|
Independent's day?
Russell Potts' votes could be decisive in a tight gubernatorial
race
READER
RESOURCES
|
|
|
|
Web
Pointers: For more information
|
|
|
|
|
|
by Garry Kranz
for Virginia Business
October 2005
Don't look now but Virginia's race for governor finally
is getting interesting. For months it's been shaping
up as a ho-hum affair pitting former Attorney General
Jerry W. Kilgore against Lt. Gov. Timothy M. Kaine. Now,
state Sen. H. Russell Potts Jr. of Winchester, a maverick
Republican running as an independent, is bluntly telling
voters something they don't want to hear: He would raise
taxes and tolls by $2.5 billion to rescue Virginia's
overburdened transportation system. That promise might
not get him elected, but if Potts grabs enough votes,
his quixotic campaign could decide the election.
The 44-year-old Kilgore is a soft-spoken Republican
who relies on a base of anti-tax, pro-business conservatives.
Kaine, a-47-year-old Democrat, is banking on help from
two high-profile politicians. The first is his father-in-law,
former Republican Gov. Linwood Holton. Kaine also hopes
to ride the coattails of popular Democratic Gov. Mark
R. Warner, a possible presidential candidate who parlayed
strong backing from the business community into a 2001
victory.
Kilgore, a former prosecutor,
grew up in Gate City and earned a law degree from William & Mary.
The Missouri-born Kaine is a Harvard Law School graduate
who once worked
as a missionary in a vocational school in Honduras. Both
men come across as nice guys, likable if a tad too scripted
at times. Occasionally they'll sling a little mud, as
when Kaine tries to link Kilgore to illegal taping of
Democratic conference calls by a former GOP executive.
Or when Kilgore associates a series of corruption scandals
in Richmond's city government with Kaine's tenure as
a councilman and mayor. Yet neither seems willing to
risk polarizing the centrists who may turn the tide in
this election. On policy issues their positions are carefully
nuanced and, well ... rather bland.
Doing his best to spice things
up is Potts, who broke ranks with his party to declare
himself an independent
candidate. Unlike his younger counterparts, the 66-year-old
Potts doesn't much care for nuance. He enters a room
with the subtlety of a bulldog ready for a fight. Potts'
decision to run infuriated state GOP leaders who tried
to drum him out of the party. He remains unapologetic.
Underdog Potts scarcely conceals his distaste for the "formidable,
well-organized far-right lobby" that composes Kilgore's
base.
Voters in Virginia's conservative
27th District have elected Potts to the state senate
four times, including
his current term. He chairs the Senate's Education and
Health Committee and sits on the powerful Finance Committee.
He refers to himself as a Republican "in the mold
of Eisenhower and Reagan." Potts also is a seasoned
campaigner who roundly dismisses Kilgore and Kaine as "childish
kids who aren't talking straight with the people" on
how they'll fund their numerous programs. "I have
twice as much experience as both combined and I have
won twice as many elections as both of them combined," Potts
says in explaining why he chose to run.
Experience aside, the odds are stacked against him.
The next few weeks leading up to the Nov. 8 elections
are crucial to all three candidates, but especially so
for Potts. Kaine and Kilgore polled almost neck and neck
through the summer before Kilgore gained a 4 percentage
point lead in a Washington Post poll in early September.
Both are well financed. Kilgore had a war chest of more
than $14 million at the end of August, while Kaine had
raised more than $13 million. Potts, by contrast, had
raised only $1 million, although half of that was accumulated
during the summer. In addition, history does not favor
Potts. The last independent to win a statewide race was
Henry E. Howell Jr., elected lieutenant governor in 1971.
Trailing badly in the polls — he hovered in single
digits all summer — Potts also desperately needs
exposure. A televised debate on Oct. 9 would help if
not for an intriguing subplot. Kilgore is scheduled to
face Kaine, but he refuses to engage Potts in debate.
Potts boasts of being the "best debater" of
the three men, but Virginians may never get to find out.
He won't be allowed to participate in the debate unless
his support reaches 15 percent in two verifiable polls.
That is the same cutoff used in presidential debates.
Potts' support stood at only 5 percent in the Washington
Post poll after garnering 9 percent in an earlier poll.
(Kaine debated Potts separately in Fairfax County in
September after a scheduled debate with Kilgore.)
Speculation goes that Kilgore
is worried about Potts siphoning off moderate Republican
votes. Clearly, Kilgore
would prefer Potts simply go away. "I've said all
along that debates ought to be between candidates with
a chance of winning," he says with a trace of weariness.
Kaine, however, also must keep
an eye on Potts, who could lure disaffected Blue Democrats
to his side. "Potts
is a threat to both sides, and it's difficult to say
this early which candidate he'll hurt the most," says
Larry Sabato, a nationally known political analyst who
heads the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.
If nothing else, Potts adds drama
to the proceedings. Virginia is one of only two states,
New Jersey being
the other, to choose a governor this year. That would
seem to make this a much-discussed showdown. Yet compared
with Virginia's previous gubernatorial races, this one
utterly lacks pizzazz — or at least memorable catchphrases
that resonate with voters. No single issue has captured
the public's imagination like the "no car tax" pledge
that carried Republican Jim Gilmore into the Executive
Mansion in 1997.
This year's hopefuls? They're stuck trying to galvanize
voters around the state's transportation crisis, a yawner
even if it is easily the most pressing concern. Indeed,
monumental transportation challenges await the eventual
winner. Hundreds of billions of transportation dollars
are needed here, with nowhere near enough money in state
coffers. Adding to this anxiety is lawmakers' failure
to address transportation in the current biennial budget.
Talking about Virginia's transportation problems is like
talking about Social Security or the federal deficit.
After awhile, many people tune out.
Not businesspeople, however.
To them, transportation is the hot button of this campaign. "The limitations
of our transportation network affect companies' ability
to receive raw materials, ship finished product and recruit
personnel," says Hugh Keogh, president of the Virginia
Chamber of Commerce.
Not surprisingly Kilgore, Kaine
and Potts are using the political hustings to pitch
their differing schemes
for propping up Virginia's sagging infrastructure. Most
of their ideas, however, are maddeningly short on financial
specifics. Kilgore's blueprint, for instance, contains
plans to widen Interstate 66 inside the Capital Beltway,
to collaborate with Maryland officials on another Potomac
River crossing, and to erect a long overdue third crossing
for Hampton Roads. "If we don't deal with transportation,
we're not going to have the business climate that we
are growing accustomed to in the commonwealth," says
Kilgore.
Few would disagree. The question
remains how to find enough money to bankroll those
plans and other high-dollar
projects. Tax increases almost certainly won't be part
of Kilgore's solution. His anti-tax stance extends to
Virginia's 17.5-cent levy on gasoline sales, which is
among the lowest in the nation and was last adjusted
in 1986. Kilgore even proposes the extraordinary step
of adding an amendment to the Virginia Constitution requiring
approval by voters before sales, income or gas taxes
could be raised. "I just think before the government
comes in and takes money out of your pocket, it ought
to ask you," says Kilgore, taking a swipe at the
Warner Administration's $1.4 billion tax package enacted
into law a year ago.
Instead Kilgore asserts that
a growing budget surplus of more than $1 billion — stemming in part from
the same Warner-led tax package he opposed — should
be used to underwrite new construction. He wants to dip
into the general fund to replenish the Commonwealth Transportation
Trust Fund, nearly depleted after being raided numerous
times by legislators. Kilgore won't expressly say how
much money should go to restoring the account but promises
to veto future withdrawals.
Besides the surplus, Kilgore wants lawmakers to pass
an abusive-driver bill carrying stiff penalties for habitual
offenders, which he estimates could yield $100 million.
He also plans to create several regional transportation
authorities that would be empowered to set transportation
priorities, explore alternative funding options and exert
local control over how the money gets spent. As envisioned,
these quasi-governmental bodies would be composed of
local and state elected officials who could float bonds,
impose tolls, privatize road-building or even conduct
special referenda for sales and other taxes.
Among non-transportation topics,
Kilgore talks about using the general fund to capitalize
an Education Investment
Trust Fund. The money would provide parents of school-age
children with a $500 tax credit for non-tuition expenses "when
times are good" and the treasury runs a significant
surplus. Tax credits also are at the core of Kilgore's
goal to attract more companies to conduct product research
at Virginia's colleges and universities.
For his part, Kaine scoffs at
Kilgore's intention to let regional transportation
authorities conduct referenda. "I
supported the regional referenda [proposed to raise transportation
funds for Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads] and he
opposed them. Now he's making regional referenda the
centerpiece of his transportation proposal?" says
Kaine.
