George Grayson: Stealth Socialist or Benign
Central Planner?
Legislature candidates debate state and regional issues
By John Crouch, Attorney at Law,
Crouch & Crouch, Arlington, Virginia; (703)
528-6700;
Amicus Curiae, College of William and Mary
Other Crouch Articles
Virginia House of Delegates candidates George Grayson (D) and
Sid Lanier (R) stuck to the issues, most of which figured in the gubernatorial
race, in a debate Oct. 12. Grayson, a professor of government at the College
of William and Mary, has been Williamsburg's delegate for 19 years. Lanier
is a brewery worker pursuing an M.A. in Public Administration at Virginia
Commonwealth University. He is active in church groups. The Virginia Chapter
of United We Stand America sponsored the debate at the Williamsburg Regional
Library.
Grayson claimed responsibility for several bi-partisan reforms, including
workfare, wetland protection, teacher testing, victim rights measures, a
"drug kingpin" law, and drug-free school zones backed by mandatory
sentences. He pointed out that the Fraternal Order of Police had endorsed
him, and a small-business group had congratulated him for voting in its
favor 86 percent of the time.
Lanier called Grayson a leftist posing as a moderate. He cited the candidates'
clear disagreements on economics issues, gun control and school choice.
He also described specific votes by Grayson which contradicted his putative
moderate positions. Grayson was unrepresentative of his constituents, he
concluded.
Both candidates have worked against a bridge at Jamestown and a reservoir
in New Kent. Lanier opposes the "over-development" of Richmond
Road, but Grayson's environmental vision is far more ambitious. He supports
"proactive" central planning of all land development by regional
authorities.
"We surely need real contemporary town centers," Grayson said
in a position paper. "If we don't define where those centers should
grow and what they should contain, we will be forever left with ugly and
disjointed sprawl, with an incumbent disintegration of landscape and community
spirit."
"Town centers" are a recent trend in urban planning. They are
intended to make towns function as if zoning had never been imposed, undo
the scattering effect of past and present zoning, and encourage walking.
Grayson wants their numbers limited to protect them from competition.
Lanier had many proposals of his own. He called for reducing the sales tax.
He wanted juries informed of defendants' records before sentencing. He proposed
requiring welfare parents to keep their children in school, saying Grayson
voted against this idea in 1990.
Instead of a government-run health system, Lanier favored allowing full
tax credits to doctors who do pro bono work. This would have the effect
of a full subsidy without distorting the market, he said. He generally favored
reducing and privatizing government.
Grayson said Lanier's main ideas--tax credits, school vouchers, tax cuts,
and new prisons--would drain too much money from the state government. Just
ending parole would cost $2 billion, he said.
Both candidates said they opposed parole for violent criminals and wanted
violent teenagers tried as adults. They claimed to oppose Outcome-Based
Education.
Grayson supports the right to abortion. Lanier supports parental notification,
and would ban most abortions if Roe v. Wade were overturned.
Lanier criticized Grayson's vote to erect an $18 million lottery building
at a time when 25 percent of Richmond office buildings were vacant. Grayson
called it a sound investment. Lanier opposes the lottery and says he organized
local churches to fight it.
However, it was not always obvious whether either candidate was candid about
what he or the other supported, or how actively either had really worked
on most issues. While Grayson was calm and polished, Lanier's repeated rhetorical
attacks did not appear to impress an audience mostly composed of Grayson's
own students and long-time neighbors. The assessment of Young Democrats
president Greg Werkheiser '96 was that Grayson "whupped his butt."
- John Crouch
Copyright John Crouch 1993
Return to: Crouch Articles || Crouch
& Crouch?