Posted on 04/10/2015 12:49:30 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Full Title: The twisted metamorphosis of Scott Walkers Wisconsin: How a once-liberal state became a political battlefield
How do you explain Wisconsin? Once the home to progressive liberal politics and politicians, such as governors Gaylord Nelson, Patrick Lucey and Anthony Earl, Wisconsin now produces the likes of union-busting Gov. Scott Walker, and a GOP-controlled legislature enacting voter ID, onerous abortion regulations, and anti-union right-to-work rules.
The state now even has a polarized and partisan Supreme Court with a constitutional crisis on its hands: Voters have just adopted a ballot initiative that would dislodge Shirley Abrahamson, the courts liberal chief justice, from the position she has held since 1996, and turn it over to the Republicans on the bench.
(Abrahamson was elected by voters in 2009 to a new 10-year term; she is now suing to retain her position.)
How has Wisconsin turned into the partisan battleground it is today? Part of the answer lies in factors idiosyncratic to Wisconsin, but part also speaks to the relative narratives both Republicans and Democrats use both in-state and nationwide to win elections.
For example, partisans like to contrast Wisconsin with the neighboring Minnesota two states identical in many ways pointing to their divergent paths under the governorships of Republican Scott Walker and Democrat Mark Dayton. These observers reference the states contrasting policies on economics, taxes and education to explain the differing paths the states are on when it comes to jobs and growth. Recent reports, such as one by the Pew Research Center, depict a state marred by deteriorating job growth whose middle class has declined more than almost any other state in the nation. (Minnesota, meanwhile, comes out near the top in terms of unemployment, median family incomes, and economic growth.) But such references give too much credit, and too much blame, to recently enacted policies in explaining the economic paths of the two states. Nor do they address a far more fundamental question: Why has Wisconsin turned to the right?
The roots of Wisconsins change reside in three forces. The first is that, while Wisconsin has a progressive streak of the sort that once put socialists in office, there is a history of conservatism and reactionary politics to the state that Joe McCarthy of all people called home. Wisconsin has a nativist culture, born of homogeneous white northern European immigration patterns, that is still fearful of outsiders, suspicious of change.
Second, Wisconsin is politically complex: It has its strong liberal pockets, Dane County (home to Madison and the state university) and Milwaukee; but there is also a growing conservative population as well. While the liberal centers once dominated the state in terms of population, that is no longer the case: More people live in the suburbs, or in its small, rural communities, creating a strong political base for Republicans.
Third, the economic landscape of Wisconsin has altered dramatically over the past several decades, as it has transitioned from an industrial and agricultural economy in the 70s to a post-industrial world. Wisconsin has not fared as well as neighboring Minnesota, which has become a hub for bio-technology. It was never the home to as many Fortune 500 companies as Minnesota was, and its industries proved more vulnerable to global competition. The state made a series of bad choices or missteps when it came to how it responded to economic challenges as it emerged from its industrial past. A partial list of policy decisions with negative ramifications include: The gradual disinvestment in higher education under Thompson, weakening public schools, especially in Milwaukee; not providing funds to welfare recipients in the 90s to get job training or education; along with a lack of investment to upgrade infrastructure. Wisconsin for many decades was heavily dependent on manufacturing, and it was hit particularly hard in the 80s and then again during the Great Recession but did little to provide resources to help transition the state in a new direction. As a result, Wisconsin has lost economic ground over the last two generations, and the world economy has left it behind.
These three factors set the foundation first for Republican Tommy Thompsons election to governor in the 1986, the Democratic loss of the legislature, and then Russ Feingolds defeat in the Senate in 2010, along with Walkers era-defining gubernatorial victory. Since 1987, Republicans have controlled the governorship for 20 of the last 28 years; and since 1995, except for a brief period, they have controlled one or both houses of the legislature. Walker and other Republicans have successfully exploited white middle and working class anxieties, as work has dried up, incomes have decreased, and the state has racially diversified. Walker, and before him Thompson, offered simple solutions for why things have gone wrong: Lazy welfare recipients, unions, gays, college students, intellectuals, Democrats, and government. (It is a variation of Thomas Franks Whats the Matter with Kansas thesis.)
But theres more to the situation than simply appealing to social issues, fear, and prejudice to acquire votes. The states Republican lawmakers have also cynically adopted policies that not only do little to help their new constituencies, but are meant also to perpetuate and magnify exactly those same anxieties and make sure their base continues to vote Republican. Walker has been successful not only in exploiting political prejudices; his policies have actively encouraged and nourished them.
During Walkers 2012 recall election, signs across Wisconsin signs declared, Its beginning to work, referencing claims that the economic policies of Walker were finally going to produce the 250,000 jobs his 2010 election promised. Those jobs never materialized, yet Walker retains the support of so many of those whom his policies have hurt.
