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The Two-State Solution [a view from the Left]
The Stranger (Seattle) ^ | 10 March 2005 | Sandeep Kaushik

Posted on 03/11/2005 10:12:10 AM PST by Publius

Residents of Eastern Washington want to split Washington in two. Why not cut the rubes loose?

State Senator Bob Morton, a Republican from the Eastern Washington town of Orient (pop. 115), has a crazy idea. It's laughable, really. Unless you've been studiously ignoring our local newspapers in recent weeks (and who could blame you), you've probably heard about it. The senator from Ferry County wants to split Washington State in two. A clean break, along the line of the Cascades. The 19 counties to the west, mostly urban and suburban, with a hefty majority of the state's population and a strong liberal inclination, would become one state. The 20 counties to the east, mostly rural, mostly conservative, would become America's 51st state (or maybe 52nd, but more on that later).

It's laid out in Senate Joint Resolution 8009, which received a hearing (but no vote) in the Senate Government Operations and Elections Committee on February 22. Morton wasn't the only one who thought asking the feds to let Eastern Washington go its own way was a good idea; SJR 8009 had 10 other sponsors. Nine were Republicans. The other legislator who liked the idea was a surprise: Senator Adam Kline of Seattle, an unabashed liberal who is--and this is all too rare in Olympia--willing to think outside the box, signed on as the only Democratic supporter.

Still, it was an absurd idea, right? The self-important bloviators at the state's newspapers thought so. The Seattle Times, in a typically haughty, father-knows-best editorial on February 19, dismissed supporters of Morton's proposal as "kids" (the Times is addicted to this particular put down). The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, not to be outdone, slagged supporters of the idea, east and west, as "feuding siblings." P-I columnist Joel Connelly took it upon himself to tell Eastern Washingtonians they should be grateful for all the good stuff the West has done for them. And a columnist for the Spokesman-Review snarkily suggested naming the new state Reagan as he dismissed the idea as "silly."

In other words, Morton may have provoked discussion with his idea, but only of the pointless variety. The typical response: Make a few witless comments about how kooky it all is, followed a perfunctory call for better communication between East and West. No one in a position of real power either in government or media took Morton seriously. That's too bad, because Morton, who has offered the proposal before, is "very serious" about the idea. He argues there are good economic reasons to think about splitting up, and he added that the gulf of "custom, culture, and lifestyle" between East and West is too wide to be bridged with a few can't-we-all-just-get-along conversations.

Senator Morton has a point. I know because I made a short trip to his part of Eastern Washington last week, where I talked to people in the small towns of Stevens and Ferry Counties. Some people liked the idea of splitting up, some were skeptical, but almost all agreed that the West dominates the East, and they don't like it.

Too bad for them, right?

In fact, it's too bad for us. The reaction on this side of the state to Morton's idea goes something like this: If they think it's good for them, then it must be bad for us. That's faulty logic, because this is not a zero-sum game. It is possible that they would end up better off without us, though that is debatable. Less debatable, however, is that we would be better off without them. We would not only save money--as Kline argues, the wealthier West tends to subsidize the poorer East--but we would consolidate our power, creating one of the most progressive states in the nation.

The first things you notice about far-northeastern Washington is that it is poor, big, and empty. The road north out of Spokane, US 395, is paved (unlike many roads in the region), a two-lane ribbon of blacktop flanked by scrubby farmland or public forest. Very occasionally you pass through a small town. Stevens County, which runs from just outside of Spokane all the way north to the Canadian border, contains 40,484 people spread over 2,481 square miles, a population density of about 16 people per square mile. (King County, by contrast, has a density of 780 people per square mile.) The county seat, Colville, has 5,000 inhabitants and boasts a few reasonable restaurants, a library, an excellent coffee shop (I'm told), and that universal symbol of nouveau rural culture, a Wal-Mart.

The economy of the region is built around agriculture, timber, and mining, and it's not doing so well. Tricia Woods, at the Colville Chamber of Commerce, tells me about the mill in Republic closing, about a Northwest Alloys plant shutting down ("they could import from China cheaper," she says), and about the recent sale of Boise Cascade, which has created deep anxiety about the possibility of further job losses. There are bright spots in the local economy, including the growth of small entrepreneurial businesses that sell products over the web, but "a lot of people around here are [just] trying to make ends meet," she says. While Woods believes the secession idea is impractical, she admits that there are "a lot of independent-minded people in this area, a lot of private landowners who don't like being told by the government what to do."

