Posted on 05/26/2012 2:45:43 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
"This is what democracy looks like. That was the boast of protesters occupying the Wisconsin state capitol 16 months ago as they blocked Republican lawmakers from entering the legislature and celebrated Democratic state senators who had fled the state to avoid a vote on Governor Scott Walkers budget reforms. So in some respects its fitting that a process launched in the intellectual incoherence of those early days will end with an election to recall an official whose offense is doing as governor the things he promised as a candidate hed do. This is not, of course, what democracy looks likeat least not what it ought to look like.
The Wisconsin recall is a farcea childish, union-sponsored tantrum that will cost the states taxpayers an estimated $18 million. Perhaps the greatest irony is that Democrats rarely discuss its ostensible cause: collective bargaining. Tom Barrett, the mayor of Milwaukee who is seeking to replace Walker, did not use the phrase in the speech he gave celebrating his victory in the Democratic primary earlier this month. Graeme Zielinski, spokesman for the Wisconsin Democratic party, told Mother Jones: Collective bargaining is not moving people. A recent poll of Wisconsin Democrats found that just 12 percent of those surveyed said restoring collective bargaining rights of public employees was the most important reason to remove Walker, well behind three other choices.
Theres a reason the governors reforms have gone from being the center of the anti-Walker movement to a talking point to be avoided. Theyve worked. Walker took office with a projected deficit of $3.6 billion, and in two years hes erased it. The Wisconsin Department of Revenue projected last month that the state will have a budget surplus of $154 million by the summer of 2013.
Restricting public sector collective bargaining freed the state and local governments from the de facto veto unions could exercise over their budgets and allowed taxpayers to ask public employees to contribute morein some cases to begin contributing somethingto their own health care and pension benefits. Before the reforms, most public employee union members paid less than 1 percent of their salary toward their pensions and contributed 6 percent of the cost of their health care premiums. And in fact, Wisconsin public employees still have a good dealwith most contributing 5.8 percent of their salary toward their pension and up to 12.6 percent of their health care premium, well below the averages for the private sector.
In addition, the reforms brought an end to forced union membership. This means that public employees can opt out of the union and stop paying its dues. A teacher in, say, the suburbs of Madison who opts out will bring home an additional $1,100 a year.
So public employee unions now have to persuadenot compelpeople to join their ranks. That argument becomes especially difficult without collective bargaining. If the union no longer has the power to win gold-plated pension and health benefits, why would the average teacher choose to spend a chunk of his or her earnings to become a member? Without that misbegotten money, public employee unions lose their power. Theres a reason public sector unions are fighting as if their existence depends on this. It might.
One sign that Wisconsin governor Scott Walker is likely to win the election on June 5 is the sudden disappearance of national media attention to the race. The networks and newspapers that gave wall-to-wall coverage to protests in the streets of Madison in the spring of 2011 and excitedly reported on the drive to collect signatures to force a recall have gone relatively quiet as a succession of polls show Walker leading by 5 points or more. State Democrats are complaining that national Democrats arent devoting the time and resources necessary to defeat Walker; national Democrats are whispering to reporters that theyd warned their Wisconsin counterparts against a costly recall effort. David Axelrod has made comments in recent days downplaying the significance of the recall beyond Wisconsin. Obama himself, who once promised to walk the picket lines with his union backers when their interests were threatened, seems to want no part of the recallor at least not a high-profile part.
Scott Walker understood that if he were going to accomplish big things, hed need to start early. He learned that lesson from watching two of his good friendsgovernors Mitch Daniels and Chris Christiefight to bring much-needed reform to their states. The changes were often unpopular at first. Daniels was elected governor of Indiana in 2004 with 53 percent of the vote, but two years later, after he began implementing an aggressive reform agenda, his support had dropped to 37 percent. Yet he won reelection handily in 2008, and in recent months, as the effectiveness of his continuing reforms has become obvious, his approval rating has risen as high as 70 percent. Christie followed the same model in New Jersey, and his approval ratings have traced a similar trajectorythough without the dramatic highs and lows of Daniels.
