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GOP governors take a pragmatic turn

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With Obama and Republicans in Congress at loggerheads over $85 billion in mandatory spending cuts set to take place Friday, governors from both parties are encouraging a deal that would delay cuts that could hurt their local economies.

GOP Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana has opposed the Medicaid expansion and the health overhaul. On Sunday, he suggested on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that Congress could delay that expansion and the establishment of health care exchanges under the law and save billions without “even cutting a program that’s started yet — just delay it.”

On CBS’s “Face the Nation,” Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell of Virginia joined with Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley of Maryland to call for Congress to prevent impending defense cuts that would hit their states hard.

Another case study can be found in Arizona, where Gov. Jan Brewer was labeled a conservative firebrand in 2010 for supporting her state’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Now, halfway through her first term, she’s softened her tone on immigration as Obama and Congress pursue a comprehensive overhaul.

In an interview, Brewer said it was easy to hold fast to ideological convictions as a candidate, but when “you have to govern for the whole state you have to be very pragmatic with your decision-making. You govern. And you have to make the trains run and the lights work and make tough decisions. You can’t please everybody all the time, but you have to be much more pragmatic.”

Pragmatism hasn’t always been found in abundance.

During Obama’s first term, Republicans fought the health overhaul in court and outside. Others refused federal money to develop high-speed rail lines or pressed to undermine the power of unions. During his campaign for governor in 2010, Scott frequently called Obama’s health care plan a “job-killer” that would hurt Florida.

Walker drew the ire of Democrats when he successfully pushed for restrictions to collective bargaining rights for public sector workers. That led unions and Democrats to push for his recall. Walker survived the recall election, but emerged with a change in tone and a focus on issues such as improving roads and bridges, education and workforce development.


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