Wisconsin Politicians Want To Spend $550 Million on Ballpark Subsidies the Public Opposes
Just 24 percent of self-identified Trump voters and 34 percent of self-identified Biden voters say they support a public handout for the Milwaukee Brewers' 22-year-old stadium.

Wisconsin voters might not agree on much—but a new poll finds that opposition to the use of public funds to upgrade the Milwaukee Brewers' 22-year-old ballpark cuts across ages, party lines, and more.
Only 29 percent of voters in the state favor the use of taxpayer subsidies for the stadium project, according to a survey conducted last week by Public Policy Polling (PPP). Opposition cuts across all political lines. Just 24 percent of self-identified Trump voters and 34 percent of self-identified Biden voters say they support the subsidies, while majorities of men, women, and all four age cohorts surveyed say they are opposed.
Despite the voters' feelings, Republican legislators are pushing ahead with plans to put taxpayers on the hook for more than $557 million in upgrades to American Family Field, where the Milwaukee Brewers have played since 2001. According to the Associated Press, the Wisconsin General Assembly is expected to vote on the proposal Tuesday.
American Family Field, formerly known as Miller Park, cost about $400 million to build. The public contributed nearly three-quarters of the construction cost via a new 0.1 percent sales tax in Milwaukee and several other countries surrounding the city.
State Rep. Rob Brooks (R–Saukville), who described himself in an interview last week as a "fiscal conservative," is leading the push for the new ballpark subsidy bill. "If you talk to any advertising agency, I don't know how you can have a better bang for your buck than whenever the Milwaukee Brewers appear on TV or on ESPN," Brooks told Wisconsin public radio station WTMJ.
Maybe Brooks should try talking to some economists instead. There are piles of evidence that public funding for sports stadiums does not generate economic growth or benefit the public in any way. The beneficiaries are always the private owners of the teams themselves, who would have to shell out for the construction costs of stadiums if there weren't an ample supply of local and state politicians tripping over themselves to spend other people's money on these things.
In Milwaukee, that means the beneficiary of Brooks' stadium upgrade plan is Brewers' owner Mark Attanasio, who recently bought a sizable stake in Norwich City, an English soccer team.
Most voters seem to agree that Attanasio isn't in need of a government hand-out. When asked in the PPP survey, 77 percent of voters say they believe Attanasio is "in a better position to pay for stadium improvements," while just 8 percent say taxpayers are better able to shoulder the cost. When asked how the state ought to spend $550 million, 70 percent of voters in the survey say the money should be spent on "other government priorities such as public safety, healthcare, and roads" while just 16 percent say the funding should pay for a baseball stadium.
"It is rare to find a proposed policy so disliked by voters of both parties," said Dan Adams, director of Milwaukee Works, Inc., a nonprofit that opposes the stadium subsidies and funded the PPP survey.
If Brooks and other state lawmakers don't pay attention to polls like this now, they might find themselves on the wrong side of polls that matter more, Adams said, pointing to the fact that voters in both parties said they would be less likely to support politicians who vote for the stadium subsidies. "This issue imperils incumbent politicians from both parties," Adams said in a statement to Reason. "The Brewers' bailout plan creates a ready-made primary issue for both Republicans and Democrats."
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"If you talk to any advertising agency, I don't know how you can have a better bang for your buck than whenever the Milwaukee Brewers appear on TV or on ESPN,"
In which case, private companies will gladly cough up the big bucks, right?
24% + 34% is 58%. Looks like a majority to any honest politician!
Change the name to Bud Light Park, problem solved!
Is Miller Part 22 years old already?
God I feel old.
Same here. I no longer live in WI, but I remember when it was new and it doesn't feel that long ago.
Evidently, it has been a while because these members of the Assembly seem to have forgotten the electoral repercussions of the regional sales tax that built it. I don't remember the details, but I recall that at least a couple of folks were voted out of office in the surrounding counties.
I lived in Kenosha when it was built, I’m in Pleasant Prairie now, but I was born and raised in Milwaukee.
Part of the political issues with the Miller Park funding was that (IIRC) Bud Selig had been saying for years that the Brewers were going to build a new stadium and pay for it themselves. Then he ended up contributing almost nothing to the construction costs for Miller Park.
Small world. Kenoshan here.
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Republicans have so gerrymandered Wisconsin that there cannot possibly be any electoral consequences for them. And they are about to remove the Supreme Court Justice who might change that.
Basically, under Republican rule, Wisconsin is no longer a democracy but a kleptocracy. The Democratic Governor is a figurehead with no power.
My house is 38 years old. Why isn't the Wisconsin Legislature subsidizing the new windows my wife is putting in. Oh, wait . . .
What a fucking DeRp asshole you are Boehm.
"Wisconsin public radio station WTMJ"? WTMJ is not a public radio station. WTMJ radio is a commercial AM radio station, owned by Good Karma Brands.
We'll build the stadium, and make Mexico pay for it?
Canada might be closer. Those suckers will pay for anything. We're getting a new international bridge here in Detroit for which they're paying the bulk of the costs.
Ackshully, when beer was Beelzebub's banned narcotic, heroin sales went through the roof--according to the 1924 Dem platform. Once Satan's pal FDR signed repeal legislation, beer regained market share from Mexican, German, French and Japanese drugs. Superstitious prohibitionism, eroded by 50 years of LP spoiler votes, is waning. So no surprise the purveyors of protoplasmic poisons want subsidies to replace sumptuary protectionism. Pooor baaaaybeeez!
What a surprise. A survey funded by opponents of the stadium finds it's unpopular.
I mean, it probably is, but I'm not sure you can trust a survey funded by a group with an agenda.
Federal ban on subsidies for private entities over X$ or just an outright ban.
Tack on some free cheese curds and a six-pack of Leinie’s original in cans, and I’m fer it.
I don't see what the big deal is. The entire amount can be covered by three and 1/6 Congressmen donating their annual salaries. If all three Wisconsin Republicans chip in their wages, the two Dems would only have to each pony up a month's pay. Far better a recreational dugout than to have that money go to hate groups, televangelists and hookers.