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EDITOR OF REDSTATE

Virginia’s Governor Bob McDonnell Thinks You’re an Idiot

BobMcDonnell

On Friday, March 15, 2013, at 8:00 a.m. Bob McDonnell will go to CPAC and address the Faith & Freedom Coalition Prayer Breakfast. For those of you who attend this event, you will be sitting staring at a liar.

If you are a conservative, remember Bob McDonnell thinks you’re an idiot.

That’s the only explanation I can think of for what just happened in Virginia this week. That, and that McDonnell is an unprincipled fake conservative whose promises are without value, an exemplar of the kind of big government pro-tax Republican who ruined the party’s stature with fiscal conservatives.

Bob McDonnell promised when he ran for governor that he’d never raise taxes. He talks a good game to conservative audiences, about principled leadership and the like. He can pretend he’s one of you. He’s got great hair. He’ll speak at the Faith & Freedom Coalition Prayer Breakfast at CPAC as if he is one of us.

But when push comes to shove, when the time comes that being a conservative demands that you stand up for what’s right and reject the easy way out, Bob McDonnell is not going to stand on principle. He’s going to cave to what the media calls “leadership” which is really just big government liberalism.

Bob McDonnell was getting all kinds of praise on the Sunday shows for his big transportation tax hike, which passed the Virginia legislature this week. He was getting praise from big government liberals like Tim Kaine and Terry McAuliffe and Martin O’Malley for his evenhandedness, his leadership, not like those troublesome conservatives in Washington who refuse to wheel and deal.

That should tell you all you need to know about the transportation tax hike McDonnell pushed through. But it’s a whole lot worse than that when you look at what really went down.

McDonnell hasn’t achieved a lot as governor. He’s done some good policies here and there. But he’s entering the final year of his governorship looking for something for his “legacy”, and he decided to make it all about transportation funding. The big McDonnell backers – corporations and developers – want more funding for road building and infrastructure, and since Virginia has been insulated from the economic downturn thanks largely to spending by the federal government (hence his outrage over the sequestration and what it might do to Virginia — he has no interest in cutting the size of government dollars which go to his state), they saw an opportunity to get funding from a big tax increase. (See this Wall Street Journal editorial for more.

The initial McDonnell package amounted to a $2.4 billion tax increase over five years. By the time the Virginia legislature was done with it, it had exploded into a $6.1 billion increase. These tax hikes include:

  • Sales tax hike from 5 to 5.3 percent
  • Additional sales tax hike of .7 percent in Hampton Roads and Northern Virginia
  • Personal property tax hike from 3.5 percent to 4.3 percent
  • Tangible personal property tax hike to 5 percent
  • 3 percent Northern Virginia hotel tax
  • Diesel tax hike from 17.5 cents per gallon to 6 percent tax on wholesale diesel, roughly a 5 cent per gallon increase
  • Car tax hike from 3 percent to 4 percent in 2013, 4.1 percent in 2014, 4.2 percent in 2015, and 4.3 percent in 2016 (Remember when Republicans got elected in Virginia by saying we should get rid of the car tax? Good times.)

The legislative package wasn’t even posted online for Virginians to read before it was voted through. Oh, and that’s not all: if Congress rejects the federal internet tax scheme McDonnell supports (McDonnell apparently, like Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, now supports the tax on every iTunes download), the tax on wholesale gasoline in 2015 will increase from 3.5 percent to 5.1 percent, without a provision to revert back. In other words: this tax burden could get even worse if Republicans on Capitol Hill don’t go along with Bob McDonnell’s tax raising ways.

What tells you that Bob McDonnell isn’t really a conservative is that there was never any interest on the part of his administration in finding funding for roads through cuts or privatizing state services. Contrast this with what a real conservative does, like Wisconsin’s Scott Walker – when a state commission recommended he raise the gas tax to pay for roads, he said he’d sell off state property and privatize other functions to pay for it rather than raise taxes. McDonnell was never interested in doing that.

But it gets worse. Because McDonnell was so desperate for this gigantic tax hike, he was willing to wheel and deal on Obamacare, too.

Senate Democrats in Virginia sensed that McDonnell was desperate. He needed their votes to pass his proposal since enough Republicans refused to go along with him. So they demanded more from McDonnell. They insisted they’d only vote for the tax hike if they got to expand Medicaid under Obamacare, something McDonnell had just days earlier swore he would not do.

But we already know McDonnell’s word is meaningless. So he wrote a letter saying he’d support a state commission to expand Medicaid instead, paired with “cost cutting reforms” and impossible-to-enforce commitments from the government and the like. It was just more meaningless talk to get political cover for expanding the worst-run entitlement program in the country. Leadership on both sides will make sure the bicameral commission will be nothing but a speed bump towards expanding the program and exploding the same program whose outcomes are so awful, a University of Virginia study recently found you were more likely to die on the table as a Medicaid recipient than if you had no insurance at all.

