Obstacles await McDonnell administration

Obstacles await McDonnell administration

JOE MAHONEY / TIMES-DISPATCH

GOP candidate Ken Cuccinelli holds a broom aloft during a joint campaign appearance in Chesterfield with running mates Bill Bolling and Bob McDonnell.

 

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Big win notwithstanding, Republican Gov.-elect Bob McDonnell will start his administration hampered by a slashed state budget, a politically divided legislature and a sour economy.

Less than 24 hours after he was elected Virginia's 71st governor, McDonnell acknowledged that he will face tough economic times when he takes office Jan. 16.

Gov. Timothy M. Kaine has already slashed $6 billion from the state's $75 billion, two-year budget because of declining tax revenue. He is expected to cut an additional $1 billion.

And while Republicans gained at least five members of the House of Delegates in Tuesday's voting, strengthening their majority, Democrats retain a thin majority in the Virginia Senate -- which will now be the last redoubt of Democratic power in Richmond.

Tuesday's election "certainly creates a large majority there that gives me the ability to . . . get full cooperation to get a lot of things done in the House," McDonnell said during his first news conference as governor-elect.

"And then obviously the challenge is for me to get these solutions put together in a bipartisan fashion that we're able to get [them] through the Senate," he said.

Speaker of the House William J. Howell, R-Stafford, acknowledged that a cash-strapped budget will play a big role in what McDonnell can get done.

"I think he's going to find when he gets in there and, particularly when we all see the budget figures, the revenue forecast and where the economy is still lagging, I think that's going to dictate an awful lot of the issues," Howell said.

"I don't think there's going to be a lot of new initiatives."

Howell said the financial difficulties are a challenge and an opportunity.

"Bob and I both over the years have stressed and worked on the idea that Virginia needs to step back and focus on what its core responsibilities are, and I think this gives an opportunity," he said. "It forces us to do this."

McDonnell maintains that he expects to carry out the agenda he outlined during his campaign. And he insisted Wednesday that he will do so without raising taxes.

That agenda includes doubling the size of the Governor's Opportunity Fund, which is used to lure industry to Virginia; tax credits for job creation; merit pay for teachers; and transportation improvements.

In an interview before the election, McDonnell said he expected that the economy will begin to improve within the next year, in part because of his emphasis on job creation.

Political analysts expect McDonnell to concentrate on nonbudgetary issues over the short term, seeking to increase the number of charter schools, pushing more education money into the classroom rather than into administration, speeding up the permitting process for new businesses, and increasing penalties for gang activity and drug dealers.

He also wants to open foreign trade offices in India and China, nations with emerging economies.

McDonnell wants to initiate performance audits of state agencies to seek increased efficiencies. He has estimated that doing so could save the state $300 million a year.

Achieving all these goals during a depressed economy would be "a hat trick," said Toni Travis, a political scientist at George Mason University.

She thinks McDonnell "is going to have to find a way to have user fees -- perhaps tolls -- if he is to carry out his transportation agenda."

A case in point is building a second U.S. 460, paralleling the current 460 from Suffolk to Petersburg. The Virginia Department of Transportation has explored working with a private developer to build a 55-mile toll road with seven exits. But the agency abandoned the idea after a study found that the state still would have to pay $2 billion for construction. The state could not afford it.

McDonnell said Wednesday that the 460 route would be a transportation priority. He held out the hope that he could find a private partner for the construction.

McDonnell has not ruled out using tolls to raise transportation funds, and he's not backing down from his plan to privatize the state's ABC stores. He said 32 other states have privately operated liquor stores. He has said the sale of Virginia's stores would bring the state $500 million, which he also would use for transportation.

McDonnell acknowledged that passing a transportation plan "will be one of the biggest challenges that I will face with a Democratic Senate, Republican House and different ideas between the rural, suburban and urban areas of the state."

When he pushes to double the Opportunity Fund, McDonnell will have an ally in the House Democratic Caucus, now reduced to 39 or 40 members, depending on the outcome of an unresolved contest in Virginia Beach.