At the same time, Kaine is trying
to secure moderates by painting himself as a tax-cutter,
pointing to a rollback
of real-estate taxes during his term as Richmond's mayor — a
time when rising property values caused city assessments
to skyrocket. Kaine has proposed a plan to keep rising
assessments from hiking property taxes. If elected, he
would push for a constitutional amendment that would
permit cities and counties to exempt up to 20 percent
of the assessed value of a home or farm.
Like Kilgore, Kaine speaks only
vaguely about where revenue will originate for his
ambitious proposals. They
include tax credits of roughly $300 million annually
to help small businesses buy health insurance, and a
prekindergarten program costing at least another $300
million per year. To fund transportation, Kaine advocates
using an unspecified amount of the budget surplus, along
with $160 million collected annually from taxes on automobile
insurance premiums. "Transportation is a great use
of surplus dollars because you're putting it in the ground.
People can use [the transportation improvements] for
a generation. Plus, it enables you to draw down more
federal dollars" for highways and similar road projects,
says Kaine.
Meanwhile, Kaine vows to "lock up" the transportation
trust fund via a constitutional amendment — a four-year
process that would not take effect until after the gubernatorial
term concludes — and he pledges to block General
Assembly requests for new spending until he gets it. "I
just don't think you can honestly look people in the
face and ask them for more [money] if the legislature
is going to pull it out and use it for something else," says
Kaine.
Yet he quickly adds: "I won't take any issues off
the table" — a hedge that leaves him room
to maneuver on the politically sensitive topic of raising
gas taxes. It is a political football that gets kicked
around seemingly every legislative session.
Kaine's position on taxes is
ceaselessly under siege. Says Kilgore: "My goodness.
He supported the largest tax increase in [Virginia]
history. He ran in 2001 saying
he did not favor tax increases, yet in 2003 and 2004,
all of a sudden he favored tax increases. Now in 2005,
when he's facing the voters again, he's saying, 'Vote
for me, I'm going to reduce your property tax.'"
Potts doesn't like the sound
of either big-party candidate. He derides Kilgore's
regional transportation authority
proposal as a "cockamamie plan." He blasts
Kilgore and Kaine as irresponsible for telling voters
the general fund can help solve funding shortages for
transportation. "If you pay for it out of the general
fund, the question [you] have to ask logically is, 'What
are you going to cut out?' Higher education, and if so
by how much? Public education? If so and by how much?" says
Potts.
Potts wants to create a "Transportation Future
Fund" to fix the state's infrastructure. Potential
revenue sources include: $840 million collected by raising
the state sales tax from 5 to 6 percent; $580 million
from boosting the tax on a pack of cigarettes from 30
cents to $1; $180 million from a 1 percentage point increase
in the motor vehicle sales tax; and $1 billion in tolls
on major interstate highways.
He calls such drastic measures
necessary investments in Virginia's future. "I
hate taxes, but I love Virginia more. And there's not
a successful business
out there that has not invested in its future."
True enough. Then again shepherding additional taxes
through both state houses seems like a Herculean task,
particularly on the heels of last year's bruising budget
battle. Of course, that's assuming Potts overcomes the
numerous hurdles he faces to do the unthinkable: win
a three-way race by getting at least 34 percent of the
vote.
Given Virginia's traditionally
conservative tendencies, Sabato says Kilgore could
have a slight historical edge,
especially if voter turnout is low. "Kilgore has
to define himself as the only conservative candidate
running against two liberals. If he is identified too
much with the far right, he will not win," Sabato
says.
Kaine's key to victory: capitalize
on Mark Warner's popularity. But, with presidential
aspirations in 2008,
Warner may have to be cautious about becoming too involved
in Kaine's candidacy. He could suffer a party backlash
if he is unable to deliver victory in November. "If
he can't get his own lieutenant elected, [Democratic
Party leaders] will ask, 'Why should we bet the South
on him?'" says Sabato.
Bubbling below the surface is
conjecture that Potts ultimately will drop out of the
race and throw his support
to Kaine. Potts sniffs at such a suggestion. With characteristic
brashness he predicts: "We are going to pull off
the biggest upset in the history of Virginia politics." Potts
still seems like a very long shot to win. Even so, he
could influence the outcome by attracting just enough
moderates to split the vote. The man who would be governor
may have settle for being Virginia's new kingmaker. |