In other words, Bob McDonnell was so desperate to raise taxes, he was willing to sell out on Obamacare, too. He was willing to sell out his party, his base, and his principles. And he did it with a smile.

The plan all along was to tax people more. The Medicaid expansion will do that too, adding in huge tax increases in future years when federal funding drops. And McDonnell got what he want. He passed his tax hike with a higher percentage of Democrats in the General Assembly voted for it than Republicans. He passed it despite the opposition of every Republican running statewide this year, including Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli.

People like McDonnell say this is about evenhanded “problem solving”. But really it’s about the fact that they think conservatives are too stupid for there to be any negative consequences for breaking their promises – on taxes, on Obamacare, on anything. There will always be someone more liberal than a guy like McDonnell, so he doesn’t have anything to worry about. He has just shown us how fake he is, and he’s convinced he can continue to fake people out because they’re too dumb to keep track of it all.

Bob McDonnell is a perfect example of the worst kind of Republican. He has no principles that he won’t sell out if he thinks the situation demands it. He is interested in the praise of liberal editorial pages for his balanced leadership, which is really just selling out the people who got him elected. His policy legacy will now be trading higher taxes for a massive entitlement expansion. How pathetic.

Conservatives should recognize that between Bob McDonnell and Charlie Crist only Crist is honest about not believing in anything. The only difference is the letter after their name. Oh that, and Bob McDonnell, after raising taxes on Virginians and caving on the Medicaid expansion will be speaking at CPAC.

And if that’s what happens, maybe it’s a sign Bob McDonnell is right about you and me: we really are that dumb.

P.S. McDonnell didn’t do this alone. While many conservative Republicans held the line and voted against McDonnell’s tax hike and Medicaid expansion deal, many Republicans in the House and Senate went along with it, greedy for the taxpayer dollars that will flow into their districts.

House: (David B. Albo, John A. Cosgrove, M. Kirkland Cox, L. Mark Dudenhefer, James E. Edmunds II, Thomas A. Greason, Christopher T. Head, Gordon C. Helsel Jr., M. Keith Hodges, Salvatore R. Iaquinto, Riley E. Ingram, S. Chris Jones, Terry G. Kilgore, Barry D. Knight, James M. LeMunyon, G. Manoli Loupassi, Daniel W. Marshall II, Joe T. May, Donald W. Merricks, J. Randall Minchew, Richard L. Morris, John M. O’Bannon III, Robert D. Orrock Sr., Charles D. Poindexter, Harry R. Purkey, Thomas Davis Rust, Edward T. Scott, Beverly J. Sherwood, Christopher P. Stolle, Robert Tata, Ronald A. Villanueva, Michael D. Watson, David E. Yancey, Joseph R. Yost, Speaker William J. Howell)

Senate: (Harry B. Blevins, Charles W. Carrico Sr., Jeffrey L. McWaters, Thomas K. Norment Jr., Frank M. Ruff Jr., Walter A. Stosch, Frank W. Wagner, John C. Watkins)

These people believe in higher taxes, bigger government, and more entitlements. If that’s what you believe in, support them. If you don’t, and you live in their districts, consider running against them.

Consider this Codevilla piece a must read related to this:

Yet modern Republican leaders, with the exception of the Reagan Administration, have been partners in the expansion of government, indeed in the growth of a government-based “ruling class.” They have relished that role despite their voters. Thus these leaders gradually solidified their choice to no longer represent what had been their constituency, but to openly adopt the identity of junior partners in that ruling class. By repeatedly passing bills that contradict the identity of Republican voters and of the majority of Republican elected representatives, the Republican leadership has made political orphans of millions of Americans. In short, at the outset of 2013 a substantial portion of America finds itself un-represented, while Republican leaders increasingly represent only themselves.

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COMMENTS

  • denoff51

    McDonnell is just another elected official who is as morally bankrupt as the country. If I remember correctly, he was high on the list for VP at one time. There will come a day when he will answer for all the wrong he has done to the people who have elected him.

  • dudette

    have we no conservatives who can stand on principle while negotiating the cesspool of politics that unforunately may be their milieu?

  • http://teapartisan.wordpress.com Loren Heal

    Did McDonnell give a solid “No” to Medicaid expansion, or did he plan to weasel all along? I think he always said “No Medicaid expansion without substantial reform…” and such.

  • spadge

    “If you are a conservative, remember Bob McDonnell thinks you’re an idiot.” Most probably becaue most conservatives are idiots…

  • rickbillies

    Let’s be clear about a couple of things. Bob McDonnell was elected by a clear majority of Virginians. He didn’t run on a platform of exclusivity using extreme social positions to get elected. He ran as a doer and he has done that.

    Tim Kaine, the previous Democrat governor, left office with a $2 billion structural deficit. McDonnell reversed that and we now have a $500 million surplus.

    I live in Virginia and I drive on our roads every day. We need to upgrade and maintain them. As a low tax state, Virginia had very little opportunity to do that. Our infrastructure has been deteriorating for some years. As the state’s population grows, maintaining our roads has become a priority. Virginia has been very successful had attracting new businesses to the state but faced with unbelievable congestion, companies will be discouraged from moving to the Commonwealth.

