Is Rick Perry Really for Limited Government?
Conservative radio hosts are excited about a recent speech by Texas governor Rick Perry. Perry forcefully argued his theme of “unwavering support for efforts all across our country, but, most of all, here in Texas, to reaffirm the states’ rights affirmed through the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.”
That sounds great, but does he really mean it?
In a study, I noted that Perry and the Texas state government are aggressive scavengers of federal grant dollars. The rise in federal granting is one of the central causes of the destruction of the Tenth Amendment in recent decades.
I noted that Perry’s official webpage is chock full of press releases touting his distribution of federal subsidies. These press releases are from a short time period in 2006:
- “Perry: Texas Farmers and Ranchers to Share $780 Million in Drought Assistance.”
- “Perry: FEMA Agrees to Reimburse Texas at Same Rate as Louisiana for Hurricanes.”
- “Gov. Perry Announces $1.6 Million in Grants to Juvenile Offender Accountability Programs.”
- “Perry: Homeland Security Grants to Focus on Technology Needs.”
- “Gov. Perry: Presidential Disaster Declaration Approved for El Paso.”
- “Gov. Perry Announces $38,098 in Victims of Crime Act Funds to El Paso County.”
- “Gov. Perry Announces $3.6 Million in Grants to Local Law Enforcement.”
Notice how Perry takes credit for all the new spending? Politicians love spending, especially when they can foist the cost on taxpayers living in other states.
Look at these two press releases up on Perry’s website right now:
- Apr. 9: “Gov. Perry Backs Resolution Affirming Texas’ Sovereignty Under 10th Amendment.”
- Apr. 10: “Gov. Perry Calls on FEMA to Assist the State in Fighting Wildfires.”
Governor Perry: Do you want to revive the Tenth Amendment or do you want the FEMA money? You’re giving us whiplash out here!
I don’t think Perry’s tax policies have been particularly conservative either, as they have centralized fiscal power at the state level and thus reduced beneficial competition between local governments.
Solving the Evolution Question
The Texas state board of education is currently engaged in a debate over science standards and how to teach evolution in public schools, the Associated Press reports.
In a recent Cato policy analysis, Why We Fight: How Public Schools Cause Social Conflict [pdf], Associate Director of Education Policy Studies Neal McCluskey examines the root cause of the debate, and how to fix it.
McCluskey writes:
Ultimately, the problem in Texas isn’t whether or not the theory of evolution has weaknesses, or whether pointing to such weakness is religiously or scientifically motivated. The problem is that the public schooling system requires everyone in the state to fund schools that take a single view, resulting in divisive conflict in the short-term and erosion of liberty in the long. Add to this that government-mandated orthodoxy is inherently incompatible with free inquiry, and it is clear that what Texas needs isn’t to decide what everyone will learn, but how to give everyone the ability to choose where and how their children will be educated.
For more on solutions to America’s troubled education system, check out McCluskey’s book, Feds in the Classroom: How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American Education.

