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Political notes from Free Press staff writers Terri Hallenbeck, Sam Hemingway and Nancy Remsen
1.29.2008
Dean v. Kunin
Tomorrow's Statehouse drama will feature a showdown between former Gov. Madeleine Kunin and Howard Dean. They will each take a different side in the debate over whether Vermont should go to a four-year term for governor, and perhaps throw some legislative seats into the mix too. Kunin has presented her point of view at a couple of public sessions. She's for the four-year term because she says you just get going with things and you have to go through another election. At a November 2006 debate, Kunin said: "Most big issues take time. If you're always thinking of the next election it's very hard to do that." She cited the Act 200 planning law, which passed while she was governor. "If there had been a longer period of time, it would have been a better law," she said. In past debates, Kunin's verbal sparring partner has been University of Vermont political science professor Frank Bryan. This time, she's got a fellow former governor, who's looking at the issue with a national as well as a Montpelier perspective. In a preview of tomorrow's testimony before the Senate Government Operations Committee, here's what Dean has to say on the issue: Over the last four years I have flown over 2 million miles, visiting every state in the union, most of them on multiple occasions. Among the many things I learned since I left the governor’s office to run for president and eventually to become chairman of the Democratic National Committee is that there is no place like home. Vermont is among the most friendly, politically responsible, fiscally well-managed states in America. Vermonters are more engaged in the process of self governing, with all its warts, than almost anywhere else in America. And Vermonters are less cynical about their own government than anywhere else I have been. ...
For that reason I have concluded that Vermont ought to keep our two-year term for governor and for the Legislature. It is incredibly tempting to get rid of 50 percent of our political campaigns by only having them every four years. All those horrible ads, the long-winded speeches. All that money that could be spent elsewhere. The truth is that four year campaigns would only begin earlier and be even more expensive.
But it is so hard to get anything done in two years.
The truth is we get more done faster in Montpelier than in other states because of the two-year term. We are held responsible for our election promises in two years, and we usually deliver. Examples include civil unions, Act 250 under Deane Davis, the Bottle Bill, Pay As You Go highway funding — which has kept Vermont out of the enormous debt problems many states have — and school funding equalization, which 26 states have been ordered to do by their courts and only two have complied, including Vermont. The truth is Vermont is well-governed. We tend to be less partisan. Our voters are closer to our governments than in virtually any other state in the union.
... We are better off in Vermont because we are not like everyone else. We ought to keep what we have.
...
Vermont stands out as a state in which our people are civil, thoughtful, neighborly, politically well informed, and most importantly respectful of the notion of a common good. This is an extraordinary place to live, non-withstanding the normal tendency of all human beings to focus more on what we want than on what we have. We ought to keep Vermont Vermont.
- Terri Hallenbeck
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