Edmonton Journal

Wisconsin governor faces rare recall vote

- LEE- ANNE GOODMAN

WASHINGTON – For only the third time in American history, a state governor is facing the humiliatin­g prospect of getting tossed from office on Tuesday as the result of a recall election.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is hoping to avoid the fate that befell the governors of California and North Dakota, who went down in defeat in 2003 and 1921, respective­ly. Instead, Walker is battling to hold onto power in a state bitterly divided by his brand of austerity politics.

It’s an election many consider a harbinger of November’s faceoff between U.S. President Barack Obama and his Republican rival, Mitt Romney. Indeed, the economic arguments between Walker and his opponent, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, are certainly similar to the skirmishes now erupting routinely between the Obama and Romney campaigns.

“I have a plan to get this state going and create jobs,” Barrett told Milwaukee’s CBS affiliate on Monday amid 11th-hour polls that suggest he’s now in a neck-and-neck race against the governor. “His philosophy is: ‘Let’s give the corporatio­ns money’ ... but his reforms aren’t working.”

Walker, meantime, insisted he will prevail on Tuesday. “I’m not letting up until eight o’clock tomorrow night; there’s a lot of voters to get to, a lot of people to get the message out to,” he said.

The Wisconsin showdown has also served as yet another vivid illustrati­on of the extreme polarizati­on of the American electorate, with the state’s voters split almost perfectly down the middle over their love — or loathing — of Walker’s cost-cutting policies.

Shortly after Walker’s election in November 2010, he landed himself in hot water for his plans to strip collective-bargaining rights from most public employee unions as well as rolling back tax credits and other benefits for the poor in an effort to slash the state budget.

The proposed measures infuriated Democrats and unions, who viewed them as an assault on organized labour that reflected an emerging trend across the country.

Indeed, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics suggest the rate of American union membership fell to a record low in 2011, with collective-bargaining units representi­ng only 6.9 per cent of employees in non-government jobs. That’s down from 7.2 per cent in 2009.

In the wake of Walker’s austerity measures, nearly a million signatures were amassed on petitions against him, ultimately forcing the recall election. Tens of thousands of people turned out to protest outside the state legislativ­e buildings in Madison, but the bill became law nonetheles­s.

Yet the law’s passage hardly eased Walker’s woes. His job now on the line, polls suggest the race has tightened against Barrett, the Democrat he defeated in the November 2010 midterm elections.

Even if Walker survives the battle, there are others on the recall ballot whose fortunes could have a significan­t impact on Wisconsin politics in the months ahead. Republican Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch is squaring off against Democrat Mahlon Mitchell, and four Republican state senate seats are also up for grabs.

If Democrats win even one of those seats, they’ll have a majority in the Senate for the first time since 2010 — and the power to rein in Walker’s legislativ­e agenda.

With so much at stake, many have wondered — including Walker himself — why Obama steered clear of campaignin­g with Barrett in Wisconsin.

“It’s kind of confusing, I think, to voters here, because they wonder: ‘Why won’t you come in?’ ” Walker said on Fox News, pointing out that Obama recently campaigned in the nearby states of Illinois and Minnesota but skipped Wisconsin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada