Governor Rick Scott is walking away from his first legislative session with big victories. The session got off to a shaky start for the rookie governor, with legislative leaders refusing to take up tax breaks and two senators suing Scott for single-handedly killing high speed rail. As Whitney Ray tells us, Scott never blinked and lawmakers caved.
![0509scott1](https://www.flanews.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/0509scott1.jpg)
Just minutes after releasing his first budget plan in early February, Governor Rick Scott began to hear from the critics.
“The notion that somehow we can cut five billion dollars out of this budget is just very unreasonable,” said Karen Woodall, the Director of the Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy on February 7th, 2011.
Lawmakers told Scott they couldn’t cut property taxes or corporate income taxes, but in the end he got some of what he asked for: a 30 million dollar break for corporations and two-hundred million dollars for property owners.
After session ended, Scott gloated on an online political talk show.
“We’re on the path to 700-thousand jobs and we are on the path to turning the economy around,” aid Scott on SayviewReviewTV.
Lawmakers also sent him bills to end teacher tenure, expand school vouchers, drug test welfare recipients and force state workers to contribute to their retirement.
Scott had asked for a five percent contribution he got three. He also asked lawmakers to eliminate 85-hundred state jobs, lawmakers settled on 45-hundred.
Still, Scott’s mark on the 2011 legislative session is undeniable.
“He’s been incredible. He’s quietly, but very effectively, moved a number of pieces of legislation through the process, but I think the biggest thing he’s done is the budget,” said Thrasher.
The real proof of the Governor’s success will be determined over the next year, as everyone watches to see if his legislative victories create jobs. Scott’s impact on the session is still a little up in the air. There are 3-thousand spending items in the budget that Scott can veto. There are also more than 2-hundred bills he has yet to take action on.
Session Losers![0509loser](https://www.flanews.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/0509loser.jpg)
While Governor Rick Scott may have been the biggest winner of the 2011 legislative session, opponents say the public is losing. Thousands of state workers will be laid off, insurance rates will likely go up, and telephone companies will be able raise rates on landline customers. Democrat House Member Evan Jenne says the rich are the only winners.
“I don’t even think this stuff going on here is conservative. I think it’s elitist. I think it pits the richest five to three percent in our state against the other 97 and 95 percent of the people out there,” said Jenne.
Brad Ashwell with Florida Public Interest Research Groups says property owners and landline customers lost.
“The industry definitely didn’t get everything it wanted, but the industry, whether it is the insurance industry, the telecom industry, you name it, they largely won out big time this session and largely at the expense of the public,” said Ashwell.
Immigrants and their supporters walked away from the session as winners. At the start of the session, lawmakers were poised to pass an Arizona style immigration bill. After a full two months of lobbying by Hispanics, the bill died.