Search This Blog

16.4.26

New LA Medicaid weight-loss drug benefit unwise

Louisiana legislators may not have learned their lesson as they try to put taxpayers on the hook for a new Medicaid benefit that may end up causing any or all of wasted money, much higher expenses, and potentially avoidable harm to recipients.

Last year, a line item tucked into the state’s general appropriation bill would have made funding available to give semaglutide, a receptor agonist for human glucagon-like peptide-1 which is the basis for several drugs such as Wegovy, Ozempic, Monjauro, and Rybelus, to state employees that suffered from obesity. Republican Gov. Jeff Landry vetoed that.

And wisely so, for the monthly injections would have imposed a tremendous cost that must continue for effectiveness to kick in and stay in. Lifestyle changes, of which Landry has signaled at least indirect support for through his healthy eating initiatives, would just as effective if not even more so for weight loss and shedding of problems related to obesity. It would cost the state little to engage in campaigns urging personal responsibility to eat right and less, and to exercise more.

15.4.26

Transparency should dampen Monroe govt conflict

More transparency will mean fewer fireworks over an obscure adjunct to Monroe’s government that sits on over $20 million.

About three decades ago the Interstate 20 Economic Development District was created as a vehicle to provide for infrastructure needs along the eastern reaches of I-20 in Monroe. It has partial tax increment financing for sales, meaning it receives 40 percent, mostly from Pecanland Mall, of state sales tax collected, which then is used to pay off debt issued and its interest to provide funding for approved projects.

The I-20 EDD, like the Tower-Armand EDD, is somewhat unlike Monroe’s other economic development districts. While the other four are written into state statute, these were grandfathered into law from cooperative endeavor agreements with the state. The others also have a wider range of TIF source options for revenues. This also means their governance is established through bylaws over which the City Council has authority.

14.4.26

Vote for first four amendments, junk last one

Mostly keepers, the May 16 slate of Louisiana constitutional amendments does include one clunker. Let’s see what voters will be asked to vet.

#1 – would allow the Legislature to bypass the State Civil Service Commission in classifying jobs as civil service with protection. Presently, except as delineated in the Constitution, the Commission determines which jobs are unclassified, or those without at-will firing protection (although most, such as college faculty members, have protections equivalent to those in the classified service). Because the Commission is composed of insulated appointees and a classified employee-elected representative, historically its members become inured to backing state employees to the detriment of efficient administration. Elected legislators are the appropriate power center to determine policy of whether a job is necessary and policy-oriented enough to grant greater flexibility to executive branch officials. YES.

#2 – would create a new school district in the new city of St. George in East Baton Rouge Parish. This is nothing new, emulating what three other cities in the parish have done, of which two now outperform substantially the Parish School System. Further, the way the finances work, on a per-student basis the EBRPSS actually will be better off with the carveout. There’s no reason not to grant autonomy (it will require a majority both among state and parish voters). YES.

13.4.26

Polls edge closer to predicting Fleming-Letlow

It’s true, a month out from party primary elections, it’s uncertain which of three serious Republican candidates will advance to an inevitable runoff. And there’s a polling-based reason for that for which a little historical data and common sense can address partially to give a better idea who’s likely to be part of that duo.

In the last several days, the campaign for Treas. John Fleming released one, and two others have come from other organizations, although there are no details as to who paid for these. Rep. Julia Letlow was named the leader in those, while the Fleming campaign had him on top with incumbent Sen. Bill Cassidy running second. The other polls had him running third.

This continues a pattern where campaigns release polls favorable to their candidate, which may be why Cassidy’s camp hasn’t released any recently. None of the most recent trio had him at better than 26 percent, which is abysmal for a sitting senator who by himself already has spent probably at least $10 million on his reelection (as of the end of the year; the most recent numbers through the first quarter of 2026 will be available later this week) and has had surrogate political action committees as well churning out cash on his behalf.

9.4.26

LA oil & gas battered more by policy than price

Elections and the policy that comes thereafter matter, as demonstrated by the antics of Democrats in Baton Rouge and Washington that until recently suffocated Louisiana’s fossil fuel industry and thereby contributed to a problem that may cost state approaching $1 billion.

Recently, a report from New Orleans’ The Data Center highlighted how the state’s oil and gas industry has done not much more than tread water going back to the swoon in oil prices in 2014. It’s skeptical that the industry will grow disproportionately compared to other sectors in the future and argues to move towards greater diversification of the state’s economy, based upon the industry’s recent underperformance.

