Friday, May 17, 2013

Education Alert: Universal Pre-K…Spending for Success?

In short, “No.”  President Obama’s push for massive federal spending on a universal pre-kindergarten program generated heated opposition over cost, government overreach and the questionable effectiveness of existing programs like Head Start.

But now this debate has landed on our front step. The South Carolina State Senate  is scheduled to vote early next week on Budget Proviso 1.83 that would create just such a program in SC.  This is the wrong choice for South Carolina’s hard-earned taxpayer education dollars.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

New SC Poll Reveals Voter Concern About Medicaid Expansion

Voters fear rushing into waste, uncertainty and cost.

A statewide survey of South Carolina voters commissioned by Palmetto Policy Forum and conducted by Magellan Strategies reveals a divided and doubtful electorate on the issue of expanding Medicaid in South Carolina to include able-bodied adults up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level.  The survey was conducted April 30–May 1 with 940 likely general election voters and has a margin of error of +/-3.2%.

The rush to expand Medicaid under provisions of The Affordable Care Act in the face of waste, fraud and abuse is at the top of voter worries.  Key survey findings include:
  1. Among active voters, when given no further facts, Medicaid expansion is deadlocked at 44% favoring and 44% opposed to expansion with a large partisan split between Republicans (who oppose expansion by 75%) and Democrats (who support expansion by 81%).  A strong plurality (45%) of independent voters opposes expansion.
  2. A plurality of all voters (48%) believes that Medicaid is a “flawed program that wastes a lot of money, has problems of fraud and abuse, and is in severe need of reform.”
  3. When presented with the wide variance in expert projections on the expected number of new enrollees, 45% of all voters oppose Medicaid expansion. Removing those who are Unsure or have No Opinion, a majority (52%) oppose expansion based on expert uncertainty over projected growth in enrollment.
  4. When presented with specific cost estimates, 47% oppose Medicaid expansion. Again, removing those Unsure or with No Opinion, opposition rises to 56% based on estimated costs. While again, there is a deep divide between Republicans and Democrats on this issue, key swing voters think more like Republicans, with 75% of Republicans, 11% of Democrats and 51% of Independents opposing expansion over the question of cost.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Tough Tuesday for the NLRB


The D.C. Circuit issues a double smackdown to the politicized agency.

Wall Street Journal

Tuesday was a tough day at the office for President Obama's National Labor Relations Board. First, three judges on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, ruling in National Association of Manufacturers v. National Labor Relations Board, struck down the NLRB's diktat that businesses put up pro-union posters in the workplace. That, the court said, violated employer free speech rights in place since Congress's 1947 Taft-Hartley Act. It got worse...

Roger Pilon: Graduates, Your Ambition Is the Problem


Obama's commencement speech at Ohio State on Sunday would have perplexed the Founders. 


Wall Street Journal, By Roger Pilon


Civic education in America took a hit on Sunday when President Obama, giving the commencement address at The Ohio State University, chose citizenship as his theme. The country's Founders trusted citizens with "awesome authority," he told the assembled graduates. Really?
Actually, the Founders distrusted us, at least in our collective capacity. That's why they wrote a Constitution that set clear limits on what we, as citizens, could do through government.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The Coming ObamaCare Shock


In recent weeks, there have been increasing expressions of concern from surprising quarters about the implementation of ObamaCare. Montana Sen. Max Baucus, a Democrat, called it a "train wreck." A Democratic colleague, West Virginia's Sen. Jay Rockefeller, described the massive Affordable Care Act as "beyond comprehension." Henry Chao, the government's chief technical officer in charge of putting in place the insurance exchanges mandated by the law, was quoted in the Congressional Quarterly as saying "I'm pretty nervous . . . Let's just make sure it's not a third-world experience."

These individuals are worried for good reason. The unpopular health-care law's rollout is going to be rough. It will also administer several price (and other) shocks to tens of millions of Americans.