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Low-Tax Texas Beats Big-Government California (You can tell when people vote with their feet)
Townhall ^ | 03/07/2010 | Michael Barone

Posted on 03/08/2010 6:18:30 PM PST by SeekAndFind

"Stop messing with Texas!" That was the message Gov. Rick Perry bellowed on election night as he celebrated his victory over Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison in the Republican primary for governor. In his reference to Texas' anti-littering slogan, Perry was making a point applicable to national as well as Texas politics and addressed to Democratic politicians as well as Republicans.

His point was that the big government policies of the Obama administration and Democratic congressional leaders are resented and fiercely opposed not just because of their dire fiscal effects but also as an intrusion on voters' independence and ability to make decisions for themselves.

No one would include Perry on a list of serious presidential candidates, including himself, even in the flush of victory. But in his 10 years as governor, the longest in the state's history, Texas has been teaching some lessons to which the rest of the nation should pay heed.

They are lessons that are particularly vivid when you contrast Texas, the nation's second most populous state, with the most populous, California. Both were once Mexican territory, secured for the United States in the 1840s. Both have grown prodigiously over the past half-century. Both have populations that today are about one-third Hispanic.

But they differ vividly in public policy and in their economic progress -- or lack of it -- over the last decade. California has gone in for big government in a big way. Democrats hold large margins in the legislature largely because affluent voters in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay area favor their liberal positions on cultural issues.

Those Democratic majorities have obediently done the bidding of public employee unions to the point that state government faces huge budget deficits. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's attempt to reduce the power of the Democratic-union combine with referenda was defeated in 2005 when public employee unions poured $100 million -- all originally extracted from taxpayers -- into effective TV ads.

Californians have responded by leaving the state. From 2000 to 2009, the Census Bureau estimates, there has been a domestic outflow of 1,509,000 people from California -- almost as many as the number of immigrants coming in. Population growth has not been above the national average and, for the first time in history, it appears that California will gain no House seats or electoral votes from the reapportionment following the 2010 Census.

Texas is a different story. Texas has low taxes -- and no state income taxes -- and a much smaller government. Its legislature meets for only 90 days every two years, compared to California's year-round legislature. Its fiscal condition is sound. Public employee unions are weak or nonexistent.

But Texas seems to be delivering superior services. Its teachers are paid less than California's. But its test scores -- and with a demographically similar school population -- are higher. California's once fabled freeways are crumbling and crowded. Texas has built gleaming new highways in metro Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth.

In the meantime, Texas' economy has been booming. Unemployment rates have been below the national average for more than a decade, as companies small and large generate new jobs.

And Americans have been voting for Texas with their feet. From 2000 to 2009, some 848,000 people moved from other parts of the United States to Texas, about the same number as moved in from abroad. That inflow has continued in 2008-09, in which 143,000 Americans moved into Texas, more than double the number in any other state, at the same time as 98,000 were moving out of California. Texas is on the way to gain four additional House seats and electoral votes in the 2010 reapportionment.

This was not always so. In the two decades after World War II, California, with its pleasant weather, was the Golden State, a promised land, for most Americans, while Texas seemed a provincial rural backwater. Many saw postwar California's expansion of universities, freeways and water systems a model for the nation. Few experts praised Texas' low-tax, low-services government.

Now it is California's ruinously expensive and increasingly incompetent government that seems dysfunctional, while Texas' approach has generated more creativity and opportunity. So it's not surprising that Texas voters preferred Perry over an opponent who has spent 16 years in Washington. What's surprising is that Democrats in Washington are still trying to impose policies like those that have ravaged California rather than those which have proved so successful in Texas.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: california; tax; taxes; texas
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To: SeekAndFind
"But in his 10 years as governor, the longest in the state's history, Texas has been teaching some lessons to which the rest of the nation should pay heed". ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Todays headline

$11 Billion Budget Shortfall Projected Official: Shortfall Could Reach $15 Billion

POSTED: Monday, March 8, 2010 UPDATED: 4:47 pm CST March 8, 2010 AUSTIN, Texas -- The Texas Legislature will face a budget shortfall of at least $11 billion when it meets to write the next state budget in 2011, a key state official said Monday.

The shortfall is the projected difference between available revenue and the cost of maintaining services at their current levels in the next two-year budget. The shortfall is mainly a result of lower-than-expected sales tax receipts.

21 posted on 03/08/2010 7:43:46 PM PST by Orange1998
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To: Entrepreneur

You can always tell a Texan, ‘cuz half of what he posts is B.S.


22 posted on 03/08/2010 7:45:43 PM PST by muleskinner ("You know the Germans always make good stuff')
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To: Entrepreneur
We do have one California like city. It's the People's Republic of Austin. It's better to avoid it.

Yes, please stay away.

23 posted on 03/08/2010 7:55:07 PM PST by Doe Eyes
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To: Orange1998

We have way too many people moving to Texas! If you’re a good conservative then we’ll let you in but others STAY OUT!! If there is a shortfall it’s because of all the illegals that we have to feed, educate and take care of their medical bills. They all get instate tuition and I’ll swear I live in Mexico some days because of all the spanish spoken!


24 posted on 03/08/2010 7:55:39 PM PST by NativeTxn
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To: muleskinner
You can always tell a Texan, ‘cuz half of what he posts is B.S.

Which half?

25 posted on 03/08/2010 8:02:28 PM PST by Entrepreneur (The environmental movement is filled with watermelons - green on the outside, red on the inside)
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To: jamndad5

Can I bring a little Kern County along?
We do Ag and Oil as well as anyone can!

...well heck yeah, if you bring back Buck Owens’ spirit since it is only returning to those roots from the 30’s when Bakersfield filled up with Texans and Oklahomans. Just left So CA for Central Texas although my grandfather built most of the buildings that survived in Bakersfield during the biggest earthquakes. Still have the rest of the family enjoying Wool Growers, but I’m loving the hospitality, music and texmex!

Cut my cost of living in half and put the wife’s horses in the backyard for a quarter of the cost...

ymmv


26 posted on 03/08/2010 8:57:45 PM PST by ElectionInspector (talk of ending these big Federal programs)
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To: bajabaja

The Texas hill country is quite beautiful and is a popular retirement destination now. Still not too crowded, though. Texas is rather large, ya know!

If you are more into cities, then San Antonio is a really nice city. It has a large Hispanic population, so brush up on your Spanish.

If Texas would do away with government education, then it would also solve its high property tax problem. Just saying...


27 posted on 03/08/2010 9:25:35 PM PST by Pining_4_TX
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