Although the Florida Republican Party has one-party control of the
state government, they are simply unable and unwilling to govern.…
Although Florida has a Republican Governor, and the GOP controls both houses of the state legislature, state lawmakers appear destined to fail
to pass a state budget when the legislative session ends on
Friday. Republicans are proving themselves incapable of passing a simple
budget resolution. In-party bickering over Medicaid expansion has
derailed budget talks and all but guaranteed that no resolution will be
reached any time soon.
The pragmatic Republican-controlled Florida State Senate wants to accept federal Medicaid funding
to extend health care to more than 800,000 uninsured low-income
Floridians. However, the more dogmatic GOP-controlled House and
Republican Tea Party Governor Rick Scott are opposed to the plan,
creating a budget impasse between the warring factions.
Florida voters are bearing the consequences of
one-party rule under a party that is increasingly divided between
traditional conservatives who still believe in governing, and hardcore
ideologues who are more interested in appeasing anti-Obama Tea Party
constituents in deep red House districts.
The anti-Obama nihilism of the House faction, aided
and abetted by Governor Rick Scott, threatens to deny 800,000 Floridians
affordable health care. In addition, the intransigence of right-wing
lawmakers has also sent the entire budget process spiraling into chaos,
with no resolution in sight.
In the current polarized political environment, it
is easy for lawmakers to win election by appealing to conservatives with
anti-government rhetoric. However, in practice those same lawmakers,
once elected, ironically prove their point by demonstrating that they
are incapable of governing. While their incompetence may further fuel
anti-government ideology, it should come at the cost of creating a
backlash against the elected officials spouting the rhetoric now that
they are the government.
Whether Florida voters will wise up and throw
Republican lawmakers out in 2016 remains to be seen. However, it has
become clear that although the Florida Republican Party has one-party
control of the state government, they are simply unable and unwilling to
govern.
No comments:
Post a Comment