By Andrew Staub | PA Independent

Another day has passed, and Pennsylvania is still without aย budget.
Advertisements
So far, services havenโt been affected,ย but the impasse has made for intriguing political theater as Republicanย Gov. Tom Corbettย jousts with the Republican-controlled Legislature over pension reform.
The biggest remaining question is whether Corbett will sign the budget the General Assembly put on his desk hours before the June 30 deadline expired. He wants lawmakers to enact pension reform, but neither the Senate nor the House has mustered enough votes for a Corbett-backed proposal that would stack a 401(k)-style plan on a traditional pension.
Itโs unclear how long Corbettโs holdout will last. He has until Friday to sign the budget, let it pass without his signature or veto it. His press secretary, Jay Pagni, did not return a message left Tuesday.
Advertisements
With Corbett trailing Democratic challengerย Tom Wolfย by 22 points inย the latest Franklin & Marshall College poll, the governor needs to change the narrative of the campaign, said G. Terry Madonna, a political analyst at the school.
And, Madonna said, whatโs better than a veto of the budget to show Corbett is serious about shifting the paradigm?
Advertisements
โHe desperately needs something to take to the voters โย a victory, a policy victory, a legislative victory,โ Madonna said,
Corbett will have more to think about after Tuesday. The state Senate approved the fiscal code, a catch-all piece of legislation that essentially implements the budget. Whether Corbett signs it is anybodyโs guess.
Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, urged Corbett to move. Scarnati released a statement Tuesday evening that parsed the governorโs previous statements that he wouldnโt consider new revenue to balance the budget without pension reform and changes to the way the state sells liquor.
Advertisements
โIn light of his conditions, the budget presented to Governor Corbett by the General Assembly contains no new revenues,โ Scarnati said, while encouraging the governor to sign the budget as it stands.
That didnโt happen Tuesday. Even though forcing lawmakers back to re-do the budget could be seen as a sign of leadership, some believe Corbett ย has already overreached in his quest for pension reform.
Advertisements
State Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Allegheny, said last week that โfolks are wed to what they believeโ when it comes to the pension bill. He doesnโt think a special session would be successful in pushing along pension reform and said Corbett might have โoverplayedโ his cards by refusing to sign the budget.
Now, Corbett looks weak within his own party on the issue, Costa said.
Advertisements
โI think the plan backfired,โ he said.
Leo Knepper, executive director of the Citizens Alliance of Pennsylvania, a conservative group that often backs upstart candidates, thinks Corbettโs team used poor strategyย by failing to anticipate what would happen if the Legislature didnโt heed the call for pension reform.
Advertisements
Signing the budget now โย without pension reform โ would make Corbett look weak, Knepper said. Letting it pass without his signature would be โless humiliating,โ Knepper said.
Knepper doesnโt know the exact impression that a veto might leave โย though he does think it will irritate lawmakers who will have to cancel summer vacations to re-do the budget.
โItโs one of those damned-if-you, damned-if-you-donโt situations,โ Knepper said.
Advertisements
The stalemate has been somewhat of an oddity, given that Republicans control the governorโs office and both chambers of the General Assembly. So why canโt Corbett get what he wants?
Madonna outlined a few reasons.
Advertisements
First, the House Republican caucus is โvery badly dividedโ between more moderate GOP members from the eastern part of the state and the two- to three-dozen Tea Party types, Madonna said.
Then there are the ideological differences between the House and the Senate, which havenโt agreed on big-ticket items such as Medicaid expansion or liquor privatization, Madonna said.
Finally, โhyper-partisanshipโ has further muddled the budget process. In the past, lawmakers in the minority party were willing to put up leadership votes for a budget if they received something in return.
Advertisements
This year no Democratic lawmaker voted in favor of the budget. Madonna canโt recall that happening before.
Add those factors together, Madonna said, and โitโs not exactly a recipe to get something done.โ
Staub can be reached at Andrew@PAIndependent.com. Follow @PAIndependent on Twitter for more.


