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4.6.26

Leftist media see Morris as threat, wield hatchet

Republican state Sen. Jay Morris has been getting a little too effective in countering the left’s agenda in Louisiana, drawing a transparent hatchet job from its far left media.

Morris has had a busy session authoring several high-profile bills that end up making it easier to remove wayward elected officials, reducing the size of overstaffed courts, and the just-signed law reapportioning the state’s congressional districts by replacing an unconstitutional map containing two majority-minority districts with a plan having just one. These have drawn the left’s ire, and so it wishes to discourage legislators from undertaking future reform efforts by trying to drag Morris through the mud.

The leftist Floodlight, Verite, and Louisiana Illuminator websites combined forces recently to publish a piece about the dealings of Morris and a long-standing business partner related to land near the Hyperion data center project. It breathlessly proclaims that Morris “used his political position to advance the project … [while] buying and selling the land around it over the past 15 months,” making him appear as a kind of grifter more commonly associated with political leftists concerning government.

3.6.26

Legislative review of alarmist plan welcome

Louisiana’s Climate Initiatives Task Force and its product the Louisiana Climate Action Plan officially died early last year. But a review of its legacy is most appropriate.

In 2020, Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwards, safely reelected, let his inner radical leftist surface in part by establishing the task force, which received orders to come up with a plan that mirrored the climate alarmism agenda. It duly did so by 2022, fatally flawed by the scientifically unsustainable assumptions behind it, that wanted to commit the state to a traumatic ratcheting down of carbon emissions.

Fortunately, for the most part the significant portions would require legislative or Public Service Commission acquiescence, and the climate realism majorities in both make that unlikely to happen. However, actions taken by the executive branch, for example, could adhere to minor aspects of the agenda at the expense of taxpayers.

2.6.26

Sausage judicial bill still worth signing

Exemplifying to the extreme the old aphorism that legislating is like making sausage, reforming the bloated Orleans Parish district court system ended up half-complete with a plethora of compromises made by reformers.

SB 217 by the busy Republican state Sen. Jay Morris intended to right-size courts in Orleans. Even as it has only a little over 8 percent of the state’s population, a study determined the district had too many judges compared to others in the state, and this directly affected taxpayers statewide as they footed the bill for this bloat.

But with the history of Orleans that built in favoritism in its treatment – most of this a product of many decades past when it represented a much higher proportion of the state’s residents (over 20 percent in 1900, for example, and with New Orleans having more than twice as many people as all other municipalities combined) and commercial activity – this would require substantial dismantling, and right off the bat a concession needed making. Originally, the bill intended only to reduce a couple of seats of civil district courts, rather than all.

1.6.26

Article misjudges salutary LA Medicaid changes

Naysayers resist this truth, but the facts point to Medicaid reductions in Louisiana as a consequence of beneficial policy for all concerned.

 A recent media piece, for some reason, decided to publicize that in 2025 Louisiana saw about 200,000 people drop off Medicaid rolls and wanted to figure out why. Unfortunately, the effort largely was ineffective, as it only cursorily investigated the question but principally because it accepted implicitly a canard.

The article accurately notes that this is part of a trend prior to Republican Pres. Donald Trump assuming office last Jan. 20, but neglects to provide crucial context. The Wuhan coronavirus pandemic provided the excuse for Washington Democrats essentially to suspend eligibility checks for those already enrolled, and nationwide rolls exploded in size including in Louisiana. Eventually, the unwinding of that started and that process mostly was completed in 2024, but with the state’s dragged out further by Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwardsstonewalling. As well, the noticeably better economic situation nationally under Trump also contributed to shrinking rolls, encouraging people to switch to other sources of insurance.