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Scott Walker

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Got An Alternate Title for Gov. Scott Walker's New Book?

Gov. Scott Walker is coming out with a book that chronicles the controversy over his 2011 budget reforms. The book already has a title, but that didn't stop people from taking to Twitter with their own suggestions.

Gov. Scott Walker’s book, which will be titled “Unintimidated: A Governor’s Story and a Nation’s Challenge,” is set to hit the bookstores shelves sometime late in 2013. Sentinel imprint of Penguin Group announced Tuesday that it has acquired the rights to the book. The book chronicles Walker’s budget reforms in 2011, which sparked massive protests and counter protests. During the budget-making process, Walker sought to erase a $3.6 billion deficit by eliminating their ability to collectively bargain and asked unions to pay more for their insurance and pensions. At one point, almost 100,000 people protested Walker’s budget and a number of Democrats left the state to protest his proposal. "This book tells the dramatic story of how one brave …

Jenna

3:51 pm on Thursday, April 4, 2013

By 2014, WI will be in such a free fall from Walker's failed policies, people will do ANYTHING to get rid of him from office!   more ›

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Scott Walker for President in 2016?

With a couple of key moves in recent few days, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker sends clear signal that he is interested in making a presidential run.

Editor's note: This story was updated at 4:50 p.m. Saturday to include CPAC straw poll results. Coming off Mitt Romney's defeat in November, Republicans are looking for a strong candidate who will give the party a chance at taking back the White House in 2016. Could Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker be their man? Even before the November presidential election, there has been speculation that Walker — along with U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and others — would go after the GOP nomination in 2016. And in an interview with Politico on Friday, Walker did little to quell that speculation. “Would I ever be (interested)?" Walker told the political web site. "Possibly. I guess the only …

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morninmist

12:47 pm on Friday, April 5, 2013

On the road again-for fundraisers--- is his motto. @WiscJobsNow RT @MadPolitics: RT @sbauerAP: On the road again: Gov. Scott Walker headlining the Prescott Bush Awards Dinner in Connecticut on May 20   more ›

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Wisconsin Appeals Court Refuses to Put Act 10 Ruling on Hold

Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen had asked appeals court to stay a rule by a Dane County judge that said parts of the collective-bargaining law are unconstitutional.

A Wisconsin appeals court Tuesday refused to put a hold on a judge's decision repealing major parts of Act 10, the law that ended collective bargaining for most public workers. Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen in September had asked the 4th District Court of Appeals to stay the ruling by Dane County Circuit Judge Juan Colas that portions of the law were unconsitutional. Van Hollen wanted to stay the decision while the case was being appealed. Colas refused in October to do so, and the state appeals court on Tuesday upheld that decision, according to the Wisconsin State Journal. The appeals court said it saw "no basis to set aside the circuit court's decision that a stay was not warranted," the State Journal reported. Today’s ruling likely …

Fred Fischer

8:59 pm on Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Lots of emotions here. I would think there's more of an advantage to not collectively bargain. That way the best producers will be rewarded adequately and not be dragged down by the weak and/or lazy. Also, I don't think anyone should be forced to join a union.   more ›

Monday, March 4, 2013

State Assembly Republicans Eye Cutting Some Tax Credits

The days of claiming the alternative minimum tax credit, historic rehabilitation tax credit and the working family tax credit may be over as State Assembly Republicans look at possibly cutting them.

If you were among the 790 families that claimed the working family tax credit or the 418 who claimed the historic rehabilitation tax credit, the 2012 tax year may be your last to do so. State Assembly Republicans are talking about nixing 50 tax credit programs -- including the alternative minimum tax, working family tax credit and historic rehabilitation tax credit -- that don't get used much by Wisconsin income taxpayers. The manufacturer's tax credit would remain untouched. If a proposal passes into law, the legislation would ultimately lower the tax rate, according to a story by the Journal Sentinel. Rep. Dale Kooyenga (R-Brookfield) told the Journal Sentinel that he's trying to simplify the tax code because it is "horrendous" and …

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peter

6:25 pm on Tuesday, March 12, 2013

If anyone who claims to know God's intentions is a fraud, why do all the fascists go to church?   more ›

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Wisconsin Would See $27 Million in Cuts Under Sequester: White House

Report released Sunday by Obama administration details more than a dozen areas in which federal aid would be cut — primarily in education and health care.