I hear similar sentiments 10 miles down the road in Kettle Falls, a dusty little town that bills itself, on its welcome sign, as "1,550 Friendly People and One Grouch." At Ralph's Tavern locals reel off a litany of woes: a pocket-knife manufacturing plant that considered opening here but was driven off by state regulation, BNSF's sale of the rail line to a smaller company that has led to the loss of relatively well-paid union jobs, the fact that the Wal-Mart in Colville is killing the mom-and-pop businesses in Kettle Falls. Years of drought have damaged the agricultural base and intensified battles between conservationists, who want to preserve water for salmon runs, and farmers. "I'm only planting half as much hay this year" because water is so scarce, one farmer sitting at the bar says.

Bob, a friendly and voluble retiree who has stopped in for an afternoon beer, sums up the local sentiment for me (he did not want to give his last name). A Rossi supporter, Bob says that people are angry about the governor's race--a sentiment I hear everywhere I stop--and believe that Christine Gregoire was elected by west-siders to protect their interests. He says that he and others believe that the West monopolizes the state's resources. The local schools are starved for funds, a situation he blames on the political power of Western legislators in Olympia. "Something is wrong with the politics in this state," he says. "Everything stays on the west side."

Ferry County, Senator Morton's home, makes Stevens County seem positively urban. The total Ferry County population is 7,300, making it the least dense county in the state with an average of only 3.3 people per square mile. It is also the poorest county in the state, with a per capita personal income of $17,437 in 2001, well under half of that in King County. Republic, the largest town (pop. 940), has the look and feel of a movie set from a John Ford Western. At City Hall, a faux log-cabin-style building on the main drag, police chief N. W. Merritt sits down with me in his cramped office. "I do agree with Senator Morton's bill," he says. "All the bills that are passed in this state are passed on the west side." He singles out the Growth Management Act (GMA), which he says may make sense on the west side of the state--"you guys are booming over there"--but place unnecessary burdens on rural areas like Ferry County, where the population of Republic has dropped in recent years.

Merritt echoes the primary complaint of east-siders, which is that they feel politically powerless. They're right. All 20 Eastern Washington counties voted for Dino Rossi. There hasn't been a U.S. Senator elected from the eastern half of the state since 1928. While Eastern Washington is overwhelmingly Republican, the Democratic politics of the more populous West dominates the political agenda. Out of 49 state senators, 38 represent Western Washington, and Morton points out that all nine state supreme court justices hail from Western Washington. "We are outvoted. We have no choice and we don't have a voice…. We get more regulations, more restrictions. We are slowly being choked down."

Eastern Washingtonians are right to feel they are dominated by a liberal coastal elite that doesn't understand them or care about their concerns, argues state Republican Party Chair Chris Vance. "What these people want are jobs," he says, but what they get is more dictates tailored to the West. "The GMA is a severe burden on small county governments. Is anybody really worried about growth in Ferry County?" The Democrats, he adds, have only themselves to blame for losing the support of working-class rural voters: "The Democratic Party used to be the party of the little guy," he says. "Now it's a party of elite Seattle environmentalists hanging around Kay Bullitt's house drinking Chardonnay. I say to liberals in Seattle, whatever happened to your concern for small family farms? What happened to Willie Nelson? What happened to Farm Aid? I'll tell you what happened. It was chic in the 1980s to worry about depressed rural areas in the country. Where did that go?"

Vance ignores the fact that while Republican elites may offer messages of cultural affinity with the rural poor, their actual policies strongly favor the rich, but he's right about Seattle liberals. And it may be that the best response to Vance is not more false expressions of concern by urban liberals for the rural poor (which come across as false and condescending), but a frank acknowledgment that the issues that divide us are not easily reconciled. During my visit to Eastern Washington, it became obvious that Morton is correct in his perception of stark, and perhaps irreconcilable, differences between East and West. The income disparity and the lack of political clout in Eastern Washington have bred a deep-seated resentment and suspicion of the West that feeds the growing political conservatism there. And though few are willing to admit it, it also breeds a growing dependency on handouts from the West.

