Get FREE NRO Newsletters

 

May 28 Issue  |  Subscribe  |  Renew

Close

New on NRO . . .

The Agenda

NRO’s domestic-policy blog, by Reihan Salam.


Print   |  Text
 

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell on ‘Results-Oriented Conservatism’

Bob McDonnell is one of relatively few Republican governors to have had a very successful Tuesday. Rather hearteningly, he attributes his success to an emphasis on public sector efficiency in a short column at RedState:

Here in Richmond we didn’t raise taxes and we didn’t grow government. Instead, we defeated Tim Kaine’s tax hike and reduced state spending to 2006 levels. At the same time, we invested in transportation, higher education and economic development. We didn’t buy in to the mistaken belief that you can’t prioritize in government. You can. That is how we reduced spending by billions of dollars, rolling back the budget clock five years, while at the same time putting the most new funding into transportation in a generation and making college more affordable and accessible for our students. In both transportation and education, we knew we needed to bet on and invest in our own future.

McDonnell also touts Virginia’s relatively low unemployment rate, which is a bit misleading. The affluent northern counties of Virginia benefit enormously from the expansion of the federal government. Regardless, McDonnell has done many things right and he is right to suggest that “the Virginia way” might prove potent for Republicans in national elections:

Conservative principles of making government live within its means, trusting the private sector, focusing on the core functions of government, getting government out of areas where it doesn’t belong, reducing regulation and litigation and trusting free people to make their own decisions are working here. Voters are responding favorably. And these same principles can win on the campaign trail from Columbus to Denver, and work in the halls of government in Washington D.C.

There is much more to say about McDonnell’s political style, which has helped him make inroads in inner suburbs and among ethnic voters, many of whom had been growing increasingly hostile to the Virginia GOP. His 2009 victory, on a jobs-centered platform that reframed right-of-center policy prescriptions in accessible, common-sense language, should be studied very closely. This is particularly true because his Democratic opponent and allied groups invested a great deal of time and energy in portraying McDonnell as a right-wing extremist. The charge didn’t stick precisely because of McDonnell’s unwavering focus on kitchen-table issues.

New on The Agenda. . .


COMMENTS   2

EXPAND  

Tom O'Gorman
   11/10/11 10:19

I remember working as a mere phone-banking drone on Gov McDonnell's campaign. It was an absolute pleasure, because the whole operation worked like clockwork. He ran a superbly professional campaign, and is approaching governing with the same style. Just the model of a Republican governor.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
Mark Vincent
   11/10/11 10:26

McDonnell is an interesting character. He claims to have balanced the states budget but a huge piece of his "smart accounting" was to simply not pay the over half billion dollar obligation to the state employees pension fund, and create an agreement that it will be paid in 2013 (when he is no longer governor and the debt will be $800,000,000.00) leaving a giant turd on the desk of the next governor. Virginia has for many years been a state that is friendly to private sector business so it is no surprise that the state recovers from the recession more gracefully than others, not to mention that Virginia is high on the list of states that benefit from federal spending. Its pretty easy for McDonnell to try to make himself look good when in fact Virginia is a state any politician would wish to govern. From the day he took office it was obvious that McDonnell was campaigning to be the VP nominee as he seemed quite detached from handling the states business, aside from items where he took a great deal of money from special interests like the liquor lobby and energy interests. I think when you dig past the surface you will find someone who is self serving and easily swayed by donations and not someone who is looking out for the best interests of Virginians or the nation.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse

Add a Comment

Already Registered? Log In Here.


The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.


* Designates a required field.
© National Review Online 2012
All Rights Reserved.
Subscriptions
NR / Print
NR / Digital

Gift Subscriptions
NR / Print
NR / Digital
NR Apps
iPhone/iPad
Android

NRO Apps
iPhone
Support Us
Donate
Media Kit
Contact