Is Rick Perry the GOPs Future--or Americas New Reality? - Edit 2
Before modification by Joel at 22/08/2011 04:37:45 PM
Texas Observer editor Dave Mann questions the Governors conservativism in an article from, of all places, The New Republic:
Perhaps this less than shocking insight into Perrys "principles" helps explain why his communications director now says Perrys book calling Social Security unconstitutional last year isn't his view of how to "fix" the program now. As I've so often said, Republicans "fix" faltering government programs the way vets "fix" broken legged horses. Romney can still phone in the GOP presidential nomination; compared to HIS crony capitalism Perry is just a very enthusiastic Johnny-come-lately whose national career depends on not alienating the party establishment and its eventual nominee. All of this corporate graft in government at the expense of the publics wallets or even their bodies is an irrefutable reason to re-elect Obama and the starkly contrasting Democratic alternative, right?
Above emphases are mine. Gee, apparently even Democratic members of the much vaunted and (supposedly) deeply liberal Congressional Progressive Caucus start whoring for corporate money before they've even been in Congress a month. More disturbingly, the only criticism of this it that the Congresswoman (I'm sorry, the staffer using her personal gmail account) was so TACTLESS. It's OK to hang out on street corners, but leering at passing policemen is crass. It's almost as if [dramatic pause] REPUBLOCRATS AND DEMICANS ARE THE SAME THING! 2' /> Has The World Turned Upside Down? Next you'll be telling me that TX Governor Rick Perry, who's busily promoting himself as to the right of Michele Bachmann, George W. Bush and Barry Goldwater, was TX Campaign Manager for Al Gores 1988 presidential bid. Not that that will surprise me any more than anything else I already knew.
Whatever Rick Perry’s Record Is, It’s Not Conservative
Dave Mann
August 19, 2011
On Sunday afternoon—just 24 hours after Texas Gov. Rick Perry announced his presidential candidacy—an email arrived in my inbox titled, “14 Reasons Why Rick Perry Would Be a Really, Really Bad President.” The article contained in the email took such a harsh tone toward Perry, I assumed, for a brief moment, that a liberal interest group was quickly jumping on the newest entrant in the Republican presidential field. In turns out, however, that the piece was the product of a right-wing website called The American Dream. The author of the article argued that Perry, the supposed savior of conservatives nationwide, is actually a RINO—a Republican in Name Only.
For Texans, this line of argument is nothing new. Indeed, for anyone who’s closely followed Perry’s tenure in Texas—as I have, covering the governor for The Texas Observer since 2003—it’s no secret that some of the state’s conservatives and libertarians dispute his conservative credentials. It’s true that Perry has trafficked heavily in anti-Washington rhetoric, especially in the run-up to his candidacy to become president. But the closer you look at Perry’s record in Texas, the harder it is to discern any coherent ideology at all. When GOP primary voters in other parts of the country examine his signature legislative accomplishments and policy stances, some won’t like what they find.
The first Perry proposal to rile some Texas right-wing activists was the Trans-Texas Corridor—an ambitious plan to cover the state in a series of toll roads. Perry first pitched the idea during his 2002 campaign for governor. The plan would have used government’s eminent domain authority to seize rural farmland not just for multi-lane tolled highways, but also for rail and utility lines. Perry’s office and the Texas Department of Transportation gained legislative approval for the plan in 2003. The state handed the contract for the road planning and building to a Spanish-based company named Cintra.
The backlash from rural Republicans was intense. It was a text-book example of a policy that classic small-government conservatives would hate: Seizing farmland with eminent domain, then handing public money to a foreign company that would built roads Texans would have pay tolls to drive on. Anti-Trans Texas Corridor buttons soon became one of the most popular items among delegates at Republican State Party Conventions in 2004, 2006 and 2008.
Perry’s plan for a comprehensive network of toll-roads would eventually die slowly over the next four legislative sessions, meeting resistance from conservative Republicans. Toll roads are still being built in Texas, but the corridor plan is remembered as a colossal failure for the governor.
