Oh dear, I didn't think I was doing that. I rather thought I was just saying the same things over and over quite consistently. My misapprehension was due I'm sure, yet again, to my oversupply of astounding stupidity. Mostly the stupidity to continue participating in this... can I call it a conversation?
I believe he did have the power to change it, but that he didn't use that power. Of course, this doesn't fit into your narrative.
In 1996, Governor Gary Johnson signed into law a budget which increased the size of New Mexico's government by about 400 million dollars annually.
He did likewise in 1997. And every year he was in office.
It's that simple. I'm glad he was in there vetoing hundreds of bills (over 700). But he wasn't vetoing enough. And most importantly, he never vetoed a single appropriations bill.
Those were the ones he especially definitely totally needed to be vetoing!! It bothers me that he didn't. I understand it doesn't bother you. But it bothers me. Though you perhaps cannot respect that, there may be others who can.
It's kind of like Scott Walker in Wisconsin. I wanted to like him, I really did. I wanted him to be a Ron Paul-type guy. But look at the budget numbers: they actually increased, from 63 billion to 66 billion (biennially). So what was all the battle about? If you're going to have an epic struggle over cuts, at least actually
CUT! He didn't cut. Nothing was cut. Nothing is
ever cut. All the talk is just talk. It's all just spin. Every budget graph for every U.S. state government for as far back as I can find data has gone up every single time a new budget is passed. No exceptions (OK, one: NH 2011). No one ever cuts anything. Gary Johnson didn't cut. Scott Walker didn't cut. Mitt Romney certainly didn't cut, and neither did Rick Perry, nor Jon Huntsman,... NOBODY! That's the sad, sad truth.
Here's a little thing I wrote up for the Herman Cain Forums back when I was "
supporting" the great
Mr. Herman Cain, C.E.O. (R.I.P.)
Mitt Romney: Establishment. Doesn't stand for anything. Budget and taxes went way up while governor -- from 26 billion to 35 billion. Debt up too. (see
here)
Rick Perry: Establishment. Budget and taxes went way up while governor -- from 44 billion to 91 billion. Debt up too. (
here,
here)
Michele Bachmann: Actually
kind of anti-establishment in her ideology and voting record. But, I could never vote for her because she's a former IRS prosecutor. Just not happening.
Herman Cain: Firmly anti-establishment. Small businessman, not a politician. Saved several businesses from bankruptcy, could have saved the USA from bankruptcy but was the victim of a smear campaign. :'(
Ron Paul: From what I can tell so far,
firmly anti-establishment.
Jon Huntsman: Establishment. Budget and taxes went way up while governor -- from 9 billion to 12.5 billion. Debt up too. (
here) Also, he's way too left-wing for the Republican Party, and definitely for myself and the Cain supporters I know. Basically a Democrat running as a Republican.
Rick Santorum: Establishment. Never met a spending increase he didn't like and vote for while in the Senate.
Gary Johnson: Budget and taxes went way up while governor -- from 4.4 billion to 7.7 billion. Debt up too. (see
here). However, unlike the other three governors, there is evidence he was at least vetoing some of the spending and it would have been even worse without him as governor. Nonetheless, he was clearly not vetoing enough. I would put him at
kind of anti-establishment at best.
Newt Gingrich: Establishment. More establishment than them all.
The very personification of Establishment. Betrayed the 1994 Republican Revolution. Will betray us again without missing a beat or blinking an eye. No principles, integrity, nor respectability whatsoever.
All the governors had their states' budgets massively increase while they were the executive. I see no reason to expect them to do any differently as executive of the Federal government and every reason to expect them to do the same. Santorum and Gingrich both have voted for and even proposed massive spending increases and boondoggle projects. They have sometimes voted against tax increases, at least more often than against spending increases (which was pretty much never) but guess what Gingtorum? If spending increases then taxes will increase too, sooner or later. Every businessman knows this. Money doesn't come from thin air. Debts can't accumulate exponentially forever.
Obviously some of this was just staying "in character," as Herman Cain is absolutely
not anti-establishment, but the write-ups on the governors is more or less what I believe. If you think Mitt Romney is horrible because his state's budget went up 34%, from 26 billion to 35 billion, what does that mean for Gary Johnson, whose state budget went up 75%, from 4.4 billion to 7.7 billion? Well, in fairness Gary Johnson was in office twice as long, so I guess the rate of increase was approximately the same.
Anyway, make it a great one, everyone! Keep up the fight for liberty! And if you're excited about Gary Johnson, by all means stay excited and get out there and have some fun spreading the Message of Freeee-dommmm!