One Wisconsin Now Blog

June 2009 Archives

...by proposing the same failed Bush policies that ran our economy into the ground in the first place.

The MacIver Institute of Public Policy's criticism of the recently passed budget reads like a loving tribute to the past 8 years of failed Bush fiscal policy. Their only solution to the record $6.6 billion budget deficit: tax cuts for the rich. Followed by more tax cuts to the rich, followed by cuts to education and vital social services, followed by massive failures of our aging infrastructure, followed by more tax cuts to the rich, followed by running up the deficit to pay for bridges to nowhere and other Republican pork.

And then more tax cuts for the rich.

So um, do they just not get that these policies failed so terribly as to put our country in the worst recession since the Great Depression? (Maybe the staff over there ought to re-enroll in Economics 101? I can recommend a good professor...)

Or do they just not care? Anything to protect their wealthy cronies, apparently.

Legislative Republicans AWOL on state budget fix

To dig us out of the historic economic crisis in Wisconsin, caused by disastrous policies of the Bush administration, our state legislators needed to come together.

The massive $6.6 billion deficit we face, much like 47 other states, requires not only sacrifice, but also common sense and fairness.

Democrats, who control both chambers of the state legislature and the governor's office for the first time in a generation, worked to cut spending, protect our most important priorities and prevent across-the-board increases in income or sales taxes.
Since Scott Walker is proudly bringing serial hypocrite and philandering staff seducer Newt Gingrich to Wisconsin to hold a fundraiser tonight for his gubernatorial campaign, one can reasonably assume Walker doesn’t have a problem with the controversies, scandals, darkness and downright evil in Newt’s muppet-thoated past.

There was the whole thing where “family values” Newt visited his first of three wives in the hospital while she recovered from a third cancer surgery, only to pressure her into finalizing their divorce.
Earlier this week, Paul Ryan went on the teevee to fondly recall voting to give $700 billion to banksters in the financial industry and then trash the idea of giving any such help to GM and the auto industry.

Stop me if you heard this one before.

Fox News "accidententally" identified known-Argentian-loverboy Mark Sanford (R-Governor, South Carolina) as a Democrat today. Here's a screen capture (via HuffingtonPost):

Just an honest mistake the news network that slobbered all over the disastrous Bush administration would whoops mis-label Sanford as a D-sinner?

Not quite. Here's another screen capture of known-underage-boy-seducer former Congress Creep Mark Foley (R-Florida) also from the Huffington Post:

But wait there's even more. 

Why Do the No-Budget GOPers Get to Complain Now?

The legislative Republicans said it as early as 2008 -- the state budget is the Democrats' problem. Assembly Minority Leader Jeff Fitzgerald said it. He was quoted saying it.

"I don't have to solve that problem," he said. "Obviously, that's the Democrats' problem."

At no point during the last six months did Fitzgerald nor his more shrill older brother, Senate Minority Leader Scott Fitzgerald offer a budget plan that closes the state's $6.6 billion budget deficit -- caused by the failed economic policies George W. Bush.

'All we are saying is give nukes a chance'

Apologies to John Lennon. But that refrain was in my brain after reading Tom Still's plea that Wisconsin consider nuclear power. "What do we have to lose?" he asks. (More on that later)

Still, president of something called the Wisconsin Technology Council, thinks it's a crying shame that Wisconsin has a moratorium law on the books that won't allow the state to even consider nuclear power as an option.

It will come as a surprise to many -- but not, I suspect, to Tom Still -- to learn that there is no nuclear "moratorium" in effect that bans more nuclear power plants in the state.

What is on the books is a perfectly reasonable law that says if you want to build a new reactor here, there are two requirements that must be met first:

(1) There must be a federal site to dispose of the dangerous, high level radioactive waste the reactors produce, and

(2) The Public Service Commission must find that nuclear power makes economic sense.

That's no ban or moratorium. It merely sets some reasonable requirements. But since the law was passed in 1984 the nuclear industry has not been able to meet those tests. So now it wants to relax the law.

