Weekly Opinion Editorial
Turning Around Oklahoma!
by Steve
Fair
On Monday, J Kevin Stitt was
sworn in as governor of Oklahoma. Stitt,
46, is the first Native American to serve as a governor in the United States (he
is an enrolled member of the Cherokee tribe).
He started Gateway Mortgage in Tulsa in 2000 and now it has 1,200
employees in 41 states. This was Stitt’s
first run for public office. He bested
six viable candidates to win the GOP nomination and then beat the Democrat
nominee by twelve percentage points. His
election is very much like President Trump’s- unpredicted, unexpected and by a
true political outsider.
At his inauguration address,
Governor Stitt, the son of a Baptist preacher, emphasized his business
background. He said he would hold state
agencies accountable, make them more efficient, and taxpayer friendly. Stitt’s tag line during his campaign was: “Oklahoma’s turnaround starts right
here-right now.” In an inauguration
speech that sounded more like a campaign speech, Stitt said he wanted to make
Oklahoma a top ten state in all the categories that mattered. Currently the state ranks in the bottom third
of most major economic indicators. Three
observations:
First, Oklahoma needs a turnaround.
The Sooner state ranks low in per capita income when compared to other
states and has for decades. The infrastructure
(roads and bridges) need work. Oklahoma
government needs modernization. There is
little accountability of state government to taxpayers. The Sooner state has languished in the bottom
third for too long.
Second, Stitt can’t turn the state around by himself. The fact is the office of governor in
Oklahoma has defined authority under the State Constitution. That authority has been expanded in recent
years with the cooperation of the legislature, but the office is still not as
powerful as other states. Stitt will
need the legislature and the support of all Oklahomans to accomplish a turn
around.
Three, Stitt’s approach to governing will be different. The new governor, with a private sector bent,
has appointed a chief operating officer as a liaison between himself and state
agency heads. He has said he will order comprehensive audits
on every organization/agency that gets state tax dollars and supports needs
based budgeting. That is a radically
different approach to governing than in the past.
In his speech, the new
governor said: “We need to change how
Oklahoma’s 400 agencies and commissions are comprised. Our current system gives
agencies too much independence from the voter – they have the ability to ignore
executive orders, skirt around laws passed by the legislature, hide pockets of
money, and protect their own interests by hiring lobbyists.” Stitt will
need the legislature’s cooperation to reform state agencies. Time will tell whether he will have it.
Every
turnaround or movement has a beginning.
It remains to be seen if Oklahoma’s started on Monday.
No comments:
Post a Comment