    Let’s talk about the gas tax. Virginia has the lowest gas tax in the US. It’s a set figure per gallon. We’re not penalized if the price of gas goes up as it has. The governor saw it as a regressive tax and replaced it with a number of other options. The state legislature voted overwhelmingly for the changes.

    As to the Medicaid situation, the Governor only agreed to form a commission to study the situation. It’s a long way from agreeing to expand Medicaid eligibility. Besides, a new governor will be elected in November and then all bets are off. Remember, McDonnell only gave the Democrats a letter.

  • PowerToThePeople

    Ahh look, a lefty. Look kids, this is the kind of POS working to destroy our country. He calls us idiots all while kicking the English language and spelling right in the mouth. “Most probably because he welfare person.”

  • aardvar

    And the problem here is ????????

    We all rail against the continuing expansion of the Federal Government into areas that should be wholly state functions. We would all like to see the term Federalism mean less control by the central government over the daily activities of communities. After all, when did education, housing, urban development, etc. become Federal core functions?

    The answer is simple. The Feds agreed to pony up the cash for these state and local functions when the state and local officials balked at asking their citizens for more revenue to execute their own core functions. The locals passed the bill onto the Governors who passed it onto their Congressional delegations and Federalism died.

    I, too, used to decry tax increases by state and local authorities. Now I vote in favor of such measures except when the purpose is clearly off target. The best way to get the Feds out of our communities is to reduce the influence of Federal dollars on our outcomes. Relying on our state and local revenues to care for ourselves is the best way to accomplish that objective.

    Who among us would not like to have – say, 30% – of our Federal income tax burden removed and an equal amount of money paid to the state instead? And not through revenue sharing – that has too many strings attached.

    So let’s stop criticizing every increase in state and local revenues as a blanket policy. We should be championing those state and local officials who have the moral courage to promote non-Federal revenue initiatives to finance core functions at their levels of government.

    As to McDonnell himself, I could care less. I’m not defending him at all. I just oppose to a zero tolerance policy that makes every tax increase an evil upon us. Let’s support our Governors and local officials and shift the tax revenues to them versus Washington.

  • rbdwiggins

    It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one’s mouth and remove all doubt – Abraham Lincoln

  • Jack_Savage

    First of all, take your “extreme social positions” rhetoric and stick it, pal.

    Second, I also drive on Virginia’s roads every day, from Roanoke to Harrisonburg to Fredericksburg, to Richmond and Hampton Roads and everything in between. There are some roads that need work, like 460 from Appomattox to Chesapeake, but they aren’t even close to the condition you describe.

    What you are talking about is the horror that is traffic from Fredericksburg north and Winchester east, and in Hampton Roads because of the incompetence of local officials, and the lack of cooperation between people handing out building permits like candy on Halloween and those responsible for infrastructure. Don’t get the two confused, and don’t deflect from the real issue.

    Virginia has been moderately successful in attracting businesses to support the boom that is federal hiring. Don’t mistake that for real economic growth, because southern and southwestern Virginia is suffering greatly. If McDonnell were such a magician in attracting business that would not be the case at all.

    Virginia does NOT have the lowest gas tax in the nation. It just doesn’t.

    This is a huge tax increase. Period. It was passed to support the transplants in Northern Virginia. Period. But just like in the nation as a whole, the takers in Virginia outnumber the givers, so Virginia got what it got. This is a cave, and you know it. It is sickening. Erick is exactly right.

  • Jack_Savage

    Then why do we have all the money that you are trying to take, and why are you without a job?

  • funwithknives

    Way-to-go there, Sparky. Makin’ friends and influencing people at light-speed.
    I’ve been to DNC Meetings here and there [witness Michigan's weekend tussle over State Chairmanship] and under no uncertain terms I can say without reservation that Progressives are just not all that bright, individually, nor in groups.
    Conservatives are more articulate, think Objectively and rationally, have it all over Progressives in the appearance department, and there is no comparison in the Latent Odors department.
    By the by, if we’re such noobs, what are you doing here ?
    Isn’t there a Police Car somewhere around you, that needs an ‘organic color change” ?

  • edintexas

    The Medicaid expansion under Obamacare is not raising state taxes in order to eliminate Federal money. It is adding a Federal mandate, which it was not necessary to do, in order to bring more Federal money to the state. But, in future years the Federal bribe decreases and the state’s citizens will see their taxes increase to make up the difference. The Democrats thought this increase in those who qualified as Medicaid recipients so important that the Obamacare statute stipulated that if a state refused to expand Medicaid, all Federal Medicaid funding would be removed from that state. The Supreme Court ruled this portion of Obamacare unconstitutional, giving the states the capability to reject the expansion without penalty. Once this increase in Medicaid recipients is accepted by state government, it can not be rescinded.

