Low taxes, school choice help inform ALEC's ranking of best, worst
governors
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[March 22, 2022]
By Brett Rowland | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Nine Republicans and
one Democrat made the American Legislative Exchange Council's list of
2021's 10 best governors in a new report on economic freedom.
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and Florida Gov.
Ron DeSantis – all Republicans – were the top three governors in the
country, according to the joint report by the American Legislative
Exchange Council and Economist Arthur Laffer & Associates.
The "2021 Laffer-ALEC Report on Economic Freedom: Grading America’s 50
Governors" ranked each governor on their current economic performance
and their fiscal and executive policies over their term in office.
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, and Idaho Gov. Brad Little, a
Republican, rounded out the top five. The others who made the top ten
were Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (6), New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (7),
Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (8), Georgia Brian Kemp (9) and Texas Gov. Greg
Abbott (10).
The bottom 10 were all Democrats: Michigan Gretchen Whitmer (41),
Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont (42), Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (43),
Hawaii Gov. David Ige (44), New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (45), former New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (46), Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (47),
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (48), Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee (49),
and lastly New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (50).
The report ranked governors based on three broad categories: Executive
policies, economic performance and fiscal policy. Executive policies
include union control, education freedom and welfare dependency.
Economic performance included a range of metrics including interstate
migration, education quality, Gross State Product growth and
unemployment rate. Fiscal policy included debt, corporate income tax,
personal income tax, government spending per capita and federal
unemployment benefits. The metrics were different than the group's 2020
report, which focused more heavily on COVID-19 lockdown policies, said
Jonathan Williams, ALEC’s chief economist and contributor to the report.
The American Legislative Exchange Council is a nonpartisan organization
of state legislators focused on limited government, free markets and
federalism.
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The top 10 governors shared some common traits: Lower taxes, policies
encouraging domestic energy production, lower unemployment rates and
tended to be among those who cut off the enhanced federal unemployment
benefits sooner rather than later, Williams said.
Polis even called for eliminating Colorado's state income tax.
"I think that's a pretty remarkable trait in this day and age, given
where the national progressive wing has taken his party, that he would
stand up for taxpayers and not just call for tax cuts, but call for the
complete elimination of the state's personal income tax," Williams said.
"When you contrast that with, in some cases, Republicans fighting other
Republicans over how aggressively they should cut taxes or if they
should eliminate their state's income tax, like Mississippi is
considering this session, and things like that, it is very notable that
a Democrat like Jared Polis stands out."
Williams said Polis also was helped by some of Colorado's existing
policies, including its Taxpayer Bill of Rights, a 1992 amendment to the
state's constitution that restricts the amount of revenue the state can
retain and spend.
The top 10 is a competitive group, Williams said.
"There is a great group of governors in that top 10 and those states are
really some of the powerhouse states across the country," he said. "So
sometimes the degree of difference between them may be very slight, but
this is based on equal weighting of the variables."
The bottom 10 includes the governors of five of the nation's 10 largest
states, including California, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois and
Michigan. The number of people living in California, New York and
Illinois have been declining.
"There's a lot of competition for the bottom," Williams said. "They are
looking to empower government to have a more command and control
top-down economic system where it empowers politicians and not the
markets, not business owners and individuals and of course, what we're
seeing is revealed preferences, that is what we call it in economics,
people are voting with their feet every single year away from states
like New York and California and Illinois."
Brett Rowland has worked as a reporter in newsrooms in
Illinois and Wisconsin. He most recently served as news editor of the
Northwest Herald in Crystal Lake, Illinois. He previously held the same
position at the Daily Chronicle in DeKalb. |