A Moderate’s View of the State of our State | Eastern North Carolina Now

Tom Campbell
    It has been four years since Republicans took control of our legislature. They now control all three branches of state government. When campaigning to takeover, the GOP promised to get government out of our way, be fiscally responsible, reduce the size of government, insist on transparency, openness and clean government, push governance closest to the people affected, grow the economy and fix education and healthcare. While not pretending to speak for all, this moderate wants to share his view of the state of our state.

    The Republican leadership's chief achievement has been fiscal responsibility. The worst of The Great Recession was waning when they took charge, but they balanced budgets, in spite of the elimination of large federal grants, without major upheavals. The state budget grew from $19.7 billion to $21.1 billion in the year just concluded, reflecting roughly the growth in population and inflation. They eliminated a $2 billion debt to the federal government for unemployment insurance by cutting arguably generous benefits. They oversaw a reorganization of state government, some of which seemed politically motivated; right now results are inconclusive.

    The Republican social agenda held their focus more than solutions to problems like education, healthcare, the economy and transportation. Their legislation has resulted in more lawsuits than at any time we can remember and their won-loss record isn't great.

    To right the economy, the GOP proposed tax reform, which largely involved cutting taxes, especially for the wealthy and businesses. Big lobby groups thwarted efforts for real reform. The state's unemployment percentage dropped dramatically but it is difficult to determine just how much of a role the tax cuts played in that improvement.

    North Carolina's economy hasn't improved as quickly as in previous recessionary periods, principally because wages are stagnant and jobs being created are not high-paying positions. The working poor and middle class, who suffered most, saw little relief, especially with the elimination of the Earned Income Tax Credit. Republicans eliminated the Rural Center, defunded the Golden Leaf Foundation, plan to axe the Biotechnology Center and Community Care North Carolina, because they have a Democratic smell rather than because they aren't working. There have been no major initiatives or programs to spur job creation or infrastructure improvement.

    Promises to make government trains run regularly and on time were de-railed. The first year in power, 2011, the Republican controlled legislature passed a state budget 11 days before the start of the fiscal year, the first time that had happened since 1995. Since then budget passage has been 2 days late, then 28, then 36 and we are currently 50 days late and no one knows when a budget will be finalized. We were dismayed at the Democrats' increased secrecy but Republicans have turned closed-door decision making into an art form. After decades of complaining about gerrymandered legislative and congressional districts GOP leaders redistricted boundaries down to specific streets to favor their candidates. We were never opposed to the election laws in existence and felt the 2013 changes were politically motivated, but aren't exercised about them and agree with the concept of showing identification when voting.

    Since becoming President Pro Tem Phil Berger has presided over a body that appears angry, antagonistic, arrogant and autocratic. Democrats often disagreed, but usually privately. The House and Senate differences are on display for all to see and their lack of respect for the governor and others is disappointing.

    Democrats attempted to fix ailing public schools by throwing money at them but the Republican solution is to encourage and fund alternative schools to our state system. They appear opposed to the way our university system is run but haven't given us specific reasons why and their appointed Board of Governors has done little more than fire the President, again without explanation.

    Healthcare has been problematic. Legislators wisely removed the State Health Plan from their own supervision and transferred it (and a huge unfunded liability) to the State Treasurer. Legislative leadership and the Governor wisely deferred on making decisions to form a North Carolina exchange or expand Medicaid until details involving the Affordable Care Act became clearer. Now that ACA is a fact of life they need to develop and initiate a healthcare plan for our state, especially for mental health and Medicaid, perhaps our single biggest need. Just taking Medicaid away from the Department of Health and Human Services feels more like rearranging deck chairs and a personal vendetta than a real solution. After four years of wrangling over Medicaid reform, they appear to be listening more to big-donor insurance company lobbies than to patients and healthcare providers. True, they eliminated budget deficits in Medicaid, but never forget some of the larger shortages were ones they created themselves.

    Meanwhile the gap between rural and urban areas and the haves and have-nots grows wider and so far they have failed to address the growing inadequacy and poor condition of public infrastructure.

