April 01, 2014
— CAC (with a few potshots to take at Team Romney along the way, because why not?)
When we last really focused on Wisconsin, Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney halved President Obama's 2008 landslide win, leaving Republicans who had just witnessed Governor Walker's wallop of Barrett during the recall apoplectic and questioning everything they could. How could this have happened? Was Gov. Walker just lucky with the recall? Is there a way for any Republican to win statewide in a Presidential year? How can we possibly beat the turnout in Milwaukee? Most important, is Walker favored to win re-election? First, we'll examine the November 2012 failure, and let's look at the most obvious parts of the state many (wrongly) assumed delivered President Obama a win where it failed to “come through” for candidate Tom Barrett: Milwaukee City and Dane County.
Milwaukee City, located within the limits of Milwaukee County, cast roughly 227,800 ballots for President Obama, and 56,700 for Romney, giving the President a sizable 171,000 vote edge. While this sounds formidable, Milwaukee City only accounted for 9% of the statewide vote in 2012- the exact same share it had in the recall five months earlier (see regional chart below). Considering Tom Barrett's 121,000 vote edge in the recall here, this Democrat-favoring margin jumped only by 50,000- hardly enough to unseat Walker if, say, Barrett had managed to score the President's totals out of the city.
Dane County, home of the City of Madison, cast roughly 83,600 votes for Romney, and 216,000 votes for President Obama, giving the President a 132,400 vote cushion. While sizable, consider that Tom Barrett scored a 98,800 vote edge in the recall, so this was just an improvement of about 34,600 votes.
Using the 2012 recall as a baseline, and giving Tom Barrett ALL of Obama's margins in the City of Milwaukee and Dane County, he would have still fallen tens of thousands of votes short of knocking Walker off. The Democrats had very impressive turnout for a non-Presidential race, but all of the votes they could find in their two largest pockets wasn't enough to unseat the Governor, and wouldn't have been even given Presidential-level turnout there. If the only improvement for President Obama over candidate Tom Barrett had been in these two often-cited areas, he would have lost to Mitt Romney.
Why Walker ultimately won and Mitt Romney lost boils down to two far less mentioned and far more important regions in the state: the Green Bay/ Appleton media market of NE Wisconsin, and even more crucial, the mish-mash of “other” markets (Duluth, Twin Cities, Wausau, and Eau Claire/La Crosse) that make up the northwest portion of the state. The former region went to Walker by a massive margin, nearly as large as his win in the blood red Milwaukee suburbs: 62%-38%. The latter region went to the Governor by a respectable 56% to 44%, and has been far less favorable to Republican Presidential candidates.

In the Presidential race, Romney lost this large “other” region of the state, and enjoyed but a fraction of the margin Governor Walker had in the Green Bay area (just 4% compared to Walker's 24%). The notion that Democratic turnout operations in Dane and Milwaukee actually block Republican victories is false: as I have shown above, if the only change had been in these two mega-Democratic regions, and you gave Tom Barrett ALL of President Obama's margins there, he would have come up short; instead, Republican Presidential candidates have a problem with winning the state because of failures in the oft-ignored regions. Team Romney repeated Team Barrett's mistake and emphasized their turnout and media efforts in the wrong places.
The Milwaukee 'burbs have been blood red for some time now, while the city of Milwaukee and the Madison area deep blue for an equally long time, so ad spending and GOTV efforts in these places reach saturation rather rapidly. Team Romney and various Republican groups spent almost $12 million of the $27 million dumped into the state in the Madison and Milwaukee media markets- the two markets least likely to see any shift substantial enough to change the race. The northern areas of the state require you to actively criss-cross and campaign if you want their vote, and this simply wasn't done. Team Romney (barely) got involved in Green Bay, and the campaign utterly dropped the ball in the northwest. The stark contrast in results is damning, particularly when you look at the county-by-county changes:


But enough about beating up on our failure in late 2012. What are Governor Walker's chances this go-around? Is Mary Burke really a more formidable candidate than Mayor Barrett? What does the polling say?

Despite fund-raising emails hyping Burke as an intimidating challenger (by both sides!), there is no evidence so far in the polling that the Governor faces a bigger fight than in 2010 or 2012. In fact, her share of the vote is marginally worse than Barrett's at roughly the same point in 2010 and 2012. But don't take my word for it: look at the data.
