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RICHMOND -- Outgoing Gov. Mark Warner thinks President Bush and the U.S. Congress could learn some lessons from Virginia, such as lawmakers putting aside partisanship to get the job done.
The Democrat, who leaves office Saturday, said cooperation has led Virginia lawmakers to improve the state's finances and enabled them to fund much-needed projects, such as the cleanup of the Chesapeake Bay.
"In Washington, people are more interested in scoring partisan points than getting things done, and I think there is a real yearning in this country for action," Mr. Warner told The Washington Times when asked about the partisan atmosphere in Washington.
"To a degree, both parties are guilty," he said. "If it's not absolutely their way, they say they'd rather have no action than their ideologically pure solutions. I think that's crazy."
In addition to discussing the national political stage on which he will debut soon, Mr. Warner reflected on the wins -- and losses -- he has experienced in the past four years leading up to his final week in elected office.
Mr. Warner, who became governor in 2002, had a rocky start with a Republican-controlled General Assembly that regularly tested his mettle. But most agree that Mr. Warner got his sea legs in his third year in office.
In 2004, he persuaded the majority of legislators, after a historic 115-day fight over the state budget, to pass a $1.38 billion tax increase that he says saved the state's finances and ultimately led to Virginia's being named the best-managed state in the nation by Governing magazine.
Despite shepherding through the largest tax increase in state history, Mr. Warner enjoys an approval rating of 75 percent or higher in most polls, the highest of any Virginia governor since firms began conducting such surveys.
Mr. Warner on Saturday will hand over the reins to Gov.-elect Timothy M. Kaine, his longtime friend and a Democrat who served as his lieutenant governor.
But Mr. Warner won't fade into the sunset like some Virginia chief executives of years past. He is about to boost his national profile.







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