No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for the 'Politics – Wisconsin' Category

May 22, 2007

“Is Conservatism Out Of Gas?” – Weeks 2-4 summary

I’ve been seriously-remiss in collating this, which ought to give you a second hint of my upcoming “unrequested” answer (if that poll over on the left side didn’t give you enough of a hint). Let’s briefly summarize what the Week 2-4 folks (revisions/extensions – I really need a calendar) said…

John McAdams, the Marquette Warrior said that foreign-policy conservatism, which he described as “a vigorous response to terrorism and to terrorist regimes”, took a drubbing, but that the seeds to a resurgence of conservatives in the Republican Party and by extension politics have been planted.

Assembly Speaker Mike Huebsch, speaking out of the “public” side of his mouth, said that conservatism, including tax cuts, was alive and well (side note; the political side of Huebsch’s mouth has been rather busy giving lie to this assertation – many thanks to Owen for exposing the Assembly’s version of Mary Panzer).

Assemblywoman Leah Vukmir said that the Pubbies needed to return to fiscal as well as social conservatism.

Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker said that a return to the principles of less government and personal liberty is what is needed, and that he’s hopeful that the Pubbies will do so quickly.

George Lightbourn, one of WPRI’s said that a refocus away from the partisan political and onto individualism is what’s needed.

Messmer Catholic Schools President Brother Bob Smith said we got “a bad tank of fuel on its present journey”.

State Senate Minority Leader Scott Fitzgerald blamed the 2006 losses in Wisconsin on the Pubbies’ inability to credibly sell itself as the party of lower taxes, smaller and cleaner government, and economic freedom and promised that the Senate Pubbies will learn the lesson this time.

WPRI President James H. Miller wonders if conservatism is out of oxygen because there are no new conservative ideas, and holds up the upcoming State Supreme Court battle between Louis Butler and whoever (if anybody) steps up to challenge him as the decisive battle.

Marquette Law School Dean Joseph D. Kearney sticks with his area of expertise, the law and judiciary, in saying that conservatism is anything other than out of gas, but goes off the rails in defending the Kelo decision (side note; it was the larger populace that allows him to say that conservatism survives on the federal judiciary because we defeated Harriet “Mushroom” Miers).

State Senator Glenn Grothman outlined 3 areas where conservatives can make inroads on the liberal base – affirmative action, the alliance between the Left and teachers’ unions, and social engineering (side note; whatever happened to the issue that put Grothman in the Senate, taxes?)

Mark Neumann noted that there are two flavors of conservatives – the “pocketbook” conservatives who will vote for anybody that espouses limited goverment and low taxes, and the “hot button” conservatives who will not look further at a candidate who does not pass “their” issue. He went on to say that almost no conservative ran on either the pocketbook or the biggest 3 “hot button” issues (abortion, gay “rights”, 2nd-Amendment rights), and that the pendulum will swing back to the conservative points of view. Of note, nowhere in his missive did he use the word “Republican”.

Christian Schneider brings out a bit of Dennis York in his answer – “I’ll tell you when I’m done with this burrito.” Seriously, he points out that “(t)rue fiscal conservatism remains the ‘Big Idea That’s Never Been Tried’ in Wisconsin.” (Side note; I need to highlight this answer.)

Scott Niederjohn and Mark C. Schug, economics professors at Lakeland College and UWM (respectively), focus on the health care “crisis” and the failure of education of basic free-market economic principles.

Thomas C. Reeves, another fellow at WPRI, outlines an 8-step program to counter the near-term conditions that leave Democrats in “excellent” shape.

Deb Jordahl says that it wasn’t conservatives that left the Republican Party, but the Republican Party that left conservatives.

These quick synopses don’t do the essays justice, so go read them. I’ll almost certainly take at least some of them apart for further analysis when I get back from my fishing trip next week (that’s right, the guest-bloggers are going to make a comeback, so business will likely pick up here :-) .

