Thursday, March 26, 2009
Addressing the state’s newspaper executives Monday, Rick Perry might have been wearing a coonskin cap and leaning on Ol’ Betsy. Or he could have been Col. Travis drawing a line in the sand.
To Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison’s joust that he’s wrong to turn down half a billion federal dollars in unemployment aid, Perry parried: “The last thing we want is Washington coming down here and telling us how to run our state.”
Bravo. Perry has always walked the walk of independence. Like in 2003, when Congressman Tom DeLay left his duties in Washington to hang out in the state Capitol for days, even hand-carrying versions of the congressional redistricting bill that paralyzed the Legislature. We called ol’ Tom Texas’ shadow governor back then, and Rick his lapdog.
The real shadow governor was the previous one, George W. Bush. For him, Perry made sure nothing would happen in Austin that session until the GOP had several more congressional seats.
So, here we are, and our Col. Travis — it’s all in the clothes — just drew a line in the sand so tight to his boots he risks his toes.
Texas’ unemployment insurance trust fund is running out of money. Hutchison asserts that to replenish it, the state might have to raise employers’ taxes. So, she says, take the money.
Perry says the strings attached would require the state to raise taxes on employers when the stimulus dollars cease.
Tom Pauken, Perry’s own man running the Texas Workforce Commission, says that needn’t be. Lawmakers can accept the money and let an expanded state program expire when federal funding runs out.
More than 111,000 Texans are projected to lose their jobs this year, more than the population of Waco proper. Perry says he has bigger principles in mind, like independence.
State Sen. Steve Ogden, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said he can easily swallow his Republican pride and make good use of the federal stimulus funds flowing to the state.
Texas will be accepting school dollars, highway dollars, health care dollars.
No, this isn’t about independence at all. It’s about political theater, something apparent from the start in the declarations of a handful of Republican governors convening in Washington last month. Though they would accept the lion’s share of stimulus dollars, they’d draw the line at unemployment aid.
The question wasn’t, “What’s best for our hurting citizens?” It was: “Where can we strike a pose? And who’s with us? Perry? Aye. Jindal? Aye. Palin? Aye. Barbour? Aye.” Then all went back to their home states with party-supplied talking points.
Yes, this is the way it works — not addressing the needs of those who hurt, but posing to suit men in suits.
When is it ever about the people in need?
When is it about the growing millions in this nation who have no health insurance — 6 million workers added in the last decade? When is it about nursing home residents in our state whose savings are gone and who are at the mercy of skinflint Medicaid reimbursement rates? When is it about citizens with mental illness left on society’s fringes? It’s never about them. It’s about posing.
Meanwhile, back in Austin, something encouraging is happening — something almost too good to be true. The Senate initially has OK’d a bill to end the partisan paralysis associated with redistricting. It would create a bipartisan, independent commission to redraw congressional districts.
That would be mighty good for the state, but not the party in power. Yet legislation author Jeff Wentworth says Perry “wants to sign the bill.”
Come on, lawmakers. Let’s give him the chance to show he’s serving us.
John Young’s column appears Thursday and Sunday. E-mail: jyoung@wacotrib.com.







Comments
By YoungWatch
Mar 27, 2009 2:38 PM | Link to this
Days of Obama Administration/Democrat control of Congress--66
Number of John Young columns--23
Young columns critical of national and/or Texas Republicans--11
Young columns critical of national and/or Texas Democrats--01 (3-8-09)
By KDF
Mar 26, 2009 10:25 AM | Link to this
Texans are proud people. I don't want federal help for every problem or solution we find. Read our Constitution, Mr. Young. Texans can take care of themselves pretty well, thank you. And as Robbie stated, we have low business taxes anyway, and the more we fool with the Federals, the more beholden we are to them.
Finally, if we have problems down here, let us fix them. At least that is the way of thinking my mother and father taught me. Governor Perry may not be perfect, but he is definitely a Texan. <
By Robbie
Mar 26, 2009 8:50 AM | Link to this
"When is it ever about the people in need?"
You want to know who is in need? The American worker. The small business owner. The people that make America, and Texas, thrive.
The people receiving your much ranted unemployment dollars are not the given examples of the nursing home patient already receiveing Medicaid or the mentally handicapped already on the state's dime.
The people in need right now are the people that make America and Texas work. The workers are overtaxed. They need to be assured that their paycheck is secure from further manditory governmental withdrawals so they can continue to pay their bills, feed their families, build their savings, and generally reap the fruits of their own labors.
Trillions of dollars in excess federal spending does little to assure workers that their paycheck is secure from the goverment's greedy hands. It guarantees future generations that government will most assuredly take their hard-earned money as well. That's not security for the middle class. That's oppression.
Workers need to earn the fruits of their labors and be the sole beneficiaries of their hard work. That's who is in need.
Workers need to be secure in knowing that their jobs are not going anywhere. An increase in business taxes means higher costs to consumers, who work, and a higher cost to businesses who use their money to hire new employees and keep existing ones. The best unemployment insurance: lower business taxes.
Governor Perry's refusal of the federal unemployment dollars guarantees that Texas can continue to be a national leader in low business taxes, instead of becoming beholden to a federal mandate from a power-drunk and over-grown federal government. We can continue to attract new companies to Texas and encourage more Texans to begin their own entrprenurial goals.
New businesses and new business owners hire new workers, who are in need. Existing business can rest assured that hirer taxes will not force them from raising their prices on goods and services and allow them the additional funds to keep their current workers, who are in need of assurance that their jobs are secure.
That's who is in need. Thank you Governor Perry for standing up for the hard workers of Texas and the businesses that make our jobs, goods, and services possible.
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