Tuesday, April 21, 2020

GOPs whine over problems they've caused, and don't try to fix

Two sets of tweets really illustrate how little the WisGOP legislators care about effective governance, even as they cry crocodile tears about wanting things to be more efficient.

Here's the first, from State Rep. John Nygren, Co-Chair of the Joint Finance Committee.





Golly, if only the co-chair of the state's Finance Committee could do something to make it easier for people to get their unemployment benefits! I mean, it's not like he was able to propose a bill to add money and staff to the Department of Workforce Development or something.

Also, let me remind you that John Nygren and all the other GOPs in the gerrymandered Legislature signed off on all of the barriers that kept Wisconsinites from getting their benefits immediately, including extra paperwork and the one-week waiting period for getting benefits. And Nygren waited 4 weeks after unemployment claims began spiking before they lifted a finger to vote on ending that waiting period and giving the higher unemployment benefits that are part of the CARES Act.

The other absurd tweet from a WisGOP comes from State Sen. Duey Stroebel, who comes from Ozaukee County, which is in the top 5 in the state when it comes to the rate of COVID-19 infections and overall deaths (9). Duey says there's no need for us to invest more in figuring out who is getting sick and who they got in contact with.



Ok, genius. Tell us where these state employees should be moved from? A Health Department that's already using lots of staff to deal with COVID-19 and a large increase in Medicaid and FoodShare cases? The understaffed DWD? Engineers from the DOT as road construction season kicks in? Tax reps at the DOR at the same time that Wisconsinites are filing their taxes? The DNR? You want state agencies to borrow researchers from the UW?

WisGOPs have underfunded and underpaid these services for years, and now they're acting like there's some magical source of staff and money to take care of all of this extra work. Hey Duey, if you think there are a lot of problems in how state government is being run, why don't you GIVE US A PLAN, throw it the flagpole and see who salutes it?

But of course, if Republicans had to actually come up with a plan on how to improve these services and get things done, they'd either have to spend more tax dollars to execute that plan (which won't do for them), or they're shot full of holes and rely on magic and other laughable assumptions that will never work.

These guys don't believe in science and facts that don't fit their agenda, and therefore aren't fit to run a hot dog stand, let alone oversee the response to the COVID-19 outbreak. As I said yesterday, they can choose to step up or shut up. But GOPs don't get to whine about how the Tony Evers' Administration is handling these many challenges of day-to-day governance when they've offered no help and no solutions, despite having months (and frankly years) to do so.

3 comments:

  1. By ending the business closures, Vos and Fitzgerald will guarantee that workers can no longer claim they are involuntarily unemployed, and so cannot claim unemployment benefits. Low wage workers will have to choose between working and their health but that isn't what this is about. This is about the state not having enough money to pay out unemployment claims without raising taxes on employers. The Wisconsin Unemployment Insurance program is financed by employers quarterly.

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    1. That theory has been floated in more than a few ALEC states, especially Brian Kemp's "open everything" idiocy in Georgia.

      It adds up to me, where it lessens the chances that GOP donor businesses have to pay higher taxes to the state's unemployment fund, which is more important to them than the public's health...and the overall economy, for that matter.

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  2. Great read. Missed the Nygren stuff. On unemployment, keep in mind out Walker gamed the system with taxpayer money.

    https://democurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2019/03/artificially-low-unemployment-benefits.html

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