“This isn’t the budget any of us would have written, given the choice,” weaseled state house Ways and Means Committee chair Ross Hunter (D-Medina), raising philosophical questions about whether state legislators have free will. Faced with a recession-ยญexacerbated $5.5 billion budget shortfall, and no federal stimulus money this time around to bail them out, Democratic majorities in the state house and senate apparently felt they had no choice but to produce a suspiciously Republican-looking all-cuts budget.
If he didn’t have a choice, then, um… why the fuck did it take so long? I mean, if this was the only budget that could’ve possibly been written, then there should have been no need for extending the legislative session for an extra month, right? Of course Hunter and the rest of his colleagues had a choice. They had plenty of choices. They could’ve chosen to soften the blow by eliminating tax breaks for out-of-state banks or any number of other unproductive tax “preferences.”
But here’s what we got instead:
Under a budget passed by a Democratic majority, class sizes will grow, teacher salaries will shrink, college tuition will skyrocket, and health insurance for some of our state’s poorest and most vulnerable families will become either unaffordable or unavailable. The legislature slashed $1.6 billion from Kโ12 education, $620 million from public colleges and universities, $129 million from the Basic Health plan for low-income adults, $179 million from the disabled, $97 million from seniors, and on and on and on. Thousands of state workers will lose their jobs. Those remaining will see their wages reduced through forced furloughs, higher health insurance premiums, and wage cuts.
“I commend the work of our lawmakers,” kvelled Governor Chris Gregoire in a statement about the budget. She rubbed more salt into budget wounds by blithely reinforcing the Republicans’ central fiscal meme, adding, “We developed that balanced budget with no new revenue.”
Yes, not a single tax loophole or exemption will be eliminated, not a single tax raisedโand there will be no revenue package referred to the ballot. In fact, the only substantive piece of new revenue will be $67 million to offset cuts to state parks, raised using a $30 per vehicle annual “Discover Pass” now required to use all state wildlife and recreation landโa user fee that, like the bulk of the cuts, burdens Washington’s lowest-income families the most.
“I wish we did raise taxes,” state senate Ways and Means Committee chair Ed Murray (D-Seattle) laments, “but we didn’t have the votes.” Not even the simple majority necessary to refer a tax package to the ballot? According to Murray, five “roadkill” senate Democratsโthese are moderates who caucus with Dems but often vote with the GOPโthreatened to cross the aisle to write a budget with the Republicans, essentially forcing the Democratic majority to almost totally cave. You know, what daily newspaper editorial boards like to call “bipartisanship.”
In fact, if there were ever a clue as to how bad this budget is, it’s how pleased Republicans seem to be with the result. “This budget agreement is truly a bipartisan one,” chief senate Republican budget negotiator Joseph Zarelli (R-Ridgefield) said in announcing the deal. “It accomplishes what citizens expect from their elected officialsโworking together for the benefit of the people they represent.” At least working together for the benefit of the people (and corporations) Republicans represent. Traditional Democratic voters, on the other hand, not so much.
“Republicans have learned that you actually have to be accountable to your base,” explained an exasperated Adam Glickman, vice president of SEIU Healthcare 775NW. For example, cuts to “levy equalization,” a program that sends hundreds of millions of dollars to small rural school districts, were never even on the table. “But the Democrats in Olympia seem consistently intent on opposing their base while pandering to people who hate them,” bemoans Glickman, whose union represents 40,000 home health care workers.
Glickman fears the budget cuts will be “devastating” to low-income seniors and the disabled, forcing many of them into nursing homes, while pushing thousands of low-paid home health care workers “further into poverty.” But he also cites a litany of other affronts to the Democratic base, including passage of a business-friendly workers’ compensation bill just months after voters overwhelmingly rejected a similar measure, and the legislature’s apparently enthusiastic embrace of antiteacher rhetoric and reforms.
“It’s an insult to our profession,” declares Seattle Education Association president Olga Addae, referring to the 1.9 percent pay cut the legislature imposed on teachers as a key part of the final budget compromise. “The Republicans believe that public education should live on a shoestring,” Addae added.
In his own defense, Senator Murray argues that his caucus managed to save funding, if at greatly reduced levels, for Basic Health, Disability Lifeline, Apple Health for Kids, and Planned Parenthood, programs a Republican majority would have joyously eliminated in their entirety. But he admits this “all cuts, no tax” budget was also a “no win” one, and acknowledges that both the fiscal and political crises were years in the making. “We as Democrats have done a pretty piss-poor job of telling the story of why we need more taxes,” Murray concedes.
The Service Employees International Union, teachers unions, and other traditional Democratic backers would probably agree that Democrats did a “piss-poor job.” The question now remaining for the Dems is, having once again chosen to screw their base, will the base return the favor? ![]()

Never vote for the Demolicans again!Vote for a socialist party.And join a labor union while your at it!
The Road Kill are not moderate Democrats. Last year tey were right wing Democrats, Blue Dogs in the national parlance. But they’ve now become Republicans in Democrats’ clothes, especially Rodney Tom, who changed parties–but didn’t really. It is sad to see people like Paull Shin, who we previously trusted, knifing us like this. He should retire and so should Mary Margaret, who was dragged into this caucus so they would be less likely to be accused of a sexist rebellion against Lisa Brown and other strong female leaders in the Senate. Nevertheless, most of them act like bully boys and strut around the capitol campus. They might as well have guns on their belts. It was depressing to see the governor, the Senate leaders, and eventually even Frank Chopp bend to their hostage-taking. And thank heaven the childish Craig Pridmore didn’t get elected to Congress. What’s with his petulance?
They named themselves the Road Kill Caucus to play up their false victimization as middle of the roaders. Poor kids. No one liked them. But the name turned out to be true rather than sillyโthey turned us into road kill.
You have to wonder who on the right wing wrote this script and sent Tom over to teach it from the inside. Itโs so much from their playbook. And when does the governor plan to change parties herself? Sheโs been traveling to the right at record speed.
You could have cut your own salaries, raised taxes on the wealthy,put more taxes on cigarettes and liquor and candy. That’s just for starters.
Instead, you insisted on gutting the earnings of teachers, undermined care
for low income individuals and families and the disabled. Shame on you all. We will have to work hard to vote all of you out next time around. Isn’t there any politicians left that care for the common man? What a disgrace.
And not a single cent pay cut for those making these laws, or the public employees that make over $100,000.00 a year.
According to the state employee databases, there are over 2,000 public employees that make $100,000.00 and above. Is that really the best use of funds?
State and national level democrats are all the same. They are so afraid of not getting re-elected by the phantom citizens that apparently vote Dem, but really support wicked, evil, shitty choices.
At Lakefair, I’m going to throw marshmallows at the Demoburger cart while yelling “here’s yer spine you good for nothings!”
the democrats are a conservative party. the republicans are a lunatic fringe conservative party. i will no longer vote for either of them. and i don’t care if it means that republicans will win. we get the same policies anyway, so what’s the difference.
and as far as doing this budget or getting a republican one, isn’t the governor a democrat? did they have the votes to override her veto? if the democrats & gregoire were actually interested in enacting progressive policies that would have been an option, huh? everything that ed murray and gregoire say is just lies to distract progressive from the fact that the democrats are a conservative party who not only won’t support progressive policies but actively opposes them.
Sounds a lot like the same choices made by the Republican state legislature here in Texas.
It all sounds like what the Republicans in the Texas state legislature accomplished. Running a government like a business is the same as running a family like a brothel, it screws the ones who actually work for a living.
Recall ’em if you can!And run for office yourself:the Citizens United decision allows you to receive funding from almost anybody (including corporations) on our planet!