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deminks

(11,018 posts)
Thu Aug 28, 2014, 10:05 AM Aug 2014

The end of the Scott Walker experiment?

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-end-of-the-scott-walker-experiment/

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker may survive, but the Walker Hypothesis seems dead. In a poll released by Marquette University Law School on Wednesday, Walker's Democratic challenger, Mary Burke, has her biggest lead among likely voters, 49 percent to 47 percent. In May Burke trailed Walker 48-45, but pulled ahead by one point (47-46) in July. Walker's recent attempts to define Burke, including the risky attack on the practices of her family company, haven't appeared to work.

As I wrote earlier this month, the Wisconsin governor's race touches a lot of national themes. On the Democratic side, it is a test of the strength of union forces that have branded Walker enemy No. 1 and a test of how effectively a candidate can be attacked for those who back him. (Walker has been supported by the Koch brothers.) But the biggest national test taking place in Wisconsin is a test of the Walker Hypothesis, which held that a politician who enacted conservative policies and didn't shrink from the resulting controversy would be rewarded by a wide range of voters--conservatives, but also swing voters. It was a model that conservatives offered not just for other GOP governors, but for the party's presidential candidates.

With each new poll showing a close race, that hypothesis grows weaker. Walker may win (he's ahead by three points with registered voters, he's an incumbent, has lots of money and is a fierce competitor) but the polls seem pretty conclusive that it will only be through a grinding and close political battle where he relies deeply on his base. That's not how the hypothesis was supposed to work. "Results trump everything else," Walker told National Review last November. "If you deliver, voters will stick with you," he said during his book tour as he explained how he could capture a wide group of voters in a battleground state.

(snip)

Because Walker is so very well known in the state--only 4 percent of voters do not have an opinion of him--and opinions about him are less likely to change than about his opponent, that put an even greater emphasis on defining Burke. In July Burke had a 26 percent favorable and 24 percent unfavorable rating. Now those numbers are 33 percent favorable and 32 percent unfavorable. Walker's hope was that the more people got to know Burke the less they would like her. That hasn't happened yet either.

(end snip)

Same thing happening to the Kochs other paid lackey governor, Brownback. Christ Christie, another Koch addicted governor, isn't exactly having a grand ole time, either. Money can't buy you love?
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The end of the Scott Walker experiment? (Original Post) deminks Aug 2014 OP
He could go back to selling warranties for IBM (now Lenovo). Half-Century Man Aug 2014 #1

Half-Century Man

(5,279 posts)
1. He could go back to selling warranties for IBM (now Lenovo).
Thu Aug 28, 2014, 10:23 AM
Aug 2014

If he loses, his billionaire support mechanism collapses, resulting in a far greater likelihood of standing trial for corruption. A lot of out-of-state people and organizations are connected to Scotty (who, rumor has it, was already set to go states evidence until a WSJ article warned him off). Some very predatory people stand to lose more that just money.

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