Our View

By the time this session of the Tennessee General Assembly comes to an end, Tennesseans understandably should feel a little like the animals used in laboratory experiments — at least the ones that survive.

Our state, thanks to the dominance of a single political party, has been selected for a series of not-so-scientific experiments. The objective? Whatever Charles and David Koch want it to be.

The billionaire Kochs do not live in Tennessee and never have. That is not important, as they, through their group Americans For Prosperity (AFP), and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), also not Tennessee-based, are increasingly deciding what laws the General Assembly should impose on the people of our state.

The Kochs are famous nationally for using their fortunes to advance causes that promote their interests or simply their philosophy, and increasingly they are getting involved in state legislatures. Invariably, their agenda is anti-worker protections, anti-environmental regulation, anti-health care reform. In other words, "anti-" the kinds of laws that majorities of Americans tend to support. And ALEC's lobbyists have been busy in Tennessee for a few years now, usually drafting so-called model legislation such as the failed attempt to emulate Arizona's unconstitutional 2010 immigration reforms and trying to spread fear of Muslims with anti-Shariah legislation.

The force of the Kochs came down last week when the Tennessee Senate voted to stop Nashville's Amp project. Stop­Amp.org Inc. publicly thanked AFP for its help. Regardless of what you think of the pricey and controversial bus rapid-transit project, such out-of-state interference is troubling, because it supersedes local knowledge and authority on either side of the issue.

Apparently, there is more to come. AFP's state director, Andrew Ogles, says that "Tennessee is a great state to pass model legislation that can be leveraged in other states." Such words give no assurance these organizations care whether the laws that are passed help or hurt Tennesseans. They just need an easy "win" so that they can boost their influence against elected officials elsewhere.

A chief casualty of their success is likely to be local autonomy — a principle that used to be celebrated by Tennessee Republicans, until they found the supermajorities allowed them to forgo principles.

How these leaders can trample local government while complaining of being overrun by federal authority themselves requires a high level of myopia.

Perhaps legislating with blinders on is part of the Kochs' diabolical experiment.