Perry caused conservative revulsion again in 2007 when he proposed that all young girls in Texas receive the HPV vaccine. The drug company Merck had just put the drug on the market, and the governor’s office made a heart-wrenching case for why all Texans should have access to it. His office brought to the Legislature a young woman with terminal cervical cancer, caused by HPV, to meet with the press and argue for mandatory vaccinations.
Some Texas Democrats agreed with Perry’s position. But the governor’s critics also pointed out that Perry’s former chief of staff, Mike Toomey, was serving as a lobbyist for Merck, which stood to make millions from the vaccine requirement. In the end, conservative Republicans in the Legislature bucked at the thought of requiring young girls to receive an STD vaccine, and Perry's effort died in the Legislature.
Then there’s the one major proposal that Perry did, in fact, pass into law—the state’s business tax. This tax increase on business was crafted in 2006 as part of a school-finance reform. The idea was to cut local property taxes and replace the lost revenue with a new business margins tax. This 2006 tax “swap” was the one instance during Perry’s decade as governor when he proposed a wide-ranging plan and successfully pushed it through the Legislature mostly unchanged. It will likely be remembered as his signature legislative accomplishment.
The problem is, it’s been a disaster. Small businesses hate it because they’re forced to pay regardless of whether they’re turning a profit: it seemed to be the very definition of a “job-killing” tax. Some conservatives simply hate it on principle. A few even argued that Perry’s business tax is unconstitutional—amounting to a tax on income, which is forbidden by the Texas Constitution.
But worst of all, the tax doesn’t even generate enough revenue. The tax “swap” has cost the state $5 billion a year for five years running. The Texas budget now faces an ongoing structural deficit because of the underperforming business tax. And with a tax increase on small business and a structural budget deficit to boot, it’s clear that Perry hasn’t taken conservative economists like Milton Friedman as his inspiration.
Another example of his conservative heresy is the Texas Enterprise Fund, which Perry seem to be especially proud of. The purpose of the Fund is to dole out public money to lure companies to Texas. It has created tens of thousands of jobs in the state, but critics have not incorrectly, labeled it “corporate welfare,” a slush fund for well-connected businesses. The Observer investigated the fund in 2010 and found that several companies with political ties to Perry had received state grants. Some Texas Tea Party activists have been especially critical of Perry's Enterprise Fund, labeling it a quintessential example of wasteful government spending.
None of this is to say that Perry has been ineffectual in office. He has used his veto power (or the threat of it) to repeatedly bend the Legislature to his wishes. And he’s utilized his power of appointment to build a web of political patronage that stretches across every entity in state government.
But while he's a charismatic campaigner, a natural performer with keen political instincts, there's no ideological compass that guides his policy decisions once the elections are over. The specifics of his positions are often a matter of expedience. For instance, over the course of this year, as Perry has been considering his run for president, Texans have watched him take hard-line conservative positions on immigration. Prior to 2011, Perry—much like George W. Bush—had been a moderate on immigration, a history that may end up harming him in the GOP presidential primary.
As governor of Texas, Perry’s lack of policy depth hasn’t hindered him much. He simply lets the Legislature do the heavy lifting. When the Legislature isn’t in session, Perry is largely content to float from one public appearance to another, cheerleading the Texas economy. He rarely bothers to diagnose the state’s problems, or offer any novel solutions.
When Perry does involve himself in policy debates, the most consistent thread is that he has sided with big business—that is to say, with industries big enough, or fortuitous enough, to have strong connections with the state government. It's a pattern that repeats itself not only in the HPV and Trans-Texas Corridor episodes—both of which would have been bonanzas for select companies—but in his business-friendly approach to immigration and job-creation programs.
In many ways, Perry is quite conservative. He espouses limited government, low taxes and light regulation. But in his 10 years as governor, he’s often strayed from conservative orthodoxy. If there’s one phrase that best describes Perry’s governing ideology, it isn’t “conservative.” It’s crony capitalism.