But it was all by design, partly out of the animus of Democrats when in power had against fossil fuels, and partly because of their desire to grow government and redistribute wealth at the expense of economic growth. When prices began their protracted fall, Democrat Barack Obama was president, whose administration backed by toadies in Congress acted hostilely towards the fossil fuel industry, as opposed to their favored renewable energy.

8.4.26

Over-the-top ads show panic over Fleming strength

As reality finally begins to intrude upon the political and chattering classes, the inevitability of realizing Republican state Treas. John Fleming is a serious candidate to win the senatorial seat up for grabs this fall finally has prompted what in retrospect may turn out to be a too-little-too-late series of go-for-broke attacks on his candidacy, validating his growing strength.

To date, the campaigns of his GOP nomination opponents incumbent Sen. Bill Cassidy and Rep. Julia Letlow, but more instructively political action committees pledged to support either, almost exclusively had trained their fire on each other. This is done in good cop/bad cop fashion, where the campaigns extoll the virtues of their candidates and the PACs lambaste the opponents. Candidates and their allies follow this strategy because the PACs keep the candidate they prefer from looking demeaning through attacking that tries to detach voters from the opponent while the campaign presents a pristine candidate and positive reasons to vote for the candidate.

However, they now have put Fleming in the crosshairs, although in a spectacularly clumsy and manufactured way with a couple of negative television advertisements recently aired. One claimed Fleming supported carbon capture and sequestration, despite Fleming being the candidate most assertively and visibly arguing against the use of tax dollars to subsidize the activity, by its saying he voted for budget bills that allow the subsidization. It attempts guilt by association by trying to tie Fleming to leftists who also oppose CCS (but for reasons with which Fleming disagrees), a connection that becomes even more ludicrous when considering that meant, according to voting on last year’s budget reconciliation bill, just about every Republican in the House of Representatives and Senate also were in league with leftist bogeymen – including both Cassidy and Letlow.

7.4.26

Error like Cassidy's may sink Letlow campaign

What has brought Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy close to extinction in his quest for reelection now threatens the chances of GOP Rep. Julia Letlow for promotion to that office.

Last week, news escaped concerning Letlow’s endorsement of diversity, equity, and inclusion practices during her time as a University of Louisiana Monroe administrator prior to her election to Congress. Recordings of her interview process to helm the university in 2020 as well as internal documents revealed her expressing support for the divisive measures, which posit that American societal differences among races comes from irredeemable racism practiced, whether consciously, by majority whites that may be compensated for only through reverse discrimination.

Actually, it was only the publicity of her past statements that was anything new. Media had reported on the documents and the video has been publicly online for years, but the presence of these recently picked up amplification by additional media reporting.

5.4.26

Easter Sunday, 2026

This column publishes five days weekly after noon U.S. Central Time (maybe even after sundown on busy days, or maybe before noon if things work out, or even sometimes on the weekend if there's big news) 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 Thanksgiving Day, Independence Day, Christmas, or New Year's Day when it is the day on which the holiday is observed by the U.S. government). In my opinion, in addition to these are also Easter Sunday, Memorial Day and Veterans' Day.


With Sunday, Apr. 5 being Easter, I invite you to explore this link.

2.4.26

Make patriotic election integrity measure law

Not only does it make good sense but also is vital and patriotic to put into law procedures that obviate the cheapening of democracy.

HB 691 by Republican state Rep. Beau Beaullieu would strengthen voting integrity by requiring Louisiana, if there is no charge to the state or it appropriates money for the purpose, to use the federal government’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements database 180 days prior to a regularly scheduled federal general election (every two years). This allows vetting of registered voters for citizenship, and already is being performed as a matter of policy since the federal government dropped access charges.

Even though noncitizens can’t vote legally, GOP Sec. of State Nancy Landry has found that layer of security breached. She reports over 400 such registrations and over 100 actual votes cast by such individuals during this decade, citing the need for this bill.

1.4.26

Democrats flooding GOP primary not happening

If there’s some strategy afoot to have Democrats raid the May 16 Republican primary to have a preferred candidate win that nomination since their field is so crippling weak, rank-and-file voters of that party aren’t cooperating.

Speculation has risen about the impact of party registration, or raiding, with the reinstalment of closed primaries for congressional contests in Louisiana. With the new rules such as they are, there’s not much incentive for unaffiliated voters to pick a major party label as they can choose which party primary (carrying through with the choice if a runoff emerges) in which to participate.

But with incumbent Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy under duress for nomination, some observers have wondered whether he would make explicit appeals to non-Republicans to vote for him. He apparently already has done that in one media appearance.