Exclusive: Governor says
'everybody's losing' in
finance impasse
11:11 PM CDT on Friday,
August 12, 2005
AUSTIN –
Gov. Rick Perry admonished
his fellow Republican
leaders, House Speaker Tom
Craddick and Lt. Gov. David
Dewhurst, on Friday, saying
they should turn down the
rhetoric and stop letting
personalities get in the way
of state business.
On the day
Mr. Craddick began airing a
radio ad that criticized the
Senate's school finance
efforts, Mr. Perry said that
the public expects better
than "the lobbing of verbal
grenades."
"There has
been too much focus by the
House and Senate on who gets
credit, whose plan wins, who
can go back and say we
out-negotiated him, we won,"
the governor said in an
interview with The Dallas
Morning News. "The fact
of the matter is nobody's
winning. Everybody's
losing."
And
acknowledging that Texans
are frustrated by the
failure, Mr. Perry plans to
hit the road to build
support for his initiatives
on education and taxes.
The
mounting frustration and
blame over school finance
issues have been simmering
over the long summer, since
the House and Senate failed
to reach agreement in the
final hours of the regular
session that ended in May.
Mr. Perry
has called them back into
session twice more, but the
two houses, both dominated
by Republicans, have failed
to agree on new taxes that
would offset a property tax
reduction, or on education
initiatives and a school
finance overhaul.
Alexis
DeLee, a spokeswoman for Mr.
Craddick, said the speaker
wanted to get out the
message that he thought the
Senate plan fell short of
meaningful school reform and
that he "wasn't willing to
pass a bill just to say we
passed a bill."
She
pointed out that the
governor, while criticizing
Mr. Craddick's radio ad,
took to the radio airwaves
himself this summer to push
his own school plan.
Aides to
Mr. Dewhurst declined to
comment, other than to refer
to an earlier statement that
said the Senate will
"continue working toward a
better school system that we
can all be proud of in
Texas."
Mr. Perry,
asked if he should shoulder
some of the blame for the
impasse and deteriorating
relations, said only that he
has pushed for lawmakers to
pass legislation.
"If it's
about taking the blame for
bringing them here, I'll
take my full measure. We ran
for office to get the job
done," he said.
Mr. Perry
said he has laid out plans
that would work, but they
have withered under
opposition from education
groups, businesses who would
face new taxes and consumers
who would face hefty sales
and cigarette tax increases.
He
indicated that once the
session ends next week, he
intends to take the plans he
has championed – including
property appraisal caps and
revenue caps on cities and
counties – out on the
campaign trail. Lawmakers
debated those issues and
have rejected them.
Asked if
that meant he was running
for re-election against the
inaction of a Republican
Legislature, he said: "We're
going to have the
opportunity to take that to
the people of Texas and have
a rigorous debate about it.
"I'm
running on the issues," he
said.
He said
that Republicans have faced
tough issues before but that
on the question of passing a
$7 billion tax bill to fund
property tax reduction, they
have balked.
"This one
has stumped them at the
moment, as it has
Legislatures in the past,"
he said.
Mr. Perry
said that he knows lawmakers
are frustrated, but that so
are constituents.
He said he
spoke to a college classmate
recently who asked, "Why
can't y'all get the job done
down there?"
"I didn't
have a very good answer for
him," Mr. Perry said.
He said he
is not worried about critics
who question his leadership
abilities. "That is
politics," Mr. Perry said.