Consider the three polls released in March 2010: WPRI found Walker with a 4% lead, Rasmussen 6%, and PPP just 3% over Barrett. Also consider the polling released between October 2011 and February 2012: Walker led Barrett by 2% per PPP in October, trailed him by 3% in February, and held a somewhat more comfortable 6% edge per Marquette in January. Now consider Burke's current performance: a 45% tie per Rasmussen (her best), trailing Walker 41% to 48% per Marquette (her worst), and trailing him 44%-49% per Gravis. While very old, Public Policy Polling's latest release of this current race gives Walker a 6% edge- a greater margin than anything they found for him during the entirety of his recall battle.

Her approval rating is up in the air: most residents of the state are still unfamiliar with her (and the Governor, war chest at the ready, will be more than happy to inform Wisconsinites who she “really” is), and she's looking at around 84% of Democrats per the latest Marquette Law Poll. Considering Barrett polled in the mid-40s and won between 46% and 47% in both of his battles with the Governor, and Burke has been at 41%, 45%, and 44% in the latest samplings (MuLaw, Rasmussen and Gravis Marketing), there is no evidence in the data we have to suggest she's stronger than Tom Barrett. As for that approval rating, being "undefined" has the potential upside of growing your numbers as the public notices you, but that is not what we have seen so far:


Contrast her performance with the Governor, who presides over a bitterly divided state, yet who maintains a consistent approval rating in the high forties (and occasionally over 50%):

Yes, his approval number has down-ticked a bit over two years, but his disapproval rating has dropped by roughly the same. There has, is, and always will be a hardened core of Wisconsin residents who hate the Governor, and there has, is, and always will be a hardened core of residents who love him. The simple truth is that the core who adore the guy is bigger, and these blocs frame the election to give the Governor a low ceiling (the mid-50s at best) and a very high floor (around 47-48%). Walker is NO Jim Doyle, who polled anywhere from -2 to -29 in his approval ratings during the final year of his last term.
One of the central issues for Wisconsin since before Walker was even elected was the economy, and the perception of its recent performance has changed in the Governor's favor since the heat of the recall:

While "jobs" will be touted by Burke as a big issue, Wisconsin voters' perception of the economic conditions in Wisconsin won't give her much of a cudgel, barring another downturn. It also doesn't help that two of her biggest claims in ads about wages and the unemployment rate have been duds, per Politifact's analysis. Perhaps the most obvious item on the "jobs" cry though is that the Democrats have been shouting it since 2011, and already tried to use it to rev up support for Barrett in the recall- and yet the Governor's lead hasn't budged.
Democrats nationally have been talking up the need to increase turnout, targeting the Presidential-year-only voters, in particular minority and youth votes to avoid losing control of the Senate and to make a few gains here and their in what otherwise looks like a Republican year; but when it comes to Wisconsin, we have already seen what top-notch turnout efforts look like in a non-Presidential election. It delivers the Democratic candidate a combined 205,000 vote margin out of Dane and Milwaukee Counties, which would be extremely impressive if the much smaller but much more Republican WOW (Waukesha Ozaukee & Washington) hadn't delivered a >150,000 vote rebuttal. With the recall as their high-water mark, and no sign yet that this fight will see turnout even approaching that, we are really, really giving Burke the benefit of the doubt in expecting roughly identical margins in the bluest areas.
The Marquette Law Poll won my respect in 2012 with it's excellent final result, nailing not only the topline number, but coming very close to Walker and Barrett's shares in the major regions of the state. Their final polls for the Presidential and Senate races were also only 2 points off. Their prolific polling and consistent methodology gives us an excellent source of data to draw long-term conclusions on the attitude of the state.