"We want to be cooperative," said Del. Ward L. Armstrong, D-Henry, the House Democratic chairman. But he added: "Our role hasn't changed. We still represent 40 percent of Virginians. It is important to put alternatives on the table."



Contact Tyler Whitley at (804) 649-6780 or .

Contact Olympia Meola at (804) 649-6812 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by GodFather on November 09, 2009 at 8:04 am

The liberal knee jerk reaction is to always raise taxes.  More money means more power for them, and less freedom for us.

Bob McDonnell has promised some creative solutions, one of which is to get out of the private sector - aka selling the ABC franchise.  He has good ideas.  Let’s see if he can implement them and make them work.

As long as he does not listen to the losers, he might do well.

Flag Comment Posted by Jack on November 08, 2009 at 8:45 pm

How can anyone seriously advocate raising taxes with more than a 10 percent unemployment rate with many working at low paying jobs that are not reported?

Just because some still have their jobs and drawing their pay and benefits doesn’t translate into the conditions many in Virginia face.

We might as well get used to the fact that we will never be able to keep piling more taxes on the backs of citizens. We will have to learn to do with less government and transportation problems.

The old saying “A government big enough to give you everything you want is one big enough to take all you have”. That point has just about been reached. With the massive debt and deficit spending by Obama and the democrats in congress we are mortgaged to the hilt for many generations to come.

Flag Comment Posted by mikeyt on November 08, 2009 at 6:48 pm

Oh yeah, Anon, that’s the answer. Sell pot in the rest stops so drivers can get stoned while driving 80 mph.

We can wait two years to remove the Democrat majority in the Senate so that we can return Virginia to the conservative control it needs.

Flag Comment Posted by grover0 on November 08, 2009 at 6:01 pm

Privatizing state liquor stores is a terrible idea. The harm will vastly outweigh any short-term gain. Private liquor stores encourage urban blight, alcoholism, and crime in urban areas. This plan is a sell-out to the liquor industry and will harm Virginia in the long run. McDonnell has no real solutions to offer Virginia.

Flag Comment Posted by Anon on November 08, 2009 at 9:59 am

The headline reads “Obstacles await McDonnell administration” and the accompanying picture shows Cooch speaking while McDonnell stands in the background.  What is the subliminal message here?

Flag Comment Posted by Anon on November 08, 2009 at 9:24 am

The RTD conveniently ignored Bob’s promise to reopen the VDOT rest stops withing 90 days of being inaugurated. 

One option not discussed so far is to legalize marijuana in Virginia and put it under the control of the ABC Board.  Growing and selling marijuana at rest stops could raise billions for the state’s transportation needs.  Plus, it would put a big dent in the Road Rage problem.

Flag Comment Posted by rukiddinme on November 08, 2009 at 9:08 am

Bob is going to have to raise taxes.  At some point, it will be the only fiscally responsible thing to do.

But maybe he can play it off like Warner and no one will care.

Flag Comment Posted by makeitwork2 on November 08, 2009 at 8:24 am

Anon is correct.  I wish the new administration well, but I believe he will have to raise taxes (or do it by other means, like fees, tolls, etc) and lay off many state employees to “bring us back to the core responsibilities of state government.“ He’s stuck. He’s made promises and he has no money to fulfill them. Tough position to be in.  Some major decisions will have to be made, including abolishing some agencies who do not perform core services.  He thinks his Bob is for Jobs motto already improved the Virginia economy? Hope he has jobs for those employees he sends to the ranks of the unemployed.  Maybe he can get VEC ready this time!

Flag Comment Posted by Anon on November 08, 2009 at 7:26 am

McDonnell is facing a transportation double-whammy. By the end of his administration, Virginia will need all of its dedicated transportation revenue just to pay off debt and maintain the existing roads.

Also by the end of his administration, all of the federal stimulus money will have been spent.

In other states with viable transportation plans, the stimulus is just a bridge until the economy improves.  In Virginia, when the stimulus runs out, what you see is what you get.

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