Revisions/extensions (9:10 am 5/23/2007) – Not only do I need a calendar (that was the first revision), I need to pay closer attention to my subscribed feeds. Lance Burri gave a pep talk worthy of Vince Lombardi, or at least Mike Holmgren. I guess that’s the antithesis of my missive above.

May 14, 2007

Doyle wants you to protest high gas prices by…

by @ 7:22. Filed under Business, Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

…supporting higher gas taxes. Yes, you heard me right; to protest $3.40/gallon gas, Jim “Craps” Doyle wants you to pay $3.49/gallon(once the inevitable half-cent rounding occurs). Only a stupid lieberal who has no concept of the free market would think that increasing the amount of money government takes from the sale of a commodity would decrease the price of that commodity.

If only I had the audio from the 6 pm WTMJ-AM newscast from yesterday to go along with this, but since I don’t have recording software on my machine and I was in my car at the time, you’ll just have to rely on my memory.

May 9, 2007

Vent vs. the McGee/Jacksons

by @ 11:54. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Guess who wins.

Only one little problem with today’s Vent; Michelle and Bryan forgot to give credit to Patrick at Badger Blogger for being all over the two jokers. Just in case you came here from HotAir and somehow missed my comment there, go over and give him some props.

Some serious Bravo Zulo outgoing

by @ 10:07. Filed under Business, Politics - Wisconsin.

From JSOnline’s DayWatch

The Wisconsin Committee for Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve (link to the national organization added) said Wednesday that eight organizations have earned its Above and Beyond awards for supporting their employees serving in the guard and reserve (sic).

The ESGR’s highest state-level award, the Pro Patria Award, went to West Salem Middle School and the University of Wisconsin – Whitewater. Representatives from the school received honors last month at a banquet in Green Lake, along with six others honorees:

* The Oshkosh Elks Club

* Deluxe Media Services of Pleasant Prairie

* Frito Lay Inc. of Beloit

* Oshkosh Truck Co.

* Voith Paper Rolls Central

* Weather Central

“Now more than ever it’s important to have employers backing our Reserve component members,” Michael Smith, executive director of the Wisconsin ESGR, said in a statement. “It’s been more than five years since 9-11, and we are seeing (our) citizen Soldiers and Airmen called up for second and third overseas deployments.”…

Again, Bravo Zulo to all 8 employers for stepping up and supporting those in the Guard and Reserve, as well as every other employer that does so.

May 8, 2007

Do not trust gubmint – the Washington County edition

by @ 13:02. Filed under Business, Politics - Wisconsin.

JSOnline’s DayWatch reports the Washington County Board reneged on a $4 million payment to Cabela’s, which it agreed to provide in September 2005 as an incentive for Cabela’s to build in the Town of Richfield. Washington County Attorney Kim Nass warned that there would be “risks” if the board reneged on making this payment, but she didn’t specify. Well, I can think of two:

  • Cabela’s will almost certainly sue for the money. Guess what, sports fans up in what used to be the most-conservative county in the state? Once the courts are done with this, it’s going to cost you far more than the $4 million whether or not Cabela’s gets its money.
  • Other companies considering Washington County to move to will properly see the county as an entity that cannot be trusted. Considering Wisconsin is a tax hell, the inability to offer tax breaks and taxpayer cash without being laughed out of the room is not going to be an asset in the competition for business.

Washington County would have been better off if it never signed that deal.

May 1, 2007

Speaking of taxes…

by @ 18:01. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Item #1 comes to us with a hat tip to The BlogfatherAssembly Speaker Mike Huebsch isn’t ruling out backing the 2.5% oil profits tax even though he realizes that it will be an over-7-cents-per-gallon tax increase. After all, he has to keep Payne and Dolan happy, taxpayers be damned.

Item #2 is from Owen’s latest column (H/T so I can get the trackback from Boots and Sabers). It really hammers home the both the sham that is the concept of fund transfers and the insatable appetite of the units of government that are the beneficiaries (and in this case) the authors of that transfer. Can anyone tell me why the state needs $7 out of the $12 fee for the first copy of a birth certificate when it has no cost associated with either maintaining or reproducing that certificate (at least it doesn’t currently take anything out of the $3 for a second copy requested at the same time), much less its proposed take of over half of the proposed $20 fee for EVERY copy, specifically without the oinks and squeals that are the only truthful reason?