Dave Mann is editor of The Texas Observer.
Dave Mann
August 19, 2011
On Sunday afternoon—just 24 hours after Texas Gov. Rick Perry announced his presidential candidacy—an email arrived in my inbox titled, “14 Reasons Why Rick Perry Would Be a Really, Really Bad President.” The article contained in the email took such a harsh tone toward Perry, I assumed, for a brief moment, that a liberal interest group was quickly jumping on the newest entrant in the Republican presidential field. In turns out, however, that the piece was the product of a right-wing website called The American Dream. The author of the article argued that Perry, the supposed savior of conservatives nationwide, is actually a RINO—a Republican in Name Only.
For Texans, this line of argument is nothing new. Indeed, for anyone who’s closely followed Perry’s tenure in Texas—as I have, covering the governor for The Texas Observer since 2003—it’s no secret that some of the state’s conservatives and libertarians dispute his conservative credentials. It’s true that Perry has trafficked heavily in anti-Washington rhetoric, especially in the run-up to his candidacy to become president. But the closer you look at Perry’s record in Texas, the harder it is to discern any coherent ideology at all. When GOP primary voters in other parts of the country examine his signature legislative accomplishments and policy stances, some won’t like what they find.
The first Perry proposal to rile some Texas right-wing activists was the Trans-Texas Corridor—an ambitious plan to cover the state in a series of toll roads. Perry first pitched the idea during his 2002 campaign for governor. The plan would have used government’s eminent domain authority to seize rural farmland not just for multi-lane tolled highways, but also for rail and utility lines. Perry’s office and the Texas Department of Transportation gained legislative approval for the plan in 2003. The state handed the contract for the road planning and building to a Spanish-based company named Cintra.
The backlash from rural Republicans was intense. It was a text-book example of a policy that classic small-government conservatives would hate: Seizing farmland with eminent domain, then handing public money to a foreign company that would built roads Texans would have pay tolls to drive on. Anti-Trans Texas Corridor buttons soon became one of the most popular items among delegates at Republican State Party Conventions in 2004, 2006 and 2008.
Perry’s plan for a comprehensive network of toll-roads would eventually die slowly over the next four legislative sessions, meeting resistance from conservative Republicans. Toll roads are still being built in Texas, but the corridor plan is remembered as a colossal failure for the governor.
Perry caused conservative revulsion again in 2007 when he proposed that all young girls in Texas receive the HPV vaccine. The drug company Merck had just put the drug on the market, and the governor’s office made a heart-wrenching case for why all Texans should have access to it. His office brought to the Legislature a young woman with terminal cervical cancer, caused by HPV, to meet with the press and argue for mandatory vaccinations.
Some Texas Democrats agreed with Perry’s position. But the governor’s critics also pointed out that Perry’s former chief of staff, Mike Toomey, was serving as a lobbyist for Merck, which stood to make millions from the vaccine requirement. In the end, conservative Republicans in the Legislature bucked at the thought of requiring young girls to receive an STD vaccine, and Perry's effort died in the Legislature.
Then there’s the one major proposal that Perry did, in fact, pass into law—the state’s business tax. This tax increase on business was crafted in 2006 as part of a school-finance reform. The idea was to cut local property taxes and replace the lost revenue with a new business margins tax. This 2006 tax “swap” was the one instance during Perry’s decade as governor when he proposed a wide-ranging plan and successfully pushed it through the Legislature mostly unchanged. It will likely be remembered as his signature legislative accomplishment.
The problem is, it’s been a disaster. Small businesses hate it because they’re forced to pay regardless of whether they’re turning a profit: it seemed to be the very definition of a “job-killing” tax. Some conservatives simply hate it on principle. A few even argued that Perry’s business tax is unconstitutional—amounting to a tax on income, which is forbidden by the Texas Constitution.
