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What
a fine mess we're in
All is topsy-turvy
as new power spheres shape up amidst a budget disaster.
by Page Boinest Melton
That
giant cracking sound you hear are the tectonic plates
shifting under the Old Dominion - political realignments
of seismic proportions. Republicans are talking tax
increases. Democrats are an endangered species. A venture
capital king - a Democrat from Northern Virginia, no
less - is headed to the Governor's Mansion. Virginia's
buttoned-down business community, long a stalwart of
the status quo, is emerging as a progressive force.
Lobbyists are left to look and leap, choosing which
side to join among the new divide.
New players are talking up bipartisan cooperation while
old hands - having heard that clarion call many times
before - retain a sense of perspective. Thank goodness
for the new State Capitol metal detectors - hardcore
partisans will have to check their long knives at the
door.
Here's a look at how the new centers of power and pressure
points are forming in Virginia's new political geology:
The
Governor: Amidst all the turmoil, the most
important event of all is unfolding. Gov.-elect Mark
Warner has spent a lot of his transition time trying
to put together his team that will guide the commonwealth
for the next four years. Faced with a $1.3 billion shortfall
in the state's budget this year - the unfortunate legacy
of Gov. Jim Gilmore's stubbornness - a recession and
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, governing just doesn't
look like much fun. Finding the right combination of
talent to govern has been a considerable challenge for
the tall entrepreneur, who ran one of the smartest gubernatorial
campaigns in recent Virginia history.
Warner's big problem? The budget, no question. His straight
line to a business group about how he was spending his
time post-election tells it all: "I'm trying to
get my arms around the budget." The crowd laughed
at the unintended joke, not in appreciation of Warner's
humor, but of the understatement. Virginia's budget
deficit is serious stuff: a billion here, a billion
there - we're talking real money. Compound the shortfall
with emboldened constituencies who want more money for
roads and schools and mix in a Republican majority legislature
that may or may not want Democrat Warner to wind up
the hero. Even with those odds, the early money is on
Warner, that as the first businessman-governor in 44
years he has the know-how to juggle it all.
For
his part, Warner is pushing a bipartisan line, saying
the fiscal worries "are not a Democratic problem
or a Republican problem, but a Virginia problem."
Alexandria Delegate Brian Moran, the new House Democratic
caucus chair, notes that Warner's appeals to Republicans
are reflective of his campaign - he needed Republican
voters to win - "and the political reality of the
cards we're dealt." Warner got budget talks off
on the right foot by tapping John Bennett, the well-regarded
Senate Finance Committee's staff director, as his Secretary
of Finance. Legislators will feel they are getting the
straight skinny from a former staffer - important, because
every little bit may help the new administration.
The
House of Delegates: Once Warner has his whole
team in place, he faces even bigger obstacles. Call
them fear, loathing and House Republicans. Just over
four years ago, for example, Amherst Delegate Vance
Wilkins was considered a dogged, conservative leader
of his minority Republican Party. He was solid for a
pro-gun vote, sure to support the pro-life position.
Yet during this session Wilkins is The Man. He will
gavel a solidly Republican House into order: 64 Republicans,
plus two Independents expected to caucus with GOP members.
Money, and who controls it, will be key, flavored by
Wilkins' conservative perspective. Legislators in both
parties are watching Wilkins to gauge the fate of this
session's marquee funding issues: tax increases some
want for transportation and education. Typically, Wilkins
views the pressure for new roads in Northern Virginia
with some detachment, wryly saying he just schedules
his Washington-area business after 10 a.m. to avoid
the traffic.
With the majority in the House, Republicans can scrap
their power-sharing deal with Democrats, handing outright
chairmanships to veteran hands like Fairfax Delegate
Vince Callahan, head of the powerful Appropriations
Committee. It also gives the speaker an almost veto-proof
majority - a big stick in negotiations with the new
governor and with the more moderately inclined Senate.
"The speaker is arguably the most powerful man
in the commonwealth of Virginia," says Virginia
Beach Delegate Leo Wardrup, a loyal Wilkins lieutenant
and chair of the House GOP caucus. "He's in charge
and he has the majority." Adding to his staying
power: while Virginia governors serve just four years
at a time, chances are Wilkins will be around to greet
Virginia's next chief executive.
The
State Senate: As Vance Wilkins' slow steady
climb to near-royal status proves, the race is not always
to the swift. So learned the cautious senators in both
parties - and even business leaders - who predicted
car tax mayhem. Stafford Sen. John Chichester, chairman
of the Senate Finance Committee, took considerable heat
from some in his own party last year - including Gilmore
- for sticking to traditional GOP virtues such as fiscal
responsibility. But not all were unhappy with Chichester's
deliberate hand: Republican firebrand Tommy Norment,
the state senator from James City County, suggested
Gilmore was so out of touch he was snacking on "hallucinogenic
mushrooms." A good line, perhaps, but one that
didn't win him any friends in the "just say no
to car taxes" crowd. Today Chichester and colleagues
look like geniuses for the go-slow approach, but then
this year the message is even harder to swallow. Chichester
suggests taking an ax to the budget to balance it right
away, slap on a tourniquet and then look ahead to the
longer-term spending demands.
