http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/what-happens-when-conservative-ideologues-get-run-their-own-states?akid=12695.294211.W3A1ZL&rd=1&src=newsletter1030419&t=5
in spite of conservatism's seeming upswing, there are signs at a
statewide level that its ideology is coming apart at the seams. Even
conservatives are starting to take notice and worry.
First and
foremost is the laughingstock that extremist Republican Sam Brownback
has made of Kansas. Brownback slashed social welfare spending and
implemented steep regressive income tax cuts, promising that his Laffer curve-based supply-side economic experiment would bring jobs and prosperity to Kansas while increasing government revenue.
In fact, the opposite has happened. Revenue projections in Kansas are in freefall,
and the economic growth benefiting the rest of the country--including economically similar areas in surrounding states--has bypassed the Sunflower State. Just in the last week Kansans received another flurry of bad news:
revenue projections are even worse than the disastrous figures
projected last month, forcing even deeper cuts to education and other
services. But that won't be possible, as a panel of judges has ruled that Kansas is already shortchanging K-12 education. In desperation, Brownback has proposed further
reductions in state funding to its already woefully underfunded public
employee pension system, a move that is meeting with stiff resistance
even from his fellow Republicans.As a result, Kansas Republicans are confronting the previously unthinkable possibility that the tax cuts may need to be repealed.
The failure of Brownback's experiment is also being replicated in New Jersey, where governor Chris Christie slashed pensions, cut taxes for the rich, laid off public employees and gave away $2 billion of tax incentives, only to watch New Jersey rank next-to-last in job growth. Christie's obvious fiscal mismanagement in New Jersey has been a major reason for his slide in early polling of potential Republican presidential contenders.
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