By W. James Antle, III on 7.13.09 @ 6:09AM
Will a Democrat-turned-independent spoil a chance to take out
Barack Obama's man in Massachusetts?
BOSTON -- When it comes to good government, hope and change can
only get you so far. That's the lesson being learned in
Massachusetts of all places, as Barack Obama's mini-me, Gov.
Deval Patrick, promised voters something new and instead
delivered the sequel to Michael Dukakis.
It is not all Patrick's fault, of course. The return of one-party
rule to Beacon Hill has unleashed the 90 percent Democratic
legislature's worst tendencies, which include corruption
and an insatiable hunger for tax revenues. So far, the damage has
mostly been limited to a 25 percent increase in the sales tax to
6.25 percent and
constitutionally dubious attempts to keep Massachusetts
residents from fleeing to tax-free New Hampshire stores.
But that won't be the end of it: with the budget left unbalanced
and the liberal legislators left unchecked, they'll come back to
the
gasoline tax and even the income tax.
Welcome back to Taxachusetts, where a 2000 voter-approved
reduction in the income tax rate to 5 seems dead and Patrick
senses an "appetite"
for a new graduated income tax.
During his 2006 gubernatorial campaign, Patrick successfully
road-tested many of the same themes Obama later rode all the way
to the White House. For example, Obama's "Yes We Can" was but a
slight modification of Patrick's "Together We Can." The fact that
the government can't may be enough to revive a nearly moribund
Massachusetts Republican Party, which boasts no statewide elected
officials, no members of the congressional delegation, just 5 out
of 40 state senators, 16 out of 160 state representatives, and
the worst showing ever against John Kerry last year.
Last week, health care chief executive Charles Baker announced he
would seek the Republican nomination for governor. Well known on
Beacon Hill for his stewardship of Harvard Pilgrim and service in
both the Weld and Cellucci administrations, the Boston
Globe described Baker as "a virtual stimulus package for the
state GOP."
Baker joins convenience store magnate Christy Mihos, who took 7
percent of the vote running for governor as an independent in
2006. (Republican Kerry Healey, who served as lieutenant governor
under Mitt Romney won 35 percent to Patrick's 56 percent.) This
time the longtime Republican is seeking the GOP nomination.
A recent
Rasmussen poll shows Patrick vulnerable to both men. Mihos
takes 41 percent of the vote to the Democratic incumbent's 40
percent. Patrick gets 41 percent against Baker, whose 36 percent
could grow with his name recognition. A WBZ TV/Survey USA poll
earlier pegged the governor's disapproval rating at 56 percent.
Yet it's not just Republicans who smell blood in the water. Right
before Baker told fellow Republicans "I'm in," Massachusetts
Treasurer Timothy Cahill changed his party affiliation from
Democrat to "unenrolled" in what may be a prelude to an
independent run for governor. Cahill has also positioned himself
as a fiscal conservative who believes Patrick and the legislature
having taken the easy way out by raising taxes rather than
cutting spending.
Cahill is no fringe candidate. The former Democrat has won two
terms as treasurer, beating a credible Republican candidate in
2002 while the top of his ticket was losing to Romney. He is also
a proven fundraiser with $3 million in cash on hand as of June
15, compared to the governor's $484,000. But is Cahill for real?
Predictably, Republicans say no. "The letter next to his name
doesn’t make a difference," Massachusetts GOP spokeswoman Tarah
Donoghue told the Globe. "It’s the same broken promises
and disappointing leadership….Nothing will change." The state
party was quick to add a "Tim Cahill -- still a Democrat!"
section
to its website, detailing what it characterized as sweetheart
deals, solicitations of political money from companies doing
business with the treasury, and votes for inflated pensions while
serving as Norfolk County treasurer.
"In today's Boston Globe, State Treasurer Timothy P.
Cahill says 'I just feel like I don't fit' in the Democratic
Party as he declares himself unenrolled," said the GOP statement.
"The Massachusetts Republican Party says: 'Tim, you're still
a perfect fit!' Just review Cahill's shady and dubious
ethics record as part of the establishment.…The trademark
characteristic of a Beacon Hill Democrat."
The commonwealth's most prominent advocate for lower taxes and
less government, though an unabashed Charlie Baker fan, didn't
dispute Cahill's fiscally conservative bona fides. "He says he's
a fiscal conservative and I have no reason to doubt him," Barbara
Anderson, director of Massachusetts' Citizens for Limited
Taxation, told TAS. "Since he's been treasurer, he's
said the right things: he's opposed tax increases and proposed
reforms."
Baker, Anderson says, is "fabulous" and "someone so brilliant we
thought he would be president of the United States, but he's got
to start somewhere." Nevertheless, she says Cahill "has been a
pleasant surprise" as treasurer.
"Is Tim Cahill a straw?" asked veteran Boston Herald
columnist Howie Carr, using a synonym for spoiler. "Not a
deliberate straw, of course, but there’s an old saying: The best
straw candidate is the one who doesn't know he's a straw."
Anderson was skeptical that Cahill would spoil a serious
challenge to Patrick, pointing to the commonwealth's history of
tuning out independent candidates and focusing on the major-party
gubernatorial aspirants as Election Day draws nearer. "The
Republicans are going to have a primary and be in the news," she
says, while Cahill's move also means the Democrats won't have a
primary. Anderson also questioned how much of a mark Cahill had
left with voters as treasurer.
Cahill's impact on the governor's race remains to be seen. But so
far, it looks like Deval Patrick was the straw that broke the
taxpayer's back.
topics:
Republican Party, Democratic Party, Deval Patrick, Timothy Cahill