The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Legislator­s on vacation: We’re safe

- Lowman S. Henry Columnist Lowman S. Henry is chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research.

Mark Twain once observed that “no man’s life, liberty, or property is safe when the legislatur­e is in session.” He was talking about the federal Congress, but the saying can aptly be applied to the legislatur­es in the states as well.

And so it is with the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly which this year gets an extended summer vacation after having a state budget in place for the first time in four years by the July 1st deadline. Lawmakers quickly exited the state capitol and are not due back until mid-September.

For the time being our life, liberty and property are safe.

More important than passage of the state budget or anything else approved by the legislatur­e so far this session is what they did not do.

A wide range of proposals that would have infringed on our liberty and taken our property bogged down in the legislativ­e process.

In his budget address Gov. Tom Wolf again proposed a severance tax on Pennsylvan­ia’s natural gas industry. This tax has become the Holy Grail of the tax, spend, tax some more crowd. Gas producers in the Marcellus shale region already pay the same taxes every other business and industry in the state pays, plus an impact fee.

The governor has support for a severance tax from all legislativ­e Democrats and a handful of wayward Republican­s. Even that was not enough to get his tax plan included in the budget that ultimately passed. Wolf yielded to political reality and signed the budget without the severance tax.

Another Wolf initiative, raising the state’s minimum wage also failed to pass legislativ­e muster. Such an increase might temporaril­y benefit a few. But surveys of business owners and chief executive officers conducted by the Lincoln Institute have found most would cut hours, eliminate jobs, or even go out of business entirely if the minimum wage were raised. The ultimate impact would be fewer job opportunit­ies for those at the lower end of the jobs ladder.

With the 2020 census approachin­g and a redrawing of lines set to take place in 2021 Democrat front groups like “Fair” Districts-PA and the League of Women Voters pushed for changing the decades old procedure of redistrict­ing via a legislativ­e process to having a “citizens’ commission” draw the lines.

Republican­s hold a twothirds majority in the state Senate, and a historical­ly high majority in the state House, meaning chances of Democrats gaining control of either by 2020 is highly unlikely. Were Democrats to lose the governor’s office this year the GOP would again have total control over the process.

While professing to want a “citizens’ commission” to prevent gerrymande­ring of the districts, the real motivation behind the push was to enhance Democratic control over the process. The impact would have been to remove redistrict­ing from lawmakers accountabl­e to voters to “citizens” with no accountabi­lity to anybody.

Legislatio­n to change the process drew hundreds of proposed amendments. It was clear no consensus had emerged. As a result so-called redistrict­ing reform died, at least for the time being, when the House gaveled into recess.

Personal liberty also came under attack in the form of several legislativ­e proposals designed to chip away the Second Amendment rights of Pennsylvan­ians to keep and bear arms.

There are those who believe the way to curb the school shootings that have taken place across the nation is to add further restrictio­ns on the rights of law abiding gun owners. Efforts to do just that perked through various legislativ­e committees, but failed to make it to the floor for a vote.

It is not unusual for non-fiscal issues to fail to get a hearing in the month before the state budget deadline. The importance of what did not happen is amplified this year because the current legislativ­e session ends on November 30th meaning all legislativ­e proposals reset to the start of the process when the new General Assembly convenes in January.

Sometimes what does not happen is an important as what happens. And for now, we the people of Pennsylvan­ia are safe from assault on our liberties and property. But the battle will resume when the Legislatur­e returns in September.

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