SAME OLD, SAME OLD IN LOUISIANA GOVERNOR’S RACE!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
SAME OLD, SAME OLD IN GOVERNOR’S RACE!
Fifty years ago this month, rock band The Who released their megahit rock opera called “Won’t Get Fooled
Again.” The song ended with the lyrics:
“Meet the new boss, Same as the old boss.”
From the early debates in the approaching Louisiana governor’s race, voters
are hearing few fresh ideas as how to get the Bayou State out of its fiscal and
quality of life disarray that has continued for years.
Those monitoring the previous debates, including members of the
press, rarely ask specific, tough questions.
All the candidates running are cookie cutter in their scripted
responses. Pro, guns, pro life, let’s
have a study on fiscal issues, everything is on the table, we will review, will
work with the legislature. We’ve heard
these same habitual retorts for decades. Isn’t it time to get specific?
How about a gubernatorial candidate who will step up and embrace an unambiguous
Contract with Louisiana? An explicit and
detailed set of guarantees, put in writing, that offers votes an agenda for
Louisiana renewal? Not a list of worn
out platitudes that pits one interest group against the other, but a management
document that addresses head on why the state is laggard in so many policies and
basic services. And back off the right
vs. left gibberish. It’s time to talk about the future vs. the past.
Forget about Bobby Jindal. He’s a has-been who
ran state government on a day-to-day basis, with no concern about future
consequences. Sure, he is leaving the
state in financial disarray. But it time
for a gubernatorial wannabe to spell out benchmarks to be met on a yearly
basis. So what are these targets?
First, call a constitutional convention to
specifically rewrite sections dealing with how to raise and spend state
dollars. In the 1973 constitutional
convention, future Governor Buddy Roemer and I co-chaired and wrote the revenue
and fiscal section. We were both adamant
that there be no dedicated funds. We
agreed that benchmarks for state spending would change, and the legislature
needed the flexibility to set financial priorities. But little by little, constitutional
amendments were passed that dramatically reduced what funds were available for
the legislature to appropriate. A new
constitution should let the governor and the legislature do their job, and then
hold them accountable. But don’t tie
their hands as we have under existing limitations.
Next, pledge to undertake a complete review of
state spending. The current system of monitoring
how state dollars are spent falls to the legislative auditor and the inspector
general, and the results are mixed. Too
much waste fall through the cracks. The massive spending to buy jobs through
corporate welfare rarely works and has not been properly monitored. Let treasurer
John Kennedy head up this effort. He
will easily be re-elected, he is capable, and bored with the work he is doing
now. So turn him loose to cut out
unnecessary spending of tax dollars.
Then require much greater accountability in
higher educational spending. Colleges
continue to demand more dollars, but what are taxpayers getting in return? Why are a majority classes being taught by
grad students and non-tenured professors?
Why are there so many non-teaching employees making six figure
salaries? Why isn’t there even one
Louisiana school that ranks anywhere near the top tier of colleges in
America? Why does it take a majority of
Louisiana students six years or more to graduate? Taxpayers deserve answers.
Is the Common Core debate all that critical to
the success of our kids? We’re talking about a few tests for goodness sakes. Louisiana has one of the top educational
superintendents who is recognized nationwide in John White. We should trust him to make the call on testing.
Turn him loose and let him do his job.
Healthcare?
Take the federal money and run.
We have the least healthy population in the nation. It’s our tax dollars that would be coming
back from Washington. If we don’t take
the Medicaid money, then our tax dollars go to some other state, and not to
us. How could any rationial official
pass on OUR money?
Hey, I’m just getting started here. The list is goes
on and on, and fodder for another column.
Louisiana is in a rut, and continues to make the same mistakes over and
over again. In five months, voters
hopefully will demand more, much more from those who want to lead. A Contract with Louisiana would be a good
beginning. So, as The Who says, we won’t be fooled again.
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s
syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the
nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and
see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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