We’re not talking about Barack Obama. We’re talking one of my
favorite Governors, Tim Pawlenty. That’s how the Wall
Street Journal describes the Minnesota conservative’s
behavior at the close of this legislative session.
It goes like this: Minnesota is in the hole big time. The
Democrats there, surprise, surprise, thought they could spend
their way out of it. Through these ridiculous, proposed tax
hikes, Pawlenty maintained some sound, conservative principles:
Balance the budget, live within means, no new taxes!
Finally.
Right before session ended though, the Dems started sending
Pawlenty spending bills thinking he’d veto them, call a special
session and, like a spineless moderate, negotiate.
He didn’t.
Upon receiving the last spending bill, he announced that he
would exercise the power of “unallotment,” which has been on
the books since 1939 and which has been used four times. Under
it, the governor is allowed to “unallot” (take away) any state
spending for which there is no money to pay. Panicked, the DFL
passed tax legislation to cover its blowout spending bills, 10
minutes before the session’s end. Too late. The governor said
he’d veto the bill and would not be calling back the
legislature to do any more mischief.
Mr. Pawlenty is now free to strip $2.7 billion from state
spending to balance the budget. Tax hikes are dead. He tells me
this will be one of the first times in modern Minnesota history
that the state will reduce the size of government in real
terms, not just slow its rate of growth. “The correlation in
recent history has been between job growth and states that have
reasonable government cost structures,” he says. These cuts, he
says, will position Minnesota to take advantage of the recovery
when it comes.
That’s what I call Minnesota Nice. And if you think Pawlenty’s
disappeared from the national stage, think again. Tactics like
this are not only good for the state and good for businesses, but
good for giving conservatives hope for the future.