Looking at their latest release, we fail to find any good news for candidate Burke- she wins Milwaukee City by 66%-21% (Democrat Barrett won it 77-23 in 2012), the Madison media market by a substantial 53%-33% (Barrett win this by 61-39), and loses everywhere else: 38%-55% in the Milwaukee media market (Walker won it 63-37), 34%-56% in the Green Bay area (Walker won this 62-38 ), and in the usually more fickle “other”, is getting absolutely destroyed 31%-54% (Walker beat Barrett in the swingiest region by 54%-46%). Even averaging this and the last MuLaw cross-tabs, Walker is enjoying double-digit advantages over Burke in Green Bay and the northwest, crushing her (as expected) in the Milwaukee burbs, and trailing her only in Milwaukee-proper and the Madison area. When you look at how much of the statewide vote each of these regions made up during the recall (and, in nearly identical percentages, the Presidential race five months later), Walker's regional strengths can't be ignored. He's running nearly identical margins to his performance in 2012, which broke down as such:

Since the recall, little has really changed for Governor Walker in terms of his approval rating- he has seemed to bounce around a few points shy of or over fifty percent, with his disapproval rating ranging from the mid to high forties. Little has changed too in his regional performance since the recall, as the Marquette Law Polls have shown. Dave Weigel's report from Wisconsin during the height of the recall contest, Welcome to Walkerland, highlighted a campaign that utilized data and volunteers to a degree unmatched by any Democrat in the state save for the President. His team plans to build off of that GOTV that successfully gave him a larger majority in the recall than his initial gubernatorial election, so “catching his ground game off guard” is off the table for Burke and Wisconsin Democrats.
The loyalty of the Walker base is not to be underestimated. During the recall, a primary was held, mainly for the Democrats to decide who they would pick to rid themselves of the Great Conservative Menace. Beyond just showing their support, there was really no reason for Republicans to turn out in the token Republican primary. Considering Kathleen Falk was thought to be the weaker candidate at the time, many conservatives considered playing around in the Democratic primary, which would have augmented what was already expected to be very high turnout (over 900,000 people signed a recall, so it was implied in the days leading up to May 8th that a sizable Democratic showing would materialize). On May 8th, over 670,000 ballots were cast in the Democratic primary....and over 625,000 were cast for Scott Walker in his virtually uncontested one. A map comparing counties where Walker received more votes (again, this was merely a show of support from Republicans, because there was no contest on the Republican side) than all of the Democrats combined went viral, and indicated just how wide a swath of territory “Walkerland” had extended:

Conservatives, establishment Republicans and libertarians got on a rare unity kick and put everything they hand into “saving” Walker on June 5th , 2012, and their success looks even grander when you consider the size of the Governor's wins in his biggest counties versus what the Democrats backing Barrett achieved:


The ten largest counties breaking for Scott Walker bested those backing Tom Barrett: Waukesha came around 3000 votes shy of matching nearby Dane's, despite having 108,000 fewer residents. Critical, indeed. No less impressive, Ozaukee, Washington, Dodge, Walworth and Sheboygan came within 14,000 votes of matching the Democratic margin out of Milwaukee, despite having a combined population just over half the size. While Barrett's % margins were enormous out of the Duluth-area counties, none approached the raw votes of the red Milwaukee suburbs. (All county level data is pulled from gab.wi.gov)
With few exceptions (Kenosha, La Crosse, and possibly Columbia), all of these will almost certainly side with the same party this time around, which just further adds to Burke's problem: how does she top the blood-red Milwaukee suburbs? If Green Bay and counties in, say, the Twin Cities and Eau Claire media markets were a coin-toss, or at least had substantial undecideds, she would have an “in”, but that hasn't materialized. Burke's easiest path is to force Walker to a draw in the NW to even have a chance. Pumping out votes in the Madison area and the city of Milwaukee is important- that's her base. But to actually win, she needs these “other” votes, as can be illustrated in the chart below, which compares the results of every major statewide race decided by less than eight points from 2006 through today:

Ultimately, nothing has substantially changed in the nearly two-year interval since the recall in the Wisconsin Democrats' favor, and there's scant chance it will in the next seven months: unemployment is down (though it looks like Walker's quarter-million jobs pledge won't come to fruition by November, so expect most of Burke's focus on it), taxes are being cut, the budget is perceived as far more balanced by voters than it was in 2010, the initial John Doe investigation failed to lead to the Walker indictment predicated by MSNBC sage Ed Schultz, candidate Burke has candidly admitted she won't be the self-funding juggernaut many Democrats hoped she would be, the unions are a shell of their former selves, the Governor's initial election polling is better than it was in 2010 or 2012, Burke hasn't materialized as an improvement over twice-loser Barrett, and looking at perhaps the most important metric for a midterm race, base support, the Governor's approval among members of his own party has been in the low to mid 90s for two years running.
