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Jim Waters: Big Biz, Big Govt: Voters are wary

Four days before the Primary Election, Rep. Adam Koenig, an Erlanger Republican, tweeted about Fayette County Constable Wade McNabb – with whom he’s sparred regarding legislation restricting constables’ police powers – hoping his nemesis would lose a reelection bid while apparently entertaining no possibility he might fall short in his own campaign.

“Happy we got my bill passed this year so I don’t have to deal with him again,” tweeted Koenig, who was first elected in 2006 and was running to represent the 69th District for a ninth term. “Hopefully the voters will take care of him on Tuesday.”

Actually, voters “took care” of both, sending McNabb and Koenig packing.

Voters also dismissed Union Republican Rep. Sal Santoro – another eight-term legislator – and Hebron Republican Rep. Ed Massey, chair of the House Judiciary Committee.

Positions on critical issues matter and citizens are paying more attention than given credit for by the political establishment.

Consider what happened to Massey, an avowed school choice opponent seeking a third term.

While we’ve praised Massey in this column for his innovative work in helping bring reform to the Teachers’ Retirement System, he ignored the voices of parents and citizens by opposing more educational alternatives for children.

Voters responded by handing Massey his walking papers, indicating a growing rejection of what an increasing number of citizens regard as “big education” – a monolithic establishment often hostile to parents that isn’t successfully educating children, either.

Free-market-minded voters in Kentucky, like elsewhere, also show increasing concern about the coziness between government and business, making them both bigger.

Consider Marianne Proctor’s 52% to 48% defeat of Santoro – despite his huge $122,000 campaign war chest, “much” of which “was from road contractors.”.

Santoro raised that re-election money while chairing the influential Transportation Budget Subcommittee.

Voters were willing to give up whatever Santoro’s seniority might mean for their region – a consequence bemoaned by the local political and even establishment media in Northern Kentucky – for someone who isn’t so beholden to the big business elements permeating our transportation budget and policies.

Apparently, it matters to voters that Santoro served as the point person for big business during a failed five-year campaign to raise the state’s gasoline tax by a whopping 10 cents a gallon, which would have added a half-billion dollars to Kentuckians’ already heavy overall tax burden.

Road contractors and big business went to the mat for the gas tax increase but, fortunately, came up way short.

Such policy – and political – defeats of tax-and-spending policies favored by entrenched lobbyists in Frankfort indicate “different attitudes toward big business, a fault line between the establishment and liberty factions within the GOP,” observed Bluegrass Institute Visiting Policy Fellow Andrew McNeill, who’s worked with Republicans in Frankfort for two decades.

It also signals concerns among voters who are pro-small business, pro-entrepreneur and very skeptical of the big-business lobby’s consistent efforts to get special treatment.

Tuesday’s primary results fit with what’s happening in other places – voters more determined to make changes ensuring that those chosen to represent them will govern with the same skepticism.

While Republicans will continue to enjoy a supermajority status in both chambers of the legislature, McNeill sees “a market correction of ideas” reverberating throughout Republican caucuses nationwide – a shift away from the mindset that “the pro-business, pro-Chamber agenda is the dominant strain of conservatism within the Republican Party.”

Previously, party leaders may have not had any reason to question that orthodoxy, but now McNeill says it’s coming into focus.

“A significant portion of the conservative movement is becoming as skeptical, and rightfully so, of big business as they are of big government – and they certainly don't like seeing the collaboration between the two,” he adds.

Jim Waters is president and CEO of the Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions, Kentucky’s free-market think tank. Read previous columns at www.bipps.org. He can be reached at [email protected] and @bipps on Twitter.

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