    And I’m willing to bet a dollar to your donut that there will be Federal Transportation Department dollars in the mix too. It may be that VA really needs this sort of transportation improvement, or not. And do read the part of the article about Governor Walker declining tax increases in favor of selling state property and privatizing functions in order to fund transportation improvements. Tax increases are not necessarily a requirement.

  • PowerToThePeople

    Amen Jack, well put.

  • PowerToThePeople

    Organic color change…love the clever pun for spreading bodily waste. It was funny!

  • Repair_Man_Jack

    Oh how precious. We have “Spadge” to score our Wonderlic Test for us. Really Spadge-Sweetie enlighten us all on what the brilliant people think.

  • mikwcas

    exactly

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    G’bye (nt)

  • General_Confusion

    Boy are you in for a surprise!

    Virginia has a long and glorious history of diverting transportation funds to ANYTHING but roads. It’s always been just one big general fund piggy bank but buck up I’m sure it will be different this time!

  • http://www.mattmodleski.com mattmodleski

    As I’ve posted here many times, Americans who can do math don’t have a party right now. There are two parties, neither of which has shrunk Gov spending (including Reagan, but he did spend on Constitutionally mandated items like defense) in the modern era. When I go out and speak about the math in America every audience I speak to (many filled with post graduate degrees) are shocked by the math and the corruption that’s fueling our math problem. We have built a
    standard of living on $29 trillion borrowed dollars. It is simply an illusion
    and even the most basic understanding of math would say our standard of living
    must “go backward” as we deleverage our HH debt and Federal debt. The
    lies start as soon as someone says something other than that fact.

    Consumer Credit is a product that makes people money (in the bond/securities
    market) whether we pay our bills or not. Simply look at the explosion of consumer debt since the repeal of Glass Steagall. The mortgage crisis shined a light into this area, but no one reports on it to help America see the corrupt link between DC and Wall Street.

    As a kid who enlisted in the USAF when I was 17 and worked my way through the ranks to retire as a Major and fighter pilot, I am shocked/dismayed by the ignorance and apathy we have in our nation about understanding the math. It’s why I wrote my book and it’s why I’ll continue to write and speak about it. As I’ve said before, I believe the next real leader in America will not come from the establishment on either side, and they probably won’t be electable until after the crash happens.

  • hayekwasright

    Nice try with the federalism argument, but it just doesn’t hold water. The problem here is (??????) simple. Conservatives don’t like overbearing and burdensome government even at the state level. Otherwise you would see us heaping praise on New York and California for their brilliant policies. This is simply not the case. It is true that one advantage of federalism is that it allows states to be testbeds for policy. It should be noted that folks are leaving NY and CA in droves for more conservatively run States. Secondly, your argument that McDonnell is “shifting” taxes and responsibilities to the state is laughable. Shifting means moving from one place to another BTW. Just exactly what taxes and responsibilities has the feed relinquished in order for Virginia to assume them?

  • sisyphusx

    McDonnell is a Judas, plain and simple. The Medicaid expansion is intended to draw another 400,000 Virginians into the maw of the beast, and ObamaCare is designed to break the private insurers and, in the meantime, raise premiums to force more people into Medicaid.

    As for road conditions in Virginia, I have had the opportunity to travel in many parts of Virginia the last few years and have no complaints. The congestion in Northern Virginia is legendary, but the tax increases just passed will be used to create the kind of high density residential zones in Tyson’s Corner and elsewhere in Northern Virginia that will draw in Democratic voters and pull Northern Virginia more deeply into the Leftist abyss. (I know the rest of Virginia may find it hard to believe there is still room for Northern Virginia to be pulled to the Left, but it is true.) The objective is not to improve overall conditions for those already here, but to pack Fairfax County to the gills with the kind of urban transformation that will lock Virginia as a blue state forever more.

    McDonnell’s “great achievement” is reaching across the aisle to reshape Virginia for generations to come to be as blue as death. His Lieutenant Governor, Bill Bolling, is looking to seal the deal with an independent run in the general election in an attempt to assure Terry McAuliffe the governorship over GOP favorite Virginia AG Ken Cuccinelli.

    It is a black day for Virginians.

  • sisyphusx

    On Medicaid, the bill passed by the state legislature authorized Medicaid expansion so long as no state funds were required, and required separate authorization of any state funds that might be required. This fits hand in glove with the federal plan to pay 100% of the Medicaid expansion in the first year and 90% in the next two years.

  • whitetop

    He sounds like a carbon copy of the guy who sits in the WH. Watch what he does, not what he says.

  • dmart81

    McDonnell, Boehner, Cantor, Ellmers, etc are all COTOs- Conservative On Tv Only. We must continue to bring attention to these people because we risk damaging the conservative brand, if we do not.

  • swordofzorro

    So depressing that Republicans cave so easily. And to think he was seriously looked at as a potential vice-presidential candidate a few years ago. These RINO’s have done more to poison the brand than any Democrat. There’s little difference between the parties anymore, just smoke and mirrors.