Can things change for the Wisconsin Democrats trying to oust their most loathed foe? Of course. We're talking a race that is seven months out from conclusion.
But they haven't in two years, and nothing we can measure indicates otherwise.
{added by CAC July 24th) For caution, here's the thing I would warn of, and could be happening: an attack on Walker's jobs pledge and the "less wild" option. If Burke can bland her way around and succeed in making Walker look more radical than herself, attack him on jobs, and get her foot in the door in the more contested regions of the state, problems will arise for Governor Walker. He won't see his own numbers shrink, but he'll see Burke's rise, and the state is very, very divided. This may be happening based on the May and now July release by MuLaw. As successful as his team has been in the past, a loss this year would go further than ruin his chances at the Presidency- it would mean Republicans are doomed in the Upper Midwest, a region they need to improve in for any shot at the White House.
AOSHQDD Initial Forecast:

Governor Scott Walker holds a six-point edge over Democrat Mary Burke, 52% to 46%, with 2% scattered and undecided. Considering his potential Presidential aspirations, while I consider this race moderately Republican, it will be at the back of my mind and will make a few appearances here on the HQ throughout the campaign.
All of the data for all of the Marquette Law Poll releases can be found here
All charts created by @conartcritic
The Ace of Spades HQ Decision Desk is now on twitter @AOSHQDD If you have a race of interest you'd like to see analyzed, shoot me a tweet @ConArtCritic
Posted by: CAC at
02:56 PM
| Comments (174)
Post contains 2874 words, total size 23 kb.
Posted by: Cicero (@cicero) at April 01, 2014 03:02 PM (8ZskC)
Posted by: WannabeAnglican at April 01, 2014 03:06 PM (g0H8G)
Obviously a huge amount of work here.......and the Horde reaction is gonna be "I was promised plaid maps, you hoser".
You know, I'm almost feeling sorry for CAC. Almost.
Posted by: IllTemperedCur at April 01, 2014 03:07 PM (TIIx5)
Posted by: Dack Thrombosis at April 01, 2014 03:07 PM (oFCZn)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:08 PM (HVff2)
Apparently the WI Republicans clevered up a tad and tightened the state's availability of early voting for this election.
Can't hurt.
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 03:08 PM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Dack Thrombosis at April 01, 2014 03:09 PM (oFCZn)
Posted by: Cicero (@cicero) at April 01, 2014 03:09 PM (8ZskC)
Posted by: Dogbert at April 01, 2014 03:10 PM (oKVs5)
Posted by: Buckeye Abroad at April 01, 2014 03:10 PM (96WPx)
You know if a butterfly flaps its wings, Scott Walker could win reelection even without the aid of plaid maps?
Posted by: AnonymousDrivel at April 01, 2014 03:10 PM (1CroS)
Posted by: Insomniac at April 01, 2014 03:10 PM (mx5oN)
Posted by: George H.W. Bush at April 01, 2014 03:10 PM (8ZskC)
Posted by: Adam Smith's Invisible Pimp Hand at April 01, 2014 03:11 PM (WdbF7)
Posted by: Cicero (@cicero) at April 01, 2014 03:13 PM (8ZskC)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 03:13 PM (pQkGj)
At least there are no spoilers in this movie review.
Posted by: rd at April 01, 2014 03:13 PM (D+lxs)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:14 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: spypeach at April 01, 2014 03:14 PM (10H0T)
Posted by: Karl Rove, Super Genius at April 01, 2014 03:15 PM (1CroS)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:16 PM (HVff2)
I wonder if this is because of clusters of people who do similar types of work. Some fields are doing better, some worse. People look around at their neighbors and see people in similar sectors and have their personal experiences reinforced.
Posted by: bonhomme[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 03:16 PM (2hTlI)
Posted by: eman at April 01, 2014 03:16 PM (AO9UG)
Posted by: Ezzie Klein at April 01, 2014 03:17 PM (QeH9j)
Posted by: Dorcus Blimeline at April 01, 2014 03:18 PM (iB0Q2)
The NYT had a hit piece on Walker over some mine. Apparently Dem strategy includes trying to to peal off some of the rural gun and tackle set with eco scaremongering:
http://tinyurl.com/qbdlzob
Executive Summary
Scott Walker makes Indians cry.
