Rick Perry, Big Government, and Big Business

Pro-business” doesn’t always equal pro-free-market, as Rick Perry’s record shows.

We already know about the time Perry mandated the vaccine Gardasil for all teenage girls, at the time his former chief of staff was a lobbyist for Gardasil’s maker, Merck. Charles Dameron at the Wall Street Journal recounts another crony-capitalist element in Perry’s jobs agenda:

The Emerging Technology Fund was created at Mr. Perry’s behest in 2005 to act as a kind of public-sector venture capital firm, largely to provide funding for tech start-ups in Texas. Since then, the fund has committed nearly $200 million of taxpayer money to fund 133 companies. Mr. Perry told a group of CEOs in May that the fund’s “strategic investments are what’s helping us keep groundbreaking innovations in the state.” The governor, together with the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the Texas House, enjoys ultimate decision-making power over the fund’s investments.
All told, the Dallas Morning News has found that some $16 million from the tech fund has gone to firms in which major Perry contributors were either investors or officers, and $27 million from the fund has gone to companies founded or advised by six advisory board members. The tangle of interests surrounding the fund has raised eyebrows throughout the state, especially among conservatives who think the fund is a misplaced use of taxpayer dollars to start with.

Of course, Mitt Romney has similar problems. And Barack Obama? Well, he’s got enough corporatism and crony capitalism to fill a book.

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