The statistics don't lie. Projections for federal and state transportation funding between 2004 and 2013 show that King County will get back 84 cents on every dollar it provides for transportation funding, Pierce County will get only 80 cents, Snohomish County 88 cents, and Thurston County a mere 59 cents on the dollar. Meanwhile, large rural Eastern counties will get significantly more than they pay in: Stevens County will get $1.56 for every dollar they provide, Pend Oreille County, on the northern Idaho border, will get $2.60, and Ferry County will get a whopping $3.52. A 2001 report for the Senate Judiciary Committee showed that overall, Western Washington provided 82 percent of the state's transportation revenues but received only 78 percent of transportation expenditures; Eastern Washington, providing 18 percent of revenues, received 22 percent of expenditures. Eastern Washington also received more than its share of state K-12 education funding: 12 of the 13 counties that received the least state revenue per student were in the West (the exception was Spokane County).

That was the point Adam Kline wanted to make by supporting Morton's resolution. "We're subsidizing Eastern Washington," he says. "You know something? We don't mind. But what I do mind is that when we pay, and they benefit, they still complain. That's what bugs me. They're bitching about it."

The bitching isn't likely to stop. The obvious disconnect between the East's self-image of libertarian self-reliance and the reality of their dependence on the West's largesse doesn't make them grateful. It just breeds further resentment. And as long as the East remains tied to us, it has a convenient excuse for its problems: It's all our fault. To his credit, Morton doesn't care much why the West agrees to let the East secede so long as it does. He even suggests, only half-jokingly, that in the future he'll try pitching the proposal differently. "I should have put on a different title that said, 'We want to be free and no longer be an albatross around the neck of Western Washington,'" he says.

He adds that free from the West, the East would prosper by becoming less regulated and more business friendly. Maybe, maybe not. The environmental consequences would likely be severe, and the loss of well-paid blue collar jobs is a national trend that is not likely to be reversed, and which is actually sped up by the Republican Party's anti-union, free-trade agenda. As one Democratic politician said to me when I asked what he thought of Eastern Washington seceding, "It wouldn't be creating the 51st state. It would be creating a new Third World country."

On the other hand, my suspicion is that if the East became its own state, it would actually become more liberal than it is now over time, at least with respect to fiscal issues. When the East no longer has us to blame for its under-funded schools, or decaying infrastructure, or shrinking social services, taxpayers in "Reagan" might be more inclined to support funding a government-provided safety net. A shift in this direction is already happening in some red states: The new issue of the Washington Monthly has a revealing story about conservative Republican governors who are repudiating the party's anti-tax mantra as they face the harsh fiscal calculus of trying to provide indispensable government services in a time of mounting budget shortfalls. But even if Easterners don't repudiate their dearly held ideological platitudes, and allow their part of the country to spiral down into a Hobbesian state of nature, that is really their choice – or their problem.

Meanwhile think of the opportunity for progress we would have if we were divorced from the East. A state of Western Washington would instantly become the most, or at least one of the most, liberal states in the country. It's not just that we would have more money to spend on ourselves, although that's not anything to sneeze at. Politically, the East may not have control, but it does have enough votes to put the brakes on our liberal agenda. Fixing the Viaduct? It might actually become possible if there wasn't a solid block of conservative legislators opposed to raising the gas tax. A gay civil rights bill? It would pass with ease. If the Supreme Court legalizes gay marriage? No real threat of a constitutional amendment backlash. If a Bush-packed Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade? We would pass a pro-choice initiative without breaking a sweat.

It's true that if Eastern Washington became its own (red) state, we would be adding two new conservative senators to the national political mix. That though is easily solvable: Washington, DC has been pressing for statehood for years, but the idea has never moved forward because Republicans don't want to create another liberal state. So, in a modern Missouri Compromise, the feds could create two new states at once, a conservative one over here, and a liberal one in the other Washington.

If we believe in our liberal values, let's test them out. Senator Morton and his constituents believe in their conservative values, so let them test them out. It's just possible that both sides of the divide may end up better for the parting. Of course, it's not going to happen anytime soon. But that's not because Morton's idea is foolish. It's because the people who run this state are.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; US: District of Columbia; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: bluestate; redstate; secession; themostcorruptstate; washingtonstate
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To: Publius

The way things are in our country, it might not be a bad idea to declare two new political divisions.

First, organize the various states into eight regional entities, North and South in each time zone and call them Provinces, without violating existing state lines.

