So Walker wasn't reelected?
He was, because the voters there apparently hate success.
So Walker wasn't reelected?
Yeah, and libs would NEVER do such things. :redface:
How many times have we heard "but, but, Bush did it too" about the POTUS that ran as the "anti-Bush"? Hear that stuff all the time.![]()
also Jack if you remember back to the recall elections most of Walkers donations were funded from out of state donors. Plus the superpacs ( which I believe are fundamentally wrong for both parties in a democracy) were funded fro out of state money.
The Walker talking point was as follows "if the money is from out of state it wont effect Wisconsin policy, so there is no stake in the game." Well when you look deeper and you see how many Koch brothers businesses are set up in Wisconsin than you can see who the "out of state" money truly benefits.
also Jack youre a smart guy, you know campaign financing needs reforms and basically buys individuals elections by spreading misinformation. The tea party is and was the perfect example of just that.
hiya Gigantalor,
i'm not an expert on budget matters, but Mr. Obama did say that he'd lower the deficit, which has happened
I'm certainly not a fan of Walker or his policies, and I expect bad results from them in the future. As far as I'm aware, though, the state of Wisconsin isn't that bad.
I'm no expert, but if an answere to this comes, I have a feeling it's going to come from another poster than the one you've quoted.
hi Jack,
didn't Mr. Walker govern a state that used to run a budget surplus? the state is now on course to have a 2.2 billion dollar budget deficit, and as you noted, job growth has been sort of sluggish.
Wisconsin's k-12 education looks pretty terrific, though i wonder how that'll be affected in the long run when (and if) cuts are made to education.
- IGIT
how on earth will all of this work?
- IGIT
I think that the trajectory of the state isn't great, but it started out as an above-average one so it's still looking OK. Again, if one wants to point out the effects of going all-in on the trickle-down idiocy, Kansas is a better example.
hello Jack,
Kansas is an odd state.
the wealthiest citizens in kansas pay 3.6% of their income in state & local taxes. the middle class in kansas pay 9.5%. that seems sort of unfair, but Mr. Brownback was voted back into office, so thats how the folks in kansas like it.
seems unfair to me - though perhaps this is a long term plan by Mr. Brownback to lure wealthy folks to the state?
i dunno.
- IGIT
hello Jack,
Kansas is an odd state.
the wealthiest citizens in kansas pay 3.6% of their income in state & local taxes. the middle class in kansas pay 9.5%. that seems sort of weird, but Mr. Brownback was voted back into office, so thats how the folks in kansas like it.
EDIT - Kansas is bizarre. last spring, Mr. Brownback signed a school finance bill that allows school districts to hire unlicensed teachers for science and math classes.
GOP supporters of the measure said that this will improve teacher quality.
http://www.kansas.com/news/politics-government/article1140755.html
- IGIT
Stick with the GOP if you want to see Murka descend into a Latin-American style Banana Republic.
All states have regressive taxation. That's one reason the right and dupes of right-wing propagandists like IDL like "decentralization" (though race is a bigger factor there). The degree to which Kansas' taxation is regressive is unusual, though.
I would say flat stupid. I wonder if Brownback is a true believer or just doesn't care about the damage that shit does.
Here in Toronto, the city where I live, the areas which were most likely to support our then-Mayor were peopled by those who saw the least benefit from his policies. His campaign promises, which were centered around 'cutting the fat' out of the city were based on cuts to services that these people (the poorest and least educated and most likely to be unemployed) had the greatest reason to make use of, and his promises of tax cuts and savings had little to no chance of positively effecting them (as they were the least likely to owe tax money due to their low income levels and reimbursements). And yet still they turned out in droves to support, not policies that benefited them, but the idea that this person was on their side. They were more than happy to vote for him because they thought that they were voting for someone whose ideology and public character seemed to mirror theirs.
Basically, they were voting directly against their own interests. And they'd likely do it again. And considering our last mayor drew HEAVILY from US style politics in his choice of key-words and delivery, I have to imagine the same thing isn't rare in the US.