It has been more than 50 years since the US began generating nuclear power -- and nuclear waste. Fifty years and still no way to dispose of the deadly end products, which the Environmental Protection Agency says must be kept away from humans for up to a million years.

If, as the industry would have us believe, a solution is just around the corner, what's wrong with waiting until we turn that corner?

Says Still:

Lifting the moratorium doesn’t mean Wisconsin will be build a new plant tomorrow. But it does mean the state can be ready for the inevitable day that science produces a cleaner, safer and more efficient reactor.
Well, why don't we just wait until that day comes?

In the meantime, just last week a new study found that it would cost taxpayers and ratepayers about $2- to $4-trillion more over the life of 100 new nuclear reactors than it would to generate the same electricity from a combination of more energy efficiency and renewables.

Available renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies are faster, cheaper, safer and cleaner strategies for reducing greenhouse emissions than nuclear power.

If you agree, please sign our online petition here to keep Wisconsin's sensible laws on the books.

Just a few choice selections from twitter about adulterer & former "rising star" GOP Governor Mark Sanford:

The Pro-Family Values Party: Larry Craig, Mark Foley, David Vitter, John Ensign, and now SC Gov. Mark Sanford. (progressflorida)

It's interesting to discover that the governor who didn't want stimulus funds was getting stimulated elsewhere! (robschendel)

Gov. Sanford: "marriage should only be between a man, a woman, and another woman from Argentina." (walterolson)

So, does a career go down the toilet the other direction in Argentina? (socratic)

1999: Sanford votes to BAN gay adoption 2009: Sanford, a father of 4 sons, spends father's day with his mistres. (progressflorida)

At least Gov Sanford's foreign policy isn't suffering... (rodrigoduarte)

Couldn't have said it better myself. The "family values" party disintegrating before our very eyes. 

On today's CNBC "Corporate-Funded-Politicians-Share-Corporate-Talking-Points" Squawk Box Show, Rep. Paul Ryan unsurprisingly showed up to try and convince the 72 percent of Americans who want health care not controlled by Ryan's pals in big insurance that they are wrong. Oh, and that the status quo is just ducky.

 

Can We Tax Lame Legislative Metaphors?

Angry Joel Kleefisch wanted to be heard today. Oconomowoc's GOP state rep took to the floor to protest what he considered, a lack of consideration given to members of the minority party.

 

Vukmir: Let's Trust the Polluters to Not Pollute

When she's not desperately trying to prevent the people of Wisconsin from having access to the same health care we pay to allow her to have, Wisconsin's Michelle-Bachmann-in-training, GOP Rep. Leah Vukmir takes every opportunity to suck up to big business and industry, particularly polluters.

During today's debate and passage on AB 281 to restrict the amount of phosphorus in certain cleaning products Vukmir hopped to it to try and push off the effective date for five years.

Her rationale is that we should trust the polluting chemical industries who say they're going to develop more environmental-friendly cleaning products. Good point, the polluters are always good for their word.

Vukmir's nonsense was ignored. Thankfully.
So this weekend GOP Rep. Paul Ryan was on Fox News Sunday to chitchat with Chris Wallace. Among the issues discussed was Ryan’s support for TARP dollars to financial institutions but not for stimulus dollars to keep jobs in the auto industry.

In another sign that we desperately need to break the pharmaceutical industry's grip on our broken health care system, the Journal Sentinel reports again on UW doctors receiving big payouts, as much as 6 figures, from drug and medical device companies, presumably to promote their products.

On Friday OWN executive director Scot Ross had the opportunity to be on WPR's The Week in Review facing former GOP Lt. Governor Margaret Farrow. Among the topics was our nation's health care system. During the debate on public health care, Farrow made the outrageous claim that the reason young adults can't afford health care is because they choose to drive more expensive cars. You can listen to Scot's rebuttal and and the rest of the debate here.

With Walker, truth stranger than fiction

When I asked last week whether AirTran would get naming rights for the Scott Walker for Governor Harley ride, in return for its corporate sponsorship, I thought I was being facetious.

Sometimes a person's imagination doesn't stretch far enough. The Journal Sentinel reports:

For this year's trip, AirTran will pick up the estimated $2,800 gas, hotel and meal tab. In exchange, the AirTran logo will be prominent on flags that can be mounted on participants' motorcycles, signs on support vehicles and on the headscarves some cyclists wear.

And you know what? The odds are overwhelming that the Milwaukee County Ethics Board, which has always rubber-stamped whatever Walker did, will say that's just fine.

This is my favorite part of the story, though:

He'll strictly avoid any talk about the governor's race or politics during the dozens of news interviews his staff has arranged for him on the trip, Walker said.

If there is one story that does not mention he's running for governor, I'll be anxious to see it.

What a load of crappity crap, crap, as that old poophead Charlie Sykes would say.

GOP corporate shill Samuel Wurzelbacher is coming back to Wisconsin courtesy of ethically-challenged Mark Block and the Americans for Petroleum.

We'll have to see if Wurzelbacher displays his legendary lack of knowledge about critical issues, such as the Employee Free Choice Act, seen here courtesy of Pennsylvania's Keystone Progress.

Pancakes and more for Moratorium weekend

It is Iraq Moratorium weekend again, Friday-Sunday, with lots of Wisconsin events to call for an end to the wars and occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.   I'll be at the Midwest Renewable Energy Fair in Custer Friday morning for Pancakes for Peace, sponsored by the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice (WNPJ), of which I am co-chair.  Join us if you can.  Info at www.wnpj.org 

If you can't eat pancakes for peace, there are plenty of other activities in Wisconsin this weekend.  Here's a list.  http://iraqmoratoriumwis.blogspot.com


 

Walker lies.

No amount of spin can get Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker out of the glaring lie he included in a fundraising letter sent out as a 2010 Republican gubernatorial candidate.

One more reason we don't need more nukes in Wisconsin

To the list of safety, environmental, and economic concerns about nuclear power, add another: Utilities do not have enough money set aside to decommission existing nuclear reactors when they are shut down, the Associated Press reports.

The nuclear reactors themselves become huge mountains of radioactive waste when they are shut down, and need to be disposed of.  But no storage site exists to accept the waste, so the reactor on the Mississippi at Genoa, WI, which stopped operating in 1987, is still there, awaiting decommissioning.

 Point Beach has only about half of the estimated $684-million it will need for decommissioning, and the Kewaunee reactor is somewhat close to having enough money set aside if estimates of $359-million are correct, the Wisconsin State Journal reports.

Help stop a current effort to open the door to more nuclear reactors in Wisconsin. Learn more and sign an online petition here.

As One Wisconsin Now showed at our comprehensive warehouse of information at WMCWatch.org, Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce has an ungodly lock on conservatives in the state legislature. In the 2005-2006 session, the legislature had 76 members (or 57.5%) score 80 percent or higher on the WMC scorecard. This included 19 legislators who never veered from the WMC pro-corporate agenda, scoring 100 percent.

Last session it was even more appalling. More than half of the then-GOP caucus, 28 members, had a 100 percent fealty to WMC.Over half -- 52 members of the the state Assembly scored 90 percent or higher. This included every single Republican member of the state Assembly (Note: Mark Gundrum was only there for one vote and Roger Roth only there for five, but both went 100 percent for WMC's anti-working family agenda. Note II: Jeff Wood, started, but did not end the session as a Republican.)

In the state Senate, 12 Senators -- all Republicans -- scored 85 percent or higher. The exceptions: Mike Ellis at 78 percent, Dan kapanke at 76 percent and Carol Roessler who retired and wasn't listed by WMC.

The final tally: Of 66 legislative Republicans, 32 had 100 percent, one under half. Wow.
A year ago the Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance tried to convince the media and its audience that there was no looming budget deficit in Wisconsin and thus no need to close corporate loopholes or raise taxes on the top one percent. And since May of this year—after official reports pegged the deficit at $6.6 billion—WISTAX has remained silent on their glaring error. But today, just in time for the budget to hit the Senate floor, the conservative-leaning, pro-corporate group finally came out of hiding.

Policy initiatives 140 characters at a time

Gov wannabe Scott Walker thinks big and small at the same time, it appears.

He  is taking major policy positions on Twitter, which limits users to 140 characters per message.

So far, he's proposed eliminating taxes on retirement income and requiring voters to approve all tax increases.  That's pretty much those two proposals in their entirety, Harris Kane notes.

Any chance some enterprising reporter will ask him what he's talking about, how much it would cost, and how he psoposes to pay for it?

When pigs fly.

The third substitute amendment (AA3) written by the conservative bunch
in the Assembly today seeks to tear up the “Truth in Auto Insurance”
provisions of the state budget that would protect auto insurance
consumers
in Wisconsin.

Amazingly, the amendment to destroy the provision was authored by John
Nygren (R-Marinette), an insurance agent and owner of Great Lakes
Insurance and Finance
. Nygren has also taken thousands of dollars from
insurance industry folks.
Are you kidding me?

After months of complaining about Democratic efforts to get out of the ginormous deficit caused by the economic collapse brought to our fine state by the incompetence and corruption of George W. Bush, Assembly Republicans have outdone themselves. And they haven't even started yet.

Looking at the first two amendments to the state budget offered by the minority caucus, they seek to spend the same money twice.

Even I have trouble believing this one and in my mind there is no bottom to Scott Walker's unending tolerance for hypocrisy, opportunism and sleaze.

Milwaukee's County Executive is threatening 310 immediate union layoffs for Milwaukee County workers.

He's starved vital government services to make political points with the ultra-right Republican base.

And he continues to claim "I don't raise taxes" while hiking fees for public services, such as those for infants using public wading pools.

Watch Here for Today's Budget News, Updates

Keep an eye on the the One Wisconsin Now Town Hall blog for news and information and interesting tidbits from today's budget marathon debate in the state Assembly.

So far, Assembly Republicans have spent their time without a budget plan, tilting against windmills in some desperate attempt to convince the media and the people of Wisconsin that increasing income taxes on the top 1 percent of our most fortunate income earners (those individuals making more than $225,000 a year and couples making more than $300,000) somehow hurts the rest of us.
Energy independence, green economy, green collar jobs -- the keys to our economic recovery and our national security. The new economy that will rise from the ashes of the de-regulated mess left by the Bush administration will be led new green manufacturers based in the US, employing American workers and developing green technologies. President Obama made it clear a new, green economy is one of his top priorities with the influx of stimulus cash for state projects with an emphasis on energy efficiency.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that Wisconsin Justices Annette Ziegler and Michael Gableman must disqualify themselves from hearing any cases involving Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce.

That is an oversimplification, but not by much. Here is how the NY Times summarized the decision in a front page story today:

Elected judges must disqualify themselves from cases involving people who spent exceptionally large sums to put them on the bench, the Supreme Court ruled on Monday in a 5-to-4 decision.

 

 The decision, the first to say the Constitution’s due process clause has a role to play in policing the role of money in judicial elections, ordered the chief justice of the West Virginia Supreme Court to recuse himself from a $50 million case against a coal company whose chief executive had spent $3 million to elect him.

The facts of the case are strikingly similar to what has happened in Wisconsin in the last three years. Here, WMC spent more than $2-million in 2007 to elect Ziegler to the State Supreme Court, and did the same in 2008 to elect Gableman.

 

Ziegler, who had a track record of ignoring conflicts of interest as a circuit judge, ignored calls to recuse herself from a case which WMC called a top priority, involving the Menasha Corp. and the question of whether corporations must pay sales tax on customized software.

Ziegler not only participated and cast the deciding vote in the 4-3 decision, but wrote the opinion -- worth an estimated $350-million to WMC, which filed an amicus brief in the case, and its members. Not a bad return on a $2-million investment.

As an aside, the lawyer who could have asked Ziegler to recuse herself from the case was Atty. Gen.J. B. Van Hollen. But WMC spent $2.5-million to get Van Hollen elected, so he didn't make a peep.

There's another case, Virnich and Moores, in which a decision is expected soon, described as "a case that could rewrite corporate law in Wisconsin."

At issue is whether business owners can enrich themselves at the expense of others, including workers and creditors, who have a stake in the business. In plain language, it's whether they can pocket all the money personally, see the business fail, and screw everyone else out of what is due them.

WMC filed a brief favoring the business owners at the appeals court stage, but has been quiet at the Supreme Court level so as not to remind people of the huge conflict Ziegler and Gableman ignored when they participated in hearing oral arguments in January, despite an effort to get them to recuse themselves.

Despite its obvious application to Wisconsin, the U.S. Supreme Court decision got scant notice in the state's press. The Journal Sentinel offered a story that mentioned Ziegler and the Menasha case, and said the state court is considering some new rules, but not much more, and nothing on the pending Virnich and Moores case.

Meanwhile, WisPolitics includes this:

Attorney Mike Wittenwyler, who closely follows election and campaign laws, said the federal ruling will give new ammunition to parties before the state Supreme Court seeking to force a justice off a case. But the difficulty could be finding an example as extreme as the West Virginia case in which one person spent $3 million on a campaign.

 

Wittenwyler also noted Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the minority in the 5-4 decision, listed 40 questions he would raise in developing a standard for recusal, all factors that the state justices will have to consider as they ponder developing regulations for state courts.

To say that Wittenwyler "follows election and campaign laws" is like saying that Rahm Emmanuel follows politics. Wittenwyler is a specialist in campaign finance law who represents a broad spectrum of clients -- including WMC, whom he should have billed for that quote.

Hard to find an example as extreme as the West Virginia case where someone spent $3-million to elect a supreme court justice? Anyone who closely follows elections and campaign laws should be able to cite a couple of examples in Wisconsin. Wittenwyler must be laughing all the way to the bank.

As to the 40 questions Justice Roberts posed, the key word is "minority." His questions, which got a mention in the 24th paragraph of the NY Times story, are hardly the issue.

You don't need to be a lawyer or a judge to understand that WMC may have wasted more than $4-million to elect two justices who won't be able to repay the favor by ruling on their cases. Of course, there's already that $350-million from the Menasha case, so maybe the investment has already paid for itself.

If this decision doesn't produce some tough, clear rules about when Wisconsin judges must disqualify themselves, there can be no acceptable excuse.

Limbaugh's pack eats its own, again

Robert Mentzer of the Wausau Daily Herald reported today that a Republican Party of Marathon County spokesperson has been stripped of his duties for criticizing the colossal conservative mouthpiece Rush Limbaugh.
Wisconsin Attorney General JB Van Hollen is sobbing because his department was subject to some of the same agency cuts necessary to balance the state's budget in light of the $6.6 billion deficit caused by the failed Bush administration which caused nationwide economic collapse.

Before anyone huffs that depriving Van Hollen of every dime he demands is going to impede crime fighting in Wisconsin, let's remember Van Hollen devoted countless resources to the partisan lawsuit last year to disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of voters after being giving marching orders to do so in his role as the state co-chair of failed GOP presidential candidate John McCain.
A story in the Journal Sentinel this morning might as well been a press release from the garbage lobby: “Plan would make Wisconsin's garbage fees highest in nation, group says.” Wow, that’s quite a claim! I wonder who this group is and why they care about Wisconsin?

Walker hypes jobs program he wanted dead

In the vein of his conservative, anti-government anything attitude, Scott Walker tried to veto $100,000 of the funding for a county parks jobs program put forth in a 2009 budget. Thankfully, the Milwaukee County Board overrode his veto.
Few are more vulnerable than children who by no fault of their own are placed in the child welfare system. Our state and state’s counties have a moral, if not sensible, obligation to ensure the safety and health of these children. But with Scott Walker at the helms in Milwaukee County, a new study shows the good people that care for these children are “overworked, under-trained and insufficiently supported.”