Such Provinces would organize states that have a lot more in common in terms of demographics, natural resources, transportation costs and general political concerns, as long as there was real power given to them.

Each Province (Central North, for example, where I live in Missouri) could rotate the provincial capitol to the various individual states that make up the Province.

Secondly, take any major urban metro area that hits a federal population target (say two hundred fifty thousand) and declare it a Federal City State, whose laws and regulations are separate from the more rural State and Provincial laws.

Let's face it: Cities have never been this large in history, they use up more resources, and they're responsible for the imposition of various draconian laws that currently affect everyone in that particular State.



41 posted on 03/11/2005 10:54:04 AM PST by hleewilder
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To: thoughtomator

Washaho... I'm still giggling...


42 posted on 03/11/2005 11:01:40 AM PST by Teacher317
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To: Publius
harsh fiscal calculus of trying to provide indispensable government services in a time of mounting budget shortfalls

There are a few services that are indispensable. But I'm sure that we all could find a few to dispose of.

Statement sure shows which way the writer leans.......

43 posted on 03/11/2005 11:03:18 AM PST by wbill
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To: Teacher317

Erm... maybe that is a better name for a de-louser than a state. Didn't really sound that one out before I posted it.


44 posted on 03/11/2005 11:04:04 AM PST by thoughtomator (I believe in the power of free markets to do good)
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To: thoughtomator

"So did the Virginia legislature consent to the formation of West Virginia?"

Being in rebellion at the time, they were incompetent to deny consent; of course they couldn't give consent either, but then Lincoln suspended habeas corpus, too. Here in California, there has been a long-standing attempt for the northern counties to join with the southern counties of Oregon in forming the great State of Cascadia. There are even signs saying, "Welcome to Cascadia," and you can listen to Cascadian Public Radio. I've kinda favored it just because it completely screws up the two-letter Post Office acronym system.

Of course, I support the perrenial ballot initiative to break up the state into three whenever it comes up. Our reading of the clause allows it, and the precedent of West Virginia supports this interpretation, as it was the western counties that voted to form a new state. Remember the 10th Amendment!

Mr. Reaganaut (I need my own account)


45 posted on 03/11/2005 11:05:05 AM PST by reaganaut (Not all Thanatologists are pro-death, abortion or euthanasia)
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To: andyk

Maybe it's time to put that initiative to divide California back on the ballot. Only this time, instead of north and south, we should split off the coast and keep the central valley, north and south to the borders, to ourselves. We'd have all the water that way, too; let LA start desalinating.


46 posted on 03/11/2005 11:07:49 AM PST by hsalaw
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To: reaganaut

As a strict constructionist, I would tend to the view that West Virginia isn't legitimately a state and thus provides no valid precedent (especially absent another Civil War).

Following this further, "Sheets" Byrd doesn't belong in the Senate, does he?


47 posted on 03/11/2005 11:09:32 AM PST by thoughtomator (I believe in the power of free markets to do good)
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To: thoughtomator
It isn’t like such a thing hasn’t happened before:


48 posted on 03/11/2005 11:12:58 AM PST by Plutarch
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To: pabianice

I advocate separating all of New England, downstate New York, Pennsylvania, and all of Deleware as well as portions of Maryland. Good riddance.


49 posted on 03/11/2005 11:16:00 AM PST by rcofdayton
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To: Publius

These "what we get back" numbers are always bogus. Would King County want to have a few reactors taken down and moved there? The reason more spending happens in rural counties is that that's where the NIMBY principle demands they go. Urban areas DO NOT want this "spending" in their areas.


50 posted on 03/11/2005 11:25:10 AM PST by cookcounty (LooneyLibLine: "The ONLY reason for Operation Iraqi FREEDOM was WMD!!" ((repeat til brain is numb))
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To: hleewilder
First, organize the various states into eight regional entities,.....

It could be called the "Octagonal Commission" and spawn a new industry in conspiracy theories. If it happens "Alcoa Alum. is a "buy". (/satire)

All kidding aside, with enough of the right influence, such an organization could trim our left tacking Republic.

51 posted on 03/11/2005 11:27:03 AM PST by elbucko (A Feral Republican)
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To: Publius

The author is a liberal schmuck.

"indispensable government services" to me do not include welfare programs, 'saving' fish, or stopping non-existent global warming.