But worst of all, the tax doesn’t even generate enough revenue. The tax “swap” has cost the state $5 billion a year for five years running. The Texas budget now faces an ongoing structural deficit because of the underperforming business tax. And with a tax increase on small business and a structural budget deficit to boot, it’s clear that Perry hasn’t taken conservative economists like Milton Friedman as his inspiration.
Another example of his conservative heresy is the Texas Enterprise Fund, which Perry seem to be especially proud of. The purpose of the Fund is to dole out public money to lure companies to Texas. It has created tens of thousands of jobs in the state, but critics have not incorrectly, labeled it “corporate welfare,” a slush fund for well-connected businesses. The Observer investigated the fund in 2010 and found that several companies with political ties to Perry had received state grants. Some Texas Tea Party activists have been especially critical of Perry's Enterprise Fund, labeling it a quintessential example of wasteful government spending.
None of this is to say that Perry has been ineffectual in office. He has used his veto power (or the threat of it) to repeatedly bend the Legislature to his wishes. And he’s utilized his power of appointment to build a web of political patronage that stretches across every entity in state government.
But while he's a charismatic campaigner, a natural performer with keen political instincts, there's no ideological compass that guides his policy decisions once the elections are over. The specifics of his positions are often a matter of expedience. For instance, over the course of this year, as Perry has been considering his run for president, Texans have watched him take hard-line conservative positions on immigration. Prior to 2011, Perry—much like George W. Bush—had been a moderate on immigration, a history that may end up harming him in the GOP presidential primary.
As governor of Texas, Perry’s lack of policy depth hasn’t hindered him much. He simply lets the Legislature do the heavy lifting. When the Legislature isn’t in session, Perry is largely content to float from one public appearance to another, cheerleading the Texas economy. He rarely bothers to diagnose the state’s problems, or offer any novel solutions.
When Perry does involve himself in policy debates, the most consistent thread is that he has sided with big business—that is to say, with industries big enough, or fortuitous enough, to have strong connections with the state government. It's a pattern that repeats itself not only in the HPV and Trans-Texas Corridor episodes—both of which would have been bonanzas for select companies—but in his business-friendly approach to immigration and job-creation programs.
In many ways, Perry is quite conservative. He espouses limited government, low taxes and light regulation. But in his 10 years as governor, he’s often strayed from conservative orthodoxy. If there’s one phrase that best describes Perry’s governing ideology, it isn’t “conservative.” It’s crony capitalism.
Dave Mann is editor of The Texas Observer.
Perhaps this less than shocking insight into Perrys "principles" helps explain why his communications director now says Perrys book calling Social Security unconstitutional last year isn't his view of how to "fix" the program now. As I've so often said, Republicans "fix" faltering government programs the way vets "fix" broken legged horses. Romney can still phone in the GOP presidential nomination; compared to HIS crony capitalism Perry is just a very enthusiastic Johnny-come-lately whose national career depends on not alienating the party establishment and its eventual nominee. All of this corporate graft in government at the expense of the publics wallets or even their bodies is an irrefutable reason to re-elect Obama and the starkly contrasting Democratic alternative, right?
Hahn: Why Don’t We Meet Over Money
By Janie Lorber
Roll Call Staff
Aug. 19, 2011
Rep. Janice Hahn, California’s newest Member, is already trolling for K Street dollars.
In an email sent Thursday afternoon, the Democrat, who was sworn in a month ago, told some lobbyists and political action committee directors that she would like to meet with them — particularly if they were bearing checks.
“I am interested in meeting with you and your industry,” she wrote in the message, sent from her personal Gmail address. “It would be wonderful if you would host a fundraiser for me in September. I realize that the timeframe is rather quick, however I am trying to settle my debt as quickly as possible.”
The message added, “I look forward to hearing from you and working with you over the years.”