  • mkeprof

    >>It was passed to support the transplants in Northern Virginia.

    I think this development is a reaction to the change in the political makeup of VA. The state has gone blue by decent margins in last two presidential elections. Both Senators are Dems. The direction forward is unfortunately towards blue as well, at least for statewide elections. Politicians, with elections in mind, are reacting to the more bluish hue of the purple that exists in VA. Same with FL and its Medicaid decision (along with Rick Scott’s healthcare industry ties).

    The next Governor’s election in VA will tell us a lot. If Ken is not successful then we might find it very difficult to stop the further bluification of VA. We will win the house seats – but the state level elections will get swamped out by NOVA.

  • icantstandthemadness

    Well, my MI governor caved as well. I guess we know now why the administration is bypassing congress yet again, in order to ‘work together with the states’ over the sequestration he implemented, and then said he never implemented, it is really the fault of the GOP per his rhetoric.. They all think we are stupid apparently, and the administration has found a way to get around congress and the rest of us. Just get the governors on board with his debacle.

  • icantstandthemadness

    I like your analogy. “Americans who can do math do not have a party right now”…I believe that is spot on, never really saw it put like that.

  • mkeprof

    I just looked through RCP Poll data on VA Gov elections. Things are way too tight there – essentially tied. If these tax increases and VA Republican infighting, as you mentioned above, result in Dems taking the Governorship – it would be a disaster. We can then say goodbye to the 13 EVs of VA. Along with CO and FL, another traditionally red states, now bluish purple – we are killing our chances of taking over the WH in near future.

  • rabun1016

    Don’t be too harsh. Politics are now just about communication, and McDonnell on his worst day communicates more effectively than Reince Priebus or Mitch McConnell on their best days. And the business community in Virginia appears solidly behind McDonnell. As long as they are balancing the budget in Virginia, I am content to let their legislators decide.

  • sliverlining

    I AM an idiot. Somehow I stupidly believe people will do what they say. More than that, I actually expect people to be on my side when someone lies, gets caught, and I think they should pay for it with time, money, or reputation.
    So far, idiotic as it may be, I still find people who do NOT do what they say and people who will continue to support them. Damn, I’m dumb.

    Good thing there’s a McDonnell out there to remind me to get back with the program. It works. Just look around at all the shiny, happy people. . .

  • suzy000

    This is his last year so I agree…it was all about legacy. He sold us all out in Virginia who believed in him and voted for him…never again!

  • beltwaylvr

    I’m a VA resident and have never seen anything impressive from McDonnell. The GOP wonders why it is dying and yet they cling to the most “unsexy” issues in the world – transportation funding??! No wonder libs are dominating. Even though they are wrong on everything, that at least confront the big issues and they do it with passion, with a do-or-die attitude. Raising taxes is the lazy/uncreative man’s solution. Unfortunately, government seems to attractive this type of man, and this is what we get over and over again. I am more and more convinced as each day goes by that my time with the GOP is quickly coming to an end….they are clueless.

  • http://aposematic.wordpress.com aposematic

    Agree! I like to call VA’s transportation funding the VA Politicians slush fund because that is in reality exactly what it is and why the Pols always want more paid into that most favored slush fund.

  • http://aposematic.wordpress.com aposematic

    Agree! Many pro-Agenda 21 Bills got through and anti-Agenda 21 Bills got squashed…its all about the NE, E, and Central VA guaranteeing VA gets painted Navy Blue and stays that way. Disgusting bunch of turncoat Republicans including my own here in SW VA.

  • http://aposematic.wordpress.com aposematic

    Its the “so called” VA Republicans killing the VA Republicans chances. How can anyone believe any Republican will stand on Republican Principles after what McDonnell and this 2013 Leg. Session just did to screw over the VA people.

  • xmmx

    “In the department of economy, an act, a habit, an institution, a law, gives birth not
    only to an effect, but to a series of effects.
    Of these effects, the first only is immediate; it manifests itself simultaneously with its cause – it is seen. The others unfold in succession – they are not seen: it is well for us, if they are foreseen.

    Between a good and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference – the one takes account of the visible effect; the other takes account both of the effects which are seen, and also of those which it is necessary to foresee.
    Now this difference is enormous, for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the ultimate consequences are fatal, and the converse.
    Hence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come,while the true economist pursues a great good to come, – at the risk of a small present evil. ”
    F. Basiat [ That Which is Seen, and That Which is Not Seen [

    How many of our politicians are TRUE politicians who focus on the great good to come ?
    None, Zilch, Zero !

    All of them, shamelessly work ONLY for their good, spewing lies in order to be reelected .
    So, All of them must be fired immediately !

  • daniel22

    This is the kind of articles that conservatives need especially before election time rolls around. I would not be surprised at all that this nut case is on Karl Roves short list for presidential candidates. Of course his leadership will be extolled by both sides making him an ideal candidate. For conservatives though, he might as well join the democrats. Conservatives should not donate anything to help elect this man again to the governorship of Virginia. To be sure for those living in Virginia I would start and participate in a weekly anti-McDonnel editorials. We need to make sure that these kind of antics are not forgotten by the voters and thereby lessen his chances of ever servicing the American public.

