BEING GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA IS NOT EASY AND THAT’S NO BULL
Where in
the world is George? I’m not talking about George W. I know where that
George is. He has donned his flight suit and is preparing to jet to Wall
Street where he will land in front of the empty Merrill Lynch building
festooned with a “Mission Accomplished” banner.
No, I am
talking about George E. As in George Ervin “Sonny” Perdue, who happens
to be your governor and mine — or at least he was until he just up and
disappeared a few weeks ago. It wasn’t the first time he has been
reported MIA.
Remember
when House Speaker Glenn Richardson got his panties in a wad in the last
days of the recent legislative session? The governor took off for China
until he was sure that Richardson had gone back to Hiram and taken his
bad temper with him.
Then when
we almost ran out of gas a few weeks ago, it was the governor’s
spokesperson Bert Brantley who assumed the role of acting governor and
told us that George E. was unavailable to help with the long lines,
short gas supply and even shorter tempers, because he was in Spain on an
industry-seeking trip.
The only
industry I know of in Spain is bullfighting. I believe someone must have
told the governor there was a Toro business available, and he thought he
was getting a lawnmower plant for his boyhood home in Houston County.
What he didn’t realize is that the kind of toro business the Spaniards
were talking about consists of angry bulls and guys in tight sequined
pants. I hope somebody set the governor straight. I have been to Houston
County, and they strike me as the kind of people who would shoot the
bulls on sight — and probably the guys in tight sequined pants, too.
Now that
we have some gas, acting Gov. Brantley has stirred up some serious dust.
He says he wants to eliminate the annual automatic cost-of-living
increases in retired teachers’ pensions. Actually, he says that is what
Gov. George E. wants to do, but as I noted earlier, we don’t know that
for a fact because we don’t know where the governor is. He might still
be in Spain trying to get those angry bulls on the state airplane after
the Spaniards assured him that bulls eat grass and, by definition, that
makes them lawnmowers. The Spaniards still haven’t figured out how to
sell him on taking the guys in the tight sequined pants, but they are
working on it.
If acting
Gov. Brantley will accept some advice from a modest and much-beloved
columnist, he will drop the idea of eliminating the retired teachers’
cost-of-living increases like a hot piquillo pepper. Teachers are very
smart — I have two of them in my family — and smart people with some
free time on their hands can dream up innumerable ways of making life
miserable for anybody who messes with them and their pensions.
Acting
Gov. Brantley hasn’t helped his case either by announcing that a $23
million “Go Fish, Georgia” Center is under construction in Perry. I
think the retired teachers and the rest of us commoners would like to
know why such a boondoggle is necessary at this time, given that the
state is facing a $1.6 billion budget shortfall.
I suspect
acting Gov. Bert Brantley will be happy to get the real governor back on
the job. If it’s not the retired school teachers in an uproar, it’s the
House Speaker acting like a two-year-old. If it’s not the House Speaker
stamping his feet and holding his breath, it is a totally confused
columnist trying to understand how we can build a $23 million fish pond
when the state is broke. If it’s not justifying a fish pond, it is
worrying about a group of guys in tight sequined pants making goo-goo
eyes at the state’s chief executive while he is busy trying to load a
herd of angry animals on an airplane.
Acting
Gov. Brantley would be the first to tell you that being governor is not
as easy as George Ervin Perdue makes it look. Even when he goes AWOL.
And
that’s no bull.
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