    The current legislature's penchant for interfering in local government affairs smacks of Big Brother.

    In the 2010 election, we heard Republicans speak to problems and the failure of Democrats to fix them. Even with Democratic-drawn districts we elected Republicans to lead. I'm not ready to declare Republican leadership failed or throw the bunch out but there are many unaddressed or broken promises. As Yogi Berra once said, it feels like déjà vu all over again.

    Publisher's note: Tom Campbell is former assistant North Carolina State Treasurer and is creator/host of NC SPIN, a weekly statewide television discussion of NC issues airing Sundays at 11:00 am on WITN-TV. Contact Tom at NC Spin.
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( August 26th, 2015 @ 7:06 am )
 
If I am such a "liberal" why do I so agree with this "Moderate" good analysis of NC under Conservative Control????

Tom is at the core of NC government with way more NC experience than me. I have lived in NC / SC / GA from birth to churches served. I first came to NC to attend Southeastern Seminary, working my way through with Dorothea Dix Nurses Aide and Chaplain to the Wake County Juvenile Court --- all while living at Wake Forest.

I gladly left Georgia after Emory graduation in 1967. Lester Maddox, an avowed racist, had just become Governor and I as glad to get out --- until I discovered Jesse Helms doing conservative political commentary on WRAL my first day in Wake Forest. My thought was, "Lester had a first Cousin here in NC --- named Jesse!"

I left Wake Forest bound to 3 SC pastorates saying, "Raleigh will never be anything more than a Capital Cow Town." In 1986 we returned to Rocky Mount as I became Eastern NC Representative for Ministers Life Insurance Company. I was working a territory by zip codes from Durham to Wilmington and all the way to the Outer Banks so my exposure to "all things Eastern NC" was quick and good, in my view.

I was amazed how the "Capital Cow Town" had transformed with the Research Triangle Park at the core of growth and wealth. Greenville got the new Medical School and ECU was growing by leaps and bounds. Beaufort County and Bayview had not changed in the least. Poverty and strained job markets were still present as you left Pitt County and entered Beaufort County. We lived in Nash County and it was going into a sewer of drugs and crime. The split at the rail tracks between Edgecombe and Nash had Edgecombe moving quickly into Nash. All positive growth was to the West, on the eastern end of the area it was growing rapidly ONLY IN crime and deterioration of neighborhoods. When we left residence there for Beaufort County a good friend at the core of Rocky Mount business and government said, "Do you realize there are NO EXECUTIVE SALARIES LEFT IN ROCKY MOUNT?" From the railroad to textiles to much spent on downtown renovation, it was dying fast and continues to do so. They have the 2nd highest crime rate of any town in NC---second only to Gastonia.

All the observations Tom makes are right on target in my experience of NC since 1986.

My Alma Mater, SEBTS, was taken over by Southern Baptist Conservatives and that changed the kinds of preachers graduated to Baptist Churches, mostly in NC. Dr. Bill Friday observed when Dr. Page Patterson (from Texas) became the new President of SEBTS and he interviewed him: "The changes at this Seminary to conservatism are, perhaps the most important of the 1900's because they flavor NC from their pulpits and conservative outlook now." The largest religious group in NC, the NC Baptist State Convention, went conservative over some 15 years of manipulation at the core meetings from "Balanced Moderate outlook" to "Abject Conservatism." It is now a shell of what it used to be in numbers and public perception.

The NC Marriage Amendment passed with great rejoicing by Conservatives---only to be found Unconstitutional by the NC Federal Supreme Court. The proponents hauled aging and Parkinson-afflicted Billy Graham out at the last minute to give his blessing to NC Conservatism. I think he got "used for political purposes" --- just as are many good Baptists who vote in elections of NC.

Since 1986 I have seen Progressive NC turn into Regressive NC at the hands of Reagan Conservatives who went in masses to vote Conservative with the same claim as NC Conservatives: We are corrupted by Liberals and only a new Conservatism is the solution.

How's it going NC???? Not so well ---is my summation!!!



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