The
Business Community: Not always can business
play kingmaker, but business leaders are feeling pretty
good about the elections. With the Northern Virginia
cluster leading the pack, key business figures from
across the state put their bucks with politicians who
supported transportation funding and better fiscal management.
An uncanny number shifted from traditional support of
GOP candidates to Mark Warner, who seemed, well, sort
of like a GOPer himself. Warner raised the issue of
a transportation referendum in the governor's race -
never mind that he tried to spin his way out of it when
Republicans tagged it a tax increase. He still got credit
for being responsive.
Statewide, business execs contributed to Warner in droves,
abandoning Republican candidate Mark Earley. This session,
business groups are emboldened to speak in a collective
voice. They're banding together in a 16-group coalition
to impose some business sense on Virginia's finances.
"The movement toward a car tax cut overall has
convinced a lot of people in Northern Virginia - including
major donors in the Republican party - that this (Republican)
party has lost all sense of perspective," says
Mary Washington College political scientist Stephen
Farnsworth. "Had you told me a few years ago that
the Republican Party would have trouble nailing down
money from the business community, I would have said
you were ridiculous."
The
Democrats: Check the milk cartons. Where
are you guys? They've got the state's top two jobs,
but otherwise these are grim days for the once-powerful
Democratic Party. Republicans started the long march
to dominance and Democratic decimation when they knocked
off veteran Newport News Sen. Hunter Andrews in 1995.
They capped it with last year's redistricting that forced
the retirement of such long timers as House Minority
Leader Dick Cranwell of Vinton. Rural Democratic seats
were altered to favor Republicans, adding a greater
GOP flavor to the rural caucus.
House Democrats are looking for a voice to stay relevant
in the rough-and-tumble discussions ahead. "We
can count," says House Minority Leader Frank Hall
of Richmond. Look for Hall and his band of brothers
and sisters to stick close to Warner and fully test
the, uh, opportunities of being in the minority. Hall
says despite the loss of some veterans, "We have
some seasoned senior members who have a solid working
knowledge of the budget process, and we've also got
some very talented young members who are going to have
their chance to shine." In the Senate, partisan
lines are a lot more blurred. Minority Leader Dick Saslaw
forged working relationships last year with some of
the GOP's most influential senators. With the slam-dunk
margin for Republicans in the House, Warner will feel
more at home in the Senate with what Saslaw calls his
"ideological majority."
The
2005 Contenders: As always, the campaign
signs haven't even come down and there's talk of who
will run for governor in the next election. Two likely
contenders: former Richmond Mayor Tim Kaine, the Democratic
son-in-law of former Gov. Linwood Holton just elected
lieutenant governor, and Attorney General-elect Jerry
Kilgore, a former legislator and public safety secretary
who's the only Republican to hold one of the three statewide
positions.
Kaine
is quitting his law practice to work full-time at what
officially is a part-time job. He plans to use his perch
to work closely with local governments and tackle K-12
education funding; he can probably count on airtime
because of his alliance with Warner. Most importantly,
he says, "My job will be to preside over the Senate
in a way that will try to work with colleagues to lead
us to common ground." He makes no apologies for
thinking about higher office, saying it's only natural.
"I think Virginians should want as attorney general
and lieutenant governor people who want to run for governor.
It's good to have a couple of other positions where
people can be in the firing line and voters can see
what they're made of."
Kilgore,
with no formal budget role and a friendly GOP majority
in his hip pocket, could have more fun than anyone this
session. If he sticks to his agenda and highlights his
terrorism issues, he may be able to dodge the flak from
the budget fallout. He plans a hard-charging legislative
presence to build his record, beefing up the attorney
general's lobbying cadre at the Capitol to promote his
issues, which include ethics reform and domestic violence.
"We're going to have an aggressive attorney general's
office," he vows. "I didn't run for the job
just to file the briefs on time."
While
Kilgore and Kaine make no secret of their interest in
the Governor's Mansion, both may find the next step
a doozie. Neither former Attorney General Mark Earley
nor outgoing Lt. Gov. John Hager could translate their
respective four years into winning gubernatorial campaigns.
In fact, the lieutenant governor's job hasn't produced
a governor since L. Douglas Wilder in 1989. Kaine won
the recent election with a little help from his friend
Mark Warner, a squeaker over a lesser-known House member
whose hard-core conservatism was pretty far out for
even Virginia. Fellow Democrats suggest Kaine take the
next year or two to look at the tapes and figure out
his vulnerabilities.
As
for Kilgore, he's keeping an eye on Gilmore, whose national
political influence dims when he steps down this month
as Republican National Committee chairman. Some Gilmore
loyalists have been making noises that he will run for
governor again in four years, which could create a bottleneck
for Kilgore. It's unclear how Gilmore's final year in
office - the combative clashes with legislators over
budgeting and his jettisoned car tax cut - would affect
another statewide run. But maybe, after shifting political
plates settle into place, four years is just enough
time to forget.
Return to Virginia Business - January
2002
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