HolyCoast: The Revolution in a Cornfield
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Thursday, December 22, 2011

The Revolution in a Cornfield

Gov. Sam Brownback is taking the Tea Party goals and objectives to heart and is transforming Kansas:
If you want to know what a Tea Party America might look like, there is no place like Kansas.

In the past year, three state agencies have been abolished and 2,050 jobs have been cut. Funding for schools, social services and the arts have been slashed. The new Republican governor rejected a $31.5 million federal grant for a new health-insurance exchange because he opposes President Obama’s health-care law. And that’s just the small stuff.

A new “Office of the Repealer” has been created to reduce the number of laws and regulations, and the Repealer is canvassing the state for more cut suggestions.

In the upcoming legislative session, Gov. Sam Brownback (R) plans to roll out proposals to change the way schools are funded, taxes are levied and state pensions are administered.

A year after voters vaulted hundreds of tea party candidates to power in Washington and in state capitals, the movement’s goals are being pursued aggressively in states such as Wisconsin, Ohio and Texas.

But in Kansas, as nowhere else in the country, tea party fervor is reshaping government. The same political forces of the Republican Party driving the confrontation over taxes and spending in Washington are now completely in charge in Kansas.

The GOP now controls the state’s House of Representatives with the biggest majority in half a century. Emboldened by this power shift, Brownback — the state’s former two-term U.S. senator — has embarked on his overhaul at a breathtaking pace.

“It’s a revolution in a cornfield,” said Arthur Laffer, the 71-year-old architect of supply-side economic theory and former economic adviser for President Ronald Reagan who is now working with the governor. “Brownback and his whole group there, it’s an amazing thing they’re doing. Truly revolutionary.”
Of course, the Washington Post is not that impressed, but I am. This kind of government tough-love is what's needed nationwide if we're to get spending and debt under control. Read the rest of the piece and try and gloss over the liberal bias. Brownback is doing good things and his state should be a model for the rest of the country.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I bet in several years after they start running a surplus, CA or NY will demand that states like this "share" their wealth.

Linda said...

Yea, I'm glad I live in Kansas!

Merry Christmas, Rick!