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Cover Story
Q&A with Gov. Jim Gilmore

Editor's Note: The following transcript
provides edited excerpts from an interview Virginia Business did with Gov. Jim Gilmore at
the statehouse in Richmond regarding his car tax cut and other issues. Gilmore is the
subject of Virginia Business July cover story.
Is Jim Gilmore arrogant, stubborn or delivering on
promise. A Johnny-one-note?
Probably wouldnt have been a Johnny one-note if it hadnt come under assault
this year. I was trying to move on
focusing on some creative things in mental health,
transportation, etc. We were drawn back to this central approach by other people -- by
direct assault on the tax cut and we had to hold ground. Its political
communication. Policy . . . I certainly feel like Im delivering on the promise to
the people and what the people want. Clearly if the people didnt want this tax
cut
. I would recognize that and I wouldnt be so assertive, would I? But the
people do want it.
How do you know?
I understand it clearly. Scientifically. Taken some surveys to make sure. If you are in
public life and interacting with the public all the time like I am, you know. You better
know. Instinctively. Hundreds of people have communicated with me since this has been
reignited by other people
Gas station attendants, bartenders, people I run into. They
all say, Thanks for being steadfast, thanks for delivering on this tax cut.
Yesterday somebody said to me, This meant $300 to me. . . This happens all the
time.
" . . . So far there has not been a
single example of somebody coming up to me and saying, Youre stubborn,
youre obstinate, dont do this tax cut, instead, spend this money on something
else.' Not a single example. . .I am going to do what I think is right in this public
service I have chosen to do. That means Im going to keep faith with the people.
Theyre going to be able to say one thing we know for sure, and that is that (when)
Jim Gilmore says he is going to do something; he is going to do it.
What about people who say, but he
cant do it. Hes cutting back on college construction, not giving state
employees a raise; youre hurting the museums and other cultural attractions?
Therein lies the principle fallacy. Im not doing any of those things you just
described. The Senate did those things. The Democratic bloc did it deliberately. They did
it so they could make a political argument.
They couldnt have done it
without help from your own party.
Thats right, and they bear that responsibility for having done that for whatever
motives that they did
.But that does not change the responsibility of the bloc of
Democrats that did it deliberately, together with a group of Republicans. Thats
true.
Are the Democrats more guilty than
those in your party? Are they equally culpable?
Theyre more guilty because the broad base of the Republican Party is in agreement on
the commitments they made to the public and the underlying policy that it represents. I
want to make this very clear. This is a point that is being debated at the national realm
also. The tax cut is a good policy. It is the right policy. It is a good policy in and of
itself.
If they discovered what you know, that
its what the people want, thats not being heroic, thats just being
politically smart. If this is what the people want and they took it away from them, they
would suffer in November.
Thats precisely correct. And that, by the way, is a reaffirmation of the democracy.
On the other hand, there are some people who still would lose their nerve if they were
being asserted by the press, by the Senate and by the Democrats that this would be bad,
bad, bad for them
It would have been better, though,
wouldnt it, if there had been a budget?
Absolutely. Sure, thats why I offered one. This issue is, can you do it? We sat
around here, looked at the declining revenues, and said, can we do this or not. If we
found we could do it, then it became a policy choice, or whether or not you would do it or
not. And we concluded that it was good policy
We had to look at all the ways that you
do this and decide are any of them acceptable within reasonable financial methods and
efforts and within the long-range fiscal stability of the commonwealth? And we found it
could easily be done. And not only could it be done, it could be done with a lot more
progressive things on college campuses, pay increases, all the things we needed to do. Put
some more money into remedial education, into mental health, a lot more aggressive
efforts, and a major new construction program, almost a new building on every college
campus. You could do it. It would have required that you handle the finances of the
commonwealth correctly
The record is clear on this. I offered an executive budget
that did all these things. And that was thrown out by the Senate, I think on the very
first day of the session.

"I didnt run on some car tax. I ran
on no car tax. So they were not asking me to compromise. They were asking me
to surrender the principle and the policy." |
I think it was Lyndon
Johnson who said politics is the art of compromise. Wouldnt it have been wise, as a
leader, to say, "I cant allow this to happen, so while these people are
doing the wrong thing, Ill back down? Surely you could have gotten 60 percent out of
the Senate.
