Posted on 02/05/2015 5:02:15 AM PST by HomerBohn
On Tuesday, as part of his continuing quest to bring Wisconsins government spending under control, Governor Scott Walker (shown) announced a 13-percent cut to the University of Wisconsins $2.3 billion annual budget. In addition, his plan includes a two-year tuition freeze and the severance of state control over the university, passing it over to an autonomous authority. It also includes drug testing for people applying for public assistance, the merging of several state agencies, and the elimination of 400 state jobs. Walker explained: Our plan will use common-sense reforms to create a government that is limited in scope and ultimately more effective, more efficient and more accountable.
He also made clear in a radio interview that professors are going to have to ante up as well:
Maybe its time for faculty and staff to start thinking about teaching more classes and doing more work. This [new] authority frees up the UW administration to make those sorts of requests, which I think we need not only here but across the country.
This is a double-barreled announcement that not only reflects Walkers determination to get state spending under control but also prods observers to conclude that since its working in Wisconsin, it certainly could in Washington, D.C., as well.
It turns out that UW Chancellor Rebecca Blank has been cutting course hours for her professors in order to keep them from taking more lucrative positions elsewhere, paying them the same but for less work. Walker thinks that must change in order for the UW to operate under the new austerity.
Walker also clearly has his eye on another target: the White House. He just announced a new political entity called Our American Revival, a group of high-powered and experienced politicos to help him get there. Running the show will be Kirsten Kukowski, former communications director and press secretary for the Republican National Committee, along with Mark Stephenson, who headed up Joni Ernsts successful bid for the Senate in Iowa.
Walker also helped himself to some top people at the Tarrance Group, a finely tuned political machine founded by V. Lance Tarrance, the author of How Republicans Can Win in a Changing America. In his book Tarrance outlines 15 key characteristics a successful candidate must have in the new political climate, and Walker has most of them, the key one being courage.
When Walker won the gubernatorial contest in Wisconsin in 2010 the state was facing more than a $300 million shortfall in its budget. Required under the state constitution to have a balanced budget, Walker offered his plan, called the Wisconsin Budget Repair Bill, just three weeks after his inauguration in January 2011: It centered on reducing union bargaining power over pay and requiring to pay eight percent more for their retirement and health benefits. It also cut taxes for small business owners and on those in the highest tax brackets along with cutting capital gains taxes. In a blue state that went for Obama in 2008 (and would do so again in 2012), these were fighting words.
Within months a recall effort was well underway, which garnered national attention and generated personal attacks and death threats on Walkers life. In June 2012, he faced the same opponent from his 2010 campaign: Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, whom he had defeated 52-48 percent. Walker survived the recall election with a slightly higher margin, 53-47 percent, the first time a sitting governor had ever survived a recall election in history.
His running mate and now Lieutenant Governor Rebecca Kleefisch, explained why Barrett never had a chance:
We came into office with a $362 million deficit. In the last two years weve had back-to-back surpluses, and this year the surplus will be $911 million.
Weve overseen $405 million in property tax relief and as a result of changing the withholding policy of our taxes, $67 a month will be coming back in [citizens] paychecks beginning in April.
Furthermore, unemployment in Wisconsin has dropped precipitously during Walkers terms, from 9.2 percent in 2011 to 6.1 percent in 2013, thanks in part to the 100,000 new jobs the states economy has generated over the same period of time.
Walkers reelection was helped along by his book Unintimidated, published last August, in which he details the struggles, challenges, and threats involved in dismantling the union structure that put Wisconsin into the red. In his preface, Walker wrote:
Today we can sound like conservatives and act like conservatives and still win elections. Those who say we cant dont see what I see in Wisconsin and what my fellow governors in states all across America see: we dont need to change our principles. What we need is more courage!
Walkers claim that it takes guts and conviction and determination to win was enthusiastically received in Iowa where he took 15 percent of the Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics Iowa Poll on January 31, beating out Senator Rand Paul.
Walkers latest bid to bring financial stability to Wisconsin, this time by cutting university spending, is also a bid for the White House. If reducing government spending works in Wisconsin, theres no reason why it wouldnt work in Washington, D.C. where it is even more desperately needed.
Most 'graduates' have such poor reading and comprehensive skills as to be unemployable.
True for many recent grads.
Nice to see he is going after Big Academia.
—and that is especially true in the UW-Madistan—
May as well. Maybe one percent of the faculty in the UW system would ever vote for a Republican while to the vast majority of tax paying citizens, including and maybe especially those of us who have seen academia from the inside, it’s about time somebody called them out. And a freeze on tuition just makes it all sweeter. Didn’t Reagan take on the California university system when he was governor?
There is so much wrong with the federal government and Walker would not be afraid to try to right these wrongs.
Go ahead and tear Walker down. It’s what we do it seem.
When you consider the millions and more millions ripped from the hard working families of America, in addition to the massive debt and hardships of trying pay off massive student loans after graduation what can one think? Add to that countless “graduates” unqualified to hold any sort of productive employment.
What I think is that the “GOT TO GO TO COLLEGE AT ANY COST” crowd makes Bernie Madoff (sp?) look like a stand-on-the-corner con man. In order words...a 2 bit piker.
I didn’t see any mention in the article about the slush funds the universities had. While they were demanding more and more tax money and raising tuition well above the rate of inflation they were also putting away millions in secret accounts. All the while they were crying about how poor they were.
Departments and professors associated with low-income graduates get cut.
Another thing I would like to see, would be that anybody who has taught science/math classes at the college or community college level for three years, automatically gets handed a teaching certificate qualifying him to teach high school math or science.
Well, it won't be me tearing Scott down. I just sent him a check for $100.00. If enough of us who can't stand the Bushes (and the nauseating Clintons) send Scott contributions, then the well-oiled, NWO Bush machine will be buried....along with Mr. and Mrs. Billygoat.
c. 1980, Wisconsin had a tourism promotion campaign with the tagline “Escape to Wisconsin.” I had a professor who had come from UW Madison who had hacked one of the bumper stickers to read “Escape Wisconsin” and put it on his car here in GA. He couldn’t stand the environment back then! Imagine what it’s like now.
Why did you have a professor?
Universities across the US are in an overinflated bubble right now, and when it bursts, it is going to be “ugly on a stick”. So I would strongly suggest that Republicans trying to get a handle on it be extra careful in guiding the collapse.
They need to tailor the cuts to start with frivolous degrees, then move to frivolous courses; while at the same time strongly slashing bloated administrations and ridiculous pensions.
Walker had great success against the government service unions, but the academic situation is much, much worse, and at a far larger scale.
The growth in staff in higher education has been in administrators - and that’s where we need to cut. In particular we need to remove the reason to have said administrators - namely government regulations. No more dean’s of diversity. No more title ix. No reason to hire an administrator because no funding is dependent on a filing or report. Dump all departments that have “studies” in their names while you are at it. That would be a good start. End government subsidies (pell grants) and allow college loans to be terminated in bankruptcy and we’ll get this under control. BTW, a corollary to the allowance of bankruptcy would be to bring market forces to bear on college loans - as such the price would increase (account for risk of bankruptcy) and demand for said loans would decrease. This would further encourage higher ed to get efficient in how it delivers product. I suspect we’d see fewer bowling lanes on campus and more e-learning.
Uh, I was in college?
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