And don’t think the other end of the cradle-to-grave mentality that Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) has isn’t covered. Copies of death certificates will be going up from $7 for the first copy and $3 for each additional copy to $20 for each and every copy. Today’s lesson; do not die in Wisconsin.

What’s Yours Is Mine part 3,212

by @ 16:35. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Today’s Journal Sentinel drones on about Department of Revenue Secretary Roger Ervin’s whine that we taxpayers are “underpaying” Wisconsin taxes to the tune of $4 billion to $6 billion annually, or between 30% and 45% of the $13.3 billion that the politicos in the Capitol seem to think they’re entitled to. Before I get to items in the article itself, let’s take a look or two at those staggering numbers. There are roughly 3.5 million Wisconsinites between 18 and 65 according to the Census Bureau, so your state government is expecting roughly $3,800 from each and every working taxpayer. With the combination of the “progressive” personal income tax and the “regressive” sales tax, excise taxes, fees, and corporate income tax making that number pretty solid through the populace, is it really any wonder there is “tax-dodging”? Indeed, that combination, which enabled those that see huge government as the solution instead of the problem, is the very reason for that “shortfall”.

Now, on to the article….

State laws haven’t kept up with the ways taxpayers find to avoid taxes – including not paying sales taxes on Internet purchases, state Department of Revenue Secretary Roger Ervin said in his first in-depth interview since taking office about three months ago.

“We don’t have a mechanism in our government to annually update our tax statutes,” Ervin said. “If you don’t have that fundamental statutory authority to keep up with the market, you start falling further and further behind.”

Allow me to translate – Grab your wallets, folks. Gubmint wants to dream up new ways to tax you without any elected official having a say.

Ervin insisted that any moves to close the tax gap would not be a tax increase. He argued that more money flowing into the state from those who should be paying could lower current state income tax rates, now a maximum of 6.75% for individuals and 7.9% for corporations.

Bravo Sierra. More money flowing in is a working definition of a tax increase. Morever, history has taught us that if there is an additional dollar flowing into government, it will be spent by government; hence, rates will not go down.

Ervin was critical of the leaders of WMC for repeatedly saying that Wisconsin ranks among the high-taxed states nationally and that Doyle’s proposed budget would worsen its ranking because it includes $1.7 billion in tax and fee increases.

“We need to have WMC in here as a positive partner that’s willing to have a public debate about the economy in a very rational and mature way . . . ,” Ervin said.

Where to begin, oh where to begin? So much material, so little time. Since it is the High Holy day of Communists, I’ll start with the notion that Ervin has that it is the job of government to control the economy. WRONG! The Soviet bloc is no more because the governments that comprised it thought it could and should control the economy.

As for the “rational and mature” comment, that’s typical liberalism at work. According to Ervin and his fellow travellers, questioning the idea that $3,800 from every working-age taxpayer isn’t enough is verboten. Fiscal responsibility need not be brought up. The idea of government not being allowed to grow unchecked must be quashed at all costs.

HORSE MANURE! The root problem is that government is too big. It may manifest itself with a myriad of taxes designed to hide government’s true cost. It may manifest itself with fund transfers that have become the vast majority of state spending. It may manifest itself with the idea that government must provide health care, or tell restaurants whether they can allow smoking, or that we need two full-fledged Interstate highways between Milwaukee and Green Bay.

April 27, 2007

“Is Conservatism Out Of Gas?” – Week 1 summary

We’re through the first week of the 2-week special from the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute, and there sure seems to be a common theme. Time to summarize what they said while I (with no pressure, thankfully) try to figure out the answer:

– On Monday, Rep. Paul Ryan noted that conservativism and Republicanism have diverged wildly the last several years, with the result being the 2006 election debacle. He outlined several principles designed to combat the triple challenge of globalization, entitlement bankruptcy, and the Islamic threat.

