One of the meaner
Governors elected in the Republican surge in 2010 was in Florida where Rick Scott, a former health
care executive (whose company was charged with huge Medicare fraud) was carried
into office by the Tea Party movement.
Mr. Scott promptly lived up to expectations.
In his first year in office, Mr. Scott chose
to introduce his budget in a rural town surrounded by Tea Party supporters.
That year, he sought $4.6 billion in budget cuts, including steep
drops in education, while pushing for large corporate tax breaks (both were
tempered by the Legislature). He successfully pushed for measures that linked
teacher pay to merit, shrank unemployment benefits and required state workers
to contribute 3 percent to their retirement. He laid off thousands of workers
and returned $2.4 billion in federal dollars that would have financed a high-speed
rail line.
The results were not what the small government Tea Party
folks expected. They thought this was
what voters wanted. The voters didn’t,
they wanted what voters always want, well managed good government projects.
His policies led to a tangle of expensive legal challenges. And
polls found that he had turned off an overwhelming number of voters.
And one other reality exists in Florida .
Unlike other states, there is a well regarded Democratic challenger
waiting to take on Mr. Scott. Former
Republican Charlie Crist, rejected by his party for not hating Mr. Obama is now
a Democrat and polls show he is competitive with Mr. Scott and could probably
defeat him.
So Mr. Scott does what every politician does, he gives up
principles for re-election.
Facing stubbornly
low approval ratings, Mr. Scott has crisscrossed the state advertising his
enthusiasm for education, state workers, highways, commuter rails, early
voting, the disabled, environmental protection and jobs. With Florida’s economy
slowly burbling to life and a tiny budget surplus, the governor’s proposed
budget of $74.2 billion is one of the largest in Florida history and includes a
$2,500 across-the-board pay increase for teachers.
Along the way, Mr.
Scott has danced in a music class, hugged teachers, quipped about his bald head
and sprinkled cartoon-size checks around the state like a reborn Ebenezer
Scrooge.
Can Florida voters be fooled twice? Sure they can, they were dumb enough to elect
Mr. Scott Governor once, even if they have gain a huge amount of smarts in the
meantime remember they had a large intelligence gap to overcome. As for the Tea Party folks that elected him in the first place, well, they have no place to go. And so once again they may play the role of Useful Idiots, voting someone into office who doesn't even represent their views.
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