Looks like Walker will be keeping his job based on current projections (roughly 60-40 with 30%+ reporting). IMO the voters made the right decision here. As much as people liked to scream about extreme union busting tactics, he basically enacted what a lot of other states had in place and managed to balance the budget. I'm sorry that teachers didn't like it, but it was the right move. At least the guy did what he said he would do when he ran for office.
6/5/2012 10:48:39 PM
First guy to balance the budget in 30 years in Wisconsin
6/5/2012 11:21:33 PM
6/5/2012 11:29:11 PM
^^ link?I can't find anything to corroborate that, and this seems to outright disprove your post:http://www.statebudgetsolutions.org/imgLib/20111006_Wisconsin.jpg^ that's a pretty weak argument in favor of Walker really. Obama promised health reform, but you still see conservatives outraged about that. The bill we got was even far milder than what Obama said he wanted.If Obama used underhanded tactics to get the more extreme bill passed, you wouldn't just be dismissing it as him doing what he said.I think a lot of the anger against Walker isn't what he did, it's how he did it. He used subterfuge and misdirection to avoid having to compromise or negotiate a bipartisan option.He would with 52% of the vote, not 90% of the vote, he's obligated to have at least SOME consideration for the 48% that didn't vote for him, and he doesn't appear to have done this.In any case, it's not like Walker being a scumbag politician was entirely unknown before his election. The people got what they deserved in this case, and only time will tell what the true effect of the policies will be. Maybe it turns out unilateralism IS the best policy. This is certainly what the left has been asking Obama to do.
6/5/2012 11:43:14 PM
He also promised jobsThere are more unemployed people in Wisconsin now.
6/5/2012 11:55:11 PM
6/5/2012 11:59:41 PM
^you sir deserve an Internetanyway what's worse than Walker merely being retained, by a bigger margin (looks like 54-45.4 with 93.7% reporting), is that it looks like all the Rethugs helping him in the state Senate got to stay too, when we needed only one loss to slow the dumbass down
6/6/2012 12:21:20 AM
I have the internets; I'm not sure that they agree with you.Wisconsin Governor Walker took his union-busting tactics far beyond balancing his state's budget, but I'm sure that all of his tax cuts helped a whole bunch![Edited on June 6, 2012 at 12:42 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 12:34:22 AM
Walker laying off 17,000 state workers helped balance the budget. His union-busting ensured that labor costs wouldn't spiral even more out of control as a result of unconstrained benefits packages. The tax cuts helped the state create 40,000+ private sector jobs in Waker's first year in office, ensuring that the unemployment rate went down despite the cuts in the public sector.
6/6/2012 12:59:15 AM
http://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/promises/walk-o-meter/promise/526/create-250000-new-jobs/
6/6/2012 1:06:43 AM
That article is over a month old. Politifact has more recent articles on the job claims, if you care to look them up.Federal job statistics released in May showed that a net 23,608 jobs were added in 2010-11, Walker's first year in office. considering that 17k state workers have been laid off, and you get 40,000+ private sector jobs created.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 1:27 AM. Reason : 2]
6/6/2012 1:24:51 AM
[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 1:48 AM. Reason : i glossed over net. durp]
6/6/2012 1:26:22 AM
It doesn't look like Wi is doing particularly good or bad in terms of jobs. Their economic growth potential ranks particularly low.There is merit in having a balanced budget, but Walker has curtailed womens rights, workers rights, and made higher education more expensive in his state, while setting a precedent of using underhanded-politics for the next administration.It seems like largely a wash, in terms of the grander political scheme. When the democrats regain power, they're just going to have to be more extreme to feel like they're "undoing" the Walker changes.
6/6/2012 1:27:43 AM
The Dems started the underhanded tactics when they ran away from the state in order to block legislation.
