Here's What's the Matter With Kansas

Governor Sam Brownback of Kansas speaka at the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, on February 28, 2015. (Photo: Gage Skidmore)Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas speaks at the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Maryland, on February 28, 2015. (Photo: Gage Skidmore)

The verdict is in, and it’s time for conservatives to face the cold hard facts.

Right-wing trickle-down Reaganomics doesn’t work.

It doesn’t work internationally, it doesn’t work nationally and it doesn’t work at the state level.

And we know this is true thanks in part to Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s  2010 decision to turn his state into a “real live experiment” in Reaganism and the religion of trickle-down economics.

See more news and opinion from Thom Hartmann at Truthout here.

Quickly after taking office, Brownback and the Tea Party-controlled legislature passed massive tax breaks for the state’s 1%; repealed all income taxes for more than 100,000 businesses; tightened welfare requirements, making life harder for the working poor and poor children; privatized the delivery of Medicaid so his corporate buddies could have a bigger slice of the state action; cut $200 million from the education budget; eliminated four state agencies; and laid off 2,000 government employees.

In 2013, after he signed the largest tax cut in Kansas history with the help of legislators backed by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), he told The Wall Street Journal, “My focus is to create a red-state model that allows the Republican ticket to say, ‘See, we have a different way, and it works.'”

And in 2016, six years after Governor Brownback took office and started shaping Kansas into the “red-state model,” you’d be hard pressed to find anyone in their right mind, Republican or Democrat, who would say that the economy in Kansas “works.”

Back when Governor Brownback initiated the plan, conservative economists like Arthur Laffer predicted a massive boom in the state, and the CATO-inspired Kansas Policy Institute projected that his tax cuts would create $323 million in new local revenues by the year 2018.

In reality, during the…

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