Scott Walker the Governor vs. Scott Walker the Candidate
Which one is running?
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has been unofficially running for the GOP presidential nomination for months now. Today, he makes it official. Here's his announcement video.
Walker's video opens with a cheery narrator declaring that, "For too long, they've said we have to compromise our principles to win."
The video goes on to portray Walker as a conservative reformer dedicated to winning meaningful policy fights. Walker "balanced budgets. Cut taxes. Beat the special interests. Improved education," the narrator says while Wisconsin newspaper headlines about his legislative victories flash by.
Later in the video, Walker talks directly to the camera, making the case himself. "Wisconsin—we didn't nibble around the edges," he says. "We enacted big, bold reforms." After a few not-so-veiled jabs at his fellow Republican nominees—("In the Republican field, there are some who are fighters, but they haven't won those battles.")—Walker goes on to connect his policy successes with his political victories. "Without sacrificing our principles, we won three elections in four years in a blue state."

In the video, in other words, Walker makes it clear that he is running on his record as governor. It is this record that helped launch Walker, somewhat unexpectedly, to the top of the GOP presidential field earlier this year.
In January and February, Walker gave a series of speeches that highlighted elements of his state-level record, dwelling at length on a series of economic success measures, as well as tales of his fortitude as he faced massive union protests—plus a recall election—as a result of his ultimately successful attempts to overhaul the state's public sector union benefits.
To be sure, in the video, Walker's defense of his record is not quite as detailed or aggressive as in many of those speeches; he does not, for example, explicitly mention unions, talking instead about his battles with "special interests." (Unions, of course, are still mentioning him; "Scott Walker is a national disgrace," read a one-sentence press release from AFL-CIO president Richard Trumpka.)
But still, the Scott Walker in the announcement video is a largely recognizable version of Scott Walker, the did-something-candidate, the governor whose record of legislative accomplishments provided the key to his surprisingly strong early appeal.
Yet for the last few months, as his proto-campaign has come alive and adjusted to the national spotlight, Walker has frequently strayed from the focus on his own record. As The New York Times noted recently, Walker has turned from his own record on a number of high profile issues.
As governor, Walker said that the fight over same-sex marriage had reached its end, saying that, "For us, it's over in Wisconsin." As a candidate, following the Supreme Court's recent decision in favor of legal same-sex marriage in every state, he called for Americans to join him in support of a constitutional amendment allowing states to ban those marriages.
As governor, Walker declared his opposition to a federal ethanol mandate, calling it a "big-government proposal" and saying that "the free-enterprise system must drive innovation to relieve our dependence on foreign oil, not mandates from the state or federal government." As a candidate, he seems to have decided that federal mandates weren't so bad, saying in March that he was "willing to go forward on continuing the Renewable Fuel Standard and pressing the EPA to make sure there's certainty in terms of the blend levels set."
As a governor, Walker said repeatedly that he supported a pathway to citizenship for immigrants who are currently in the country illegally. As a candidate, Walker has said that he no longer supports comprehensive immigration reform, and has derided such plans as "amnesty." Walker's long record of support for more open immigration was clear enough that he could not pretend otherwise. "My view has changed," he admitted. "I'm flat out saying it."
The distance between Walker the governor and Walker the candidate is arguably the central tension for the Walker campaign as it officially launches. Walker the candidate has set his sights on winning in Iowa, and has adjusted his positions accordingly.
And so it is worth remembering that it was Walker the governor whose legislative battles and accomplishments first garnered him national attention, Walker the governor who won three state elections in four years, and Walker the governor who, earlier this year, rose so quickly to the top of GOP's 2016 field. Meanwhile, it is Walker the candidate who has slipped in the polls as the months have gone by.
Walker the governor looks like someone who, as his campaign launch video says, doesn't buy the conventional wisdom that "we have to compromise our principles to win." Walker the candidate, on the other hand, looks like someone who already has.
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Walker, Wisconsin Ranger.
I SAID IT FIRST!!!
You know what's a total steaming pile of shit?
That this article isn't about Donald Trump.
Trump and Trump! What is Trump!?
-1 Science Officer's brain, let's go find it!
That's a great idea. Take out Trump's brain and give it to an alien civilization. In the meantime, the controls for Trump will be placed on the Internet and operated by users selected at random.
You mean that's not how he already operates?
I know, right? But technically, it's all done in that strange brain of his.
Twitch play Trump?
They should remake Being John Malkovich, except with Trump. The whole plot of the movie could revolve around people trying to find out what he does to his hair, only to never discover that before being dumped out of his head at the Mexican border.
Of course it's about Donald Trump. This article is a hit piece on a candidate that might threaten Trump's winning of the GOP nominational.
*Reason: bats eyes at Trump*
*Trump: tips hair at Reason and smiles dashingly*
*Reason: swoons*
Who are you, who are so wise in the ways of Science?
If Trump's hair weighs as much as a duck, then....
No, no, no. The correct answer is Richard Trumka.
Other than needing an editor, what is inconsistent about this position? You can want to (or accept that you have to) have gay marriage recognized in Wisconsin while at the same time thinking it's OK for, say, California or Alabama to not recognize it. Much like some states recognize first cousin marriage (California, despite what poor G-M Bluth thought) and others do not.
Suggestion for one of tomorrows articles:
Scott Walkers hair vs. The Donald Trumps hair. Whose hair reigns supreme?
Does Scott Walkers do look like Reagans?
Is Trumps worse than Bidens?
We took a poll of millennials...
Read today he's pushing for $250 million in taxpayer money for a new arena for the Bucks. A real fiscal hawk.
