States Try New Approaches, Feds Cool
Over the last two years, while the federal government has focused on terrorism and the war in Iraq, governors and state legislators have been tackling pressing domestic policy issues ranging from soaring prescription drug prices to environmental concerns.
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States Try New Approaches, Feds Cool
By Christine Vestal
Over the last two years, while the federal government has focused
on terrorism and the war in Iraq, governors and state legislators
have been tackling pressing domestic policy issues ranging from
soaring prescription drug prices to environmental concerns.
There is tremendous innovation going on in state legislatures
today. With Congress gridlocked, a lot of the innovation in public
policy is coming from the states, said Gene Rose, director of
public affairs for the National Conference of State Legislatures
(NCSL).
According to the NCSL, 17 states have raised the minimum wage above
the national level of $5.15 per hour, four states have specifically
allowed controversial stem cell research and 16 states have
established limits on greenhouse gas emissions in an effort to curb
global warming. Several states are defying the federal government
on prescription drug importation and the medical use of
marijuana.
In a recent example of states going their own way, Illinois Gov.
Rod R. Blagojevich (D) signed an executive order July 12 creating a
stem cell research program that includes $10 million in state
grants in its first year.
Since the federal government has chosen to stall the medical
advancements that will come with stem cell research, it is up to
the states to take action, Blagojevich said.
Illinois joins California, which recently approved $3 billion in
spending on stem cell research over 10 years; Connecticut, which
approved $100 million over 10 years; and New Jersey, which approved
$150 million for a stem cell research laboratory. There are
numerous other instances of states taking the initiative.
* New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, a potential Democratic
candidate for governor, has cracked down on dubious financial
practices the U.S. Justice Department refused to prosecute, using
state laws to challenge mutual fund and insurance companies that
put consumers at a disadvantage.
* Massachusetts broke new ground as the only state in the country
where same-sex couples can legally marry.
* Maine began tackling its share of the daunting national problem
of providing medical care for the countrys 45 million uninsured by
launching a program that helps small businesses buy health care
coverage for employees.
* And Minnesotas Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty has led a growing
state rebellion against rising prescription drug costs by taking
steps to help citizens import cheaper medicine from Canada. Several
factors have fueled the spate of state initiatives, including deep
policy differences and resulting gridlock in Congress, tight state
budgets that have forced experimentation with new policies to
increase revenues or cut costs, the additional authority for such
areas as environmental regulation and social welfare that Congress
has given the states over the past 30 years, and an increase in
lobbying at the state level by social advocacy groups.
But as states become more capable of developing sound domestic
policy, a majority Republican Congress and President George W.
Bush, himself an ex-governor, often fail to support the very
activism that GOP leaders have encouraged for decades. Indeed, the
states moves have run into occasional outright opposition from the
Bush administration.
This, in turn, raises questions about the Republican Partys long
support for federalism and states rights and threatens to weaken
the states role as a laboratory for policy solutions. A prime
example of the administrations attitude toward states authority is
the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), said Michael Bird, senior
federal affairs counsel at the NCSL. NCLB was devised by a party
that traditionally held that education is a local issue, that less
than a decade ago wanted to dismantle the [federal] Education
Department. And yet it is the largest federal bureaucracy
ever.
Even when Utah, a Republican state with powerful leaders in
Congress, sought federal flexibility, the administration offered no
compromises, Bird noted.
And in the Terry Schiavo right-to-die case, Bush and Congress
attempted to override the authority of the Florida court system to
decide whether Schiavos feeding tube could be removed, interfering
with what has traditionally been considered a state issue.
In an article soon to be published in PS: Political Science &
Politics, a journal of the American Political Science Association,
analyst Paul Posner theorizes that federalism may be on the
wane.
The real sea change is that the business community has shifted its
support away from the states, said Posner, who is the Government
Accountability Office managing director for federal budget and
intergovernmental relations.
In the past, businesses and state governments were allies, he said.
But a globalized economy, an increasingly nationalized media
culture and a more centralized political system all portend the
eclipse of federalism as a guiding principle in responding to the
wide range of issues and problems on the national policy
agenda.
Now, big business has become a foe of state innovation and a friend
of federal preemption, Posner writes.
Nevertheless, Richard Nathan, co-chair of the Albany, N.Y.-based
Rockefeller Institute of Government, said that states will continue
to champion interests and ideas discouraged by Washington. Nathan
agrees that the current centralizing forces are powerful, but
argues that the states have risen to the challenge and will
continue to do so.
The fact that state governments can create effective social policy
when a Republican regime [in Washington] is so strong, bold,
conservative and apparently uninterested in states' rights is proof
that the constitutional underpinnings of the federal-state power
sharing system are working, he said.
As the federal government focuses its attention elsewhere, the
states are having a field day, Nathan remarked, adding, Its a good
time to be a governor.
Source: Stateline.org.
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© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
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