Robert Sarvis, the Libertarian candidate for Virginia governor, is a voice whose message is beginning to resonate among Virginians, who are weary of the dreary dynamic duo of Terry McAuliffe, a democrat, and Ken Cuccinelli, a republican. Many of you may not agree with some of Sarvis’ views. But how many of you agree or support McAuliffe or Cuccinelli? Sarvis is the outlier, the wild card. If you’re fed up with the bleats of McAuliffe and Cuccinelli, please take a moment and read the following interview with Sarvis.
TDN: In general, what
is the role of government?
The first role of
government is to protect our individual rights and ensure freedom under the
rule of law.
TDN: What is the role
of government in social issues?
We should be left free to
live our lives as we see fit, without government interference, as long as we
aren't hurting others.
TDN: What is the role
of government in commercial and business affairs?
We should be left free to
run our businesses as we see fit, as long as we aren't hurting others.
Government has a role in punishing force and fraud and should focus on ensuring
that markets remain open and competitive. No industry or company should get
special treatment.
TDN: How would you fix
Virginia's fractious transportation policy?
Do you believe it's
efficient or broke? Give me an example of how it's broken.
Virginia's transportation
policy is inefficient, politicized, and overly centralized and bureaucratic. We
should be moving closer to a user-pays system, instead we moved away from it
toward a regressive tax unrelated to road use. We should decentralize
decision-making and empower local jurisdictions, where authorities are more
accountable and have better local knowledge about the relative merits of
various projects.
TDN: Would you continue to entice companies to relocate or
stay in Virginia with tax payer dollars, ie, the Governor's Opportunity Fund?
No. The Opportunity Fund
has become a slush fund for political patronage. It's another reason why so
much money is wasted on lobbying and provides the environment in which graft
and gift-giving become epidemic. We should return the money to taxpayers.
Entice companies to Virginia with an improved tax and regulatory regime, a
return to the rule of law, and open and competitive markets.
TDN: Would you accept provisions of the Affordable Care
Act, namely the acceptance of Medicaid $$$ from the feds to provide healthcare
for 400,000 Virginians?
No. It is naive to accept
at face value the claims that Medicaid expansion will provide healthcare for
400,000 Virginians. Federal funding is not likely to be maintained at the
promised levels, doctors may stop seeing Medicaid patients, increased demand
for healthcare services will increase prices if supply is kept constrained.
Before accepting federal funds, we need to get policy freedom to construct a
more efficient program focused on catastrophic insurance, mental health, and
cash subsidies, and we need to free the health care supply by liberalizing
restrictions on doctors and especially nurses.
TDN: If you could, what would you change about Virginia's
constitution? Just one change, for example.
Repeal the 2006 ban on
treating same-sex relationships equally.
TDN: Would you try to
repeal McDonnell's tax initiative, which eliminated the
gas tax and boosted the
sales tax?
I would like to see a
revision of the revenue scheme. The move from a gas tax to an increased sales
tax was a regressive move that undermines the connection between revenue and
road usage. We need a more rational transportation system that moves closer to
user-pays and decentralizes decision-making. Also, we need to prioritize
spending so that increased transportation funding doesn't require huge tax
increases.
TDN: In many ways, you represent the diversity of America,
since your mother is Chinese and you are in an interracial marriage. Do you
feel America's future rests
in its diversity, in families such as yours?
America's future rests in
its young people, regardless of origin or ethnic background. I celebrate
diversity and believe Virginia and America should be welcoming to all. An open
society with freedom and the rule of law is a society that will treat people
equally, generate great prosperity broadly shared, and produce rich cultural
values.
TDN : Are you the
future of the political landscape?
Certainly, as Virginia and
America become more diverse, candidates will come to represent that diversity.
Whether politicians stand up for freedom, equality, and the rule of law,
however, is a different, and more important, question. I certainly hope I am
the future in that regard.
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