Signs of fiscal responsibility in Sacramento

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Read my lips: Like everyone else, I’d prefer no new taxes. Americans are taxed too much as it is, and politicians – in both parties – are too wasteful with other people’s money. Or, as we were reminded during the debate over the stimulus bill, they’re too busy scheming new ways to stimulate their careers by using our dollars to bring pork to their districts, pursue ideological goals, fund pet projects and reward their supporters.

So I’m not pleased that the compromise budget worked out in Sacramento includes $12 billion in new taxes along with – and here’s the good news – $14.9 billion in spending cuts. Nor are many other California voters, who will have their say about approving some of the budget details in a special statewide referendum on May 19.

Yet in a time of crisis, it would be irresponsible for our elected officials to stubbornly take any remedial action off the table and refuse to even discuss it. And in that vein, it’s obvious from the raucous budget debate in Sacramento – and the populist fallout since – that state Republicans would be wise to reconsider their absolute hard line against any tax increases, even in dire straits. In the state Senate, only three Republicans voted for the package. And it may well cost them their careers.

The bigger worry is what the budget deal will cost the state. Rumors of the state’s demise have been greatly exaggerated, and it remains a highly desirable – if, at times, crushingly expensive – place to live and do business. While many people are leaving, others continue to move in. No matter what happens with the budget wrangling in Sacramento, tourists will still come here to spend money, and companies will still move here to make money.

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Still, the figures don’t lie. California has a budget deficit of $42 billion, and it’s one of the states that have been hit hardest by the mortgage crisis.

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Republicans have made some bad choices, such as alienating Hispanics over issues such as immigration and language. So now California is controlled by Democrats, and those Democrats are beholden to public-sector unions – representing everyone from teachers to prison guards to sanitation workers – that have a knack for putting their interests before the common good.

Then there is what is unfolding in the national arena. Future generations of Californians will have to pick up their share of the cost for the gargantuan $787 billion stimulus package passed by Congress. Whatever else the emergency legislation accomplishes – and unfortunately, it might not accomplish much – it has already managed to tighten the screws on Republican governors who blasted the deal and yet are eager to claim their chunk of the federal bailout. It seems that nothing turns a fiscal conservative into a tax-and-spend liberal quite like the allure of free money – even if it isn’t really free. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger comes to mind. He was elected as an economic reformer but is now eagerly awaiting his share of the stimulus money.

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Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal deserves credit for being one of the Republican governors who, at least at this point, walk it like they talk it. A critic of the stimulus package, Jindal doesn’t want his state to accept $98 million to expand unemployment benefits for people who wouldn’t normally be eligible to receive them. Taking the money would also require a permanent change in state law that Jindal says would cost more in the long run.

Meanwhile, Schwarzenegger would probably also take Louisiana’s share if he could. He has praised President Obama for helping put together what he called a “terrific package” that could bring as many as 400,000 new jobs to California. The governor is also pleased with his state’s budget deal, which he claims was completed because lawmakers put the interests of Californians ahead of the agendas of either party. He called the agreement “the perfect medicine for our ailing economy.”

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We’ll see about that. Perfection is not often seen in politics. For now, it’s enough to say that the state budget deal, while not pretty, represents a realistic stab at something that neither political party seems to care much about: fiscal responsibility.

Washington, take note.

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