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Gov. Lynch Flip Flops On Budget Plan (New Hampshire News)

March 12, 2007

A little local news here. In New Hampshire we have a timetable imposed by the state supreme court to define adequate education, if the deadline is not met they will most likely impose a state income or sales tax. While it is bad enough the supreme court has overstepped it’s bounds and will create law where it has no authority to do so, it is equally troubling that our governor is wasting time flip flopping on his budget proposals as well as other issues. I believe he really wants these taxes to be imposed so he will get the taxes, and he can make it seem like it wasn’t him who introduced these taxes, it was the courts. So he is delaying, hoping and waiting for the new tax revenues.

From the New Hampshire Union Leader:

WE WONDERED how long Gov. John Lynch’s original education funding proposal would last once school board members started calling their legislators in protest. Answer: just shy of two months.

It’s nice to have a governor willing to listen to lawmakers and adjust his positions after hearing them out. It would be nice, too, to have a governor who better thought out his own proposals before making them.

First, Gov. Lynch was opposed to amending the state constitution to effectively overturn the state Supreme Court’s Claremont rulings. Now he’s pushing an amendment. First, he was against Health and Human Services Commissioner John Stephen’s GraniteCare plan. Now he’s using it to balance his budget. First, he was against Gov. Craig Benson’s plan to create a Web site where residents could go to compare prescription drug costs. Now he’s promoting it.

We could go on, but you get the point.

When Gov. Lynch proposed an across-the-board 5 percent increase in state education aid this year, it was a shock for a couple of reasons. One, it raised aid to communities that didn’t need or expect it while shrinking aid to those that arguably do need it and definitely expected it. Two, anyone could see that it would not fly in the Legislature.

Sure enough, nearly two months later the governor has reversed course. He won’t say exactly why he changed his mind, but rest assured that there was intense political pressure to give schools more money.

Gov. Lynch gets credit for shifting money in the budget without being overly concerned about upsetting the status quo. But you cannot ignore the status quo. He really should have done more to test support for his education funding plan before releasing it. We’ve lost two months in which the governor’s energies could have been focused on gathering support for the necessary constitutional amendment, but were instead diverted by a poorly conceived school funding plan that was dead on arrival.

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