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 03:19 PM (kdS6q)
and forced to wear stupid signs...
and then shunned.
Posted by: LoneStarHeeb at April 01, 2014 03:19 PM (BZAd3)
Someone explain the take home.
Posted by: OG Celtic-American at April 01, 2014 03:19 PM (vHRtU)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:20 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:20 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: Merovign, Dark Lord of the Sith[/i] [/b] [/s] [/u] at April 01, 2014 03:20 PM (qyfb5)
Posted by: OG Celtic-American at April 01, 2014 03:21 PM (vHRtU)
Reagan's economy took off like a rocket. How do the leftists interpret that?
It was the Decade of Greed.
Posted by: bonhomme[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 03:21 PM (2hTlI)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 03:21 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: oc joe at April 01, 2014 03:21 PM (hqVUe)
Posted by: Soona at April 01, 2014 03:21 PM (MzhHs)
Posted by: Insomniac at April 01, 2014 03:22 PM (mx5oN)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:23 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: [/i]andycanuck[/b] at April 01, 2014 03:23 PM (hn5v5)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:24 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: mugiwara at April 01, 2014 03:24 PM (3a584)
Posted by: Russell Ziskey at April 01, 2014 03:25 PM (kFxpe)
Posted by: Adam Smith's Invisible Pimp Hand at April 01, 2014 03:26 PM (WdbF7)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 07:16 PM (HVff2)
--------------------------------------------------
It's always the SEIU and NEA. Any union making trouble for anyone usually involve these POSs.
Posted by: Soona at April 01, 2014 03:27 PM (MzhHs)
Posted by: captain kirk at April 01, 2014 03:27 PM (hn5v5)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 07:20 PM (HVff2)
Of course you are.
Posted by: LoneStarHeeb at April 01, 2014 03:27 PM (BZAd3)
You don't know me. The line is "Well, I got the shit kicked out of me in Wisconsin once. Forget it!"
Posted by: Russell Ziskey[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 03:28 PM (2hTlI)
Posted by: PaleRider, tips back tinfoil hat and rides into sunset. at April 01, 2014 03:29 PM (dUS+X)
BURN THE INFIDEL.
Posted by: alexthechick - SMOD, you taunty bitch. at April 01, 2014 03:29 PM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: BackwardsBoy, who did not vote for this shit [/i][/s][/b][/u] at April 01, 2014 03:29 PM (0HooB)
Posted by: Arizona Wildcats at April 01, 2014 03:29 PM (2nTM3)
Posted by: Mike in the Hinterlands at April 01, 2014 03:30 PM (DNpio)
Posted by: Dack Thrombosis at April 01, 2014 03:30 PM (oFCZn)
Posted by: alexthechick - SMOD, you taunty bitch. at April 01, 2014 07:29 PM (Gk3SS)
We were supposed to act like we hadn't noticed!
Posted by: LoneStarHeeb at April 01, 2014 03:30 PM (BZAd3)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:31 PM (QeH9j)
I wanted plaid.
Is that too much to ask?
Posted by: BackwardsBoy, who did not vote for this shit at April 01, 2014 07:29 PM (0HooB)
Trust me, you don't want to go to plaid.
Posted by: Dark Helmet at April 01, 2014 03:33 PM (lr3d7)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 03:34 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:34 PM (QeH9j)
Posted by: irishEd at April 01, 2014 03:35 PM (bfm04)
Posted by: DangerGirl at April 01, 2014 03:35 PM (GrtrJ)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:36 PM (QeH9j)
Don't you dare!
Posted by: Phil Kessel[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 03:36 PM (44jNh)
Posted by: johnd01 at April 01, 2014 03:36 PM (r0+v0)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 01, 2014 03:36 PM (n+8FE)
Posted by: Dack Thrombosis at April 01, 2014 03:37 PM (oFCZn)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:37 PM (QeH9j)
I've gotten SO much black nookie spouting this...
Posted by: Billy Cliton at April 01, 2014 03:38 PM (vHRtU)
Posted by: Mike in the Hinterlands at April 01, 2014 03:38 PM (DNpio)
Posted by: Anderson Cooper at April 01, 2014 03:38 PM (kFxpe)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:39 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: BackwardsBoy, who did not vote for this shit [/i][/s][/b][/u] at April 01, 2014 03:39 PM (0HooB)
Can't wait for tomorrow's analysis. It'll give me time to add RAM to my motherboard.
