This
column publishes usually every Sunday through Thursday after noon
(sometimes even before; maybe even after sundown on busy days) U.S.
Central Time except whenever a significant national holiday falls on
the Monday through Friday associated with the otherwise-usual
publication on the previous day (unless it is Independence Day or
Christmas or New Year's when it is the day on which the holiday is
observed by the U.S. government). In my opinion, there are six of
these: New Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Veterans' Day,
Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas. My column for The Advocate will run on Easter Sunday.
With Friday, Dec. 25 being Christmas Day, I invite you to explore this link.
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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25.12.15
24.12.15
Syndrome reaction to Jindal challenge of culture
With the departure of Gov. Bobby
Jindal from Louisiana’s political scene, at least for the immediate future,
more enlightened observers will miss perhaps the most humorous aspect surrounding
his electoral career – behavior stemming from the affliction that some catch
called Jindal Derangement Syndrome, the pathology of which merits scrutiny.
This syndrome manifests as a hyper-emotive,
sociopathic reaction to all things Jindal. Typical behavior includes screeds
devoid of reason that ramble enough to connect Jindal somehow to the imagined
perfidy. So consumed by hatred of Jindal, these victims abandon any attempt to
use fact and logic to evaluate policy preferences pursued by the outgoing
governor.
For example, as incoming Gov. John Bel
Edwards agitates for resumption of Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program
benefits to the able-bodied without spouses and/or dependents between ages
18-49 who do not work, attend training programs, or volunteer to charitable
organizations at least 20 hours a week in the past three months, invective
flies against how Jindal wisely decided to join 20 other states in
returning to following the law of the land since the late 20th
century by terminating benefits for these recipients. Or, more generally, how a
few of the chattering classes define Jindal’s optimal decisions to right-size
government that help people keep more of what they earn while those policy same
choices make others being subsidized and/or who desired subsidies force others to
do their fair share to accrue these privileges as some kind of crimes
against humanity.
23.12.15
Edwards' inner liberal keeps muddying his narrative
Incoming Gov. John Bel Edwards
throughout his campaign tried to distance himself from his image as a wild-eyed
liberal. Yet leopards don’t change their spots, as a recent
comment of his validated.
On perhaps no issue did Democrat
Edwards differentiate himself from his GOP rivals than on tort reform. Long an
ally of trial lawyers, as one example of his fealty towards them Edwards
opposed efforts to remove
the ability of state regional bodies to bring suit on matters over which
the state or parishes had ultimate policy-making authority, voting against
such a measure.
That law
specifically applied to the South Louisiana Flood
Protection Authority-East’s attempt to extract money from nearly 100
companies that had explored and extracted oil in its jurisdiction over the
decades. It alleged them primarily liable for environmental damage in the
billions of dollars despite that science does not corroborate the impact to
that extent and with few exceptions had followed the law with the state’s
blessing in their activities throughout.
22.12.15
Other shoe may drop on LA unconstitutional taxation
Before Louisiana policy-makers
breathe a sigh of relief over the state’s current fiscal year budget, they need
to realize the real trouble could lie ahead, either financially or as a threat
to representative democracy in the state.
Last week, state District Court
Judge Michael Caldwell ruled
against the Louisiana Chemical Association in its suit against the state
for the outcome of HCR 8 of 2015. That resolution suspended a penny of the four
cent sales tax exemption on business utilities essentially for the fiscal year,
which will raise an estimated over $100 million and allowed the budget passed
to balance.
Caldwell noted, as has
this space, that the Constitution allows for suspension of tax breaks from
the time passed until 60 days after the end of the next year’s regular legislative
session by a simple majority, the same required to put a tax exception in place.
The LCA had claimed something like this did not need a two-thirds majority in
each chamber through a convoluted argument that the supermajority provision
applied only if the Legislature had suspended the entire statute that set up
the tax, not a “portion” of it.
21.12.15
LA GOP hopes to move past majority growing pains
That so
many Louisiana Republicans have come out the woodwork to run for the
state’s open U.S. Senate seat next year illustrates the maturation and but
possible continued immaturity of the party that gave away its control of the
governorship this year.
Loser of that election runoff Sen. David Vitter decided to
call it quits in his current spot after that debacle Republicans inflicted upon
themselves. Throughout most of that cycle observers considered a GOP candidate
a lock to win, and Vitter the favorite to do so.
Republicans have put themselves in
the strong position they hold in the state now – near supermajority status in
the Legislature; control of the Supreme Court, Board of Elementary and
Secondary Education, and Public Service Commission; holders of every state
statewide office except soon governor; of the seven U.S. House seats serve in
six of them; and have both senators – at the state level less for what they
have done than the self-destruction arranged by state Democrats with their
insistence on following national Democrats ever further leftward ideologically.
This hari-kari encouraged
factionalism among Republicans since Democrats made themselves too weak to
offer the necessary incentive for the GOP to emphasize the winning conservative
ideology that earned them the state’s majority and instead lazily allowed
Republicans to base their candidacies and policies on the state’s common past
political cultural themes of populism and personalism, making personalities
rather than ideology the flashpoints of conflict and policy-making.
