Untangling the Appearance of a Sweeney-Coughlin Rift
When Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin (D-Middlesex) unveiled his proposal to reform the public school teachers health benefits package and substantially reduce employee contributions, the media and the Trenton in-crowd quickly pounced, characterizing it as evidence of a significant break with Senate President Steve Sweeney (D-Gloucester), over a policy issue that has dominated and bedeviled legislatures and administrations.
Like most knee-jerk reactions, it is accurate only in a narrow sense but overlooks the larger forces at play. Certainly, Coughlins legislation a long sought goal of the New Jersey Education Association is markedly different and falls considerably short of the comprehensive overhaul of the public pension system championed by Sweeney.
It does not, though, rise to the level of a philosophical rift between the two leaders nor does it by any means represent a fissure in what has been a united front which has served both men well in re-asserting legislative dominance and placing it on an equal footing with the executive branch in determining public policy.
Rather, the Speakers idea reflects the most fundamental rule of political life in an election year, provide the greatest degree of protection possible to your colleagues and head off or mitigate opposition from outside sources, particularly those with financial and organizational clout.
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