Who's Creating Walker's Playbook?
National and local right-wing groups want to weaken workers
Koch—or, rather, a Buffalo, N.Y.-based blogger posing as Koch—famously listened to Gov. Scott Walker ramble on for 20 minutes about his allegedly winning formula in Wisconsin. Kill unions. No deals, no negotiation, no compromise.
As most Wisconsinites now know, David Koch and his brother Charles are the multi-billionaire oil barons who fund a network of ultraconservative and libertarian groups and candidates that provide "grassroots" and political support for their corporate agenda.
The Koch brothers are part of a large and growing right-wing network of campaign funders, legislation writers and think-tank-backers who are trying to weaken American workers so that huge corporations like their own can increase their profits and skirt any kind of government regulations.
These ultraconservative groups are major campaign donors—Koch Industries was Walker's second-biggest donor ($43,000 directly) and spent more than $65,000 indirectly on independent ads in the Wisconsin governor's race—and active lobbyists who have their hands in everything from cable and phone deregulation legislation to clean energy opposition to Arizona's unusually punitive immigration law. All of their political activities are intended to boost their bottom line.
Gov. Walker is just one Republican politician who is in their pocket. But Wisconsin is a prize state in their ongoing war to increase profits at the expense of governmental institutions and workers' rights since Wisconsin has a proud common-sense, progressive tradition.
Koch
Industries: Profiting From Propaganda
David and
Charles Koch run Koch Industries, the largest privately held company in the
country, with 70,000 employees and sales of $100 billion in 2008. While the
company was built by their father on oil trading and refining, the brothers
have expanded it to include coal mining, the paper company Georgia-Pacific, and
household products such as Teflon.
Through the
Koch Family Foundations, the brothers are very politically active in
conservative and libertarian causes. The sons of a founding member of the
ultraconservative John Birch Society, the brothers fund a network of think
tanks and grassroots groups (that are anything but truly grassroots) that
preach their gospel of low taxes, few regulations and global warming denial.
Americans for Prosperity (AFP), the Cato Institute, Reason Magazine and the Heartland Institute are among the many
front groups they fund.
Koch
Industries also lobbies the government and has even hired more lobbyists and
opened a new office just off the Capitol Square in Madison since Walker took
office.
Walker's critics have warned that his budget repair
bill's provision that state-owned power plants could be sold without
competitive bidding was a special favor granted to Koch Industries. The
political appointee who would oversee the sales is ex-Democratic state Sen. Jeff Plale, now the head of the
Department of Administration's Division of State Facilities. Koch has denied
interest in any Wisconsin power plants.
Although
Koch Industries has been a leading opponent of federal health care reform, they
have found a way to profit from it. One of the little-known provisions in the
federal bill would help reduce employers' costs to cover the health care for
early retirees, which is more expensive than health care for younger workers.
Shockingly,
Koch Industries applied for the benefit and was approved.
Then again,
conservative corporations in Wisconsin—such as Journal Communications, Marshall
and Ilsley, Rockwell Automation and We Energies—have applied for this program
and been approved as well.
Walker:
The 'Original Tea Party'
In
Wisconsin, the Koch brothers fund the state chapter of Americans for Prosperity
and the MacIver Institute, a conservative "news" outlet. The Koch groups have
whipped up opposition to last year's Clean Energy Jobs Act (which was killed by
the Koch-friendly Plale when he was a state senator), Gov. Jim Doyle's budgets
and, now, the right of public employee unions to unionize. AFP sponsored buses
to a Feb. 19 counter-rally in Madison, but only managed to round up 2,000
supporters to the union backers' 70,000. On hand was AFP's president, Tim
Phillips.
Walker has
always been a darling of AFP. He has spoken at a number of their tea party
rallies and has bragged about being the "original tea party in Wisconsin" for
his promise to not raise taxes as Milwaukee County executive. But contrary to
Walker's spin, property taxes rose 17% in Milwaukee County under his watch.
Koch
Industries donated heavily to his campaign and in opposition to the Democratic
candidate for governor, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett.
So it was no
surprise that Walker would take a call from "David Koch," his benefactor,
during a time of crisis and infamy. In his conversation with "Koch," Walker
sounded like a department head reporting to—and trying hard to impress—his
boss.
Also
unsurprising was Walker's request for "message" support in the future. Walker
also wanted help shoring up support from moderate Republicans uneasy with
Walker's radical policies.
After "Koch"
asked Walker if there was anything he could do to help, Walker said: "The more groups that are encouraging people not just to show up, but to
call lawmakers and tell them to hang firm with the governor, the better.
