Fair
75°
DeKalb, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Harrop: Tough Times for California Bashers

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Something about California sets conservative teeth on edge. In the Republican manual, liberal spending priorities married to an activist government cohabiting with a hedonistic culture can lead only to failure.

So when the Golden State conspicuously succeeds, California bashers find themselves at a loss. Until recently mired in deep budget deficits, California’s general fund is set to end next year in a surplus.

Surely deeper evil lies ready to bubble up, the bashers warn. To them, California resembles the phantom Rollo Tomasi from “L.A. Confidential” – the criminal “who gets away clean.”

It must especially pain conservatives that sunnier economic news partly results from voters directly rejecting Republican politicians and their agenda. A simplification here, but California’s famously dysfunctional politics have reflected Democrats’ desire to spend on certain public goals and Republican resistance to raising revenues needed to fund them.

So what did the voters do? Last November, they approved a temporary tax hike on themselves, expected to add $6 billion annually in revenues for the next seven years. And they handed Democrats a two-thirds supermajority in the state legislature, enabling them to raise taxes without Republican support.

Cornered by good news, some conservatives need to lash out. For example, Steven Greenhut recently wrote in Reason magazine: “It’s bad enough that other states have to deal with our residents, who are fleeing our success-punishing tax and regulatory regimen, but now, apparently, they are going to have to deal with our bad ideas, promoted through smug lectures from California’s liberal politicians.”

The “exodus out of California” is a common theme. “California factories once housed such industries as steel, automobile manufacturing, tire production and aerospace,” Charlotte Allen wrote on WeeklyStandard.com. “Those are now mostly gone or entirely gone.”

Right, and they’re no longer sewing sweatshirts in Manhattan or butchering cows in Chicago. They are doing other things, such as developing a technology powerhouse concentrated in Silicon Valley.

For bashers, California’s most prideful sin is public investing in the future. Made ‘em nuts when California passed a 2011 law requiring the state’s utilities to get 33 percent of their electricity from renewable sources by 2020.

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

Which Illinois issue matters most to you?

Pension reform
Same-sex marriage
Concealed carry/gun control
Medical marijuana
Other