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Jul 16, 2008 12:23 AM | last updated Jul 16, 2008 12:24 AM
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Helpful policy tips for Dino Rossi

By David Brewster

So far, not a lot of policy is coming out of the Dino Rossi campaign, but it may be very interesting when it does. That's because the Republicans are getting pretty desperate for bold new ideas to turn around their national tailspin. I'll give some examples below.

First, why is Dino so dull? Three factors come to mind. One is his deep distrust of the media, and his expectation that anything he says will immediately be turned into comic material. (That pretty much happened with his one foray into policy, on transportation, which quickly got caricatured.) Second, Rossi doesn't really do "the vision thing." Rather, he's a dealmaker, and a good one, who makes policy by shuffling together the various positions other people have. Third, the campaign thinks it can run against Gregoire (cold personality, punting on big issues, too cautious) and so doesn't need to risk having Rossi take stands.

That strategy of lying low and making Gregoire the issue may work, though I doubt it. So far, Rossi is staying within the margin of error on polls, and Gregoire's ratings are not good, considering her incumbency. Also, if Rossi thinks he can avoid becoming a target by not having any controversial views, he need only look at all the attacks on his main support group, the BIAW, a very conservative lobbying group for builders and Rossi's main source of financial support so far. (The irony in the race is that most business groups have either thrown in with Gregoire, normal for a sitting governor, or are wary of Dino and are holding back. Rossi will have to count on national money, local billionaires, and BIAW — an indication of the tatters the state GOP machine is in.)

Now, about those possible (if missing) ideas. The most interesting blueprint for revival I've seen so far comes from Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam, both with The Atlantic and authors of a fascinating new book, Grand New Party. The authors recently spelled out part of their back-to-the-center strategy with a focus on regaining upscale suburban voters (who are now tilting decisively Democratic). Here are four interesting proposals:

School choice for the suburbs. Suburban families are being squeezed by the high cost of home in high-quality school districts, and they figure No Child Left Behind is all about poverty kids, not their kids. Avoid the bad politics of vouchers and even charter schools, and instead let schools compete for more students from nearby towns, stipulating that the new money that flows to attractive schools can be spent outside controls by unions and central bureaucrats. It's a variant of Seattle's weighted-student formula (for disadvantaged kids).

Green conservatism. Innovate, rather than regulate, our way out of the climate-change crisis, largely by a huge federal effort to subsidize the invention of alternative technologies. An example is McCain's suggestion of a $300 million prize for the inventor of an improved car battery.

Relief for commuters. Rossi actually gets some of this: More traffic lanes, toll highways to generate more money for infrastructure, differential pricing to steer some commuters to off-peak trips, and public investment in technology to increase telecommuting. Couple all this with a crusade against earmarks, one of the main reasons taxes go up and congestion gets worse.

Lots more cops. The Republican approach of locking up more criminals is about to backfire as the prisons disgorge a huge "graduating class," and gang-related crime is spreading to the inner suburbs. So combine a policing-first strategy with prison reform, acknowledging that prison is an incubator of crime.

Doutha and Salam urge a return to the suburbs for the GOP, as opposed to its current strategy of courting Sam's Club voters, a resentful class of diminishing numbers. Rossi, an Issaquah commercial real estate developer, has a natural feel for the upper middle class suburbanites that the Republicans have lost. We'll see if he has the confidence to break out of his defensive crouch and start putting forth some compelling ideas that appeal to this forfeited bloc of voters — or waits until he loses and then discovers them in the coming wilderness of the GOP exile.

Comments
You've got to be kidding.
Report a violationPosted by: IMFletch on Jul 16, 2008 2:15 AM
Just look at their respective web sites. Dino goes in to so much more detail on issues than Gregoire it's laughable. She actually talks about "inheriting" a $2.2 billion deficit and "wiping it out." If wiping it out is growing it to $2.7 billion, then yes, she wiped it out.

And as for your assertion that Dino's transportation plan was considered comical, considered as such by whom? Horsesass.org and the PI? I didn't find it comical and you even seem to think he's on to something later in your article.

No doubt Republicans in this state, and nationwide, need new and fresh ideas. And I agree that some of the suggestions you made and ideas you pointed to are quite worthwhile. But your assertions about Dino, and particularly his lack of substance on issues (especially when compared to this Governor), are silly.
I can hardly wait for "Helpful policy tips for Chris Gregoire" by Luke Esser
Report a violationPosted by: Cameron on Jul 16, 2008 9:03 AM
I alway smile when I read how someone who is opposed to a particular candidate forwards "helpful hints" on how they would modify that candidates position...even though they would never consider voting for them. How about some helpful hints on how to address the upcoming budget deficit that Gregoire denies even exists?
GOP needs a "Come to Reagan" Epiphany
Report a violationPosted by: dbreneman on Jul 16, 2008 9:58 AM
The Republican party prospered when it embraced the common interests of libertarians and conservatives under Reagan. Bush has shunned libertarians with his big-government Nixonian Toryism, and all but the bible-thumping social conservatives have abandoned him as a result of that agenda as well. Libertarians are never a comfortable fit with the Democrats and the Dem's "government knows best" policies, so they tend to gravitate to the GOP when the GOP is doing something worth fighting for. Reagan's "The government is the problem" proclamation was such a rallying cry. It's awfully hard for small-L libertarians like myself to rally around such a wretchedly European concept as a "Homeland". The GOP needs to go back to its modern roots, as the party thats against government oppression and for personal discretion and freedom. That's how it can find its way back from the wilderness.
Cops, cops, cops
Report a violationPosted by: J.R. on Jul 16, 2008 10:00 AM
Rossi can talk all he wants to about hiring more police officers, but until state government provides a steady revenue stream to cities and counties to fund this, it's just talk. The state, through measures like Eyman's I-747 (struck down by the courts, but approved by the Legislature), has actually cut the amount of money available for local law enforcement in recent years.
Being a fiscal conservative
Report a violationPosted by: Lainie on Jul 16, 2008 2:09 PM
is very dull. However, I'd rather have dull than continual tax increases that tax us into a deficit while expanding government and rewarding Gregoire's campaign contributors.

In any event, Rossi can't do any more damage to this state than the fraudulently elected Gregoire. The only problem is getting past the big government lover liberal legislative majorities. That would prove his greatest accomplishment.
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