The Missouri Senate began its week by
gathering with members of the House of Representatives to listen
to the governor’s annual State of the State address. This is the
time the governor presents his recommendations regarding the budget
for the upcoming fiscal year, which begins on July 1. We all want
the best for the people of our state, but I cannot agree with the
governor’s proposal, and implementing the recommendations we heard
on Monday would cause irreparable damage to our state.
My assessment is that the governor said he is happy with the progress
Missouri has made during his first four years in office, and
has no intention of changing course. It was “spend more money doing
the same things.” Over the last four years, we have seen Missouri
languish in everything from employment to education. We’ve lost
jobs and population to neighboring states precipitating the loss
of one of our congressional districts and delegates.
Few in either
political party envy Gov. Nixon’s dilemma. He was handed devastating
social and economic policies by Washington, D.C. that make it harder
for families, businesses, and workers to survive. For a governor
of the minority party, the politics have been challenging: does
he support failed federal policies like “stimulus,” income redistribution,
expansion of food stamps, and socialized medicine, or does he push
back and risk political backlash from his own political party?
Does he continue to join Washington, D.C. in promoting more dependency
on government, rather than independence of government? Will he
risk alienating his own party with free market policies that encourage
individual liberty and responsibility, as well as economic freedom?
Does he continue to build into Missouri’s budget federal dollars
and ignore the truth that it is really just federal debt?
The governor
advocated for expanding Medicaid to make more Missourians dependent
on government and ignored the harmful effects of the federal health
care law that created this proposal. There are federal incentives
until 2017; however, this is not “free” money, and how much do
you trust a federal government that is already more than $14 trillion
in debt? Our nation is in a financial emergency and the federal
government is trying to lure the states into accepting the invisible
money, dragging our country even deeper in debt. Missouri would
eventually be required to take over a portion of the cost of the
expansion — a cost that would amount to millions out of taxpayers’
wallets. Have you looked at your paycheck this year and adjusted
your budget to the increases in your taxes? Why not design policies
to transition out of welfare and move our state forward? That requires
engaging free-market forces like eliminating taxes on income, freeing
workers to choose whether to belong to unions, and reining in bureaucracies
like the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.
The governor
also touted increased funding for early childhood, K-12, and higher
education. Last year, his plan for the FY 2013 budget would have
slashed funding for higher education by $89 million — this was
the third time the governor proposed cuts to higher education.
The Legislature stepped in and was able to allocate $65.9 million
in reduced state spending to restore the governor’s proposed cuts
to higher education, maintaining the same level of funding from
the previous fiscal year. In the end, the governor
withheld nearly $9 million from higher education.
Furthermore,
the governor’s budget proposal depends on the Missouri Legislature
passing numerous pieces of legislation. If lawmakers do not agree
upon a measure and these bills don’t become law, the governor’s
budget proposal would collapse. As highlighted in an article by
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the governor’s
budget depends upon: $56.6 million from legislation regarding Missouri’s
“circuit breaker” tax credit (HB
192); $51.8 million from a tax amnesty proposal (HB
55); and, of course, we can’t forget the $46.6 million his
budget plan relies on from the expansion of Medicaid.
Missourians
do not appear to me to be more free or prosperous than four years
ago. Promises of more of the same promises the same results, and
I, for one, do not believe government can ignore the laws of economics
or the lessons of history and be successful. In the months ahead,
my hope and prayer is that the governor will be present in our
efforts to create jobs, provide incentives for businesses to locate
to Missouri, and ensure our children have a successful academic
career.
I appreciate you reading this Legislative Report, and please
don’t hesitate to contact my office at (573) 751-2108 if you have
any questions. Thank you and God bless.
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