Posted by: AnonymousDrivel at April 01, 2014 03:40 PM (1CroS)
Posted by: Wisconsin Jones aka bad muthafugga at April 01, 2014 03:41 PM (QeH9j)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:42 PM (HVff2)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6locfXcsQQ8
Posted by: huerfano at April 01, 2014 03:43 PM (bAGA/)
Posted by: Aviator at April 01, 2014 03:43 PM (3rrMW)
Posted by: Some Dumb White Bitch at April 01, 2014 03:44 PM (Aif/5)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:45 PM (HVff2)
how totally unexpected.
Mittens lost a state that he had a decent chance of winning.
it's almost as if he and the rest of the RNC RINOs didn't even try....
Posted by: redc1c4 at April 01, 2014 03:45 PM (q+fqH)
You missed it when Rick awoke from his coma in the hospital bed, as it was teetering on the rim of a volcano.
Posted by: Gareth's alter ego, Chris Gaines at April 01, 2014 03:46 PM (wu/TK)
Here ya go buddy on white privilege
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 07:42 PM (HVff2)
I love that photo. A sea of white losers and one black dude standing on the right whose ass must be sore from all those douchebags begging to kiss it.
Posted by: mugiwara at April 01, 2014 03:46 PM (3a584)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:46 PM (QeH9j)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:49 PM (QeH9j)
And I gather from extensive research* that the Lt. Gov levels up if the top office becomes vacant, and the Gov/Lt. Gov run on a joint ticket.
So Walker's covered in 2016 if he runs for President and wins.
*googling
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 03:49 PM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Angel with a sword at April 01, 2014 03:49 PM (hpgw1)
Sheboygan.
Ouzakee.
Say them out loud. It's kinda fun. Sorta like insane northern Caucasus place names, but more pronounceable.
Posted by: non-purist at April 01, 2014 03:50 PM (afQnV)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:50 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 07:34 PM (pQkGj)
--------------------------------------------
Oh, be still my heart.
Posted by: Soona at April 01, 2014 03:51 PM (MzhHs)
Posted by: RWC at April 01, 2014 03:51 PM (QeH9j)
Posted by: lowandslow at April 01, 2014 03:51 PM (IV4od)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:51 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: Killerdog at April 01, 2014 03:52 PM (ld2OA)
Posted by: Golfman in NC at April 01, 2014 03:52 PM (/djtm)
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 01, 2014 03:53 PM (HVff2)
Posted by: 2000 lbs JDAM at April 01, 2014 03:53 PM (Aif/5)
Posted by: Nip Sip at April 01, 2014 03:54 PM (0FSuD)
Posted by: Golfman in NC at April 01, 2014 03:54 PM (/djtm)
Obama won, Romney lost, Walker won. What I remember of Romney he failed to inspire voters, failed to address issues I wanted addressed in the way I would hope they would be addressed while Walker stood up to the mob.
Isn't that the lesson to be learned here?
Wisconsin has a budget surplus, teachers don't have to join the union. Isn't that a clue?
Posted by: Jushoha Smith at April 01, 2014 03:55 PM (gx25J)
But I'm still hoping Chris Daniels can kick Thad Cochran's pork barrel ass in the primary.
Posted by: GnuBreed at April 01, 2014 03:55 PM (wNF3N)
BTW --
Romney spent tons in cash in Wisconsin.
His VP pick was from Wisconsin.
His party chairman good ol Reince "That Man Right Outta My Hair" Priebus was from Wisconsin.
Romney still lost Wisconsin.
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 03:57 PM (kdS6q)
Read the wiki on "white privilege" and then do some looking at the source material. One of the "proofs" that it exists is this: "In a study published in 2003, sociologist Deirdre A. Royster compared black and white males who graduated from the same school with the same skills. In looking at their success with school-work transition and working experiences, she found that white graduates were more often employed in skilled trades, earned more, held higher status positions, received more promotions and experienced shorter periods of unemployment."
Sounds convincing, right? But her "study", published as "How White Networks Exclude Black Men from Blue-Collar Jobs". In it you find her sample is horrible. It's only 38 students from a single trade school in Baltimore. Only a sociologist in a grievance industry would use that as a proof of anything.
