« BACK  |  PRINT

RS

FRONT PAGE CONTRIBUTOR

‘…but more importantly for the common good.’

The above is from Governor Pat Quinn (Democrat, although it’s fairly obvious from the quote) of Illinois; and it tells you everything that you need to know about Quinn’s mindset – not to mention the mindset of the Democratic party in general, too.

Here’s the background: the Sears Corporation has its headquarters in Illinois, and has been bribed offered incentives to stay in Illinois, despite the fact that Illinois itself is a rotten place to do business.  However, the bribes incentives run out in 2012, so the corporation is making sounds about moving somewhere else unless some new bribes incentives are offered.  You may safely guess from the previous sentences that I am not particularly interested in making Sears out to be the plucky little underdog in this conflict; it is in fact in an excellent position to get its bribes incentives, because Quinn doesn’t want to be the Governor Who Lost Sears To Texas.  And everybody knows it.

However, in the process of starting the intricate dance that is legalized corporate bribery, Quinn had this to say:

“We will sit down with the Sears people . . . and I’m sure we’ll work out something that will work for the company, but more importantly for the common good,” Mr. Quinn said.

Yeah.  About that.  This ‘common good’ thing?  That’s your problem, not the Sears Holding Corporation’s.    The Sears Holding Corporation’s responsibilities are first and foremost to the Sears Holding Corporation (which is to say, its owners and stockholders); ‘the common good’ is a semantically meaningless buzz-phrase used by politicians to justify… whatever the politician wants to justify that day.  Sure, sometimes ‘the public good’ represents a valid concern (dumping raw industrial waste into reservoirs is generally frowned upon).  And sometimes it doesn’t (banning trans fats in restaurants is generally just annoying).  The problem is that you can’t tell from the buzz-phrase… and that politicians who use said buzz-phrase are usually predisposed towards rank demagoguery when they don’t get their way.

Again:  this is, strictly speaking, not an issue for Sears.  Illinois Democrats do not want to see SEARS FLEES ILLINOIS headlines in a variety of national newspapers, so Illinois Democrats will make a deal with Sears.  This is instead an issue for are all the Illinois-based companies who do not have the economic clout of Sears; those companies will be apparently expected to put the interest of “the common good” before their own interests, despite the fact that an out-of-business corporation serves nobody any good at all.  And those companies can certainly expect Illinois Democrats to be unsympathetic to anyone who can’t force them to become sympathetic.

Fortunately for those companies, there are options.

Moe Lane (crosspost)

COMMENTS

  • bcochran1981

    anti-big business…unless it fills their cof..I mean, is for the common good.

  • msctex

    It is how they justify the South Carolina/Boeing obscenity of Government overreaching and interference, and what they are hinting at here. It is the battle cry of every Monarchy or Totalitarian who feels power slipping away.

    Progressivism does not function, in terms of its effect upon an economy. It brings it to a halt, given time. The only way to maintain the implementation of the policies after a certain point is to assume dictatorial powers over the industries they seek to control.

    Because given the chance, to which they have every right, the companies will of course leave. I think Davy Crockett had a well known quote which would be perfectly appropriate.

  • http://havegunwillvote.blogtownhall.com/ cmndr45

    Raise individual and business taxes, drive small businesses out of state or out of business. Grant waivers, favors, bribes, back door deals to those with the money and connections that are willing to scratch their back next election.

    Rinse and repeat.

    Daley would be proud.

  • http://theminorityreportblog.com Repair_Man_Jack

    Chicago w/o Sears. That would be worth shaking my head at.

  • steve010

    is actively brow beating the legislature to lower corporate taxes. Home prices are half of what they were in 2006, even ocean side homes. If Sears wants to move, this is the place and any other company for that matter. Never more than 60 miles from the beach and you never have to fight the snow.

  • Ausonius

    Last week it warned of large losses, and its stock went down nearly 10%.

    If its stores in Ohio are any indication, the whole chain is in danger of tanking: old, dingy and in disrepair, often in malls which are vacant, with more employees than customers.

    And that accurately describes the Sears store I visited last night!

    So moving out of Illinois to save money, and selling the tower in Chicago, might not be a bad idea.

  • http://www.scragged.com petrarch

    Willis Tower, my backside.

  • jaykali

    I want my governor doing whatever he/she can to attract businesses to invest in our state. A good example is HP shopping around for a good place to build a new support center, Arkansas a couple years ago got them to build one in Arkansas that would bring a bunch of white-collar jobs. That was a huge win for our governor.

    Tax incentives are a very good tool for attracting business. You also have to remember that these businesses are not stupid, they have a lot of leverage and they use it to lower their bottom line. This is very legit, and it helps the state that wins the business. Most recently, South Carolina with it’s more friendly ‘right-to-work’ laws is stealing new Boeing business.

    I was born and raised in Texas and they are making a living on stealing business from California and other Democrat-heavy states. It’s called #winning, and conservative states are doing it the best so we should celebrate!

  • jaykali

    So smaller businesses will just leave, but that too will send a signal to these Democrat states. I really think there are going to be some serious population shifts to the south. It’s already been happening. These Democrat heavy states are going to spend themselves into ruin.

  • 6eorge Jetson

    Lower tax rates for all, instead of just those well connected enough to get waivers.

  • sieve70

    Moe –

    Check out the bri… I mean incentives Motorola Mobility got to recently announce their new corporate headquarters would be in IL, beating out CA (duh!), PA, TX, and FL…

    You know Sears will get their “deal” too…