According to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission, Hahn’s campaign is about $266,000 in debt after spending more than $1.5 million in a particularly nasty special election to replace Democratic Rep. Jane Harman, who resigned earlier this year,
The fundraising appeal came just days after Hahn, who served for a decade as a Los Angeles City Councilwoman, announced she would run for re-election in California’s newly drawn 44th district, little of which overlaps with her current district.
The solicitation was sent by a young “assistant fundraiser” to a “handful of PAC directors who have traditional donorship to Democratic candidates,” according to John Shallman, a campaign consultant for Hahn.
Dave Vance, a spokesman for the Campaign Legal Center, said there was nothing illegal about the communication.
“It seems to be a pretty unpolished solicitation,” he said. “It’s the way Washington works, but generally it’s done much more circuitously. It doesn’t look good.”
Shallman acknowledged that the message could have been written more deftly. The Congresswoman was out of the country and did not review the email before it was sent, he said.
Hahn’s battle for a first full term will be tough, likely pitting her against at least two fellow Democrats, Rep. Laura Richardson and Assemblyman Isadore Hall. The new district, located in South Los Angeles, is one of three drawn with significant African-American voting populations.
Hahn was sworn in July 19 and sits on the House Homeland Security Committee and is a member of the Out of Afghanistan Caucus and the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
By Janie Lorber
Roll Call Staff
Aug. 19, 2011
Rep. Janice Hahn, California’s newest Member, is already trolling for K Street dollars.
In an email sent Thursday afternoon, the Democrat, who was sworn in a month ago, told some lobbyists and political action committee directors that she would like to meet with them — particularly if they were bearing checks.
“I am interested in meeting with you and your industry,” she wrote in the message, sent from her personal Gmail address. “It would be wonderful if you would host a fundraiser for me in September. I realize that the timeframe is rather quick, however I am trying to settle my debt as quickly as possible.”
The message added, “I look forward to hearing from you and working with you over the years.”
According to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission, Hahn’s campaign is about $266,000 in debt after spending more than $1.5 million in a particularly nasty special election to replace Democratic Rep. Jane Harman, who resigned earlier this year,
The fundraising appeal came just days after Hahn, who served for a decade as a Los Angeles City Councilwoman, announced she would run for re-election in California’s newly drawn 44th district, little of which overlaps with her current district.
The solicitation was sent by a young “assistant fundraiser” to a “handful of PAC directors who have traditional donorship to Democratic candidates,” according to John Shallman, a campaign consultant for Hahn.
Dave Vance, a spokesman for the Campaign Legal Center, said there was nothing illegal about the communication.
“It seems to be a pretty unpolished solicitation,” he said. “It’s the way Washington works, but generally it’s done much more circuitously. It doesn’t look good.”
Shallman acknowledged that the message could have been written more deftly. The Congresswoman was out of the country and did not review the email before it was sent, he said.
Hahn’s battle for a first full term will be tough, likely pitting her against at least two fellow Democrats, Rep. Laura Richardson and Assemblyman Isadore Hall. The new district, located in South Los Angeles, is one of three drawn with significant African-American voting populations.
Hahn was sworn in July 19 and sits on the House Homeland Security Committee and is a member of the Out of Afghanistan Caucus and the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Above emphases are mine. Gee, apparently even Democratic members of the much vaunted and (supposedly) deeply liberal Congressional Progressive Caucus start whoring for corporate money before they've even been in Congress a month. More disturbingly, the only criticism of this it that the Congresswoman (I'm sorry, the staffer using her personal gmail account) was so TACTLESS. It's OK to hang out on street corners, but leering at passing policemen is crass. It's almost as if [dramatic pause] REPUBLOCRATS AND DEMICANS ARE THE SAME THING! 2' /> Has The World Turned Upside Down? Next you'll be telling me that TX Governor Rick Perry, who's busily promoting himself as to the right of Michele Bachmann, George W. Bush and Barry Goldwater, was TX Campaign Manager for Al Gores 1988 presidential bid. Not that that will surprise me any more than anything else I already knew.