This is a subtlety that is missed which you need to write about. I didnt run on
some car tax. I ran on no car tax. So they were not asking me to
compromise. They were asking me to surrender the principle and the policy. . . If you
could disrupt the phase-out, if you could make the policy point that the tax cut is
expendable, that maybe you do it and maybe you dont do it, do a little this year,
maybe a little less next year, bouncing up and down like a ball, then youre
communicating to the public at that point that this is not a commitment. This is not real,
this is not good policy, and that its constantly negotiable. At that point in the
future, anyone could have used any excuse to shave a point here, shave 10 points there,
put it off to another year. This, by the way, is the essence of the (Democratic
gubernatorial candidate) Mark Warner approach, which is, well do it if we feel like
it. And Im just not going to do that.
But part of the deal was that there
were triggers. It wasnt no car tax at all costs. There had to be the
revenues.
Sure. Had to meet the triggers.
I guess some people are saying you had
to use some fuzzy math to make the numbers.
Thats not true at all. You can say it and, in the absence of sophisticated dialogue
on this in public, somebody will believe that. But heres the deal: The triggers were
put in there, that was understood. But there should never have been triggers. It probably
was bad policy, but the tax-and-spend people insisted on it.
Now the President had a tax cut
proposal and he didnt get it all, so he compromised.
He didnt say $1.6 trillion, take it or leave it, thats what were
promising you, thats our contract with you. He didnt do that. He had more
wiggle room than I did.
Have you talked to the president about
your situation?
Well, we havent had a detailed discussion. Hes very aware of it.
Everybodys aware of it. The former president (Clinton) told me in the White House
last year, he said he knew that when we made the commitment to do the tax cut in Virginia
that the Democratic candidate (then-Lt. Gov. Donald Beyer) was toast. The former president
and I had some lengthy discussions about it. But President Bush and I have not. But he
understands very well what we have done. Thats part of the reason, probably, why
Im chair of the RNC (Republican National Committee), because I keep my word and
Im a conservative that pushes conservative principles.
Talk a little about the duties of
being chairman of the RNC. How much has it taken away from your time and your duties here
at the statehouse?
Im governor 24 hours a day, whether Im in the District or wherever I am. So
the issue isnt really to quantify the number of hours or days or any of that. In
either instance, its getting the job done. Clearly, when the president and I
discussed this, we both contemplated that this was going to need to be made consistent
with the governorship, and I think that we have. So I am physically doing both jobs, but
at the same time, I am really effectuating the policies during the use of personnel. Good
people there, good people here.
Its a paid position?
It was a paid position. Im not being paid. It would be against the law for the
governor of Virginia to accept additional compensation. It usually pays about $150,000 a
year, but the president and I always understood if I was going to remain governor and RNC
chairman that I wasnt going to be compensated. Actually I dont think the
president ever thought of that. He just understood it was going to be a dual position. I
knew that you couldnt be compensated additionally.
But after you leave office, and
youre still the chairman, you could be.
The RNC changed the rules so it is not required to be a full-time position. It remains to
be seen what we do next year.
As you look back, has this car-tax
fight inhibited you from doing things you wanted to do? Are there some
disappointments?
Did you do all you wanted
for the tobacco farmers, for traffic
congestion in Northern Virginia?
I could flip the question around and tell you why were fairly comfortable were
sitting in this administration on those variety of issues. The one place where I would
like to have more time to do is mental health. That is a place where I made a fairly
strong clarion call (in his 2001 state of the commonwealth address). Changing old ways of
doing things is extremely hard. Once people are locked in to doing things in a particular
way, to radically change peoples perception of the world and their attitude toward
doing things is very difficult. One of the reasons we have a little difficulty right now,
have had a debate over the issue of the tax cut, was that there are people who are very
old thinkers that cant change. When I tell them to think new, I am really
encouraging them to open their minds up to new possibilities and with mental health they
have not done that. They have not been willing yet to recognize the long term benefits for
our patients and our system with new approaches. They are still playing the old
pork-barrel politics, saying You are not going to close my hospital.
That
is a sad thing. That means were wasting money in places where we instead could be
using it on patients.
Theyre insisting on a centralized,
institutionalized approach, which is really about 1900 thinking, instead of thinking about
the more progressive thinking of community-based types of service that could be done with
almost the same money and would be so much better. But theyre not willing to think
about that because they get a few constituents who say, Oh my God, whats going
to happen to my job? and we say, plaintively, were going to place people in
new jobs, find opportunities
That scares them. The status quo is what Ive
got to have here. And so they dont move and, in fact, get rather angry that
you even ask them.
Youre not very conservative when
it comes to (health and other social issues).
