Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Good Deal


See politically correct glowing AJC article below:

Politics, Campaigns, and Elections, by Georgia Pundit, 1/7/19. Governor Nathan Deal's two terms in office are profiled by Greg Bluestein in the AJC.

He steadied the state's finances and exponentially boosted its depleted reserve funds as he initiated record spending on infrastructure and new building projects but held the line on some sweeping tax breaks sought by many in his party.

He warred occasionally with both sides of the aisle, taking stances that drove some conservatives to threaten sanctions and payback after controversial vetoes and infuriating Democrats with hard line approaches on many debates, including his steadfast opposition to Medicaid expansion.

And yet he pushed through most of the key elements of his agenda with overwhelming bipartisan support - sometimes even unanimous - as he rewrote criminal justice initiatives, overhauled workforce training policies and vastly expanded the judicial branch.

At a time of peak polarization, Deal stands out as an anomaly in his final days in office: an understated politician who never lost an election and built a legacy as a consensus-building pragmatist with a record that seems a throwback in the era of Donald Trump.

A Democrat-turned-Republican who ruled the state during eight years of increasing partisanship - but who will leave the Governor's Mansion with polls that show he's the state's most popular politician.

He steadied the state's finances and exponentially boosted its depleted reserve funds as he initiated record spending on infrastructure and new building projects but held the line on some sweeping tax breaks sought by many in his party.

He warred occasionally with both sides of the aisle, taking stances that drove some conservatives to threaten sanctions and payback after controversial vetoes and infuriating Democrats with hard line approaches on many debates, including his steadfast opposition to Medicaid expansion.

And yet he pushed through most of the key elements of his agenda with overwhelming bipartisan support - sometimes even unanimous - as he rewrote criminal justice initiatives, overhauled workforce training policies and vastly expanded the judicial branch.

But he won two terms in office, and steered the broad majority of his priorities through the Legislature, by knitting together a coalition of rural conservatives and more moderate suburbanites with a blend of pro-business policies and culturally conservative legislation.

And he leaves office with a raft of new policies embraced by both parties, including vastly expanded tuition-free tech school programs and a redesigned approach to workforce development. In all, his office said, more than 800,000 jobs were created since he took office.
But even his fiercest opponents applauded his consensus-building strategy in the Legislature that started his first year in office with major changes to the HOPE scholarship program. 

His more inclusive approach was a contrast from that of his predecessor Sonny Perdue, whose aggressive style earned him the disdain of some GOP leaders.

"We regarded the Legislature as equal partners with the state. That makes all the difference in terms of the relationship between the legislative and executive branch of government," Deal said. "If they don't work together, not very much comes out."



Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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