662: 'I want to be the governor for everybody' (Audio)
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"I think sometimes we forget that every community in the country has a whole bunch of people that wake up every morning, and the baseball bat that is called life cracks them across the head," Gov. Kelly Armstrong said on this episode of Plain Talk.
"They're the people serving food in a diner, working behind a gas station counter. Sometimes they're sitting in your office right now, anywhere you're at. And if you don't recognize that, then you're not really the governor for everybody. And I want to be the governor for everybody."
Armstrong was responding to a question about his administration's efforts to address homelessness and addiction, as well as his family's individual efforts on the same front. He also responded to a question about President Donald Trump's recent comments denigrating people of Somali heritage. He called Rep. Ilhan Omar "garbage" and called on Somalis to "go back to where they came from."
"I think kind of a pox on everybody's houses in this space," Armstrong said. "We've conflated legal immigration and illegal immigration in a way that has made this stuff...I don't like all of it."
Ther governor spoke at length about controversy surrounding bonuses at the state's Retirement and Investment Office. The governor says he "doesn't love" the way the bonuses are structured, but also doesn't want the state to go back on whatever commitments it made to those employees. But upstream from that issue, Armstrong said he'd like to see structural reforms to the way the state's investments (which he notes have grown substantially over the last decades) are managed.
Also, Armstrong spoke about the special session he'll be calling in January next year and said his administration has begun the budgeting process for the next regular legislative session to commence in January 2027. He aid this will be the first time he's "really got to show off my fiscal conservative chops."
"I've told my agencies that you guys have had 20 years of real substantial growth and I wouldn't think you're going to have 21 years of real substantial growth," he said.
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