Monday, August 21, 2006

The Real Referendum On Gambling

Greg Stumbo is as much a legitimate candidate for Governor as the Easter Bunny is ready to start making little rabbits with Jennifer Aniston. His position on gambling is interesting, but in no way does it erase concerns about his past.

There is a referendum on gambling this year and it will take place in the 34th Senate district of Madison, Lincoln, and Rockcastle counties. Senator Ed Worley (D-Richmond) is an outspoken supporter of casinos and racinos. Senator Worley's opponent, Barry Metcalf, is against expanded gambling.

If you want to know which way casino gambling is going in Kentucky, this is the race to watch.

Concentrating On 2006

First-term legislator Jim DeCesare (R-Bowling Green) is the kind of leader Kentucky needs. His was one of only two votes against the state budget earlier this year.

For conservative people, that was a very good thing.

Lots of people give lip service to smaller government and conservative principles. Jim is the real deal.

Democrat Math Stays In Vegas

Greg Stumbo wants to spend education dollars without teaching basic math, fight crime while establishing "criminal enterprise zones," and cut property taxes while blowing the lid off the state social service liability.

That's right, Stumbo wants casinos in Kentucky. And he wants them now.

We will need several extra layers of education bureaucracy to avoid actually using the revenue casinos bring in on teaching kids the reasoning skills that might otherwise keep them out of casinos. Should we go ahead and start condom programs and free needle exchanges for the extra hookers and junkies who will be drawn to the neighborhoods near our casinos? And the three dollars in social services damage for every one dollar in casino tax revenue will only satisfy those same kids who aren't learning any math.

All this from the same people who don't want you earning any more on your savings than Social Security wants you to have.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Bubba And Hillary Parse The War

The most dangerous political hacks in America try to spin "cut and run."

KAPT Goal: Fleece Taxpayers?

Kentucky's Affordable Pre-paid Tuition program (KAPT) keeps losing money.

The taxpayer-backed program is due to release its actuarial analysis any day now. Expect to see the program's deficit to have gotten several million dollars larger.

Investment performance continues to lag tuition inflation and so its stated investment policy goal needs to be adjusted. Currently, the program seeks to "meet or exceed tuition inflation."

The programs ROI since its inception is 6.12%. That means investments are picking up a little more than half of the program's liabilities. You get to pay the other half.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Left Meets Right In Lexington

A very interesting political event takes place September 7, at a fundraiser for Lexington city council candidate KC Crosbie.

The guest speakers for the event will be former Republican party chair Ellen Williams and former Democratic party chair Terry McBrayer.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Can't Ignore The Front-Runner

Here is an interesting article about Sen. John McCain.

Reckless Disregard For Truth

Newspaper editorialists are quite fond of looking down their noses at those who play fast and loose with the truth. They like to depict those who spin or lie as beneath contempt, slimy, dirty, despicable, and evil.

Given that, how can they possibly rationalize today's drive-by smearing of Supreme Court Justice John Roach?

You might not like John Roach. You might hate him and want him to lose this November and go away. Even so, you can't justify the treatment he got on the editorial page in today's CJ.

They define a campaign poll by Justice Roach they haven't seen as a "low down, dirty poll." They turn a "no comment" answer to another paper into "his handlers at first wouldn't even admit ... they had conducted the survey." That would be the low-down, dirty survey they have never seen, but feel compelled to comment on nonetheless. The paper states without attribution to any source (the source happens to be the campaign of Roach's November opponent): "A number of angry voters say they were asked in the phone survey such slimy questions as whether it matters that Mr. Roach's opponent is "married with no children," is "soft on crime" and "feels that judges can create laws if the legislature has failed to act."

This isn't true.

What is important is The Courier Journal might know that it isn't true. What is critical is they should show some kind of discretion when they aren't sure what the truth is.

That is what libel laws are for.

It is tempting -- and perhaps prudent -- to ignore the wild spinning from Judge Mary Noble's campaign. Having the state's most venerable newspaper vilify him may be a net-positive for Justice Roach.

