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Showing Original Post only (View all)KRUGMAN: "California" [View all]
* And California as an experiment for liberal economics: Conservatives like to point to California as a glaring example of the failure of liberal policies, but Paul Krugman pushes back on this storyline: now that the GOP in that state has lost its power to obstruct, we may now see a test run for genuinely progressive economic policies.
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The point, however, is that these problems bear no resemblance to the death-by-liberalism story line the California-bashers keep peddling. California isnt a state in which liberals have run wild; its a state where a liberal majority has been effectively hamstrung by a fanatical conservative minority that, thanks to supermajority rules, has been able to block effective policy-making.
And thats where things get really interesting because the era of hamstrung government seems to be coming to an end. Over the years, Californias Republicans moved right as the state moved left, yet retained political relevance thanks to their blocking power. But at this point the states G.O.P. has fallen below critical mass, losing even its power to obstruct and this has left Mr. Brown free to push an agenda of tax hikes and infrastructure spending that sounds remarkably like the kind of thing California used to do before the rise of the radical right.
And if this agenda is successful, it will have national implications. After all, Californias political story in which a radicalized G.O.P. fell increasingly out of touch with an increasingly diverse and socially liberal electorate, and eventually found itself marginalized is arguably playing out with a lag on the national scene too.
So is California still the place where the future happens first? Stay tuned.
MORE:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/01/opinion/krugman-lessons-from-a-comeback.html