Whichever party grabs the term Lean Government will win in 2020. :-)


New national survey shows strong support for radical simplification | 
California Forward
http://www.cafwd.org/reporting/entry/new-national-survey-shows-strong-support-for-radical-simplification


This still from HBO’s “Game of Thrones” is an unfortunate metaphor for our 
state’s fiscal health if we continue down the same path

As characters on the popular HBO series “Game of Thrones” famously quip, 
“winter is coming.” 

It’s tempting to apply this sentiment to the new legislative session in 
California. Those in conservative circles lament the newly-awarded 
supermajority to the Democratic Party in Sacramento. Those on the left wonder 
if their party can effectively use this new power they have been granted to 
bypass partisan gridlock and make progress toward getting our state back on 
track.

Indeed, as citizens, sometimes we feel frozen; after so many years of steady 
decline no matter who we vote into power and no matter what initiatives we 
support at the ballot box, it feels as if our state is in the middle of a long 
fiscal winter that the Stark family constantly fears.

A new nationwide survey of U.S. voters released earlier this month resoundingly 
indicates that people want to streamline government, making it less complex and 
more efficient as a path toward reducing our deficit.

“It’s hard to balance the budget when complex and obsolete laws prevent 
government from changing how it does things,” said Philip K. Howard, Founder 
and Chair of Common Good, the nonpartisan government reform coalition that 
sponsored the survey. 

“It’s time simplifying government becomes a national priority.”

In looking at the numbers, the support for such claims across the board is 
truly striking. Over 80 percent of those surveyed supported each of the the 
following statements:

eliminate government programs with duplicate functions (93 percent)
review all government regulations at least once every 10 years (92 percent)
simplifying government regulations and structure should be national priority 
(85 percent)
The heavy lean toward radical simplification of the federal government can 
easily be applied to California. We are, afterall, staring down the barrel at a 
monumental deficit with further crisis narrowly averted on November 6 when Gov. 
Brown’s tax measure got the green light from voters.

But we simply avoided sinking deeper into the snow; the blizzard is still 
happening and unless we shovel a path out now, we risk getting buried.

California’s regulatory environment is notoriously labyrinthine, both in 
business and government. We have archaic legislation crafted during far 
different times that still govern how we collect taxes and how our elected 
officials can legislate. 

Strides were taken at the ballot this year by enacting longer term limits for 
legislators and in other arenas when the Citizens Redistricting Commission was 
created (and backed by the state Supreme Court) and when Online Voter 
Registration was enacted.

But this progress still does not address some of the core issues facing our 
state today. Should we be taking a harder look at Prop 13? Does CEQA need a 
heavy dose of reform? How much more austerity can the state handle before 
safety net services collapse under the weight of a population that needs them 
now more than ever? How many more cuts can an education system already stripped 
to the bone take before our ability to populate our own skilled labor force is 
utterly decimated?

This notion of radical simplification that has captured the attention of those 
surveyed nationally has a home here in California as well. Now that a major 
partisan hurdle has been cleared away how will Democrats wield this newfound 
power? Will they use their mandate by way of their new supermajority to 
streamline or to convolute? To further their own agenda or that of their 
constituents?

In the opinion of those surveyed (and we tend to agree), taking the simplest 
approach and eliminating state programs that duplicate efforts and instituting 
a formal review process for regulations in the name streamlining our government 
and allowing it to operate more efficiently is a common sense approach to 
ensuring that winter doesn’t last longer than it has to.

Categories: Government

More Stories +Share this Post

(via Instapaper)



Sent from my iPhone

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to