6/6/2012 1:30:46 AM
I'll look when aim not about to pass out, but are those numbers really 23k net jobs?[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 1:54 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 1:38:42 AM
6/6/2012 1:47:38 AM
^You don't understand how tax cuts could entice businesses to set up shop in a state, or expand operations? Really?^^I'm looking for the article I read last night, but I remember it was from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and it said that based on surveys, Wisconsin lost jobs last year. The numbers were 17,000 fewer jobs in the public sector and only about 6,000 jobs created in the private sector. In early May, Walker's administration released preliminary, but far more accurate, job numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics which showed a net gain of 23,608 jobs in 2011. I assumed that the public-sector job losses were accurate (since, after all, Walker did fire quite a few state workers), and that the only way to get a net gain of 23,608 jobs, with 17,000 fewer state workers, would be for the private sector to add 40,000+ jobs. Perhaps this was an incorrect assumption.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:04 AM. Reason : 2]
6/6/2012 1:57:10 AM
6/6/2012 2:01:16 AM
Yes, really.I'm only aware of tax cuts resulting in the amassing of personal wealth and savings. Yet, somehow, in the state of Wisconsin, tax cuts result in the increase of job growth - what am I missing?Isn't it pretty much common knowledge that the wealthy don't spend their savings? They accumulate them.^There was a voter mandate, 70% of which was funded by out-of-state donors who didn't vote.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:10 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 2:06:31 AM
Walker's tax cuts were on businesses. Lowering business taxes will positively impact employment. This is not a controversial statement; any economist will tell you as much. It's depressing that we have gotten to the point where smart people on this forum don't understand such basic concepts, because of all the partisan tripe they've been fed. C'mon, man. You're better than this.
6/6/2012 2:14:49 AM
I appreciate the back-handed compliment, but weren't those tax cuts for multinational corporations, not small businesses?MNCs have demonstrably not created jobs in the past 30 years; they've shipped jobs overseas and their investors have payed less taxes on their anti-American profits.Not to say that profits, in and of themselves, are anti-American in nature. I only mean to suggest that those tax-free profits don't benefit the American people as a whole.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:27 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 2:25:07 AM
Granted, you and I are probably viewing this topic from two different perspectives.Whereas you probably view unions as all-too-powerful, I would rather see the workers have more power than the owners any day of the week.I find it rather grotesque, after how hard our forebears struggled, that we would just throw all of their efforts away, as if they were nothing more than a hindrance to our own self-exploitation.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:35 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 2:35:09 AM
Walker passed a series of tax breaks for corporations in his first month, all designed to add jobs. One of them said that any company which opens a shop or factory in WI is exempted from income tax for 2 years. Another one gave tax breaks for every job created. I'm sure you can google the others, but they were targeted for job creation. They didn't go into effect until this year, so despite what Rachel Maddow may have told you, his tax cuts had zero effect on last year's budget and were not the impetus for the public sector union busting.As for multi-national corporations, American tax rates, and the effects of free trade and neoliberalism, that's a whole other discussion. Wisconsin is competing with other states, not other countries. It does not take a lot of research to see that manufacturers have fled highly-taxed, unionized states for states with lower tax rates and less union participation. Creating a low-tax, low-regulation environment has served many states well. As to whether business-friendly policies create jobs? I didn't think that question needed to be asked. It's like the stimulus; even critics of Keynesian deficit spending should be able to admit that the stimulus created jobs. The debate is whether they were worth the price tag. Likewise, the question for Walker is how many jobs, what kind of jobs, and whether they are worth the cost to the state. It is also worth asking whether we are engaging in a "race to the bottom". But the reality is that Walker is a supply-sider, and his policies reflect that. It should be interesting to see how Wisconsin's economy looks in a few years.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:50 AM. Reason : 2]
6/6/2012 2:40:52 AM
6/6/2012 8:02:21 AM
6/6/2012 8:52:14 AM
6/6/2012 9:48:23 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/06/opinion/bennett-walker-victory/index.html?hpt=hp_t1Purpose of linking article is Walkers accomplishments, not to argue the impact of national election. From CNN:
6/6/2012 9:55:13 AM
i could have totally missed this while i wasn't paying too close attention to WI in the last couple months, but for as much as the media is now talking about how this will affect the presidential election, it doesn't seem like Obama got too involved in the WI recall.
