Before I came to Mississippi, I was a Member of the British Parliament for 12 years for Clacton. Donald Trump's friend, Nigel Farage, has now decided to run for election in Clacton on July 4th.
I'm delighted and I encouraged Nigel to run the moment it was announced that there would be a General Election. (I know, the Brits do politics differently with flexible, rather than fixed, terms)
Back in the old country, the Conservative party faces annihilation.
Having sat in office since 2010, Britain’s Conservatives have failed to govern on conservative principles. Today, their supporters are abandoning them for Nigel Farage’s new Reform party.
Perhaps this should serve as a stark warning for those who campaign as conservatives, but who govern as progressives.
Here in Mississippi, Republicans have been in charge since 2011, about as long as Britain’s Conservatives.
Where are the big strategic changes our state needs? What reforms are being advanced to elevate Mississippi?
There are, I would suggest, three top challenges Mississippi faces:
Imagine if we were to use the notionally conservative majority in our state to accomplish actual conservative reforms to tackle any of this?
Here is a list of some of the bills that were blocked in the most recent legislative session:
The one big achievement of the session, Rep. Rob Roberson’s INSPIRE bill which personalizes school funding for students, passed because of Speaker White’s drive and determination. Eight weeks ago there were still some in the Senate intent on preserving the old Soviet-era funding formula.
Morton Blackwell, a great American hero who I happened to meet for tea in Jackson, once said that “In politics, nothing moves unless it’s pushed.”
He’s right. If we want to see conservative policies implemented in our state, we are going to have to do a lot of pushing!
Nobody likes to be pushed, particularly politicians. Leaders will not thank you for making them do something they would preferred not to have done, as my experience with Brexit taught me.
Here at the Mississippi Center for Public Policy we are 100 percent in the business of pushing for the kind of bold, principled conservative reforms we need.
We need to start using our conservative majority to deliver the kind of changes we are starting to see in Republican-run states throughout the South.