Posted by: bonhomme[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 03:58 PM (o4Xc4)
Posted by: BackwardsBoy, who did not vote for this shit [/i][/s][/b][/u] at April 01, 2014 03:58 PM (0HooB)
Posted by: Lincolntf at April 01, 2014 03:59 PM (ZshNr)
Obama won, Romney lost, Walker won. What I remember of Romney he failed to inspire voters, failed to address issues I wanted addressed in the way I would hope they would be addressed while Walker stood up to the mob.
----------------------------------------------
Yup. Walker stood up and was fearless. Rombley folded under pressure during the debates, too afraid to make a stand against a known lier.
Plus, he had no moral standing in denouncing Ocare. He was Rove's boy.
Posted by: Soona at April 01, 2014 04:00 PM (MzhHs)
Lt governor is elected separately.
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian
"Under the original terms of the state constitution, the lieutenant governor was elected for a two-year term on a separate ticket from the governor; because of this, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin have not always been of the same party. After a 1967 amendment, however, the two have been nominated, and voted upon, as a single ticket."
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 04:01 PM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 01, 2014 07:57 PM (kdS6q)
And Massatwoshits, where he was once gubner. Then again, Al Gore didn't carry his own state of TN neither.
Posted by: GnuBreed at April 01, 2014 04:02 PM (wNF3N)
Posted by: Old Guy in a Tunic at April 01, 2014 04:02 PM (lq3Ak)
Walker is TOAST
//Cartoon and Imaginary Friend Locals 957, 732, and 35
Posted by: sven10077 at April 01, 2014 04:03 PM (TE35l)
Posted by: bonhomme[/i][/b][/i][/b][/s][/s] at April 01, 2014 04:03 PM (o4Xc4)
Posted by: Lincolntf at April 01, 2014 04:03 PM (ZshNr)
Posted by: BackwardsBoy, who did not vote for this shit [/i][/s][/b][/u] at April 01, 2014 04:04 PM (0HooB)
Posted by: Old Guy in a Tunic at April 01, 2014 04:05 PM (lq3Ak)
Posted by: Angel with a sword at April 01, 2014 07:49 PM (hpgw1)
Unless you're Wil Wheaton, who will wet himself whilst whining about what whorrible whuman beings we want two bwe.
Posted by: Dark Helmet at April 01, 2014 04:07 PM (lr3d7)
I use my WhiteGuy discount card whenever I go shopping. If I forget the card I can still use the secret handshake in some establishments.
Posted by: Bertram Cabot Jr. at April 01, 2014 04:10 PM (/Nxsb)
Posted by: Donna and V. (no ampersand) at April 01, 2014 04:13 PM (R3gO3)
Posted by: Buck Farack, Gentleman Adventurer at April 01, 2014 04:13 PM (Nk6GS)
Posted by: Slapweasel at April 01, 2014 04:13 PM (lq3Ak)
Posted by: MOTHER JONES at April 01, 2014 04:17 PM (Aif/5)
Posted by: Lincolntf at April 01, 2014 04:18 PM (ZshNr)
Posted by: ScoggDog at April 01, 2014 04:22 PM (VdBU2)
Posted by: Bossy Conservative riding Orca at April 01, 2014 04:22 PM (+1T7c)
Posted by: ChampionCapua at April 01, 2014 04:23 PM (KZi9D)
Posted by: CrotchetyOldJarhead at April 01, 2014 04:23 PM (60Vyp)
If nothing else I appreciate the effort.
CAC is sorta like a slightly less cute Oracle at Delphi from 300...
http://youtu.be/CfGIeNALguE
Oracle 300- Sorta SFW maybe
Posted by: sven10077 at April 01, 2014 04:25 PM (TE35l)
Posted by: Treasure of the Mesabi Range at April 01, 2014 04:25 PM (+1T7c)
You may want to go to the University of "leave me the fuck alone" but they won't admit you.
Posted by: sven10077 at April 01, 2014 04:26 PM (TE35l)
Posted by: Danny at April 01, 2014 04:35 PM (27lss)
Seems like Burke's approval/disapproval is going in the same direction. So the more they find out about her they love her/hate her? This is funny, from the Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel regarding part of her jobs plan:
"The document's crowning glory, however, is Burke's unveiling of her "Wisconsin INSourcing Initiative (WIN)" to help keep jobs from moving overseas. "'Offshoring' (or 'outsourcing') American manufacturing jobs to other localities where labor is cheaper has been the dismal trend for over thirty years," Burke complains.