– On Tuesday, Charlie Sykes took many words to say that while conservatism is temporarily out of gas, liberalism is permanently out of gas. He also came up with a reason why Rudy Giuliani is so popular – he’s perceived as conservative on economic and security issues, and that social conservatives have pretty much given up putting social conservatism on the front burner. As a side note, I do not buy Giuliani as conservative on anything other than most law-and-order/security issues (gun-grabbing a major exception); after all, he was very active in railing against Wall Street in his time in the US Attorney’s office of Southern Manhattan.

– On Wednesday, Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner railed against what passed for Pubbie leadership going into the 2006 elections and issued a call for conservatives to start speaking up.

– On Thursday, Owen Robinson, despite claiming he had a different take than the previous 3, sounded a lot like Ryan. He expounded on taxes and health care far more than Ryan, while also taking on education.

– Today (Friday), Mark Green took a stab as to why he lost his race for governor, and came up with fatigue over the Iraq front in the Global War on Terror, scandals in DC, and Republicanism in general. Considering the office Green ran for and the person he ran against, I would take door #3.

If I had to summarize their takes, it would be that it is Republicanism, not conservatism, that is out of gas. The only problem is, at least on a statewide and national level, there are but two parties, and time is definitely a-wasting in deciding whether to try to retake the Republican Party or do to the Pubbies what they did to the Whigs.

I would be remiss if I didn’t point you to Tom McMahon’s contrarian take (unfortunately, not part of the WPRI series). Take a close look a the bottom-right block.

Roll bloat – Friday edition

by @ 9:44. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, The Blog.

This one could get interesting. JSOnline mashed together 4 Milwaukee-area Legislators, 2 from each house, 2 from each party, and stuck them on the same blog called Backroom Blog. Representing the elephant are Sen. Neal Kedzie (11th Senate District-Elkhorn) and Rep. Leah Vukmir (14th Assembly District-Wauwatosa). Representing the donkey are Sen. Jeff Plale (7th Senate District-South Milwaukee) and Rep. Jason Fields (11th Assembly District-Milwaukee).

I’m keeping an eye on this one, especially since we’re already starting on the beanballs. You should too, unless you don’t like sausage-making.

One message to the JSOnline folks; please do a better job on the RSS feeds. The current set of feeds, when they’re working, do not link properly to internal links (likely because you guys are using relative rather than absolute addresses), don’t offer links to individual posts (which makes it nigh impossible to link back to you) and don’t have any real formatting. When they’re not working (which is way too often), the attempts at formatting and linking result in the code followed by the HTML for >, and the feeds fail to validate and parse.

April 26, 2007

Craps planning on passing along a 7-cent/gallon gas tax

by @ 11:06. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Charlie Sykes just reported that Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) had his Department of Administration ask the Dem members of the Legislature to separate the 2.5%-of-value gas tax he wants to hoist upon “Big Oil” and his “requirement” that “Big Oil” eat the cost of that tax with the idea of keeping the tax once the courts strike down the “no-pass-through” provision. With gas at anywhere between $2.83 and $3.10 per gallon (like the pumps and unlike just about everybody else, I round that 9/10ths of a penny up), we’re talking about over 7 cents per gallon added onto the 32.9 cents/gallon tax.

The drive to number one continues unabated.

April 20, 2007

US v Thompson, 3 LIBs’ opinion

I’m so glad they waited until I got back to issue this drivel so I could consider this without being rushed. I’m sure Rick Esenberg will apply a legal mind to this one, and I’ll wager that Jeff Wagner will jump in as well. The short version of the opinion – We Lawgivers-In-Black know better than you peon politicians and civil servants how to run a bidding contest, and if you corrupt politicians want to hand out favors for bribes, use minions and don’t tell them precisely why (though you can go as far as saying that it’s “political”).

That rousing cheer you hear is from corrupt politicians and criminals from Madison to Chicago and all points in between who have been given a “Stay out of jail free while buying campaign contributions and influence” card by LIBs Easterbrook, Bauer and Wood.

