GOP wave reshapes nation's agenda state by state
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/04/18-2

Associated Press

4/18/2011

COLUMBUS, Ohio - State by state, Republicans are moving at
light speed on a conservative agenda they would have had no
hope of achieving before the big election gains of
November.

The dividends are apparent after only a few months in
office, and they go well beyond the spending cuts forced on
states by the fiscal crunch and tea party agitation.
Republican governors and state legislators are bringing
abortion restrictions into law from Virginia to Arizona,
acting swiftly to expand gun rights north and south,
pushing polling-station photo ID laws that are anathema to
Democrats and taking on public sector unions anywhere they
can.

All this as Democrats find themselves cowed or
outmaneuvered in statehouses where they once put up a
fight. In many states, they are unable to do much except
hope that voters will see these actions as an overreach by
the Republicans they elected - an accidental revolution to
be reversed down the road.

A tug to the right was in the cards ever since voters put
the GOP in charge of 25 legislatures and 29 governors'
offices in the 2010 elections. That is turning out to be
every bit as key to shaping the nation's ideological
direction as anything happening in Washington.

A close-up review of the first wave of legislative action
by Associated Press statehouse reporters shows the striking
degree to which the GOP has been able to break through
gridlock and achieve improbable ends. The historic and
wildly contentious curbs on public sector bargaining in
Wisconsin, quickly followed by similar action in Ohio, were
but a signal that the status quo is being challenged on
multiple fronts in many places.

The realignment in Florida has produced a law imposing more
accountability on teachers, along with 18 proposed abortion
restrictions, some bound to become law. Immigration
controls are motivating lawmakers far from borders,
constitutional amendments against gay marriage are picking
up steam, Michigan is shortening the period people can get
jobless benefits and Indiana may soon have the broadest
school voucher program in the U.S.

At least 20 states are going after public-sector benefits,
pay or bargaining rights.

In Virginia, Republicans used a deft legislative maneuver
to enact a law that could close many of the state's 21
abortion clinics. In Missouri, a presidential swing state
where Republicans are at their strongest numbers in
decades, a tax cut sought by business for 10 years has been
given final legislative approval and Democrats are putting
up little resistance to Republican priorities they once
tied in knots.

"You can't get up on every issue when you're in the
minority," said state Sen. Tim Green, a Democrat from St.
Louis. "So you pick the ones you're most passionate
about."

In North Carolina, where Republicans won control of both
legislative levers for the first time since 1870, the party
has secured approval in at least one chamber for charter
school expansion, limits on damages in medical malpractice
suits and a bill that would create separate crimes for the
death or injury of a fetus at any stage of development.
Republicans have made unexpected progress in giving gun
owners more rights to carry concealed pistols. North
Carolina is also among nearly a dozen states where an
initiative to require photo IDs at polls is getting
traction. Democrats and civil libertarians worry photo ID
rules would suppress minority and legal immigrant voting.

Conservatives welcome the pace and breadth of it all. "When
you have one side that's been put out in the legislative
wilderness, there's a lot of pent-up ideas that are going
to move quickly," said Dallas Woodhouse, director of
Americans for Prosperity in North Carolina.

Even solidly Democratic Vermont is coming up a paler shade
of blue as legislators seek cuts in spending on the elderly
and disabled after shelving a plan to raise taxes on the
rich. The squeeze on state budgets and the shaky economy
are forcing lawmakers of both parties to rethink the usual
partisan prescriptions.

"In the context of that kind of a fiscal reality, I think
agendas become a little bit more polarized and
opportunities for finding the kind of adjustments on the
margins become less and less," said political scientist
Philip Russo of Ohio's Miami University.

In bellwether Ohio, new Republican Gov. John Kasich burst
out of the gate with a plan, now law, to hand over job
creation functions from the government to a nonprofit
corporation whose board he chairs. Bills that would have
met quick death under Democratic control have advanced
under Republican majorities - none more apparent than the
law to curtail the collective bargaining rights of more
than 350,000 public workers.

Democrats in Ohio are complaining about "one-party rule"
and want buyer's remorse legislation that would help voters
recall lawmakers who are doing things they didn't elect
them to do. Their chances of getting it are close to
zero.

So is a conservative tide sweeping the nation?

If so, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin sees it as a tide
that can wash out as fast as it rushed in.

Sitting in the State Room of the Statehouse in Columbus,
Ohio, where she had come for a historical event, Goodwin
said declining party loyalty has accelerated shifts in
public opinion and swings of the pendulum. She recalled the
Democratic statehouse gains of 2008, the year of Barack
Obama. "We thought in 2008, many pundits did, that that
meant a progressive era was coming in; now everybody's
talking about a conservative era in the states and maybe in
the nation," she said.

"When one whole party comes in, and they come in having
been out before, there's that flush of victory that makes
them think this is our time, whether they're Democrats or
Republicans, to get through what we want to get through."

In South Carolina, where Republicans are fashioning further
restrictions to one of the country's toughest immigration
enforcement laws, Democrats have mostly dropped the
delaying tactics they once used with relish. The Democratic
opposition has essentially vaporized in Tennessee, Kansas
and Oklahoma, too.

In Oklahoma, where the GOP controls both chambers and the
governor's office for the first time in history,
Republicans are making sweeping changes to the state's
civil justice system, shoring up the state's pension system
by making workers contribute more and work longer, and
aiming to eliminate bargaining rights for municipal workers
in the state's seven largest cities.

"They're power mad," said Democratic lawmaker Richard
Morrissette of Oklahoma City. "They weren't out there
campaigning on the idea of consolidating power. They know
they have control of the House, the Senate and the
governor's office, and they're ramming this stuff through
just because they can."

If Republicans are overreaching, it's also true that voters
did not elect them to govern like Democrats.

"All this should come as no surprise to people," said New
Hampshire GOP lawmaker Gene Chandler. With supermajorities
in both chambers, giving them a stronger hand against a
Democratic governor, GOP legislators in the state have
passed bills to shift more public employee pension costs to
workers and opt for spending cuts over tax increases.
They've also approved legislation to expand the right to
use deadly force in self-defense.

It's not all coming up tulips for the tea party or the
social conservatives, however. New Mexico and Utah are
among Republican-led states where governors are bypassing
the GOP playbook. The tea party movement is in tatters in
Colorado and not much better off in Alaska.

In Montana, Republican leaders are struggling to keep their
eye on the big picture - cutting spending, developing
natural resources - while the swollen GOP freshman class
peppers the debate with calls to nullify federal laws,
create an armed citizen's militia, legalize spear hunting,
force FBI agents to get a sheriff's OK before arresting
anyone, and more.

"Stop scaring our constituents and stop letting us look
like buffoons," veteran Republican lawmaker Walt McNutt
told the aggressive newcomers.

Gov. Brian Schweitzer, not one of the Democrats to roll
over, came up with a cattle brand that reads "VETO" and
seems itching to use it. "Ain't nobody in the history of
Montana has had so many danged ornery critters," he said.









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