Gov. Mark R. Warner’s credibility as a potential presidential candidate got a big boost today in the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page. Stephen Moore, founder of the Club for Growth, quoted national Democratic Party insiders as describing Warner as “the primary alternative to Hillary Clinton” in seeking the 2008 Demo nomination and that “he would be the party’s strongest conceivable general election candidate.”
Moore cites Warner’s track record as a successful entrepreneur, as a moderate in the Bill Clinton mold, and his skepticism of Democratic Party pieties, quoting him as attacking Washington Democrats for “defending the same government programs, thinking they are going to get us new results.”
Of course, Moore is no friend of Mark Warner. He attacks the Governor’s claim to be a fiscal conservative, and in particular his campaign promise not to raise taxes — followed by his support for the regional sales tax initiatives and then the successful $1.4 billion-a-biennum tax increase of 2004. Says Moore:
Gov. Warner alleges that the tax hike was necessary to balance the budget and preserve the state’s triple-A bond rating. That was mostly a canard. Months before the tax hike was enacted, the state’s revenue office reported a massive 7.5% surge in tax receipts from the previous year due to the national economic recovery. This year, with the higher tax rate, tax receipts have exploded by 12 % [Actually, closer to 15 percent-Editor] and the state legislature is swimming in a green river.
Also, asserted Moore, “The Virginia state budget has expanded by 26% over Gov. Warner’s tenure, about twice the national average for the states.” Still, none of those inconvenient facts have stopped Demo party pros from trumpeting “Clinton-Warner” as the dream ticket in 2008.