It's only bad when St. Paul does it. Duh.
I tend to prefer successful governors to Senators, when it comes to Presidential candidates, in that Senators can *say* whatever they want, while governors get to be judged on what they *do.*
It's hard for me to say this, as a Rand Paul sympathizer. I would probably vote for Rand, other things being equal.
Yet, the decibel level of the lefty screams about Walker indicate to me that he would make a good President.
You can't go by that. They'll howl at the most milquetoast of GOP candidates.
Romney was the MOST RADICAL RIGHT-WING CANDIDATE EVER!!!
Precisely the example I was thinking of. Little-known fact: Romney has the Confederate battle flag tattooed on his chest.
Fuck that; he had his entire dick tat'd up to look like the General Lee, and has little bars pierced through the underside to use as axles to attach the little wheels.
p.s. I know b/c I've seen it. His magic underwear acts as a palantir, and I can look into my own and see what is in his.
So you, too, have underwear you wear all of the time?
Only when I'm in Florida, and need the protection from extra-grabby hands.
Perhaps it's because you don't change your underwear for extended periods. That's not recommended, though perhaps that's a Fruit-of-the-Loom plot to increase underwear sales.
Romney also employs slave labor in his political campaigns.
Which is why the GOP is the stupid party. A GOP candidate could be indistinguishable from a Democrat, but he's still an evil despot with plans to fill the country with orphan torture chambers and rape camps. And yet the GOP establishment still thinks a moderate front-runner will have any positive effect on the people they'll never please, which just makes it so no one likes them.
There once was a guv'nor named Scott
Who had to unravel a knot
"I'm kind of not bad?
"What can we do about that?"
Test welfare rolls to see who smokes pot.
You can buy your liquor, cigarettes, and porn with taxpayer money, but buying marijuana with your food stamps is just beyond the pale.
To be fair, they've done as much as is constitutionally possible to bar people from spending welfare cash on tobacco, liquor, porn, strippers, and even the wrong kinds of food.
What's the point of having welfare, then? Sheesh!
But they haven't done nearly enough to prevent people from spending it on tacos, futbol jerseys, churros, Dos Equis, mariachi music, and lawn equipment. That's why we have this overwhelming brown wave from the lower quarter.
Churros are a human right, Hugh. Jesus.
See, poor people can't make right decisions!
Of course that 8pack of red bull is easily monetizable...
I would like it if we could institute Haiku Mondays.
For you, JJ, anything.
Who says Eliot killed poetry?
You do.
What about Scott Walker the Musician?
Scott Walker = Picking Up Chicks in His Camaro
That wasn't Scott Walker .... http://i.huffpost.com/gen/9472.....-570.jpg?7
What a weird looking dude. But is he weirder looking than Ted Cruz?
Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good, folks. Anyone who can emasculate public employee unions in Wisconsin should get libertarian support for that alone.
Scott Walker is a right-to-lifer. Therefore should be unacceptable to any true libertarian.
This is sarcasm, right? Any "true" libertarian, at least the intelligent ones, would be willing to accept the opinion that drawing an arbitrary line between when someone is "human" and when he or she is not, and it's therefore just fine to terminate that life, is not acceptable.
DarrenM... Well, a 'true' libertarian might also try to see that ALL "definitions of when the fertilized egg 'becomes human' and thus should not be aborted for (fill in the blank reason,)" is a pure matter of Agreement and Power of the Majority, which is anathema to a 'real' libertarian.
There Can Be No scientific or logical 'definition' ... only agreement on where to draw the line or plant the flag.
Because of that, all claims to where that 'line' belongs are moot.
Unless you've got a bunch of people who think that "Agreement == Truth," in which case, the 'discussion' was over before it began.
So, in my never-so-humble opinion, Rand Paul smells just like any other Conservative and won't get my Libertarian-minded vote.
Cheers!
We'll find out what he thinks after the cannibalism of the Republican primary process is over. If he survives.
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Hacked I tell you !!!
sso.anbtr,com
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my buddy's step-aunt makes $68 /hour on the laptop . She has been without a job for nine months but last month her check was $99350 just working on the laptop for a few hours. check my source
http://www.jobnet10.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....-tests.jpg
my buddy's step-aunt makes $68 /hour on the laptop . She has been without a job for nine months but last month her check was $99350 just working on the laptop for a few hours. check my source
http://www.jobnet10.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....-tests.jpg
my buddy's step-aunt makes $68 /hour on the laptop . She has been without a job for nine months but last month her check was $99350 just working on the laptop for a few hours. check my source
http://www.jobnet10.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....-tests.jpg
my buddy's step-aunt makes $68 /hour on the laptop . She has been without a job for nine months but last month her check was $99350 just working on the laptop for a few hours. check my source
http://www.jobnet10.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....-tests.jpg
.... oh, wait... working on WHOSE 'laptop'???
Google pay 97$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12k for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it out.
This is wha- I do...... ?????? http://www.online-jobs9.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....u-ever.jpg
Google pay 97$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12k for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it out.
This is wha- I do...... ?????? http://www.online-jobs9.com
http://www.plusaf.com/linkedin.....u-ever.jpg
now fuck off and go away, troll.
Suderman seems to have a tough time making his argument. Walker thecandidate vs Walker the gov is a talking about two very different points in time. And as for gay marriage, find me oneperson who hads not changed their opinion - both Clintons did a 180 switch, while Walker did not - he went from active opposition to being neutral. And ethanol is not going to be a campaign issue except in the cornbelt. These paltry examples make Suderman's argument look threadbare.