Dalton Plays Small Ball | Eastern North Carolina Now

While the national Democratic ticket is enjoying a modest lift in the polls after the convention in Charlotte, the party's gubernatorial nominee, Walter Dalton, remains significantly behind Republican Pat McCrory.

ENCNow
   Publisher's note: The article below appeared in John Hood's daily column in his publication, the Carolina Journal, which, because of Author / Publisher Hood, is inextricably linked to the John Locke Foundation.

    RALEIGH     While the national Democratic ticket is enjoying a modest lift in the polls after the convention in Charlotte, the party's gubernatorial nominee, Walter Dalton, remains significantly behind Republican Pat McCrory.

    The political plight of Dalton, the current lieutenant governor and former state senator, is "over-determined," as a social scientist might put it. That is, there are many plausible explanations for why he trails McCrory. Thanks to Gov. Bev Perdue's last-minute decision not to file for reelection, Dalton's campaign came together quickly and remains underfunded. Perdue is the most unpopular governor in modern North Carolina history, so running to succeed her as a Democrat is obviously a challenge.

    The state's economy remains
John Hood
in the doldrums, imperiling any candidate perceived to be part of the incumbent establishment. And McCrory proved as the longtime mayor of Charlotte that he is a skilled and likeable campaigner with a strong appeal to independents and conservative Democrats.

    Still, Dalton is partly responsible for his plight by choosing to emphasize modest, incremental, and unexciting ideas rather than bold initiatives. His strategy is to play small ball - a concept that originated in baseball and then migrated to poker. Essentially, the idea is to build to ultimate victory through a series of low-risk, low-return plays rather than swinging for the bleachers.

    His problem is that in politics, you can afford to play small ball only if you have superior or equivalent resources. In public policy, you can afford to play small ball only if the performance of your government is near or above average, requiring only tweaks to continue progressing over time.

    Neither condition applies to Dalton's situation. He's badly outmanned and outgunned in the governor's race. And the state he aspires to govern, North Carolina, has anti-competitive tax and regulatory policies, inadequate infrastructure, and one of the worst economies in the United States.

    Dalton needs a homerun, or at least a couple of solid doubles. Instead, his campaign seems to be one of grounders, bunts, and hopes of getting walked.

    Take a look at the lieutenant governor's just-released economic plan, for example. While McCrory has been talking about big ideas such as completely rewriting the state's tax code, slashing red tape for entrepreneurs, and making career and technical education a real option in K-12 education, Dalton's plan is a hodgepodge of small ideas ranging from modestly beneficial to modestly harmful.

    I count as modestly beneficial those elements of Dalton's plan that focus on encouraging collaboration in business recruitment and reforming unemployment insurance to allow some workers to continue receiving partial benefits while retraining for a new job. I count as modestly harmful Dalton's proposals to complicate the tax code through more incentives, to loan or grant more tax money to politically favored companies, and to raise the cost of state government by imposing various "Made in North Carolina" mandates and set-asides.

    Neither candidate gets good marks for specificity, I grant you. Both McCrory and Dalton say they would reform North Carolina's tax code in part by eliminating deductions and credits, but won't say which ones they'd junk. At least with McCrory, however, his stated goal is a big one: to reduce the state's marginal income tax rates, thus reducing the disincentive to save, invest, and create new jobs. With Dalton, there are schemes to shield companies or industries he likes from these marginal tax rates, rather than improving the rate of return on all investment in North Carolina, regardless of where and how it occurs. Essentially, his conception is of government as venture capitalist. Down that road lies Solyndra.

    The policy problem is part a parcel with the political problem. If Dalton were to say that North Carolina needed major changes in our education, infrastructure, tax, and regulatory systems, it would be a tacit admission that the past two decades of Democratic administrations have made poor choices. Can he really do that and remain the standard-bearer for the Democratic establishment?

    No. Running a more independent campaign might risk some intra-party tensions. But it would also have a better shot of putting the ball in the outfield - or in the stands.

    Hood is president of the John Locke Foundation and author of Our Best Foot Forward: An Investment Plan for North Carolina's Economic Recovery.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Liberalism Unmasked: Part One John Locke Foundation Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics, Bloodless Warfare: Politics Obama Apologizes; Romney Criticizes


HbAD0

Latest Bloodless Warfare: Politics

President Donald J. Trump slammed failed Governor Roy Cooper's soft-on-crime agenda that led to the tragic murder of Ukrainian refugee, Iryna Zarutska, by a career criminal in North Carolina.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Soft-on-crime Democrat Roy Cooper stayed silent this weekend after police released the footage of a repeat offender brutally murdering an innocent passenger on the Charlotte Light Rail.
Today Governor Josh Stein signed Executive Order 23, establishing the North Carolina Energy Policy Task Force to strengthen the state’s electricity infrastructure and energy affordability as demand increases.
I am honored to announce my candidacy for City Council.

HbAD1

The N.C. Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Coastal Management announced nearly $6 million in Resilient Coastal Communities Program (RCCP) grants, with nearly $1.2 million of that going to support communities in District 3.
National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) Chairman Tim Scott released the following statement commenting on President Trump's "complete and total endorsement" of Michael Whatley for the North Carolina U.S. Senate race in a Truth Social post earlier this evening:
(RALEIGH) Today, Governor Josh Stein announced that the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources has awarded more than $2.6 million to trail development and restoration projects in eastern North Carolina.
Gary Carlton moved out of his school district, apparently on June 13.
(RALEIGH) Today Governor Stein signed seven bills and vetoed three bills.

HbAD2

(RALEIGH) Governor Josh Stein announced today that TMG & Haartz Solutions LLC, a new joint venture to supply synthetic leather materials for automotive interiors, will create 125 jobs over the next five years in Rutherford County.

HbAD3

 
Back to Top