
Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie, the Republican candidate for governor, released his long-awaited economic plan this week. It was the first time the public and press got a glimpse of Dubieโs stands on major policy issues.
Until now, Dubieโs campaign has kept the lieutenant governorโs policies under wraps, limited his participation in public forums to a single appearance and insulated the candidate from reportersโ questions.
Unlike the Democratic candidates, who return calls personally or give out their cell phone numbers to journalists, Dubie typically speaks to reporters through handlers.
So, on Monday, it was no surprise the press corps was anxious to ask the lieutenant governor about his economic plan. They were issued copies of the 26-page report, โPure Vermont: Blueprint for Job Growth and Economic Expansion,โ before he spoke to more than 100 business leaders gathered on the factory floor of Northern Power Systems in Barre.
Afterward, reporters were given 12 1/2 minutes to ask Dubie questions. His responses stuck to the script: repeating bullet points from his speech without explanation of how his proposal to limit โgrowthโ of government by 2 percent per year, for a four-year period, would affect state programs, particularly education and health care. Nor would he explain how his tax cut plan, to begin in 2013, would affect low-income and middle-class Vermonters. When asked for more information, he continued to paint his proposal with broad strokes, repeatedly saying further details would be part of a โconversationโ with the General Assembly.
Hereโs a sampling from his exchange with reporters:
Terri Hallenbeck of The Burlington Free Press: We have a good sense of where the Legislatureโs priorities are. Youโve hinted that weโre being too generous (with state benefits). Could you just give us a sense of where your priorities might be?
Dubie: Iโve said we canโt spend more than the underlying economy. Families canโt spend more than they take in. Thatโs what Iโm saying here today. Gov. Howard Dean level-funded budgets. Iโm proposing that we grow government at a rate less than we have grown in the last decade. Itโs reasonable, itโs responsible. Weโre going to have to have a conversation about what our priorities are as a state. Iโve provided a comprehensive plan today, and it will be a basis of that conversation. Iโm suggesting what families have to do. Families canโt spend more than they make. That should be the basis of government over time. When I was a school board chair, I remember listening to Gov. Howard Dean talk about that all the time. Government canโt grow faster than the underlying economy; thatโs what Iโm proposing here today.
The โconversationโ with reporters was cut short, even after reporters repeatedly asked for five more minutes of his time.
At first the excuse was that workers needed to get back on the factory floor. Reporters said theyโd be happy to take the interview outside. At that point, Dubie didnโt exactly refuse โ he looked to Kate Duffy, his communications director, and Corry Bliss, his campaign manager for a sign. Permission was denied.
Reporters asked for a second press conference and were told the candidate would be available for followup interviews on Tuesday. Dubie, however, didnโt take this reporterโs calls despite three Voice mail messages were left with Duffy and Bliss. Word arrived late in the day via e-mail from Duffy that Dubie would also not be accessible after his appearance on Wednesday at the Hardwick funeral of National Guard member Tristan Southworth, who died in combat in Afghanistan. (Duffy partially answered a tax policy question on Dubie’s behalf, via e-mail.)
If youโd like to see what questions reporters asked and how Dubie responded, check it out. Itโs all on the following video clips, including the request for more time.