" . . . I believe conservatism is progressive. I dont want you to equate a
political philosophy of conservatism with that way of looking at the world. The president
and I believe that conservatism is a dynamic and progressive quality that is better for
people, and we are applying our political philosophy in this way and are very pro-active,
forward moving. We believe liberalism is backwards, is retrogressive. It was fine for
1930; its not fine for 2001. Its an old way of looking at things in the last
century that has collapsed repeatedly when it is carried to its logical conclusions.
Conservatism, on the other hand, still has the hope and promise of delivering a high
quality of life to people and more freedom and liberty and empowerment. The president and
I always agree on these kinds of things, which is another reason probably why Im the
chairman of the RNC.
How did you get to know him?
When I asked to him to come campaign for me when I ran for governor. He did an event in
Richmond, and I became acquainted with him. I met him a few times in passing at National
Governors Association meetings and at the Republican Governors Association . .
. And then I made a decision to fully engage in his campaign when he began to run. I
showed up very early for some events. I surprised him one time at an event in Washington,
D. C. and I was the only governor there. That probably was the beginning of some kind of
relationship. And then I campaigned faithfully for him, and I think the (Virginia) primary
made a difference materially in his campaign and we just kind of continued to grow. But I
would not overstate the relationship. Its not like he and I are chum buddies and
spend every weekend at Camp David, or something like that. But there is a mutual respect
in the business that were in of public policy.
You come from very different
backgrounds.
I think so. Yes. But somehow we arrived at something of a similar type thought process in
politics.

"Well, there is a real problem here with a one-term
governorship. Virginia is the only state that does this and there is a serious problem
with it." |
What are you going to
do in the future? Run for the Senate if John Warner doesnt run in 2002, although he
says he is going to?
You asked me earlier if I had any regrets. Well, there is a real problem here with a
one-term governorship. Virginia is the only state that does this and there is a serious
problem with it. And that problem is the inability to develop long-term relationships and
to sustain policies that other states are able to do. You can sustain policies, as we have
done between Governor Allen and myself, but that was just lucky, the state was just lucky
in that regard
I am able, as governor, to develop a lot of relationships on behalf of
the state, on European trips and things like that. But then they get uprooted at the end
of four years. And legislators are very honest about it, they dont care. They want
the governor to be gone because the institutional strength of the legislature is the
non-term limited ability to be there year and year after year on its antiquated seniority
system which allows them to develop their processes in a certain way, and they like a
governor starting over again every four years with a new learning curve
. The lesson
here is, if youre going to write a constitution, youve got to write it correct
the first time because you probably cant alter something like that. But its
really bad for the state.
Do you see yourself working to change
the constitution?
I have actually tried. I have offered it up in some speeches and talked to people behind
the scenes about it, and even my own best friends in the legislature dont want to
give up that legislative power. So I dont think theres any chance, to tell the
truth, until the public itself decides its something thats important to them
and I dont think theyre that focused on it.
Talk a little bit about your future.
Where do you see yourself going? Would you like to be in the Senate, in the presidential
cabinet, or go fishing?
Im only 51, so I think Ive got a lot of career ahead of me. Ive got a
lot of opportunities, a lot of things I can do. I like public service; Ive been in
it now for 14 years. I always hoped to be in elective office. Ive served in three
different capacities (commonwealth attorney of Henrico County, attorney general and
governor) and I might like to serve again at some point, in some capacity. But I
dont have a firm path laid out. I have come to understand how much fun law and
business can be, and that could be enjoyable
.
You are planning to stay on as RNC chairman next year?
I expect to stay on as RNC chairman.
But you will still live here?
That is not clear. Roxane and I are still talking about whether the best place is Richmond
or Northern Virginia or some other location. Were just beginning that process now,
because Im still focused on being governor.
What do you see you see as your major accomplishments as governor? Where does the car-tax
cut fit in?
It reawakens people to the notion that actually their own money can be used to take care
of their own kids as opposed to an attitude of the 20th Century that the government is
going to take care of everybody. Dont worry about it. You dont need
initiative, you dont need to go in there and drive, because its going to be
okay. Youve got to get away from that. Youve got to do something fresh in the
21st Century and empower people and give them self-confidence and belief in themselves.
You do that with a tax cut.
You also do that with technology. Virginia is
a leading technology state. At one time it probably was not even thought about. But today
people think about the Silicon Valley and the Digital Dominion simultaneously. And
its the other areas that are beginning to be less thought about. Thats
building on a strength that was already here. It gives you another dynamic that Virginia
is not used to seeing. Our people now travel across the world building this industry and
they are recognized.
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