1
|
in a proper way. It is certainly for their protection.
|
2
|
He shouldn't, in doing that, be permitted to ignore any
|
3
|
existing law that the Legislature has produced or that they
|
4
|
may pass in the future, but the control of that, I think,
|
5
|
should, to that extent, remain with the Legislature, in
|
6
|
case the Governor gets out of hand.
|
7
|
Should the Governor have the power to require
|
8
|
administrative departments to furnish him with information?
|
9
|
That goes; without saying.
|
10
|
What powers does the Governor need to fulfill
|
11
|
his functions as preparer of the budget?
|
12
|
I would let him alone. There isn't anything
|
13
|
I feel more strongly about than that. Otherwise, he would
|
14
|
be running around in a circle, and I think in my experience
|
15
|
insofar as the budget is concerned, there is some unusual
|
16
|
language with reference to education.
|
17
|
Maybe I shouldn't say this, but I will. The
|
18
|
only way at times I was able to balance the budget because
|
19
|
of the size of the budget for the educational setup, which
|
20
|
Tom Fullen was getting the most amount of money -- now,
|
21
|
you have, true enough, Jim Rennie, and so forth, and his
|