By Lowman S. Henry
Columnist
There
is a lot of wailing and rending of garments these days over the hyper
partisan atmosphere in both Harrisburg and in Washington, D.C.
Conventional wisdom holds that if Republicans and Democrats would just
work together we could solve the problems confronting our state and
nation.
But there is ample evidence that when
Republicans and Democrats do work together the outcome is worse than no
action at all. The recent collusion between the parties in the
Pennsylvania Senate to pass a revenue plan to fund the 2017-18 state
budget is a prime example.
So, let's pull back the
curtain and take a look at how elected officials from both parties work
together to preserve their own political careers at the expense of
taxpayers.
In theory Republicans stand for smaller,
less intrusive government and for fiscal responsibility. Were that
actually true the debate in Harrisburg over how to balance the budget
would be focused on cost-savings and spending reductions. Instead,
leaders of both parties in the state Senate have focused solely on what
taxes to increase and on an even more irresponsible course of action -
borrowing from future revenues to cover current expenses.
The
GOP holds 34 of 50 seats in the Pennsylvania Senate. That is a
veto-proof majority that again - in theory - should be able to pass a
fiscally responsible state budget. The sordid truth is that Harrisburg
is not divided by political party, but rather is governed by an
incumbent party dedicated first and foremost to political
self-preservation putting up a united front against taxpayers and job
creators.
Thus that 34-seat Republican majority was
rendered irrelevant when leaders of both parties went behind closed
doors to craft a revenue package. What emerged was a toxic cocktail of
tax hikes that would harm businesses such as gas drillers by
implementing a severance tax; and add to the burden of homeowners by
hiking taxes on gas and electric bills. Oh, and that wasn't enough to
sate the appetites of the big spenders - they approved borrowing
hundreds of millions from future tobacco settlement revenue meaning our
children and grand-children will get to share in the pain.
When
the final vote was held the revenue package passed 26-24. How the
Senate got to that number is the truly disgusting part of the story.
There is an old saying that you should never watch sausage or
legislation being made. But we will. If all Democrats had voted for the
revenue package it would only have taken 10 Republicans to craft a
majority. But 14 Republicans went astray.
Why?
The
goal was to provide political cover to four Democrats in competitive
districts. It is all about incumbent protection. Party leaders
conspired to determine who would vote for and who would vote against the
bill. Those Republicans and Democrats voting for higher taxes and
massive borrowing all represent "safe" seats because they are relatively
immune to serious electoral competition.
A few
Republican Senators who actually favored the bill, but who would face
conservative primary challenges if they voted for higher taxes were
given a "pass" to vote against the plan. Those Republicans representing
more moderate districts and less likely to face a serious primary
challenge voted for the tax plan. Likewise Democrats deemed vulnerable
to a tax vote were also given a "pass."
So everyone wins - except We the Taxpayer.
And,
of course, "leadership" of both parties all voted for the revenue
package on the mistaken belief that they have to be "responsible" and
provide revenue to fund a state government beset by out-of-control
spending. Real leadership and a truly responsible course of action
would have been to craft a budget that spends within our means rather
than go looking for every way possible to wring more tax dollars from
Pennsylvania's working families, senior citizens and small businesses.
The
bottom line: the Senate's revenue plan vote was nothing more than
business-as-usual backroom Harrisburg politics of the type that
cynically preserves incumbents at taxpayer expense.
Remember that the next time you hear someone crying out for "bi-partisan cooperation."
(Lowman
S. Henry is Chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Public
Opinion Research and host of the weekly Lincoln Radio Journal. His
e-mail address is lhenry@lincolninstitute.org.)

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