Gov. Rick Perryās job-recruitment journey has taken him to the northeastern United States where heās appealing directly to businesses to relocate to Texas.
Iāve seen the latest ad and to be candid, itās actually a pretty good piece of work.
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/06/rick-perry-takes-aim-at-new-york-93030.html?hp=r3
I continue to be amazed at the in-your-face approach Perry is taking toward his fellow governors. The previous targeted states ā California, Illinois and now, New York ā all are governed by Democrats. Perry, who once was a Democrat, is now a card-carrying Republican whoās demonstrating time and again that he doesnāt care one bit about working with Democrats.
Still, he is a member of the National Governors Association, which still has a number of members from the āotherā party. He goes to NGA meetings, hob-knobs ā I presume ā with other statesā governors. Maybe they swap stories about working with their legislatures or even brag about how good things are going in their particular state.
Does he cross the proverbial aisle at these meetings and talk shop with Democrats? My hunch is that he rubs shoulders only with Republicans, mainly because heās managing to tick off Democrats with his job-poaching initiative.
Frankly, I cannot blame the governor for wanting to lure more business to Texas. Name a governor of any political stripe who doesnāt want to put more constituents to work and Iāll show you someone whoās not long for the office he or she holds.
But every business magazine published already has touted the Lone Star Stateās business-friendly environment. Itās the worst-kept secret in the realm of national politics.
The governor might need some of those Democratic governors one day to help push some bipartisan idea forward ā if any such notion ever pops into Perryās noggin. Iām betting they wonāt stand with him.