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A Times Editorial
Tax commission does Bush's bidding
In print: Tuesday, April 29, 2008
In devoting two ballot questions to school vouchers, the constitutionally empaneled Taxation and Budget Reform Commission removed any doubt about its agenda. The commission, which includes three members of former Gov. Jeb Bush's staff, placed his education legacy at the top of the list. Never mind that the Florida Constitution directs the commission to "examine the state budgetary process, the revenue needs and expenditure processes of the state, the appropriateness of the tax structure." Forget that the public hearings held throughout Florida were dominated by talk about property taxes. In the end, two of the seven questions for the Nov. 4 ballot will be about school vouchers. The tribute was led by a commission member, Patricia Levesque, who serves as paid director for the two foundations created to keep Bush's political fortunes alive. And let no one be fooled by what lies ahead. The commission has assured that pro- and antivoucher groups will make Florida a national battleground. The campaign will be ugly, costly, divisive — and just the kind of politics that Bush relished. The way the commission put the items on the ballot hints at the deceptions that lie ahead. Neither question mentions the word "voucher." The first would remove the prohibition on spending tax dollars "directly or indirectly in aid of any church, sect, or religious denomination." The second would rework the constitutional guarantee of a "high-quality system of public schools." Commissioners traded votes before adopting both questions, and then added camouflage to the second one. They added a formula — 65 percent of education funding must go to the classroom — that is widely regarded as a gimmick. A 2006 federal assessment, in fact, found that Florida schools already surpass that threshold. Then again, the formula is intended to entice voters who know no better. Call this Bush's postgubernatorial "devious plan." He and the Legislature repeatedly expanded voucher programs even as courts were ruling against the first program, Opportunity Scholarships. Now he gets a chance at payback, and had the familiar cheek to issue this statement on Friday: "Florida voters, not activist jurists, will ultimately decide the best way to provide a quality education for all of our students." Apparently, "activist" commissioners who go beyond their constitutional power don't bother him. The worst part about this upcoming voucher fight is the extent to which it will again polarize the debate on education reform. Gov. Charlie Crist has tried to restore trust with educators who under Bush were treated as though they were obstacles to progress. Some teacher union officials and voucher supporters have even worked behind the scenes to try to find common ground, and none of the remaining voucher programs have been challenged in court. That cease-fire is about to be blown apart. It's a high price to pay in pursuit of the Bush legacy.
[Last modified: Apr 29, 2008 03:48 PM]
Comments on this article
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by T-Ball
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Apr 29, 2008 3:48 PM
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Jimmy, you don't know what you are talking about. This have EVERYTHING to do with Florida and how the GOP and conservative Christians have bent and twisted the law to their own benefit using taxpayer dollars.
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by tommy
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Apr 29, 2008 3:25 PM
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Bush was popular because he gave special interest tax breaks and and look what a mess he left the state in.
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by Lin
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Apr 29, 2008 3:21 PM
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No one should be surprised that this commission turned out to be nothing more than a bunch of political hacks, but it's still amazing that they accomplished so little.
In November voters will make sure these commissioners know how silly they
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by Mr Smithers
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Apr 29, 2008 3:18 PM
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Excellent. The best thing for the American economy is to create an entire class of uneducated workers so that America might once again compete with China. I need cheep labor people.
God bless the GOP and smite the liberals.
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by Karla
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Apr 29, 2008 3:11 PM
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I think someone at your paper is seeing monsters under the bed. The 65-percent solution will most likely keep the voucher initiative from passing the single-subject requirement of Florida's election law. Adding it was poor judgment, no
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by Frank
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Apr 29, 2008 2:55 PM
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Bureaucrats want two things money and control. Educrats are no different. Vouchers give parents a voice in what happens and the educrats oppose them. This is divisive because educrats won't share control. So we must fight to protect our childre
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by jimmy
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Apr 29, 2008 10:21 AM
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This is another example of Times editors swimming WAY outside of the mainstream of Florida politics. Proof? Gov. Bush was an extremely popular governor both at home and around the country. Only the most radical commentators (left & right
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