In so exploiting and nurturing these attitudes, Walker and Republicans have been successful in flipping Wisconsin. They have used a narrative of blaming others, decrying them, Democrats, and government for the reasons why the middle and working class are struggling. Democrats conversely have failed to articulate a narrative to why this is wrong and their policies are right. This is why Wisconsin is flipping, why Walker is successful, and how that state is a case study and prelude to the Republican 2016 presidential campaign strategy.
When a warrior shows up, there will be a battlefield....
Don’t waste time reading this except to be reminded of how the enemy sees the world.
According to this socialist, Wisconsin’s ills flow mostly from the government not spending enough money: money on welfare, money on schools, money on job training, money for this money for that; each a favored program of the socialists. It never dawns on them that things would probably be worse if the government actually had funded their favored programs.
Oldplayer
“Wisconsin now produces the likes of union-busting Gov. Scott Walker, and a GOP-controlled legislature enacting voter ID, onerous abortion regulations, and anti-union right-to-work rules.”
The author seems to imply this is a bad thing. I see it as advancements for the cause of working folks, the unborn and law-abiding voters. So.... who exactly is being “injured” here?
More on Abrahamson here:
Dislodge her only as chief justice.
No...the fair weather “moderates” saw their tax bills increasing and enough of them figured it out. Trust me...ultimately it is all about money. That’s why the fair weatherers are all leaving commie controlled states like CA and NY. Changing your address doesn’t change your IQ!
Prior to Walker, the special interests of the public unions were supported by Democrats (and Democrat politicians were supported financially by the union dues) and Republicans did not stop the incestuous relationship. Republicans also continued high spending and high taxation in Wisconsin.
Democrats are unwilling to compromise and want to dominate at all costs, especially by using courts to delay and not allow us to solve problems. Republicans would often cave and go along.
Scott Walker is the best leader Wisconsin has seen in a long time because he wants to solve problems and will stand up against the Democrats and special interests.
Don't listen to the idiot university types that pontificate the liberal agenda, but don't know how to fix problems.
Wisconsin stands with Scott Walker.
FTA: “...Walker...offered simple solutions for why things have gone wrong: Lazy welfare recipients, unions, gays, college students, intellectuals, Democrats, and government.”
What a bunch of garbage! Walker has never said any of that baloney. Salon is having a fit of fancy.
FReep Mail me if you want on, or off, this Wisconsin interest ping list.
“Wisconsin has a nativist culture, born of homogeneous white northern European immigration patterns, that is still fearful of outsiders, suspicious of change.”
Oh, Thank Gawd! I was afraid that this Salon article would never get around to blaming Whitey!
*SNORT*
Walker remains over the target.
Barrett et al don't want to solve problems, they just want a choo-choo train to go around the block and spend a couple hundred million and leave the taxpayers with future operating losses. Barrett et al (School Board) are unwilling to provide a quality education in Milwaukee and just spend more money from the taxpayers from the rest of the state.
If we look at the problems in America - the cities and states controlled by liberal politicians, we see democratic control and they keep raising taxes and spending and don't know how to solve problems.
Yes!
Like moths to a flame.
“David was a city administrator and director of code enforcement in New York State, where he enforced city and state housing codes as well as authored housing codes. He also was a housing and economic planner and a community organizer for a community action agency. “
In other words, David was a fascist pig illegally writing laws. This jackass needs to be thrown on a boat sailing one-way to North Korea.
-—In 2008 Professor Schultz was asked by the United States State Department to serve as an independent scholar to cover the Republican National Convention in St. Paul and meet with the foreign press and media reporting on it.
Its sad that our State Department feels that it needs to appoint a very partisan operative to explain a Republican political event to foreigners. Your tax dollars at work for Democrats.
As far as Republicans gutting University of Wisconsin system spending . if that were true, how did the UW system amass a one Billion dollar slush fund?
Professor Schultz is a text book watermelon.
My point was that Maryland is spared the socialist rot of NJ/NJ, IL, and CA because the wealth transfer ends in Maryland (on the federal level). Maryland isn’t thriving because of industry or business; it is thriving because federal bureaucrats infest it, and spend their ill-gotten gains there.
All of that puked up bullsh!t and not once was one of the main reasons for Scott Walker’s rise to Governor and the patience we understand we need to have bringing Wisconsin back.
Our former Democrat Governor Diamond Jim Doyle.
One of the worst, incompetent, and most corrupt people ever to be associated with this State and he spent his time in office driving this State into the ground.
While he was busy trying to kill Wisconsin with his policies the State of Minnesota had a run of Republican governors that helped shape the bounty Minnesota is prospering from now.
Give Minnesota their 8 years of Dayton and the full pain of his budgets and see if they’re doing as well.
Maryland’s current Governor is Larry Hogan, a Republican.
A small ray of sunshine.
Unabridged liberalism is the greatest conservative recruiting tool.
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