Reason Editor Penned a Brutal Takedown of Darializa Avila Chevalier, the Most Insane...
Judge Rules on Charlie Kirk Assassin's Request to Remove Death Penalty
When It Comes to Abortion, the Left Is Terrified of Women Actually Having...
People Noticed Something Odd About Zohran Mamdani's Ashura Celebration
Nicolle Wallace Thinks the Statue of Liberty Trumps Immigration Law
'I Didn't Speak Up Because It Was Easy.' WI Volleyball Player Works to...
Gavin Newsom Just Called For a National Billionaire Tax
A Small Group of Democrats Is Saying No to the Socialist Takeover
Chicago Man Charged with Obstructing Justice in Foiled White House UFC Attack Plot
Fugitive in Massive Child Food Fraud Case Captured Overseas
World Cup Fans Are Touring America and Loving Every Minute of It
Trump Declares Holy War on Communism in Latest Speech
U.S. Secret Service Seized 35 Illegal Skimmers, Stopped $36M in Possible Fraud in...
Illegal Alien Sentenced to 8 Years for $38 Million Payroll Tax Fraud
United States Announces Strikes Against Iran Moments After Trump Warning
OPINION

Sequestration: Governors Are a Special Interest Too

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Sequestration: Governors Are a Special Interest Too

The president made an appearance at the National Governors Association’s winter meeting to drum up support for his position that the sequestration spending cuts should be mitigated with tax hikes. The president understands that state politicians are dependent on federal handouts (see chart below), which makes them ideal candidates to help him convince the citizenry that spending cuts would usher in the apocalypse.  

In the battle with congressional Republicans over sequestration, it would be particularly helpful to the president to have Republican governors fan the flames. The post-appearance coverage that I’ve read indicates that some GOP governors took the bait and others did not. For instance, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal dismissed the president’s position as “just trying to scare the American people.” On the other hand, Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell expressed dissatisfaction with congressional Republicans (and the president’s) inability to come to an agreement to avoid sequestration. 

If an article in Politico is accurate, however, Republican governors are working behind the scenes to get congressional Republicans to acquiesce: 

The new rumblings match what’s been going on behind the scenes for months. Governors have publicly signed on to letters bashing Obama and praising House Republicans’ efforts, but privately their offices have been urging lawmakers to work harder to avoid potentially devastating cuts — particularly those that could hit local programs. 

Having worked for a Republican governor who made it a mission for his state to grab as many federal dollars as possible, I have zero reason to doubt that this is the case. The reason is simple: every federal dollar that a state politician can spend is a dollar that he or she doesn’t have to ask his or her voters to part with. Thus, state politicians love the “free” money from the feds and expend great effort (and additional taxpayer money) trying to obtain it. 

Of course, it isn’t really free.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement