It looks as if Governor Scott Walker will survive Tuesday’s recall vote. The Real Clear Politics
average of recent polls has him leading Milwaukee’s Democratic mayor
Tom Barrett by 6.6 points. As of late Sunday, the betting site Intrade
was predicting that Walker has a 94.5 percent chance of becoming the
victor. Even Ed Rendell, the former Pennsylvania governor and chairman
of the Democratic National Committee, is now saying the recall wasn’t
smart. “Don’t get an election that’s divisive, that may have an
influence on the presidential election,” he told MSNBC last week. “We
made a mistake doing that.”
If the recall fails, what will be the takeaways from the 17 months of
pitched war that Wisconsin has endured since Governor Walker proposed
his dramatic reforms of pensions and privileges in the state’s
public-sector unions?Expect the Left to Blame Obama
Maureen Dowd of the New York Times dismissed Obama on Sunday as someone who “prefers to float above, at a reserve, in grandiose mists.” When the likes of Dowd are no longer feeling the love, we shouldn’t be surprised that other Democrats are dumping on Obama for not showing up to help Barrett in Wisconsin. “Progressive Pundits Lay Groundwork to Blame Obama if Wisconsin Recall Fails” was the headline of a searing critique by Noah Rothman at Mediaite. He quoted Ed Schultz of MSNBC sarcastically noting that the president was in neighboring Iowa and Minnesota last week and that his campaign office is in nearby Chicago. “It’s all around, but is it in?” Schultz asked of the Obama campaign. “[Union members] want him on that line because he talked about being on that line with them back in 2007.” Schultz closed his plea for an Obama visit by saying it is the “job of a leader” to motivate his followers.
Read more: http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/301674/if-walker-wins-what-are-lessons-john-fund
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