Because the more they get that reassurance, the easier it is for them to vote
yes."
After "Koch" agreed, Walker continued: "The
other thing is more long term. That is the day after this, the coming days and
weeks and months ahead, particularly in some of these more swing areas, a lot
of these guys are going to need—they don't necessarily need ads for them, but
they're going to need a message out reinforcing why this is a good thing to do
for the economy and a good thing for the state. To the extent that that message
is out over and over again, that's a good thing."
While
Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Executive Director Mike McCabe felt the request
was probably legal, former Wisconsin Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager took a
more critical view of the exchange.
In an
interview with John Nichols of The Nation,
Lautenschlager said, "I think that the ethics violations are
something the [state] Government Accountability Board [GAB] should look into
because they are considerable. He is on tape talking with someone who he thinks
is the funder of an independent political action committee to purchase
advertising to benefit Republican legislators who are nervous about taking
votes on legislation he sees as critical to his political success."
Walker's request for message help has prompted
the national watchdog group Public Campaign Action Fund to send a letter to
Dane County's district attorney and the state GAB requesting that they open
investigations into the matter.
That said, AFP has spent a reported $400,000
on ads in support of Walker's budget repair bill and its president, Tim
Phillips, has been singing the governor's praises, saying that Walker has
"demonstrated resolute political courage."
Walker has dismissed the implications of his
phone call, saying that nothing he said during the supposedly private
conversation differs from what he's been saying in public.
ALEC: Corporate Lobbying
Disguised as Legislation
Also intertwined in the Walker-boosting
right-wing network is the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which
brings together very conservative state lawmakers and powerful corporations to
write model legislation that can be copied and introduced in state legislatures
around the country. In 2009, 115 ALEC-written laws were passed in statehouses
around the country.
Corporations pay huge membership dues to
ALEC—ranging from $5,000 to $50,000—while legislators pay relatively small fees
and enjoy all-expenses-paid private gatherings to discuss legislation. Sponsors
include Koch Industries, American Express, Wal-Mart, Philip Morris, Pfizer,
ExxonMobil, GlaxoSmithKline, State Farm Insurance, AT&T, Texaco and the
National Rifle Association (NRA).
In private meetings, ALEC pairs one legislator
and one representative of a corporation to write bills that can be replicated
throughout the country to weaken government regulations and oversight and serve
ALEC's corporate sponsors. In this way, ALEC whitewashes activities that would
otherwise be determined to be lobbying.
ALEC's most infamous "success" was the passage
of Senate Bill 1070 in Arizona, otherwise known as the anti-immigrant,
racial-profiling "show us your papers" law. SB 1070 was written by Arizona
legislator Russell Pearce with the help of the NRA and the Corrections
Corporation of America, a private owner of prisons. Few noticed when the
Republicans introduced the bill in the Wisconsin Legislature when Democrats
were in control, but now that Republicans beholden to ALEC are in charge, look
for it to return.
Make no mistake: ALEC is deeply interested in
Wisconsin and has been for a number of years.
With the help of then-Sen. Jeff Plale—now a
Walker political appointee—ALEC's Cable and Video Competition Act was passed in
2007, which deregulated cable services but has done nothing to lower cable
bills. Its former legislator of the year, state Sen. Leah Vukmir of Wauwatosa,
has written a slew of insurance-company-friendly bills that gut patient
protections.
Recently, ALEC sent out congratulations to
Walker when his tort-reform legislation was passed, since weakening consumer
protections is one of the organization's top policy goals.
Not surprisingly, Republicans' attempt to turn
Wisconsin into a right-to-work state—and thereby weakening unions in the
private sector—was launched at an ALEC meeting in Washington, D.C., after the
November election, according to remarks made by Senate Majority Leader Scott
Fitzgerald, a former state chair of ALEC. (That position is currently held by
state Rep. Robin Vos of Caledonia, the co-chair of the budget-writing Joint
Finance Committee, according to ALEC's website.)
ALEC is also
cheering on Walker's attempt to bust public employee unions. Its fiscal policy
director, Jonathan Williams, has said: "Wisconsin has become ground zero. What
happens could serve as a domino, win or lose, in either direction."
Walker's
Local Corporate Sponsors
Followers of
Walker's career at the local level have no doubt noticed that he's been
sponsored by a Milwaukee-centered right-wing network of think tanks, donors and
fake grassroots groups.
Walker
became Milwaukee County executive after a wave of voter outrage helped along by
the recall-happy quasi-grassroots group Citizens for Responsible Government
(CRG), which continued to support him in office by promoting his sham
no-tax-increase budgets and attempts to privatize county services. Walker was
so enamored of the CRG that he actually wanted to provide them with an official
office in the courthouse. Not surprisingly, Walker lost that battle.
But the CRG
has only been one cog in the Walker political machine. His career has been
boosted by the Bradley Foundation, the deep-pocketed and deeply conservative
nonprofit organization that has championed school vouchers, tax reform that
favors the rich, and other right-wing causes in the state and nationally. It
notoriously underwrote Charles Murray's race-baiting book The Bell Curve, which essentially argued that blacks were intellectually
inferior to whites, and, through its funding of the American Enterprise
Institute, supported the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
According to
the most recent figures available, in 2009 the Bradley Foundation donated
$20,000 to Americans for Prosperity to support its Wisconsin chapter, $1
million to the arch-conservative Federalist Society, $200,000 to the Cato
Institute and $500,000 to the anti-organized-labor group Center for Union
Facts, among other free-market organizations.
It also
donated $1,475,000 to the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute (WPRI), a
right-wing think tank chaired by James Klauser, a former Tommy Thompson
administration official and senior vice president of We Energies. WPRI pushes
school vouchers, voter ID, tort reform and lower corporate income taxes—pretty
much the complete Walker legislative agenda. It also opposed high-speed
rail—which Walker rejected before becoming governor—as well as federal health
care reform.
The Bradley
Foundation is led by Michael Grebe, who just happened to have co-chaired
Walker's gubernatorial campaign.
The Bradley
Foundation-funded WPRI also provides WTMJ-AM's Charlie Sykes with a steady
moonlighting gig. The foundation also employs Sykes' third wife, Janet Riordan,
as director of community programs. No wonder why Sykes has provided Walker with
unfettered sympathetic coverage through the years.
And it's no
wonder why Walker's agenda is being cheered on by a local and national network
of right-wing organizations that want to destroy worker protections and provide
private corporations with unfettered freedom.
Because of
the state's long tradition of support for unions and workers' rights, Wisconsin
truly is ground zero for their grand experiment.



Boring. Most of this is common knowledge and nobody cares. I don't know what world Lisa lives in but donations of $65k or $43k seems to me to be small and meaningless. I could care less who donates to what and how much. Rhetoric about tax breaks favoring the rich - thats funny. The rich are the only ones that we can favor tax breaks too because the poor don't pay taxes. Wow, who would thave thought --- conservative groups donating to conservative causes --Alert the media now!!! Whats wrong with taking a call from a donor? I bet if I only gave Barrett $5000 he'd take a call from me. I just realized what is really funny -- Barrett is more likely to take a call from me than me taking a call from Barrett.
This article makes me like Scott Walker even more. Thanks for including it in your publication! Go Shepherd! Go Scott Walker!
We all know who is behind Scott Walkers scheme, it takes no brains to figure out that it's those billionair jews the Koch brothers who will end up owning Wisconsin's power plants thanks to their buddy Scott!
And there it is! The compassionate, racially and ethnically sensitive progressive left!
Wait, who are the Nazis again? Oh yeah, the Tea Partiers who have an African-American headline their rally...not this cat who rails against "billionair jews" (sic).
I will call a crooked JEW and his other scheming brother as it shall be, those two and Walker are in cohoots and want to own everything in America!. Pardon me but I am not racist, I do not hate African Americans, Latino's, Arabs, etc. I just detest those Koch brothers, they are the reason people pick on Jewish people about their wealth!
Do you realize that Georgia Pacific (a Koch corporation) employs far more people than WI has public employees? Georgia Pacific matches their employee's charitable donations. Does the state government do that (with my tax dollars)? Look it up- GP is a publicly traded company. Unlike the state public employee unions, GP top execs make political contributions to BOTH Democrats and Republicans.
Tell me again why representation for public employees is more important than representation for corporations that are ultimately responsible for EVERY DIME of income taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, license and reg fees...etc.? Anyone? Bueller?
This article portrays the attitude and hateful comments of a sick journalist and her editor. I have never read a "hit Piece" so full of accusations without substance or data to prove a point.
Five columns of inflammatory descriptions of citizens and organizations performing their patriotic duties are defined as corrupt wrong doers with no reasons given. Only vengeful dictators would write and publish this type of propaganda.