20.12.15
17.12.15
Gridlock produces better LA govt than leftist agenda
As the run-up to the inauguration of
Gov.-elect John Bel Edwards proceeds, increasingly the left and its media
allies will try to propagate the narrative that the best policy outcomes will
come from the Republican-led legislature bending to the will of the new
Democrat governor, ignoring the flaw fatal to that argument.
My Advocate colleague Stephanie
Grace attempts
this in defending the attempt of Edwards to swing the election of House
Speaker to a Democrat, despite the fact that Republicans have about 60 percent
of the seats in the body. This affront to the notion of majority rule and
popular representation she justifies on two bases, that it has happened before
and it would provide for more “productive” government.
I
addressed that first notion recently, pointing out that when the minority
Republicans corralled the job in 2007 they trailed Democrats by just one seat
and no party had an absolute majority, the only time this occurred in modern
House history. A precedent of a party as small as the House Democrats today
nevertheless having one of its own made chamber leader did occur during Republican
former Gov. Mike
Foster’s second term, but Foster himself did not differ tremendously in
ideology with the then-majority Democrats, having been one himself right up to
his first election.
16.12.15
Top job to speak volumes about Edwards, Democrats
Gov.-elect John Bel Edwards and the
rest of Louisiana’s Democrats face a decision the answer to which can influence
whether his shock victory this fall signals any real life in the party as a
relevant statewide political agent.
Despite a hard left agenda masked
by moderate platitudes here and there, Edwards took
advantage of fluky conditions to become the first state statewide-elected
official to win as a Democrat since 2007. This glimmer of hope for a battered
party will stay a one-off event unless Democrats act to capitalize by forsaking
a hyper-liberal agenda in a center-right state and governing, as Edwards
alleges he will, in the center.
And thus comes a big test for
Edwards to practice what he preached. Recently candidate qualification occurred
for each major party’s state central committee (and parish executive committee)
seats. For Democrats, registered Democrats during the presidential preference
primary election in March may select a male and female candidate in each state
House district, although many will not have that chance as the majority of these
spots were uncontested.
15.12.15
Decision again looms for Kennedy's political future
At this time last year, Louisiana Treasurer John Kennedy contemplated whether he should leverage an assumedly successful reelection into a run for the Senate in 2016 or to take a stab at running for governor this year. Now at this time this year, the Republican contemplates whether he should leverage a successful reelection into a run for the Senate next year or to take a stab at running for governor in 2019.
Facing a crowded field of
Republicans, then Kennedy had no guarantee that he could outpace it, especially
with Sen. David Vitter leading
it. By contrast, no likely Senate competitors had enough positive statewide
exposure as did he, or nearly as much money at his disposal. In the end, Kennedy
deferred by endorsing Vitter, the favorite who if won then could appoint
his own successor to fill out the term. Kennedy very well might have scored
that bonus as among major Republicans only he and Vitter had built political
careers trying to fuse populism and conservatism.
Then the voters pulled a fast one
and sent Vitter down to defeat at the hands of Democrat state Rep. John Bel
Edwards, which caused Vitter to keep his office in play by announcing he would
not run for reelection. As Kennedy stood a decent chance of becoming the Senate
placeholder, a new job that would have brought electoral benefits, this
actually slightly degraded his chances for next fall. But as a survey
showed, commissioned by the political action committee formed to support
him, he still retains the advantage over names anticipated to run that could
win.
14.12.15
Moving N.O. monuments lacks foresight, tolerance
At a public meeting to gather input
on whether New Orleans should tear down four historic monuments, the intemperance
and intolerance most often exhibited by supporters of that notion
illustrates exactly the imperative of, for the most part, their preservation as
is.
An idea harbored by Democrat New
Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu that
he made public almost six months ago advocates removal of statues of three
historical figures – Robert E. Lee at the top of a column within Lee Circle,
P.G.T. Beauregard at the main entrance to City Park, Jefferson Davis at the
intersection of Canal Street and the eponymous Parkway – and the Battle of
Liberty Place monument, which doesn’t actually reside at the location where the
Reconstruction-era fracas occurred, from city grounds, with installation of them
perhaps in museums. All of these fixtures having existed a minimum of a
century, many
don’t want them removed (including
a healthy minority of blacks) even as some special interests have argued
that somehow these offend because they appear to valorize figures and events
that promote racism.
The meeting turned raucous with
bombastic displays from representatives of both sides of the argument, but with
the excitability heavily weighed towards the monument opponents, demonstrating
again that in robust democracies that the right to take offense at some assumed
slight exists only because full political rights and protection against
discrimination already have been achieved by the group claiming aggrieved
status. No one has the right not to feel offended in our system of government,
but as the objects in question reside on public property, informed democratic
vetting by policy-makers as to whether the city should allow these to stand
their grounds should prevail.
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