Wisconsin would see more than $27 million in federal funds cut from a myriad of programs if Congress fails to act this week to avoid the sequester, the Obama administration said Sunday. In a move designed to pressure Republicans into accepting new revenues as part of a deal to prevent the sequester from taking effect on Friday, the White House released reports that outlined how those cuts would impact individual states, The Huffington Post reported. In Wisconsin, most of the $27.4 million in looming cuts would affect education programs, the report said. For example, the state would lose $8.5 million in funding for primary and secondary education, putting around 120 teacher and teacher aide jobs at risk. Wisconsin also would lose about $10.…

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morninmist

2:47 pm on Thursday, March 7, 2013

Sequestration Furlough Notices Go Out To Customs And Border Agents http://huff.to/13I9EKY via @HuffPostPol   more ›

Walker's Budget Address: What Did You Think?

Walker focused on job creation, mining, transforming education, and infrastructure, but what did you think of his speech? And if you missed it, we've got the whole transcript.

Kid Leashes, Destruction of American Families Among Hottest Blog Posts

From the benefits of minimum wage to the destruction of the American family, Patch bloggers weighed in on a variety of topics this week. Here is a look at some of the most popular posts over the past week.

The most popular blog posts in Wisconsin Patch sites this past week ran the gamut — from pro- and anti-Scott Walker pieces to children on leashes to destruction of American families.  Every day, Patch's Local Voices bloggers share information, insight and opinion about what matters to them. Here's a selection of blogs from throughout the past week. Although this post only had two sentences, it was enough to garner more than 120 comments. In, "Why Do We Have a Minimum Wage?" readers debated the importance of unions and the minimum wage system. Mount Pleasant blogger, Bottom Line, needed to only ask one question to get this conversation flowing:  Why do we have a minimum wage and how does it affect society? Greendale blogger J.B. Schmidt …

Lika Phipps

3:45 pm on Monday, February 25, 2013

Leave it to Bottom Line to ask such a hot topic question... Always rhetorical, and a question that may not have a right/wrong answer, depending on the angle it comes from. But, good question about minimum wage. My opinion? So we don't have slave wages. On the other hand, if minimum wage was supposed to be livable, it would depend on who you are. A single person needs a lot less than the chap …   more ›

Friday, February 22, 2013

Robin Vos: Speaker's Briefing about the Budget

Speaker Robin Vos, R-Burlington, is putting together a new video series, "Speaker's Briefing" to help keep residents updated on key happenings in Madison.

Speaker Robin Vos, R-Burlington, talks about key pieces of Gov. Scott Walker's budget address - including the expansion of school vouchers - in this first installment of "Speaker's Briefings," a new video series from the parlor in Madison.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Walker's Budget Address: What Did You Think?

Walker focused on job creation, mining, transforming education, and infrastructure, but what did you think of his speech? And if you missed it, we've got the whole transcript.

Gov. Scott Walker gave his budget address tonight at the state capitol, which focused on job creation, workforce development, transforming education, government reform and investing in infrastructure. He stressed the need for the passage of a mining bill, making Medicaid into more of a safety net, allocating more money for deer management, and tying K-12 school funding with their performance. Here are some of the highlights from Walker's speech: "Bottom line—I want more freedom and prosperity for all. Improving the economy is my number one priority.  Over the past two years, we lowered our overall tax burden, we streamlined the regulatory process—so what we do enforce is about common sense and not government red tape—and we put limits on …

morninmist

11:05 am on Saturday, March 2, 2013

I agress. Wisconsin needs to have an open discussion on this policy issue. Walker will not allow it because he knows he would lose. Appleton, Green Bay superintendents critical of Scott Walker's school spending plan ow.ly/ibZww #wiunion #wiright ..Green Bay School Board President Brenda Warren said state lawmakers should discuss school vouchers as separate legislation, rather than a budget item.   more ›

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Should Gateway's Funding Be Tied To Their Performance?

Gov. Scott Walker wants to tie the technical college's funding to how well it meets performance standards.

One of the provisions in Gov. Scott Walker's budget, which he'll officially unveil on Wednesday, will be changing the funding model for Wisconsin's technical colleges, including Gateway Technical College, according to a story by The Journal Times. Technical colleges receive $83.5 million in state aid and Walker wants to increase that to $88.5 million. However, beginning this year, Walker wants 10 percent of that funding would be tied to the colleges achieving their performance benchmarks and by the year 2020, all of that funding would be tied to meeting those benchmarks. The details around how the funding formula would work still need to be hammered out by the Wisconsin Technical College System. According to the story, Gateway Technical …

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Richard Head

2:43 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

SO - where are the jobs for the people? Where are all the Corporations wanting to locate here? It seems to me that the more RUSD, Gateway and the City of Racine take, the fewer jobs there are, the more foreclosures, and the more homeless. They are greedy and are abusing their taxing authority. What will save the region is the utter collapse and bankruptcy of these taxing authorities. It's coming…   more ›

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