WHAT STATE POLITICIANS NEED IS
A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED TEA PARTY
What
this state needs is a good old-fashioned Tea Party. Not one directed at
the liberal weenies in Washington who tried to ram health care reform
down our throats. This protest needs to focus on the State of Georgia.
Our
governor and members of the General Assembly continue to remind us that
state revenues are dropping precipitously and budgets must be cut.
Among those making the hard choices are legislators who did not file
their
taxes
last year. We aren’t talking about filing late or filing incorrectly. We
are talking about people who did not file. Period. And they will be
making decisions that will affect your pocketbook and mine? That is
appalling.
I
watched Paul Crawley, the no-nonsense political reporter at WXIA in
Atlanta interview new House Speaker Dennis Ralston the other night.
Crawley reminded Ralston we have another crop of legislators who haven’t
filed their taxes. I found Ralston’s response astonishing.
“These
legislators, many are working people,” he said. “They’re subject to
having the same problems as other working people. So I think you have to
look at the individual case — and I don’t think you can make a blanket
determination.”
Crawley, refusing to let the speaker off the hook, finally got Ralston
to concede that there is no excuse for not even filing the paperwork.
That’s a start.
I’m not
going to tell the speaker how to run his job. If I did, he would want to
tell me how to write this column. But, I would suggest he show a little
righteous indignation at having people who write our laws blithely
choose not to follow them.
Speaking of righteous indignation, there is suddenly a heap of it in the
Legislature directed at these scofflaws. Rep. Calvin Hill (R-Canton) has
introduced a bill calling for a constitutional amendment to bar anyone
from holding office who fails “in a timely manner” to file their taxes
or to pay them. Under this proposal, the State Ethics Commission would
have the power to remove office holders at any level from city, county
or state offices. Outsiders removing politicians from office? As a
former member of the State Ethics Commission, I will believe that one
when I see it.
Revenue
Commissioner Bart Graham, who cannot reveal the names of the legislators
by law, has given the miscreants 30 days to explain themselves before he
hands over the list to the legislative ethics committees for possible
disciplinary action. That is where the rubber will meet the road. Will
the legislators actually discipline their colleagues? Or will this turn
out like the charges against Ralston’s predecessor Glenn Richardson, who
was accused of having an affair with a gas company lobbyist while
shepherding a $300 million pipeline bill through the Legislature? That
complaint was dismissed by the Joint Legislative Ethics Committee
without ever holding a hearing. It took a scorned ex-wife to get the
facts out. What leads us to believe it will be any better this time?
Now
Rep. Wendell Willard (R-Sandy Springs) is proposing legislation to
strengthen the ethics laws in the wake of the Richardson debacle.
Willard’s proposal would prohibit legislators from accepting any gift
worth more than $100, but puts no limits on how many times a sub-$100
gift can be accepted. That’s absurd. Why do they need to accept any
gifts at all?
Our
legislators don’t get it. If somebody is going to cut education and
furlough school teachers — again — we want it to be people we can trust
to act with integrity. I don’t trust tax cheats and I don’t trust people
who play games with ethical conduct. Are our politicos just now
discovering this?
For too
long we have allowed too many legislators — Republican and Democrat — to
operate as though they are not accountable to us for their actions. And
we have been too apathetic to do anything about it. We just keep sending
them back to Atlanta. (One problem is we always think “our” legislator
is doing a grand job; it’s all those other politicians who are the
issue.)
Maybe
it is time for change under the Gold Dome. Maybe it is time for a good
old-fashioned Tea Party protest in Georgia. It is long overdue..
Download Printer-Friendly Version Here
(Must have Acrobat
Reader installed... click
here
for a free download!