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EDITORIAL: Scoring points with constituents
The Daily Oklahoman


By The Oklahoman, Oklahoma City

Nov. 7--Tulsa's partisan mayor's race is not only vitriolic but costly. Democratic nominee Tom Adelson has raised nearly $1.3 million in his quest to lead a midsized city in a job that pays $105,000. That's chump change for Adelson, a state senator and attorney who's so wealthy he could afford to loan his own campaign $850,000. The Tulsa World reports that Adelson has spent nearly $700,000 on radio and television ads, dwarfing the expenditures of his Republican opponent, Dewey Bartlett Jr. Adelson, Bartlett and independent Mark Perkins are on Tuesday's ballot to succeed Mayor Kathy Taylor, who contributed to Adelson's campaign (her husband gave a like amount to Bartlett). By contrast, Oklahoma City's nonpartisan mayoral races attract little attention and little money because the city manager here, not the mayor, does the heavy lifting.

Tearing down walls We know Madeleine Albright is a Democrat. Turns out she's also a democrat. Writing for Sunday's issue of Parade magazine, Albright, the former Clinton administration secretary of state, salutes the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall with a glowing defense of democracy over despotism. We hope President Obama absorbs Albright's message and stops marginalizing the ability of democratic forms of government to create stability and prosperity. People are never too poor or uneducated to participate in democratic elections. Albright quotes Nobel-winning economist Amartya Sen: "Democracy is not a luxury that can await the arrival of general prosperity." Obama has already won his Nobel. A man who didn't -- but should have -- is Ronald Reagan, who was very much responsible for getting that Berlin Wall torn down 20 years ago come Monday.

Admired from afar We tired late in George W. Bush's administration of hearing how much foreigners disliked America. Barack Obama's overseas mea culpas upon succeeding Bush played to that theme. To be sure, there are those who can't stand our ways (read: freedoms), but our sense is that the United States remains a beacon to the world and a source of admiration. Air Force Gen. Roger Brady gets a sense of that in his role as commander of U.S. air forces in Europe. "The blood of a lot of Americans is in the soil of Europe and the Europeans have not forgotten that," Brady told our Bryan Painter this week. "So regardless of what politics may or may not be from one nation to another, people receive us very gladly."

The other shoe That footfall you may be hearing a year or so from now is the sound of the other shoe dropping on state revenues. It's not common knowledge, but State Legislatures magazine says tax collections not only fall during a recession but continue dropping after the recession ends and "often end up falling further than the rest of the economy." The current downturn is the longest since the Great Depression, but this recession is believed to have officially ended. Yet the budget woes facing state governments may not bottom out until long after the return of positive growth in the gross domestic product. Tax collections never precisely align with GDP growth or decline. State revenues continued to fall dramatically after a recession that began in 2001 had ended.

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Copyright (c) 2009, The Oklahoman, Oklahoma City

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