Quantcast
breaking news

Texan Perry and Californian Brown Battle for Business

By: Ross Ramsey, The Texas Tribune
Updated: February 11, 2013
What could be more fun than a throwdown between Governor Goodhair and Governor Moonbeam?

Rick Perry is on a four-day "business recruitment trip" to California, escalating his raids on Jerry Brown's economy and getting enough attention to, maybe, get some businesses to think about moving. After new taxes that were imposed by California and Congress at the end of 2012, Californians -- including decision-making executives -- are among those who pay the highest taxes in the country.

Perry spent a pittance -- $24,000 for a radio ad in a state like California has a smaller audience than a tweet from Paris Hilton -- to tweak Brown's nose on jobs.

In the recent ad, Perry talks about how hard it is to do business in California and how easy it is in Texas, suggesting the job-makers on the West Coast would have a better time if they would simply move here.

That's nothing more than air support for a news release. And it worked. Perry's proposition quickly became a big story, eclipsing that teensy radio play. Brown took the bait, scolding reporters in his home state for pestering him so insignificant an emission: "It's not even a burp. It's barely a fart."

It is a lovely thing when two political avatars slug it out in public. The little radio advertisement has so far become a weeklong conversation about the relative virtues of the nation's two biggest states.

In other words, Perry got just what he wanted. The first part of persuading someone to move is getting them to consider that idea.

Behind the ads and the commentary is a serious competition between the states for economic pre-eminence. In that corner, Athens. In this one, Sparta. Each serves as the other's foil, the Ali to its Frazier, the Moriarty to its Holmes, the red to its blue. Each sees itself as the economic, cultural and political engine of the future.

Over the past decade, Texas has been knocking the feathers out of the competition, adding jobs faster than any other state. That's one of Perry's brags and would have been a centerpiece of his 2012 presidential campaign, had he kept that effort alive long enough to need a centerpiece.

Not from Texas? Here's one argument heard lately in California: Perry and Texas didn't create all those jobs. They stole them. When Countrywide Financial (may it rest in peace) moved from California to Texas in 2004, Texas threw $20 million at the company, which in turn promised 7,500 jobs. Even the rosiest spin on that deal failed to add to the number of jobs in the universe. It just relocated them.

You can put all of the eggs under one chicken, but that does not make that chicken the best egg-layer in the coop. On the other hand, it does make that chicken the one with the most eggs.

The governor versus governor and state versus state competition is a king of the hill thing, with winners and losers. For a national candidate, it is a harder sale to make, because a president gets blame or credit for the overall picture and not just for health in one precinct of the country. Both governors have been national candidates; Perry hasn't ruled out being a national candidate again.

Maybe he just wants to make friends. If you had both states in the bag, you'd be the next president. It would be highly unlikely that a candidate could take Texas and California and lose.

But at the moment, it's highly unlikely that anyone could get them into the same camp. New friends or not, Perry would find the same stiff political headwind in California that Democrats face in Texas.

In his speeches, the Texas governor says other states -- he doesn't mention the big rival here -- have been "trying to beat us at our own game" by, among other things, "aggressively courting major employers."

Texas' low taxes and regulations are in there, too -- that's Perry's stock in trade. "We led the nation out of recession and into recovery, and remain the nation's prime destination for employers and job-seekers alike," he told lawmakers last month.

The Californian is good at this economic development thing, too. The state's finances are getting better, and the economy there is improving more quickly than the national average. And he has a different audience, too.

Texans might be rooting for Perry's marauding out West. Californians have to be cheering Brown's unwelcoming response.

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2013/02/11/texan-perry-and-californian-brown-battle-business/.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

The State Fire Marshal's office has been investigating two suspicious fires that happened over the weekend....

The two largest groups of school districts represented in the case, along with the state, were in favor of reopening evidence in the case to update the record after a legislative session in the...

A tweet by Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst that uses an advertisement by a reproductive rights group to praise the Senate's approval of abortion restrictions late Tuesday evening has raised eyebrows....

The barrier that divides the U.S. House and Senate plans for immigration reform looms as large as the double-layered border fence that lines much of the Texas-Mexico border. ...

The Tucson Unified School District appointed Dr. H.T. Sanchez as the next superintendent in a meeting Tuesday night....

Temperatures will soar into the upper 90s with triple digits to our west....

The City of Midland will offer the following scheduled activities for family fun at its pools this summer....

Starbucks says it will start posting calorie counts on menu boards and bakery cases at its coffeehouses across the U.S next week....

Mexican authorities arrested a former college professor who was on the FBI's 10 most wanted list over allegations of child sex abuse. ...

Experience Life at Moody Gardens!...

 
 
Do you wish Dr. HT Sanchez could be ECISD Superintendent instead of heading to Tucson schools?
 



 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Permianbasin360.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved