Such a conclusion comes from data gathered by
Louisiana State University’s Public Policy Research Lab. The first
release from its 2018 Louisiana Survey came
last week, focusing on questions of trust in politicians and government and
assessing its performance, as well as perceptions of the population’s political
views and attitudes.
Of note, after last year where those respondents
thinking the state headed in the right direction exceeded marginally those who
thought the opposite, this year’s results followed the reverse trend of recent
years. With half thinking wrong direction, 11 points more than the opposing view,
this overall negativity adhered to the pattern since 2012. The year before had
slightly more saying wrong direction, but this may have been a product of an election
year).
Reviewing the numbers going back to the beginning of the Republican former Gov. Bobby Jindal Administration sheds some light on the current figure. After a couple of years of very negative results undoubtedly reflecting former Gov. Kathleen Blanco’s inept and politicized handling of the aftermath of the 2005 hurricane disasters, his assuming office in 2008 – followed by a number of reforms including on ethics, tax cuts, more efficient government spending, and expanded educational choice – produced a public that, typically widely for years, liked the direction of state government.
But after Jindal’s attempt at tax reform in 2013
fizzled, much of the momentum went out of his governorship, and at that point opinion
turned negative. The bottom really dropped out in special surveys after large
tax increases in Jindal’s final year (also obviously an election year) and
stayed that way after the next round of big hikes in 2016. The atypical 2017
result may have represented more relief at not having to deal with yet higher
taxes still.
So, 2018 returned to form as the specter of higher
taxes reemerged and marked three straight years that Edwards had held the sick,
disabled, and students hostage, threatening to cut such programs (despite
readily-available alternative actions) unless the Republican-led Legislature
gave him permanent tax hikes, preferably based upon middle-class-and-above
income earners. It’s little wonder, in this environment, that dissatisfaction
of government comes from across the political spectrum, as the survey indicated.
Yet now it’s Democrats, particularly blacks, that
seem especially perturbed by the state of affairs. Feelings on direction appear
to vary by education, income, and race. The better educated and the higher
incomes, the more satisfaction appears, along with non-blacks more likely to declare
government headed in the right direction (even as majorities among all races saw
things headed in the wrong direction).
This helps to explain the observed partisan
differences. Republicans are split on the matter, with the deficit of wrong
over right appearing among Democrats and others. Probably if running the raw
data with controls, the partisan differences largely would disappear among
whites and perhaps other non-blacks. In large part, the income and education
variables held constant would demonstrate the same, as blacks
disproportionately comprise the less educated and lower income households. (The
most interesting comparison would match up less educated/lower income whites,
blacks, and others among themselves.)
Thus, Democrats, particularly blacks, must have something
eating at them, and this likely is the overselling, whether intentional, by
Edwards of his agenda. On economic issues and to a lesser extent on the social side,
he has sought a hard left program little of which so far he has fulfilled. Besides
creating an expensive new entitlement for many with expanded Medicaid, on ideological/partisan
issues he has experienced next to no success. If anything, to its chagrin he
increased sales taxes on his electoral base, and may extend that in the coming
months.
By contrast, Republicans hardly approve of the state’s direction but are not nearly as pessimistic,
with perhaps some feeling encouraged by the Legislature’s holding the line on taxes
(so far) but others fearing a state government they think too spendthrift
already ready to spend more and to impose higher permanent tax increases to
feed that. This would explain results by ideological identification, with only
moderates marginally seeing the direction more right than wrong, while equally
healthy majorities of liberals and conservatives see the state headed in the
wrong direction.
Therefore, unless Edwards
(unexpectedly) moves to the center that would refresh disappointment on the
left but would perk up the right’s assessment of the state’s direction, expect a
large dose of pessimism in the public. As long as he tries to drag public
policy in a direction that the state’s center-right majority does not want to
go, causing further conflict that worries it, and not succeeding in that which depresses
the left – or by chance if he did thereby deflating the majority’s ambivalent assessment
– this pattern will continue.
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