OXFORD, Miss. – Three-time Louisiana Gov. Earl Long, a betting man who loved the horses, knew his maneuverings to get a fourth term in 1960 were a long shot. He also knew he was the last hope for the poor white and poor black in a state where the right-wingers were aching for power.
A.J. Liebling, a newsprint poet who also loved the
racetrack, records in his classic The
Earl of Louisiana what indeed happened when Uncle Earl’s bet came up short.
“The grasseaters and the nuts have taken over the streets of New Orleans.”
Sure enough, newly elected Gov. Jimmie Davis quickly moved
to cut $7.6 million in welfare funding and put 22,650 poor children on a path
to starvation.
When I get depressed about politics, I look back to Uncle
Earl for some solace. His enemies called him crazy—and maybe he was a
little—but he was a true-blue populist who stood up for regular folks, something
hard to find these days.
Look at Mississippi under Republican “grass eater” rule in both
the governor’s mansion and state Legislature.
A lop-sided tax system that favors corporations and the rich
has contributed to one of the biggest income gaps between the rich and poor of
any state in the country. Mississippi House Speaker Philip Gunn’s solution?
Phase out the state income tax and the $1.7 billion in state revenue it
provides.
Thank goodness, House Democrats killed Gunn’s plan and
prevented Mississippi from becoming another Kansas, where Republicans succeeded
in such an effort and nearly wrecked the state’s budget while flatlining its
economy.
I’m one of the few journalists in this state who has decried
the miserable protections workers here get due to a Republican-spawned gutting
of workers’ compensation rules. That’s why I get calls from desperate workers
injured on the job with little or no means of getting just treatment from their
employers. Got one the other day. What can I tell them? Get people to stop
voting in politicians who side with bosses and CEOs rather than working folks.
Another nearly wrecked institution is Mississippi’s prison
system. Corruption at the highest levels and medieval conditions within its
private prisons have the system’s reputation in shambles. Experts acknowledged
during a recent Overby Center for Southern Journalism and Politics panel
discussion here at the University of Mississippi that past politics and a “lock ‘em up and throw away the key”
attitude set the stage.
My view? The core corruption in the state’s prison system is
its willingness to hand over what is a state responsibility to profit-seeking
private corporations.
Finally let’s look at education in a state with a sordid
history of politically sanctioned disdain for public education.
Once again, the state Legislature ended its most recent session
underfunding public schools, this time by $211 million under rules it set for
itself in the Mississippi Adequate Education Program (MAEP). Initiative 42 (on the ballot this fall and which would force the Legislature to meet MAEP funding requirements or face judicial sanction) is
an effort to fix this.
Quite clearly a grass-eating core within the Republican
Party wants to privatize public education. Charter schools and vouchers are
merely Trojan horses in that cause.
According to a study recently published in New Labor Forum, charter schools across the country have doubled
since 2008 while some 4,000 district schools shut down. Charter school CEOs
earn as much as three times what school principals earn. Yet charter school
advocates are the first to condemn teacher unions that want fair wages and
benefits for teachers.
Higher education is in a nationwide crisis. The cost of one
college year has increased 1,200 percent over the past 30 years, the New Labor Forum reports. Student loan
debt jumped 400 percent between 2003 and 2013. Thank the corporatization of
America for those statistics.
The board of the Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning, known as the College
Board, has been under fire for failing to renew the contract of University of
Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones. The decision, reached in secret, led to
widespread speculation about a right-wing takeover of higher education in
Mississippi.
Such speculation is warranted given what has happened in
North Carolina and Wisconsin.
Tea Partyers, corporate wheeler dealer Art Pope, and the
University of North Carolina’s Board of Governors managed to get rid of progressive
UNC President Tom Ross earlier this year as well as university centers devoted
to the environment, voter engagement and ending poverty. Pope’s dream is to get
writer Ayn Rand, right-wing goddess of unhinged capitalism, accepted into the
canon of required studies at UNC.
In Wisconsin, Republican Governor and possible presidential
hopeful Scott Walker tried to get the wording of the University of Wisconsin’s
mission statement changed from “searching for truth” to “meeting the state’s
work-force needs.” He failed, but he did succeed in seriously cutting
university funding.
Mississippi voters have a chance to change things next
election. Will they vote for Initiative 42 and for politicians who serve rather
than oppose their interests?
I’m hoping, but I’m not placing any bets.
A version of this column ran recently in the Jackson Free Press of Jackson, Miss.
A version of this column ran recently in the Jackson Free Press of Jackson, Miss.
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