But today's editorial provides an open-and-shut case of libel and it would be fun to watch the pointy-heads at the CJ have to defend the indefensible when it counts.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Fletcher, Worley, Moberly

Hard to miss a strange sign on Main Street in Richmond at the Chamber of Commerce. It says "Ernie Fletcher, Ed Worley, Harry Moberly, August 25."

I've gotten several calls from people wondering why Governor Fletcher is campaigning with Democrats this close to an election.

Well, he isn't.

Governor Fletcher is coming to Richmond to announce a Recovery Kentucky Center.

The General Assembly has nothing to do with this, so Worley and Moberly will just be getting in the way trying to pick up a little free publicity.

Some D's We Actually Need

Two Kentucky schools have institutionalized grade inflation in order to fake better results. They have eliminated D's from their grading system.

I did something similar with my kids when they started school. I told them D stood for "dead" and that they didn't want to know what F stood for.

But being non-violent types, administrators at no-D schools are telling teachers they get D students back for a repeat unless they bump them up to a C.

There are, of course, no indications this policy does anything good for anyone.

Putting students with a D in in-school suspension would be far more effective at incentivizing achievement.

Old Messes

Steve Henry still says he didn't take the $162,000 he paid back to the government to settle his Medicare/Medicaid fraud case.

I don't know. Maybe he didn't.

The former Paul Patton lieutenant governor should definitely run for the Democratic nomination for governor next year.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Return Of Pence

Ryan Alessi has the story.

Grayson, Napier Campaigns Roll On

The Danville Advocate Messenger caught up with two gubernatorial candidates in Lancaster yesterday.

Good News For Gov. Fletcher?

Brian Goettl at Conservative Edge reports the Kentucky Supreme Court may pick up the merit hiring case.

An opportunity to get out of indictment limbo should be very good news to Ernie Fletcher.

Barack Obama, Gas Hog

Beautiful.

Actually, this foolishness about fossil fuel usage hastening the end of the world is no more true coming from these folks now than it has been for the last half century. It is pathetic that the industry that keeps the free world moving faces such brainless attacks today.

Nonetheless, it is fun to see one of the chief purveyors of hot air get caught like this.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Mary Lou Marzian To Chair KDP?

Some Dems are ready to make Chairman Jerry Lundergan walk the plank. It will be fun to see what they might do next.

Thanks For Saving Us Democrats!

On a day like today when the Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 132 points, I'm sure glad Democrats saved us from bankrupting ourselves by allowing some people to opt for private investment accounts for their Social Security dollars.

Whither Ernie?

There can be disagreement about how the Fletcher Administration reached its current doldrums, but few would argue anymore that no real problems exist.

If you were advising the Governor, what would you suggest he do?

Two things don't count: suggesting either that he resign or that everything is fine are both out of bounds.

I think pushing for repeal of Certificate of Need laws and giving parents some form of school choice would help generate some much-needed support.

Good: Republicans For Lieberman

When an opponent is hurting himself, the shrewd action is to let him do it.

Watching Republicans save the once-proud Democratic Party from its own Ned Lamontiacs runs counter to that old dictum, but it is the right thing to do.

If Ned Lamont runs Joe Lieberman out of the U.S. Senate, he benefits Republicans by pulling Democrats to the left on the War on Terror. It won't happen. Fortunately, Republicans are playing a role for the good of the nation. There aren't enough conservative voters in Connecticut to elect a Republican, but independents, Republicans, and Democrats will come together in Connecticut to preserve common sense on the issue that matters most to America.

While we are all watching Connecticut, it is time to get Alan Schlesinger to drop his embarrassing run for the Senate. America needs his votes (about 8%) to re-elect Lieberman.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Divided Loyalties

No, I'm not talking here about Republicans. The party of fighting cats will have kittens at election time. It's Democrats in a quandry.

Sometime between now and November it will occur to Kentucky Democrats who want Ben Chandler to run for Governor that they have to hope their party doesn't take over the U.S. House of Representatives this year.

If they do win, he stays put and the Dems are left flat-footed for 2007.

Actually, I think Democrats will wish after the November elections they had been able to find some candidates named "Generic Democrat." And Rep. Chandler still won't run for Governor.