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Government
Dysfunction in Annapolis
2015-04-17
[WASHINGTONPOST] MARYLAND GOV. Larry Hogan, who never held elective office before voters chose him last fall, was true to his promise to govern from the center in the first legislative session of his term.
Hogan ran as a conservative. We voted for him over a Martin O'Malley clone.
As a Republican governor faced with Democratic majorities in both houses of the legislature, he presented modest initiatives: measured tax breaks for first-responders, military veterans and small businesses; a repeal of the so-called “rain tax” on stormwater runoff, his main campaign talking point; small budget cuts to public schools and state worker pay; a sensible bill to encourage creation of more charter schools.
The Dem majorities come from Baltimore city, Prince Georges County (mostly DC suburbs) and Montgomery county. The minorities represent mostly the Eastern Shore and western Maryland, which are where we keep our rural.
Despite tactical blunders, Mr. Hogan did not try to force an ideologically ambitious right-wing agenda on Democrats; if he had, we’d have understood their reluctance to meet him halfway. Instead, he proceeded cautiously — and was still met with hostility and snubs from the Democrats in control.
That's the same situation the previous Publican governor, Bob Ehrlich, faced.
To hear the Democratic lawmakers tell it, you’d think they had spent the session trying to rescue schools and public employees from the predations of an alien invader. In fact, in their budget impasse with the governor, they were mainly intent on protecting their party’s core constituents today and shifting the burden of paying state pensions to Maryland taxpayers in the future.
The party's core constituencies include blacks, LGBTs, unionized govt employees, and--theoretically--Hispanics. Everybody else is racist, there to supply tax funds.
Despite Mr. Hogan’s pragmatic restraint, Democrats rejected most of his proposals; they also ignored his attempt to sustain catch-up contributions to the pension fund. They did repeal the “rain tax” but with the proviso that localities would have to devise other means to contain stormwater runoff.
If Marrtin O'Malley actually runs for president the Pubs should be waving signs reading "Rain Tax" at each and every appearance.
On public charter schools, the legislature took a bad law and made it worse. Democrats ignored reforms sought by the governor that would have given such schools needed flexibility. Instead they weakened the chartering authority of the state board of education and created new ways for local boards to meddle in the operations of charter schools. Mr. Hogan should veto the bill.
The teachers' union writes the education legislation for our Dem machine...
As the session wound down, the governor at first seemed to declare victory, then wondered publicly what had become of his agenda. He warned he wouldn’t spend the tens of millions of additional dollars approved by lawmakers for schools and state worker raises, then suggested that he probably would. He said nothing for two weeks about the Democrats’ raid on pension fund contributions, then declared it a “line in the sand” he would not allow.
He's still in the "nice fellow" stage. I hope he grows fangs pretty soon.
If Mr. Hogan was inconsistent, Democrats were unyielding and heedless of November’s election results.
The machines are still turning them out, so what's to worry?
By slashing pension contributions, which were also halved by lawmakers last year, they simply postponed the burden of filling the pension fund and saddled future generations of taxpayers with a bill amounting to an additional $2.5 billion.
It's only money. The taxpayers will cough up. There'll be more equivalents to the rain tax--maybe an air tax.
For all his rookie mistakes, Mr. Hogan was the one in Annapolis who seemed to grasp the exigencies of divided government. The Democrats, to all appearances, are still learning.
They're not learning anything. With a Dem governor it was full speed ahead. I lost count of the number of new or increased taxes or fees. With a Pub governor the tactic is simply to make sure he has no accomplishments, no successes, and only one term. Politix is all.
Posted by:Fred

#3  I wonder if the moderate, bipartisan, pragmatic, "electable" Republicans could take a lesson from all this?

(Ponders)

Nah.
Posted by: charger   2015-04-17 17:38  

#2  Test
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-04-17 16:50  

#1  The Democrats are politically interbred in Maryland.They believe this is a game they play exclusively in Maryland. Same thing is repeated all over the country as can be seen where they have been in power for years. Ehrich left office with a surplus and O'Malley left things in in the red after eight years of being in office. Seems much longer. O'Malley was a Tax and Spend headcase from day one. O cutting Defense spending has hurt Maryland big time.
Posted by: Dale   2015-04-17 07:18  

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