Archive

Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Walker reminds voters of union wins as he enters 2016 race | TribLIVE.com
Politics Election

Walker reminds voters of union wins as he enters 2016 race

The Associated Press
PTRWALKER16082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Jan Murphy (left), 68, of Appleton, WI and Ione Berg, 78, of Grand Chute, WI, listen to Gov. Scott Walker talk to supporters and campaign volunteers at the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. 'I've been supporting him since '05,' said Outagamie County GOP Chairman Barbara Bieber, 72, of Appleton, WI. 'I think he's honest and he truly cares about what he's doing. They have scrutinized that guy and they can't find anything. He's just an honest person.'
ptrwalker0824141
Carolyn Kaster/AP
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker
PTRWALKER9082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
A woman carries flowers from the farmers market in front of the Wisconsin State Capitol building in Madison, WI early Saturday morning, Aug. 16, 2014. Though Walker has support among conservatives in rural areas, it’s hard to find backers in Madison or Milwaukee. Where food tents and farm stands pop up weekly now around the capitol sidewalks, groups of protesters once stood early in Walker’s tenure. They marched against his “budget repair bill” — Act 10 of 2011 — which restricted the power of public-employee unions to bargain collectively.
PTRWALKER10082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
HyPro Inc. team members listen to Gov. Scott Walker speak on the company's manufacturing plant floor in Platteville, Wis. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014. Co-owner of HyPro Inc. Mark Schildt said Walker's policies have encouraged investment in the state, 'breaking down some of the roadblocks' business owners faced. 'Now I'd say Wisconsin is open for business,' he said.
PTRWALKER2082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker answers questions from the media after visiting the factory floor of HyPro Inc. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014.
PTRWALKER6082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
'We Stand With Scott Walker.' A campaign sign sits by a crock pot of food for Walker campaign volunteers and supporters at the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. “For over a year, I’ve been telling folks this was going to be a close race,” Walker told volunteers of his race for the governorship against Democratic opponent Mary Burke. In this divided state, he said, “Any reliable Democrat would immediately hold 47 percent of the vote.”
PTRWALKER5082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Gov. Scott Walker puts his arm around a team member at HyPro Inc. after touring the factory and speaking on the company's manufacturing plant floor in Platteville, Wis. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014.
PTRWALKER11082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Campaign volunteer Rachel Olson, 21, stands with her copy of Gov. Scott Walker's book at the Jefferson County Republican Party field office in her town of Fond du Lac, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. 'I only date Republicans,' reads the sticker on the back of her pink phone case. 'I think in the long run he did what was best for the state,' she said of Walker's history as governor. 'He actually got my first ever vote in 2010.'
PTRWALKER4082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
HyPro Inc. team members listen to Gov. Scott Walker speak on the company's manufacturing plant floor in Platteville, WI on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014. “Part of our message is, ‘We are the ones that want to help you get what you want.’ We want to get government out of the way, the bureaucracy out of the way. (Democrats) are the ones who’d want to regulate you, stifle you,” said Walker.
PTRWALKER13082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker tours Davy Engineering Company Inc. in La Crosse, WI during a day of campaign stops on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014. “We did do bold, positive things that are working in Wisconsin, so people are taking note of that,” Walker told the Tribune-Review in an interview during three days of campaigning.
PTRWALKER15082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
'On Wisconsin!' Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker signed a photo of himself for employees at Davy Engineering Company Inc. in La Crosse, WI during a day of campaign stops on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014.
PTRWALKER12082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Jan Murphy (left), 68, of Appleton, WI and Ione Berg, 78, of Grand Chute, WI, listen to Gov. Scott Walker talk to supporters and campaign volunteers at the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. Murphy stressed that she was supporting Walker for another term because she did not want to see Wisconsin slide back into the financial hole that Walker brought the state out of.
GOP2016WalkerJPEG09503
In this June 27, 2015, file photo, Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker speaks at the Western Conservative Summit, hosted by the Centennial Institute, Colorado Christian University's think tank, in Denver.
PTRWALKER1082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker stands for a portrait in the back room of the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. In the third race for his seat in four years, the 46-year-old reformist governor intrigues many in the GOP after winning a fierce, 20-month battle with public-sector unions and a subsequent recall election.
PTRWALKER8082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Volunteer Tony Wettstein (left), 34, of Neenah, WI sits at an information table outside of the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI as community captain Paul Kempen carries a Scott Walker campaign sign to his car on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. Kempen is one of 228 community captains out of the Outagamie office in charge of organizing to knock on doors for Gov. Scott Walker's campaign.
PTRWALKER3082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
'We Stand With Scott Walker.' Campaign signs hang from the parking lot of the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014. A minister’s son, Walker had an all-American upbringing: involved in sports, band, church, and an Eagle Scout.
PTRWALKER7082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
'End Common Core' is written on the collar of Julian Vajda (right), 6, of Appleton, WI as he stands with Austin Faeth (left), 8, of Greenville, WI at the Outagamie County Republican Party field office in Appleton, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014.
ptrWalker082414
Mary Burke, the Democratic nominee for governor in Wisconsin and a Madison County School Board member, talks with voters in downtown Madison during Concerts on the Square on Wednesday, July 9. Burke is a former Trek Bicycle Inc. executive.
PTRWALKER14082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Kasidi Schaff (left), 5, of Fond du Lac, Wis. holds her doll 'Ruby' as Gov. Scott Walker shakes hands with her father, welder Scott Schaff, at the Jefferson County Republican Party field office in Fond du Lac, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014.
PTRWALKER2082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker answers questions from the media after visiting the factory floor of HyPro Inc. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014.
PTRWALKER10082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
HyPro Inc. team members listen to Gov. Scott Walker speak on the company's manufacturing plant floor in Platteville, Wis. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014. Co-owner of HyPro Inc. Mark Schildt said Walker's policies have encouraged investment in the state, 'breaking down some of the roadblocks' business owners faced. 'Now I'd say Wisconsin is open for business,' he said.
PTRWALKER5082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Gov. Scott Walker puts his arm around a team member at HyPro Inc. after touring the factory and speaking on the company's manufacturing plant floor in Platteville, Wis. on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014.
PTRWALKER14082414
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media
Kasidi Schaff (left), 5, of Fond du Lac, Wis. holds her doll 'Ruby' as Gov. Scott Walker shakes hands with her father, welder Scott Schaff, at the Jefferson County Republican Party field office in Fond du Lac, WI on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014.