April 13, 2007

Doyle’s raising taxes $1.74 billion $2.1 billion $2.6 billion over the next two years

by @ 16:24. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

(H/T – Dad29)

You may or may not remember the earlier calculations of just how much Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) wants to raise taxes in Wisconsin over the next two years. Now comes news from Assembly Speaker Mike Huebsch that Craps wants to borrow an additional $3 billion over the next two years to feed Hugh Gubmint:

"The Democrats budget puts an additional $3 billion on the taxpayer’s credit cards. To put that in perspective, if Wisconsin had a 20 year loan at 4.41% to pay that it off, the Democrats’ spending spree would cost taxpayers an extra $19.8 million a month. A child born today will leave the hospital with a $861.43 credit card bill thanks to the Democrats’ borrowing.

“The credit card bill is in addition to the Democrats’ plan to raise taxes by $536 for every man, woman and child in Wisconsin, hitting the average family of four to the tune of $2,144. Our children will pay for their spending spree for the rest of their lives….”

That’s right, sports fans. Increasing the size of state government by the cumulative effects of inflation and income growth isn’t enough for Craps. Increasing the burden of that government by $1.74 billion beyond the cumulative effects of inflation and income growth isn’t enough for his fellow Dem members of the Party-In-Government. As Dad29 said, “That’s hardly sufficient for his plan to transform Wisconsin into a State whose residents will have zero after-tax disposable income.” (emphasis in the original)

Talk about your “structural deficits”.

April 11, 2007

Madison, we have a job problem

by @ 12:49. Filed under Business, Politics - Wisconsin.

Reading beyond the headlines of this DayWatch blurb that focuses too much on Milwaukee County’s piss-poor job-creation performance yields a very dark and bleak picture. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics ranked job growth in the 326 largest counties in the country, including the 6 largest counties in Wisconsin (in alphabetical, Brown, Dane, Milwaukee, Outagamie, Racine, Waukesha and Winnebago), between the third quarter of 2005 and the third quarter in 2006. The average job growth among employers subject to unemployment insurance laws was 1.5%. Waukesha County came in on top of the Wisconsin heap and slotted in at 213rd nationally with a 0.5% increase. Milwaukee County came in second with a 0.1% increase, “good” enough for 252nd nationally, Racine broke even statistically, and the other 4 all lost jobs.

I guess having a very hostile tax/legal/regulatory business climate does have consequences.

5 days and counting

That is how long it’s been since the 3-person panel of Lawgivers-In-Black on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals released Georgia Thompson from Club Fed, and there is still no opinion from them to back up their order. Inquiring minds from Madison to Chicago, both in politics and organized crime (or are they really one and the same?), want to know whether there is something specific about this case that caused a crash-stop reversal of Thompson’s conviction that they can exploit or whether the new standard is that, as long as the fixer remains clammed up, no conviction in the Great Lakes will remain upright.

April 3, 2007

Election – good news/bad news

by @ 23:20. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

This will be revised and extended as further numbers come in. The time-stamp will be updated to reflect this. As of 11:04 pm, however, I’m done updating. One last update since the New Berlin numbers came in.

Also, a correction; I should know better than to depend on DayWatch to provide accurate information; the Mukwonago land grab scheme passed handily.

Further revisions/extensions (12:28 pm 4/4/2007) – It was wishful thinking on the Goron who ran the Journtinel’s vote tabulator last night. The townsfolks in Mukwonago did NOT, repeat, did NOT approve the land grab scheme, though the DayWatch article I depended on originally had the wrong numbers.

Good news – As I type, Annette Ziegler is leading Lieberal Linda Clifford 57%-43% with 51% in. AP has declared Ziegler the winner. Make that margin 58%-42% with 84% in.

Bad news – Fred Dooley got waxed 362 votes to 226 votes.

Good news – Mark Verhalen is my new alderman, winning 401 votes to 386 votes.

Bad news – Junior McGee-Jackson intimidated enough voters in his district to survive his recall without having to go through a run-off.

