FROM CESSPOOL TO HOT TUB IN LOUISIANA POLITICS!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
FROM CESSPOOL TO HOT TUB IN LOUISIANA
POLITICS!
Who cares about any budget crisis in Louisiana? After all, it’s important that the Bayou
State’s new governor and legislature set priorities. And they apparently have. They were not able to balance the state
budget in a recent special session. But many
lawmakers were quite busy raising campaign dollars for future elections and
other political activities.
When these officials were running for office, the state capitol was pictured
as nothing but a cesspool of special interests gaining particular favors and
tax breaks at the public’s expense. But
once in office, the cesspool apparently has been turned into a hot tub where
legislators are wined and dined, and the campaign dollars abundantly flow.
Although in office for two months, 42 legislators have held
fundraisers during the recent special session.
The president of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association, Don Briggs, was quoted
in the Advocate recently saying: “We approach them. They approach us. There is not a legislator over there that
doesn’t have fundraisers.” So it’s
politics, as usual, at the state capitol.
Louisiana’s new governor is not above the fray in raking up the
campaign cash, particularly from his opponents.
Gov. John Bel Edwards was blistered in criticism when he was campaigning
this past fall by oil and gas, chemical industry, LABI and various other
business interests. But once in office,
the new governor made no bones about why he was calling on his adversaries to
cough up campaign funds. “They opposed
me last year, and I’m governor this year,” he was quoted as saying. So to be in the political mix, the governor
seems to be saying that you have to “pay to play.”
More than one half of current legislators were elected without any opposition. And all of them had a significant campaign
war chest built up. It’s no secret that in
the overwhelming majority of elections held in Louisiana, there are three key
elements in getting elected. The first is lots of campaign dollars. The second
is more campaign dollars. And I’ve forgotten the third.
Louisiana regularly ranks as the most expensive state for campaign
spending per capita, in the nation. Out-of-state corporate and special interest
money regularly floods into the campaign coffers of Louisiana candidates. In
his bid for reelection four years ago, former Gov. Bobby Jindal had more
contributions from outside Louisiana then from within. One might wonder why
almost 1000 California contributors were so interested in Louisiana issues.
There is a simple and constitutional way to keep Louisiana
elected officials focused on Louisiana issues. A candidate for public
office should only raise campaign funds in the district from where he or she is
running. If a candidate is running statewide, he or she should raise all
their financial resources within the state. If a candidate is running parish
wide, the limits should be within the home district. Legislators would be
limited to raising campaign dollars from within their respective
districts. Simple. Keep fund raising local. Make the
candidates focus and be responsive solely to the voters in the boundaries that
put them in office.
To be sure, there would be loud protests from lobbyists who hand
out the campaign dollars to gain their “special access.” And incumbents,
who can work the system from day one in office, would object at having to forgo
all the many out-of-district fund raising
opportunities. The voters would be the
beneficiaries. But don’t count on any groundswell of change.
The recent Citizens United Supreme Court decision was touted as
a catalyst for major campaign changes. But as long as out of state money
floods into any state, it’s going to be the same old, same old in both Baton
Rouge and Washington. Remember the 1960s song by The Who called “Won’t be
Fooled Again?” There’s a line that goes: “Meet the new boss, same
as the old boss.” The more there is talk of change at the state capitol,
the more it would seem to stay the same.
********
People used to complain that selling a campaign was like selling
a bar of soap. But when you buy soap, at least you get the soap. In this
campaign, you just get two guys telling you they really value cleanliness. — David
Brooks
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 9:00 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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