http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/12/opinion/12brooks.html?_r=1&ref=davidbrooks

In states across the country, elected leaders raise state employee salaries
in the fat years and then are careful to placate the unions by raising
future pension benefits in the lean ones. Even if cost-conscious leaders are
elected, they find their hands tied by pension commitments and employee
contracts.

The end result is sclerotic government. Many of us would be happy to live
with a bigger version of 1950s government: one that ran surpluses and was
dexterous enough to tackle long-term problems as they arose. But we don’t
have that government. We have an immobile government that is desperately
overcommitted in all the wrong ways.

This situation, if you’ll forgive me for saying so, has been the Democratic
Party’s epic failure. The party believes in the positive uses of government.
But if you want the country to share that belief, you have to provide a
government that is nimble, tough-minded and effective. That means
occasionally standing up to the excessive demands of public employee unions.
Instead of standing up to those demands, the party has become captured by
the unions. Liberal activism has become paralyzed by its own special
interests

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