Walker hopes to follow that path. He defeated Barrett by 52 to 47 percent in 2010, and he says he thinks the results on June 5 will show that voters are willing to stand with people who make tough choices. A win would say thatand a 2010-level margin over Barrett would shout it. On, Wisconsin!
Wisconsin: Steve Hayes wraps the whole recall kerfluffle in a nutshell!
FReep Mail me if you want on, or off, this Wisconsin interest ping list.
My guess is that it’ll be 52-47 percent again. I don’t see how it changes much. As for the money wasted by the unions and Democrats on this? Down the drain. It also comes at a pretty negative time....I’d slide the state over to Romney in the fall and officially give up on advertising within the state if I were the national Democratic Party.
As for another recall? I think this takes all recall efforts off the table for the next twenty years in the state. It won’t come up again.
Not all of that wasted money is Democrat, or Union, money, unfortunately. They are also wasting taxpayer money — big time — as well as Republican donations from all over the country. This means less Republican money going to the Presidential and other races. It made me furious last night to watch that sniveling Barrett trying to undermine Walker for taking out of state donations and for setting up a legal defense fund after the Dems have thrown everything (including the kitchen sink) at him.
I predict 58-42.....even in Wisconsin.
This shows that Republicans win, even in Wisconsin, when they don’t back down from conservative core principles.
Walker was calm and concise with his direct answers to the reporters questions.
Unless there is voter fraud on a massive scale, Walker walks away with this with breaking a sweat, I just hope the other recalled pubbies do as good.
If Walker wins big, obama will develop a severe health problem and have to resign {for his health and to spend more time with his 5 iron and putter} and hildabeast {ugly as sin and twice as nasty} will ride in to save the day.
Don't know about any other part of the state.
Not going to happen in 5 lifetimes...
When Walker wins it will be a 15 second news blurb...on ABCNBCCBSCNNMSNBC...that's how important it is...
Obama is never going to resign....I have concerns "we the people" are going to have to physically remove the bastard...
If Walker wins big, obama will develop a severe health problem and have to resign {for his health and to spend more time with his 5 iron and putter}...
You mean like Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez?
The recall pits the big gubmint lovers in the cities like madison and milwaukee against the rest of the state. Rural areas have lots of “I Stand with Walker” signs but madison is virtually 100% “Recall Walker” territory. Easy to see who benefits from taxes paid and who pays those taxes.
Voting ID’s are not required so early absentee ballots are being handed out to thousands of recall supporters arriving in buses - wonder who pays for those buses. And where do these eager voters come from? Polls slightly support Walker but it is too close to call.
I’m in Ozaukee County, just north of Milwaukee. I’ve seen exactly TWO Barrett signs, and they are on the homes of teachers (dyed in the wool Dems who have the “wrong” signs out every election, whether it be for dog catcher, or mayor). There are Walker signs EVERYWHERE else. One homeowner, whom I know, had his Walker sign vandalized, so he glued it back together and put it back up.
And puhleeze! Walker signs are NOT litter! ;*) Franken signs are litter. sarc/off
IMHO, that would really show how weak union support it...
IMHO, that would really show how weak union support is...
IMHO, that would really show how weak union support is...
That is a perfect description of the Barrett/Walker “debate”. I was shocked at how personal Barrett got. Every question was turned into a personal dig at Walker, but Walker kept his cool and answered forthrightly.
God is welcoming Jesse Jackson and the Democrats get out the vote with a free meal after just the way I had hoped.
Chilly and raining today in Milwaukee...voter suppression today for sure 90’s and miserable tomorrow won’t bring anyone rushing out wither.
Even the DNC has given up on it and stopped spending money in the state, they're desperately trying to separate themselves from losing the recall so it doesn't splatter all over Obama.
Personally I think whatever happens in Wisconsin is going to be a microcosm of this coming November. That's just me though.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.