Pence rejected by the federal
government.
Perhaps the biggest home
run came with the appointment of education reform advocate Betsy DeVos as
Department of Education secretary. That should signal a further pullback
from federal government direction over states’ power to educate, concomitant with
the Every Student Succeeds Act currently under implementation by Louisiana and
other states (and driven
by ardent reformer incoming House Education and the Workforce chairwoman
Rep. Virginia Foxx). Better, reforms
popularized by DeVos have become mainstays of the state’s education system,
despite opposition from Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards. The
seriousness of the setback suffered by him and his allies planning retrogression
of Louisiana education became clear when one
opponent wrote misleadingly in a sympathetic media outlet about DeVos’ past
activities.
Now
comes Carson, who brings a warranted skepticism to using housing policy as
a form of social engineering. Most unnerving to those who favor that in New
Orleans, it portends change in rules that encouraged the city to set up a plan
to export poverty and values associated with it across the city. This set
off a litany of complaints about picking Carson, who, unlike most of his
detractors, actually grew up in poverty and understands that the values
associated with it overwhelmingly drive housing patterns and opportunities, not
extraneous factors such as racial attitudes.
His selection might qualify as the icing on the
cake, but when Trump announces a nominee for Homeland Security, chances are it
will throw yet another spanner into the works of New Orleans public policy.
Trump made clear in his campaign that sanctuary cities such as New Orleans and
Orleans Parish will lose federal funding, and his prior nomination of
Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions
as Attorney General reinforces
that point.
While these local governments allege they would
have to circumvent a court order to reverse these policies, in fact the details
to these largely come from U.S. Department of Justice guidance that will change
with the ascension of Sessions. Combine this with a DHS secretary willing to
enforce the law and executive
orders by Trump ending preferential programs for illegal aliens, and New
Orleans will have no legal justification for its bias towards noncitizen
lawbreakers.
The fruition of these events in two months will
put Louisiana in a much better space than it was a month ago. If these live up
to promises, exciting times for the state lie ahead.
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