While it’s only been a few days since Scott Walker
“survived” his brush with political oblivion, after reading the various takes
on what happened and why, I thought I’d chime in with my own two and a half
cents worth.
What happened in Wisconsin can be attributed to two factors:
money and incompetence. Regarding the
former, Walker outspent his opponent by a seven to one margin thanks not only
to the Citizens United ruling but also to a rather quirky state law passed in
1987 that exempts incumbents facing recall from the typical contribution limits
of a challenger. In other words,
Walker’s contributors could donate any amount they wanted while Barrett’s
contributors were limited to a maximum donation of $10,000. Anybody want to take a stab at how many FOW’s
(Friends of Walker) had more than $10,000 just lying around? A hell of lot more than Tom Barrett would’ve
had that’s for sure.
But if money played a huge role here, it was not the
decisive reason for Walker’s win. For
one thing, exit polls indicated that a majority of voters who voted in the
election said they were likely to vote for the President in November, including
18% of those who supported the Governor.
If this was a mandate for Walker, I’m sorry, I missed it.
So if it wasn’t a mandate, then what the hell was it? In short, it was a referendum on the whole
idea of a recall. As strange as it may
sound, while a majority of voters did not favor the tactics that Walker used
against the unions, that wasn’t enough to convince them that he needed to be replaced,
especially by the guy who got his butt kicked by him in 2010. I don’t know what genius thought it was a
good idea to re-run Tom Barrett against Walker, but whoever it was needs to be
run out of town. The conventional wisdom
is that once you lose – and lose big
– you sit out the next election. Even
Nixon waited eight years before he ran for president again after losing to
Kennedy in 1960. Apparently the Barrett
campaign never got that memo.
But even before Barrett won the Democratic primary, it was clear
that the strategy was to make the recall about Walker versus the unions. Back in January, I expressed grave concerns
about such a strategy, believing that state Republicans would use it against
the Democrats. Evidently no one was
listening. Walker, in a classic
application of divide and conquer that would’ve made Marx grin, tapped into the
unrest of the electorate by reminding them of how privileged their union
counterparts were.
In a brilliant op-ed piece in The Huffington Post titled “Lessons Learned,” Jason Linkins nailed
it in one paragraph:
The real story here is that the strategy of
rechannelling all that post-crash, populist angst and anger away from the
malefactors of the financial crisis and directing it back at the larger,
middle-class community worked like a charm in Wisconsin. Scott Walker performed
to his patrons' expectations, successfully creating a zero-sum game in which
one group of have-nots was pitted against another group of have-nots. You can
distill Scott Walker's message down to this: “The reason you are suffering is
because your neighbor takes home a pension and a health benefit.”
The problem for the Democrats from day one was that, by
making it solely about the rights of the unions to collectively bargain, they ostensibly
opened the door for the GOP to rub it in the noses of the millions of
non-unionized workers who weren’t the favorite sons and daughters. The Democrats have their backs; we’ve got yours!
Of course, all that was bullshit. Unfortunately for Tom Barrett, when it comes
to building a narrative that resonates with voters – true or otherwise –
Republicans have it down to a science.
Just look at how deftly they redefined the whole healthcare debate into
a death panel canard. In a few short
months, they had a majority of voters convinced that the government was going
to euthanize their grandparents.
And now the party that lied through its teeth about
healthcare and painted union workers as leeches, is now in the process of undertaking
the endeavor of a lifetime: dressing up its national image so it can win a
general election. After a contentious
and embarrassing primary season in which the inmates had all but burned down
the asylum, Mitt Romney, the reluctant conservative, is now running neck and
neck with Obama in several key swing states.
Wisconsin hasn’t gone red since Reagan in ’84; but with a Walker win in
the recall election, expect the GOP to pour in tons of cash and force the
President to campaign hard to keep the state from tipping. Funds that will be badly needed in Ohio,
Florida and the mid-Atlantic states will have to be partially diverted to
protect what should never have been in jeopardy in the first place.
This is the price you pay when you don’t win on the state
level. The DNC and the Administration
were MIA throughout this whole process and they must share at least part of the
blame. Certainly the Citizens United
decision is also partly to blame. But
the reality is that blaming Citizens won’t get the job done in November. Like it or not, the nation is stuck with this
horrible decision. Democrats must make
the most of it by picking their fights more closely and then engaging
proactively in them. Whatever else you
might say about Republicans know this: when they see meat on the table, they
don’t leave it there.
Hunger can drive a person to do desperate things. It’s hard to believe that only three years
ago, political pundits were referring to the GOP as the next Whig Party, so out
of touch were they. Now the Republicans
are a little more than five months away from wielding complete power in
Washington. Crazy isn’t it how quickly things can turn on a dime. Yes, as Cyndi Lauper once sang, money does change
everything. But it’s not so much the
money as what you do with it that determines your fate.
The Republicans have been unrelenting and consistent with
their message ever since they got their asses kicked in ’08. With a fervor seldom seen even in
championship teams they have pursued the Democrats on every front and
capitalized on the opportunities afforded them brilliantly. They have been patient and diligent while their
counterparts have been dazed and confused.
If the Democrats do not regain their mojo and become as hungry as their
opponents they are in for some bitter times, not only this November but in
Novembers to come.
The economy is barely moving forward, Europe remains a mess
and last month’s campaign contributions showed Romney with more donations than
Obama. The scary thing in all this is
that June might be a harbinger of things to come. Obama will be hard-pressed to equal, much
less surpass, his ’08 total of $750 million in contributions for the simple
reason that most of his likely donors just don’t have the money they did four
years ago. His SuperPac will help, but
let’s face it: there are a lot more conservative millionaires and billionaires out
there than there are liberal ones.
Reality sure does suck sometimes. But crying over it won’t change a thing. When life deals you lemons, you make lemonade
out of them. What you don’t do is take
the lemons and go home.
Links: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/08/wisconsin-lessons_n_1581374.html
http://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/npr/154368815/in-fundraising-walker-had-a-governor-s-advantage
http://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/npr/154368815/in-fundraising-walker-had-a-governor-s-advantage
Links: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/08/wisconsin-lessons_n_1581374.html
http://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/npr/154368815/in-fundraising-walker-had-a-governor-s-advantage
http://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/npr/154368815/in-fundraising-walker-had-a-governor-s-advantage
Comments
Running Barrett was definitely a bad idea, but the whole situation was one that favored the Republicans anyway. If they tried to say "Walker is against the working man, union and non-union alike", he'd just deny it, because there was nothing concrete you could point to prove that.