  • mtruth

    aarvdvar, there is a huge flaw in your argument. regrettably most states now have no fiscal responsibility. every time there is a problem- e.g. education, governors and legislatures throw money at it. there is not accountability only cronyism, no budgeting only a power grab enabled by distributing our tax dollars, and no transparency only backroom deals. here in the atlanta area we have infrastructure issues that could easily be resolved by leasing the world’s busiest airport. it will never happen because it is a goldmine of corruption. when the economy dips, businesses and families evaluate there budgets, cut out the perks, and find more efficient ways to do business and run their households government agencies cry foul and threaten loss of services. I for one want to see all govt. agencies- local, state, and federal perform an audit, find solutions and stop whining and stop going back to the well that is the American taxpayer. money does not cure problems intelligent solutions do.

  • sisyphusx

    Virginia law prohibits a governor serving two consecutive terms, so McDonnell will not be eligible again for four years. After four years of living with the outcomes he is creating for us now, he might have trouble running for dog catcher.

  • littlehouse18

    I believe Cuccinelli, Obenshain and Bell will stay strong.

  • sharkey

    Where I live in California Governor Jerry “moonbeam” Brown has just raised the sales tax to 8 percent. California’s combined local, state and federal gasoline taxes total 68.9 cents per gallon, the second highest in the nation. Our property taxes are also among the highest in the nation, ranking 15th nationally. The top state income tax rate in California is 13.3%, the highest in the nation. California’s corporate tax is 8.84 percent, making it the highest corporate tax rate in the West.

    The reason I mention California is because the combined taxes in California are the highest in the nation. Yet California is floating in debt as we speak. So much so that it has been estimated that state spending will rise by $25 billion over the next four years, ushering California further into debt and will continue to fracture the economy and if the downward spiral is not reversed soon it will lead to even higher unemployment and even greater angst and suffering for the citizens of California. In fact, California is basically bankrupt already and Jerry “moonbeam” Brown is compounding the problem with his egregious “tax and spend” philosophy. Brown’s tax and spend policies are strangling the economy and keeping California in recession. Failed policies initiated by progressive Democrats (including Jerry Brown) through irresponsible actions, partisan politics, and lack of leadership. Everything Democrats touch seems to fall apart at the seams. Evidenced by California’s dismal economy along with its unsustainable debt. Barack Obama is also a diehard liberal and over the last four years America has descended into a great recession with unemployment over that same period being the highest extended unemployment rate(s) since the Great Depression with the slowest economic recovery in U.S. history. What recovery?

    What am I getting at? If Governor Bob McDonnell (R-Virginia) takes a similar path that progressive Democrats have taken, it will undoubtedly result in a similar outcome that progressive Democrat’s failed “tax and spend” policies have caused in Virginia. In other words, Bob McDonnell’s devious policy shift will likely cause the same type of problems that are currently being experienced in California, New York, Illinois and other states which are considered progressive Democrat Party stronghold states.

    Another RINO we do not need. We already have plenty of RINO running around Capitol Hill “caving” to Obama’s every whim and wish. We need “principled” Republicans who are more concerned about the welfare of the country than they are about a popularity contest or the love of money. If Bob McDonnell continues down his wayward path he should be thrown out of office when he comes up for reelection.

    Unless the “cancers” are removed it is highly unlikely America will survive intact. What are the options? There are really only two options. Get America’s fiscal house in order ASAP by lowering tax rates across the board and by relaxing regulations and then create other incentives to boost the economy, which will invariably increase personal income. Like Ronald Wilson Reagan did and consequently it resulted in the greatest period of economic expansion and prosperity the world has ever known. Or fall prey to disingenuous politicians such as Bob McDonnell, etc. and watch the United States of America descend into recession, Depression, chaos, rioting, looting, violence, upheaval, decline and ultimately insolvency and ruination. Those are the two choices facing America right now.

    Which side of history do you want to be on? The “right” side with low taxes, fiscal responsibility and a nation on the upswing? Or the failed “tax and spend” side of history which progressive Democrats and mealy-mouth Republicans are currently advocating, and subsequently, bankrupting the country at breakneck speed? Choose wisely America.

    Kicking the can down the road won’t solve anything. Taxing the American people to death won’t solve anything. Higher taxes ultimately result in lower overall revenue to the Government and doing so also leads to higher unemployment and a slower economy and it also reduces personal income which is especially detrimental to the poor and middle class. The very same people that Barack Obama claims to care about. Bob McDonnell is looking more like a Democrat than a Republican. He might as well switch his Party affiliation. Sad, very sad indeed. Another one bites the dust. Joining a long list of backsliders which includes John Kasich of Ohio, Rick Scott of Florida, Jan Brewer of Arizona, Rick Snyder of Michigan and others unfortunately. They all ended up “caving” to Obama’s socialist agenda, and subsequently, they have given the Republican Party a black eye and should be thrown out of office in my opinion. Along with Bob McDonnell if he doesn’t straighten up and fly right.