Yet Burke neglected to mention that she remains a significant shareholder in Trek Bicycle Corp., which moved much of its manufacturing operations to China. As part of her program, Burke says she will "specialize in recruiting (and retaining) manufacturers back from abroad." I'm pretty sure I know which number she can dial first — she probably has Trek's headquarters programmed in her cellphone. ("Hello, Trek? It's me, Mary — hey, I just raised the state's minimum wage, so come on back! Hello? Hello?")
Posted by: joanne at April 01, 2014 04:37 PM (s/quq)
Posted by: joanne at April 01, 2014 04:39 PM (s/quq)
Posted by: seamrog at April 01, 2014 04:43 PM (xdk6U)
Posted by: ScoggDog at April 01, 2014 04:50 PM (VdBU2)
Worse than being afraid to make a stand, Romney got up there in the second and third debates and said over and over a variant of, "I agree with the President on this."
Well, geez, Mitt, if you agree with the President on so many issues, why in the world did you even decide to run against him? On the basis of which of the two of you had the better hair?
Posted by: torquewrench at April 01, 2014 04:57 PM (noWW6)
In regards to the 2006 win by doyle the Libertarian candidate was Tommy Thompson's slow witted brother, Mayor Ed Thompson. I believe he tilted the race to that asshat Doyle.
Then Ed's retarded supporters in Tomah had the gall to put bumper stickers on their cars that said "Don't blame me, I voted for Ed."
Math is hard.
Posted by: Minuteman at April 01, 2014 05:04 PM (SS7Gu)
Posted by: tasker at April 01, 2014 05:07 PM (RJMhd)
Posted by: tasker at April 01, 2014 05:10 PM (RJMhd)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 05:17 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 05:19 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: Gyaos at April 01, 2014 05:21 PM (yWFG6)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 05:30 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: tasker at April 01, 2014 06:00 PM (RJMhd)
Posted by: tasker at April 01, 2014 06:07 PM (RJMhd)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 06:34 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 06:36 PM (pQkGj)
Posted by: CAC at April 01, 2014 06:39 PM (pQkGj)
173 Makes you wonder how the people who donated that $27 million spent in that state by Romney feel.
Don't remind me, CAC.
Since I'm gratified by your interest in my state (gee I read the whole post and didn't find it boring:-), here's some more info you might find interesting:There are fairly significant differences within Milwaukee County. The affluent northern suburbs used to be more Republican than they are. The most left-wing burb is Shorewood, which is home to the sort of well-heeled lib who lives in a lovely early 20th century home and does her grocery shopping at Whole Foods (Madison is filled to the gills with such types).
The southeastern suburbs are blue collar and used to be home to a lot of Polish factory workers. However, the Poles and other white ethnics have begun moving out and are being replaced by Hispanics and blacks. They've become poorer and shabbier than they were when I was a kid, since it's not like the factories have made a come-back. So they're still Dem territory, although the remaining whites also include a lot of veterans and older people. I remember seeing a mix of signs there during the presidential and governor race.
The western and south-western burbs (ranging from affluent to middle-middle class) are the ones trending conservative. Of particular interest is Oak Creek, which was farm country when I was a kid and is now filled with subdivisions. It's the place a young couple looking for an affordable starter home and decent schools will settle and it's growing very rapidly. I saw nary an Obama or Barrett sign there.
Milwaukeeans have always had an inferiority complex about being a dinky city in the shadow of Chicago; however, when it comes to elections, I'm happy it's not Chicago, not just because they're the dirtiest goddamn crooks in the country down there but because Milwaukee just doesn't have the massive pull Cook County does and so can't drag the rest of the state down with it. I find it very odd - and yet reassuring - that if I get in my car and drive west on I-94 in a half hour, I'll be in deep red Waukesha. In an hour and a half I'll be in commie Madison. But in Illinois, that blue goes across the entire northern part of the state. Milwaukee and Dane Counties don't have any pull beyond their borders.
Posted by: Donna and V. (no ampersand) at April 01, 2014 08:06 PM (R3gO3)
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Posted by: Dr Spank at April 01, 2014 02:58 PM (5UteM)