Indispensable government services are the military, law enforcement, fire departments, and civil courts.


52 posted on 03/11/2005 11:29:46 AM PST by PeterFinn ("Tolerance" means WE have to tolerate THEM. They can hate us all they want.)
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To: Publius
Then how do you explain West Virginia?

There were TWO groups claiming to be the duly constituted legislature of Virginia. Congress listened to the group that wasn't shooting at US troops.

53 posted on 03/11/2005 11:34:35 AM PST by Poohbah ("Hee Haw" was supposed to be a television show, not a political movement.)
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To: pabianice

Michigan's UP and Maryland's Eastern Shore would gladly secede.


54 posted on 03/11/2005 11:35:57 AM PST by expatpat
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To: thoughtomator
So did the Virginia legislature consent to the formation of West Virginia?

Yes.

55 posted on 03/11/2005 11:36:05 AM PST by Poohbah ("Hee Haw" was supposed to be a television show, not a political movement.)
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To: Publius
This is the sort of thing that sounds good at the time, but that people usually end up regretting. Cities that have cut themselves off from the surrounding counties at a time when rural areas looked like a drain on their budgets, found themselves disadvantaged when suburbs sprang up outside their borders and people moved there.

Splitting up states isn't quite the same thing, but there is a lot to be gained by having cities, farms, farms and forests together, and spreading the gains and burdens over a larger population. If the oceans are really going to rise, as so many liberals believe, why cut yourself off from the higher ground?

Separate out a high tax region from a low one and in time you'll find all the growth moving to the low tax area. The first corporation that moves its offices from Seattle to Spokane will be quite a blow. This is probably something Washingtonians are probably aware of, as businesses already cluster on the border of states with no sales tax. What happens when more and more people who work in Seattle are making hundred mile commutes from across the new border.

On the other hand, some important banks, utilities, and corporations are bound to keep their offices where they are. If you are in a rural part of the state, would you want a government that you didn't elect to have the lion's share of control over the companies that are most important to the local economy?

Probably libertarians wouldn't mind, but why would rural areas want to recreate the situation of having little or no say in corporate affairs. That sparked the populist movement -- farmers in the Dakotas and elsewhere thought that the Twin Cities, Chicago, and New York exercised more control over their product and its marketing than they had themselves.

56 posted on 03/11/2005 11:37:59 AM PST by x
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To: Publius
Vance ignores the fact that while Republican elites may offer messages of cultural affinity with the rural poor, their actual policies strongly favor the rich,...

However, it's the rich "Republicans" that bankroll the jobs. Democrat Bill Gates, in Blue Redmond, WA, hasn't opened an M'Soft campus in Spokane, WA, has he? No, I didn't think so.

57 posted on 03/11/2005 11:42:22 AM PST by elbucko (A Feral Republican)
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To: Malesherbes

I'd agree with you. I never thought Eastern Washington as a state made sense, but merging those eastern Washington counties into Idaho makes perfect sense.


58 posted on 03/11/2005 11:42:53 AM PST by Publius (The people of a democracy choose the government they want, and they ought to get it good and hard.)
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To: Publius

Speaking of two-state solutions, since this is a favorite lefty solution to the Palestinian problem, why note make the left half of the the two states a Palestinian state? The Left would surely love to give self-determination to the Palestinians and the Palestinians would give the Left just the kind of state they deserve.


59 posted on 03/11/2005 11:52:42 AM PST by JewishRighter
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To: elbucko; hleewilder
At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Alexander Hamilton came up with a similar idea, which he used in the first speech of the Convention.

Hamilton proposed abolishing the 13 states then in existence and freeing the counties to form any number of new states. However, these new states would not have possessed any sovereignty, the "governor of the United States" would have appointed the state governors, and Congress would have had veto power over acts of the state legislatures.

Hamilton's idea was a non-starter, but there is an idea that could be distilled from it.

The boundaries of the states west of the Mississippi made sense 150 years ago, but they don't necessarily make sense today. Perhaps we need a "convention of the western states", represented at the county level and officially sanctioned by Congress, to redraw the state boundaries. To observe the Constitution, all affected state legislatures would have to sprinkle holy water on the final proposal, as would Congress. This might solve the problem.

60 posted on 03/11/2005 11:54:11 AM PST by Publius (The people of a democracy choose the government they want, and they ought to get it good and hard.)
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