When those identified in this article can be associated with crimes, I'll be the first to listen and act against them. Where is the outrage against former Governor Jim Doyle who was illegally "floating $46 million between accounts as described in the Lakeland Timed Feb 1 - 5 editions? Where is the outrage over Doyle's abuse of his line item veto which the Legislature granted to control over spending? Doyle left Scott Walker with a $3.6 trillion deficit. I would like to see some ideas for reducing that debt and a call for a conviction for illegal accounting of the $46 million.
The abgebra and hate spewed by Democrat demonstrators who destroyed our State Capitol during the past three weeks also got a complete pass. Why not charge back those costs to the Unions and Democrat Party?
ALSO-- Has this hate filled Journalist and editor looked up the current ratio of Wisconsin teachers to students. Go to WI School Performance Report published by the state on the internet. The teacher problem is obvious and you will have to make your own judgment as to a reasonable student/teacher ratio. I feel we have 2x as many teachers as we need. Unfortunately our state ranks about 42nd below the top performing state. Maybe it is because we have too few teachers for High School Science classes like Algebra, geometry, trig., chemistry, biology and physic. Our Schools prefer teaching Social Studies, Music, Art, Event Planning and a wide variety of sports.
Stop the hate filled Journalism and maybe our kids will stop destroying our institutions and drug use.
Keep things in perspective. The writer and editor work for the free hippie newspaper. This is one level up from the junior high gazette. There is a reason these people are not working for well known paper or magazine -- they can't. This paper does nothing but bad mouth every Republican or Right Wing action. Also note that if it wasn't for just a few of us making sport of these nuts with our posts, they would have hardly any comments at all.
This was actually one of her better written pieces, plenty of factual reference (but no hyperlinks this time). If she simply wrote propaganda statements without any evidence to back it up, you would not be so angered. You just don't like that she may be right, and it may affect public opinion!
There WAS outrage against Doyle's use of Wisconsin's partial veto (a true "line item" veto could not be abused like that), but since most people did not see the immediate threat to their own personal cash, few cared.
And, who cared about "floating" debt from one place to another, pushing it off to the future? I'll bet that MOST Wisconsin residents of all classes have already been doing that in their own personal credit dealings. This was not seen as a problem as long as you could find a bank, credit card company, or payday loan store that allowed you to roll over your growing private debt. It was when you had your house up for collateral, and the housing value crash happened that it all fell apart.
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On teachers, I remember the days when one teacher could manage a class of 30 students, but that was when public schools were neighborhood schools, no busing or vouchers. That was when most mothers were housewives with husbands and intact families, and all the kids in the classroom were relative equals, had similar cultural up-bringing.
Like both small and large business, to get an efficient operation, you need consistent incoming materials. That includes students who come in on equal level, so they can be taught in large classes. Need to look at this part of "no child left behind" or "race to the top". Too bad those raised in Wisconsin's blue collar heyday do not really care about education, they only care about money moving between districts!
I agree that we need more math and science, but I also had seen many poor math and science teachers, even back then. Many of my friends suffered. I remember from college days in the late 70's, the impression that grad school and teachers were for those who did not measure up to land a "real" job that paid better. Unfortunately, until math and science teachers can be paid well enough to encourage the best to choose to teach instead of higher-paying "real" jobs, you will end up with this. Walker's way of "fixing the deficit" will make this worse.
I would love to see the day when a teacher's pay is dependent on performance AND CHOICE OF SUBJECT TAUGHT, not simply on seniority, or going back to school for continuing education.
I would also love to see the day when availability of student financing is dependent on the major or field of study. Maybe then you would not see such push for teaching the arts in public schools. You want to teach the arts, do it out of passion, not for the money.
History, however, still needs to be taught, so as to pass on the lessons learned by prior generations. No "Revisionist History" where you try to whitewash your sore points from the public record. No avoiding the fact that capitalism did go through labor struggles, that workers did organize and fight for ways that did not leave them feeling like slaves. Even us non-union people benefit, for that option to organize is known to us, companies fear it. That said, was there not a recent attempt by Wisconsin government to stop teaching labor history in public schools?
Good points Waukesha dude. I remember a 65 year old lady teacher, who was about 4 ft 10. She knew how to teach and control the class. If you acted up, you had to fist fight the gym teacher for punishment. Believe me, getting your ass whooped by that sick psycho is something you don't forget. Forget about dysfunctional families - no excuse. A teacher either knows how to take total control and be a compelling teacher, or they can't.
I'd like to take the teacher that cried to me, the one that hypervenilated, and the one that broke out in hives over all this mess, line them up Three Stooges style for a group slap.