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker announced on social media Monday morning that he's running for president, tweeting “I'm in.”

Walker, a Republican who built a national profile largely due to his clashes with labor unions, also released a campaign video at the same time declaring his entry in the race.

The video is heavy on images of Walker speaking to a crowd in an Iowa cornfield, as well as his 2010 battle with unions. The video includes Walker speaking directly to the camera touting his willingness to take on big fights.

“We didn't nibble around the edges,” he says.

Walker has a national profile largely due to his clashes with labor unions.

He enacted policies weakening their political power and became the first governor in U.S. history to defeat a recall election. Now, on the eve of his campaign launch, Walker's task is to remind Republican voters about the four-year-old fight and the recall election sparked by his efforts to weaken unions — and a series of lesser-known triumphs he says set him apart from the crowded Republican field.

“If you could accomplish half of what he's done in Wisconsin in Washington, D.C., you would go down as one of the greatest presidents ever,” said Walker's top political adviser Rick Wiley.

Walker cut income and corporate taxes by nearly $2 billion, lowered property taxes, legalized the carrying of concealed weapons, made abortions more difficult to obtain, required photo identification when voting and made Wisconsin a right-to-work state.

His budget this year, which plugged a $2.2 billion shortfall when he signed it into law Sunday, requires drug screenings for public benefit recipients, expands the private school voucher program, freezes tuition at the University of Wisconsin while cutting funding by $250 million and removing tenure protections from state law.

Such achievements may appeal to conservatives who hold outsized sway in Republican primaries, yet some could create challenges in a general election should Walker ultimately become the GOP's nominee. Voter ID laws, abortion restrictions, liberal gun policies and education cuts are not necessarily popular among swing-state independents.

“Ultimately Walker has to show all these victories and political successes have shown real results,” said Democratic pollster Paul Maslin.

Walker's decision to run brings the number of GOP candidates to 15. Two more, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore, are expected to enter the race soon.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, also seeking the party's nomination, said Monday, “Scott's a friend, and just because we're going to be running against each other doesn't mean we aren't going to be friends before and friends after.”

Walker's record is well-known to Wisconsin voters, a state where the second-term governor engenders fierce loyalty and fierce opposition. Protesters who first crowded the state Capitol in 2011 in demonstrations as large as 100,000 still gather daily, although only about a dozen or so at a time, to sing anti-Walker songs.

Anger over Walker's 2011 union law led to the failed 2012 recall. His team created a video this week, called “Recall the Recalls,” to tell that story again, especially for those who are taking their first serious look at Walker as a presidential candidate.

And while he's not yet a presidential candidate in the eyes of the law, the labor dispute helped give him a significant head start in the 2016 money race.

Walker's three governor's races left him with a far-reaching donor database of more than 300,000 names. He shattered state fundraising records, collecting $83 million for his three Wisconsin elections, much of it coming from outside the state.

He begins his 2016 presidential bid with at least $20 million to spread his message, raised by two outside groups not subject to campaign finance donation limits, according to sources with direct knowledge of the fundraising operation. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to publicly discuss private fundraising strategy.

Walker's union clashes will be featured prominently on the day of his announcement, to be held in the same convention hall where he hosted his victory party after the recall election.

“A lot of people, that was their first introduction to Walker,” Wiley said, calling the union battle and subsequent recall win “one of our biggest assets.”

Yet the specific impact of Walker's fight with labor unions is open to debate.

The governor often highlights rising test scores and graduation rates as evidence that the 2011 union law worked. What he doesn't mention is Wisconsin's graduation rates were increasing for years before he took office, and the recent growth is not as strong as the national average. Wisconsin's ACT scores have been among the best in the nation since before Walker was elected. They ranked third the year before he took office and ranked second in 2012.

Walker also talks about how the 2011 union law saved taxpayers $3 billion as of late 2014, saying state and local governments have used “tools” he provided them to reduce spending on pensions and health benefits for public employees.

While it's true that the state and local governments have saved roughly that amount, the costs have been shifted to the employees who have to pay more for those benefits.

Critics note that Walker too often ignores where he's fallen short.

The state's chief economic development agency that Walker created, a hybrid public-private partnership, has been beset with problems, including handing out $124 million in loans without properly vetting the recipients. Walker was over 100,000 jobs short on his signature 2010 campaign promise to create 250,000 private-sector jobs. Wisconsin's job growth has lagged not only the national average but its Midwest neighbors as well.

He's also been dogged by two investigations, neither of which have yet to result in charges filed against him. The first resulted in a variety of criminal convictions, including misconduct in office, against six of his former aides and associates when he was Milwaukee County executive.

The second investigation, currently on hold while the state Supreme Court considers a trio of lawsuits, centers on whether Walker's recall campaign illegally coordinated with independent groups.

Christie appeared on Fox News Channel's “Fox & Friends.”