    That’s why a third Party should seriously be considered. The Tea Party has led the conservative movement forward and into the forefront of political debate. If Republicans continue acting like Democrats the country will eventually go bankrupt and the American people will continue to suffer disproportionately. If, on the other hand, conservatives unite and mount a ‘third party’ challenge to the ‘status quo’ in Washington D.C. the country has a chance of recovering before it’s too late. On the other hand, if Democrats and irresponsible Republicans remain in power… the country is doomed most likely. Hard facts. Stark choices.

    Conservatives need to rise up and with God’s help… take back the country! Before it’s too late. The Founding Fathers would be proud of the fact that there are millions of like-minded people in America who still love their country and believe in limited and responsible governance. Which is what America was founded upon and in which has made the United States of America the greatest nation on God’s green Earth. But unfortunately progressive Democrats and irresponsible Republicans are in the process of bankrupting and destroying it. Those are tough words but open rebuke is better than secret love.

  • littlehouse18

    He definitelt weaseled all along. And this commission is an unconstitutional way for the rest of the cowardly General Assembly to avoid having to take a vote.

  • littlehouse18

    It’s even worse, Erick. McDonnell is going to sign on to a partnership exchange. My sources tell me that the only thing they changed was to take the words “partnership” and “exchange” out of the bill, but left all the workings in. They actually think we’re that stupid, or they just don’t care anymore that we see them spit on us. They are the “ruling class.”

  • josephlanders

    This is just another example of how some politicians will say whatever they think the people want to hear just to get elected. Maybe he’ll get what he deserves and be voted out of office but I thought Obama would be and that didn’t happen.

  • http://www.mattmodleski.com mattmodleski

    Thanks.

  • sliverlining

    I read an article a few years ago titled something like: Why Not a $100 Minimum Wage?
    It was very instructive for me since I couldn’t reconcile any wage minimum in my mind. It helped me to better understand why I had the conflict. I probably should search the title and see who wrote it but what’s the point?
    Fantasy Funding is why banks make money.
    Inflation = interest.

  • oldmanrick

    Although it may seem somewhat primitive, a good coating of tar and feathers, and a ride out of town on a splintered rail does seem appropriate. How sad that corrupt, bottom feeding trolls are not still treated in such a manner. There are some customs from the good, old days that should be revisited.

  • http://melvin-udall.livejournal.com/ melvinudall

    Don’t just blame Bob McDonnell. Yes, obviously blame him, but realize he isn’t alone. Where is the GOP establishment in VA or nationally condemning him? It won’t happen.

    The VA GOP is a cesspit, corrupted by the progressive cancer encroaching from DC. That’s part of why the state is going blue. Progressives are influencing too much in the state, and the VA GOP does too little to confront and defend against it.

    “Consider this Codevilla piece a must read”

    Dead. On.

  • runner12

    There are some people who fail to come across as genuine. They appear fake and plastic whenever they speak. Gov. McDonnell has always come across that way to me. Time after time he has expanded and grown government, ignoring fiscal conservatism and small government principles. Shame on CPAC for having him speak at the prayer breakfast. I hope they can keep their food down in the midst of such outright fiction as he is likely to spew.

  • 4free

    With our Governor Scott, Florida is going from bluish purple to deep
    blue. The Republican party is slowly disappearing.

  • 4free

    I am not sure what you classify as “core functions”. Our local gov’t
    here in Florida use a great deal of federal money to provide for our
    county’s services. We get federal money for our schools, roads, beach,
    medical care, small business loans to start new businesses, everglades
    refurbishing, farm irrigation canals, fema money for our storm shelters,
    and the list goes on and on. If the federal money stops coming in, my
    county would soon disappear. Is that what you mean by “finance their
    core functions?

  • Jack_Savage

    No. It means picking up the trash, enforcing the law, and maintaining county roads. Everything else is just a bribe from the Feds.

  • 4free

    Isn’t Rand Paul a progressive? Do you classify him as not too bright?

  • Ari

    Humiliatingly perceptive!

  • 4free

    Correction. Feds pay 100% first 3 years and 90% thereafter.

  • Bill S

    Take a few mins to look up “progressive”. Rand Paul…ain’t. (I’m not a Rand fan, but anyone who considers him “progressive” is whacked.

  • restoreliberty

    The only good thing about this law is that I can completely control how much I spend at the pump and in sales taxes. I’ve learned well during the Oblamo economy how to go no where and spend no money, lesson I guess I will need for a lifetime if I continue to live in Virginia.

  • The_Gadfly

    What’s worse is it doesn’t even have to go to the federal level. Even at the state level, do you honestly believe all of the revenues being “raised” will go to fund transportation (let alone highways)? I sure don’t.

    Some twenty years ago when I moved to The People’s Republic of Maryland one of the few thing I saw that I liked was well kept roads. But over the last 20 years they have repeatedly raided the alleged transportation lockbox to fill deficits in the general budget. We’ve now got the same problem McDonnell claims to be fixing in Virginia. With Republicans voting like Democrats in Virginia the same thing will happen there.

  • Jack_Savage

    I remember when I lived in FL they put forth the idea of a lottery as a boon to education. Every dime did go to education, then the regular education budget was reallocated to other agencies.
    With the re-election of Obama, it is truly over. The only thing we can do is wait for things to fall completely apart, then maybe help pick up the pieces.

  • funwithknives

    A Progressive ‘What’, exactly?
    You ,by this miniscule,empty-headed posting, illustrate just what is screwed-up with what is generously labeled ‘Education’ in this country.
    Are you at-all familiar with the history of large-P Progressivism in this country since ,…oh,… say 1870 or so?
    By your ill-thought-out post you’re not,… not one eeny-teeny-weeny bit.
    What was your first confusing tell in my post? The real big “P” ?
    Go back to your navel and gaze at it some more, Junior. [Note : The Title]

  • nomaster

    You are absolutely right Mr. Erickson, Bob McDonnell has proven his deception and lack of willingness to back his constituency.

  • Samsara

    Speaking of Governors, Chris Christie just took the Obama Care Medicare Expansion.

    http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/chris-christie-to-take-obamacare-medicaid-expansion-88105.html?hp=f2

  • littlehouse18

    Maybe you should learn to take care of yourselves instead of mooching.

  • littlehouse18

    You sound like you might work in McDonnell’s office.
    The Medicaid decision will happen before November and these pols are just itching to take it; they’re just hoping that by the summer few will notice. Does anybody think the MSM will make a stink? These commission members will get praise and endorsements from their colleagues for being willing to take the heat away from the entire Assembly. They’re probably in ‘safe’ districts too.

  • littlehouse18

    90% only lasts till 2020 at best.

  • 4free

    Call it mooching if you want but the reality is, if federal funds were

    stopped flowing to the states there would be few states survive.

    Its easy to say we’ll do it ourselves but few realize (including you)

    that life as we know it now would come to a screeching halt.

    Like it or not we have to live in the 21st century and that means

    helping each other out.

  • 4free

    Your best guess of 2020 is as good as any. Nobody knows what
    will happen after 2016. I just wanted to correct sisyphusx with
    the correct time frames.

  • PowerToThePeople

    Horsecrap. You are so full of it I am not sure whether to laugh or mock you.

    States did just fine before the fed took over, they will do fine long after the fed stops forcing all these programs down the states throats. It does not matter if it is the 21st Century or the 25th, states can make it just fine without fed dollars and forced fed programs.

    You really need to stop typing here, you are showing yourself to be a fool.

  • PowerToThePeople

    It is not even really a bribe, it is the feds demanding states comply to every absurd program, promising so many dollars per ten if every item is complied with, and the states have to add in the other dollars per ten which amounts to billions of the budget. Then when the fed knocks off a dollar or three per ten because they do not like some aspect of the state’s compliance, then the state is stuck with a much bigger bill and no funds to pay for it. Not a bribe, more like extortion.

  • 4free

    Gee is your title to show now articulate and rational you are?
    I sure liked the way you conservatives used your objectivity in
    choosing Romney as your candidate. I can say without any
    reservation that conservatives aren’t too bright when it comes
    to choosing candidates.

  • funwithknives

    …and this is precisely what I was discussing with Junior here.
    Know it or not, it was Your Title I was dissing , but you’re just not perceptive nor seemingly bright enough to see sarcasm when it slaps you upside your head.
    By-the-by, it’s never ‘wasted bandwidth’ when Progressives [ your self-description is your problem. I suggest intensive drug therapy] come here and caterwaul incessantly.
    Every tap you take and every word you form clues us in on Our Great Divide and shows us, up-front and personal just what the other half is currently thinking. Plus, the giggles bring some measure of levity.
    I also must note that nowhere in your minute response did you note or counterpoint anything I claimed.
    You only tried to switch the subject, and really badly attempted to try out what you might class as ‘ridicule’.
    You hit 2 of 3 of the ‘tells’ of a Progressive and did it in two posts and fewer than 50 words. Good job.
    BTW, I collect knives, throw knives for relaxation, and keep ‘em all real sharp. In my world, we call this “Fun”. Comprende’ ?

  • Seedyrom

    Mr Ultrasound also abandoned conservative principles requiring women to be forced into a vaginal probe…….reminds me of the TSA searches at airports. Violating someones body is not the way. Make women watch an ultrasound and watch the abortion procedure on video and require they look at the tv or at least have the volume up with detailed descriptions from doctors.

    Mr. Ultrasound was used by dems to make the case against Romney 2012 and against all republicans seeking election and reelection. When a bad idea costs votes, don’t do it again and don’t take big gov types seriously.