K-12 Tax & Spending Climate: Indebted and Unrepentant

Fred Siegel

The big news from Tuesday’s elections–the GOP’s gains of 60-plus seats in the House, recapturing the majority that it lost in 2006–naturally makes one wonder about the divisions that the victories are likely to foment. Pundits are speculating on conflicts between the Tea Party and Republican regulars over spending; between the 25 remaining Blue Dog Democrats and the party’s liberal leadership; and of course between the two parties over budgetary matters, which could lead to gridlock.
But another division is likely to compete for center stage in the next two years: the split between, on one side, California and New York–two states, deeply in debt, whose wealthy are beneficiaries of the global economy–and, on the other, the solvent states of the American interior that will be asked to bail them out. This geographic division will also pit the heartland’s middle class and working class against the well-to-do of New York and California and their political allies in the public-sector unions.