6/6/2012 9:25:57 PM
^i heard among exit polls he fared much better than romney, despite this electorate being prowalker. maybe a good decision not to have weighed into it in the end.
6/6/2012 9:34:29 PM
This is a victory for Citizens United and the plutocracy
6/6/2012 9:40:52 PM
something like 60% of his campaign funding came from out-of-state donors. And some insane percentage of that came from only a few individuals.LOL....democracy.
6/6/2012 10:01:01 PM
6/6/2012 10:20:42 PM
^exactly. Bunch of babies.
6/6/2012 10:29:24 PM
^^ Obama spent a significantly more amount of money in defeating McCain in '08. Was there a problem with democracy then?
6/6/2012 11:04:43 PM
6/6/2012 11:20:20 PM
6/6/2012 11:47:08 PM
I love how the GOP can always spin something into "THIS TAKES AWAY YOUR FREEDOM!" and have people vote against their own interests.This time they fooled people into voting against the very groups that were created to protect them.Hey, you know why we don't have shit working conditions today? Unions. Do you want to know why we get paid good wages? Unions. Do you want to know why children don't have to work in factories anymore? Unions.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_history_of_the_United_States
6/7/2012 12:15:33 AM
aaronburro, I only mean a little offense, but Prawn Star refuted my arguments far more adequately.
6/7/2012 12:16:44 AM
6/7/2012 12:17:21 AM
Walker spent 2x as much as his opponent: http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/the-wisconsin-recalls-big-money/2012/06/06/gJQAKAyiJV_graphic.htmlIn NC, didn't the anti-amendment 1 folks outspend the pro-amendment 1 and still lose?
6/7/2012 12:51:56 AM
6/7/2012 2:05:36 AM
^ fair answer. The only clarification I would make is that Waker's ballyhooed business tax cuts were actually targeted tax credits specifically for those companies which hired new workers or newly incorporated in the state of Wisconsin, if I understand correctly.In terms of macroeconomic strategy in this time of slow growth and stubbornly high unemployment, I will once again attempt a conciliatory approach here. I understand the impetus for stimulus spending as opposed to tax cuts when demand is depressed and money is tight. That said, this stimulus should be done on a federal level, since the federal government can run deficits. At the state level, every governor has a responsibility to balance their budget annually, while encouraging job-creation. I don't buy into all the Koch brothers-inspired supply side policies that Walker espouses, but I certainly understand his rationale, and as I stated before, it should be interesting to see how it plays out for Wisconsin in the years ahead.
6/7/2012 2:30:53 AM
Obama raised an unprecedented amount of money from small donations in 2008. That's the main he reason he outspent McCain. So there's really no comparison between that and Walker receiving ridiculous money from the Koch brothers and other billionaires. This entire election cycle is going to be so ugly. Thank you Citizens United.And no, the pro-amendment 1 people outspent the against people. Republicans in every election are going to outspend their opponents. That entire party is bought and sold to the highest bidder. Democrats aren't much better, but they are better.
6/7/2012 2:51:55 AM
6/7/2012 6:44:50 AM
Now, If only Walker could get rid of that pesky criminal probe. He better hope his donors keep opening up their wallets for that too.
6/7/2012 7:45:10 AM
6/7/2012 11:09:45 AM
6/7/2012 11:35:14 AM
Private unions are okay. Public unions aren't.Peoples' earnings and their unborn children's earnings should not be up for negotiation. Government workers' wages come from taxes, deception, and enforcement of unjust laws.[Edited on June 7, 2012 at 11:46 AM. Reason : ]
6/7/2012 11:44:44 AM
Yeah, I'm not too crazy about public unions. I can see how those would be abused. Private unions are an important part of workers' rights though and they need a larger role in politics.
6/7/2012 11:50:41 AM
unions are fine as long as no one is forced into the union and/or harassed for not being in the union
6/7/2012 11:59:55 AM