Good news – The largest tax increase referendum in the history of Wisconsin (Elmbrook School District’s attempt to borrow $99.3 on the big question to remodel the high schools to Taj Mahal standards and another $10 million to build marble-lined field-houses at those schools) went down in flames to the tune of 61%-39% on the big question, 64%-36% on the not-as-big question.

Bad news – The second-largest tax increase referendum in the history of Wisconsin (New Richmond School District’s attempt to borrow $92.9 million new high school/new elementary school/remodeled future middle school/remodeled elementary school) passed 2,370 votes to 1,818 votes. The relatively-good news is a 5-year “non-recurring” $500,000 cap-buster for the new elementary school fell 2,122 votes to 2,047 votes.

Good news – The third-largest tax increase referendum in the state (Franklin’s attempt to borrow $75.9 million to build a Taj Mahal high school) also went down in flames 60%-40%, with the related $1.18 million recurring cap-buster falling 62%-38%.

Bad news – Ryan McCue will continue Cudahy’s descent into the 9th ring of Tax Hell unabated as he won the mayoral race there 60%-40%.

Good news – Bill McReynolds won another term as Racine County Executive 54%-46%.

Bad news – Brown Deer voters continue the trend of turning northern Milwaukee County into a lieberal tax-hell bastion, voting themselves a $4.1 million tax increase so their school district could overspend on science classrooms without having to make any cuts in Cadillac benefits.

Good news – Delafield’s $20.15 million plan to build a pair of Taj Mahals for the cops and firefighters fell 56%-44%.

Bad news – Despite no more potential for growth, the Greendale School District suckered the taxpayers into taxing themselves an additional $14.6 million for “adding to, improving and renovating” their schools.

Good news – The Washington County land-grab scheme fell 63%-37%.

Bad news – The Mukwonago School District got a pair of victories to spend an additional $23 million so they could continue to offer Rolls-Royce benefits while catching up on intentionally-delayed repairs and continuing to offer the same level of education.

Good news (I hope this is final; the initial call from JSOnline’s DayWatch had the correct result, but incorrect numbers, while JSOnline’s running vote totals had the incorrect result but the right if transposed numbers) – The townsfolk in Mukwonago rejected their town board’s land-grab scheme 64%-36%. While the board said it would respect the voters’ decision in this advisory referendum, it remains to be seen whether they follow through.

The ultimate bad news – Every school official reached by the Journtinel from the districts that were slapped down, plus the Gorons that are ruinin…er, running Delafield, promised to not listen to the voters that said to practice fiscal restraint and to come back again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again until they sucker the voters like the Brown Deer, Greendale and the Mukwonago School Boards successfully did.

April 2, 2007

The not-so-awaited NRE endorsements

by @ 9:44. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

I’ll keep them short and sweet, I promise.

  • Wisconsin State Supreme Court – Annette Ziegler – Putting tort lawyer Linda Clifford (who has not prosecuted or ruled upon one case) on SCOW will make them a 4-to-5 member ultra-liberal über-Legislature, unaccountable to nobody. It would also validate a wholly-negative campaign.
  • Oak Creek 3rd Aldermanic District – Mark Verhalen – It’s the taxes, stupid, part 1.
  • Racine 7th Aldermanic District – Fred Dooley – It’s the ideas and taxes, stupid.
  • Any and every borrow-and-spend-and-tax referendum, especially the 3 biggest in the history of Wisconsin (the $99.3 million one in Elmbrook School District to Taj Mahal their two high schools that is paired with a $10 million one to add indoor tracks to both, the $92.8 million one in New Richmond that is paired with a $500,000-for-5-years levy-buster, and the $78 million one in Franklin to build a new Taj Mahal high school) – No – It’s the taxes, stupid, part 2.

March 29, 2007

I am also Spartacus

by @ 13:50. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

I’ve made it a policy to not blogroll campaign sites. However, after some twit decided to try to take down Owen for putting a Blogs for Ziegler button on his site, I’ve changed my mind. I am proud to promote my candidates for State Supreme Court and Racine’s 7th Aldermanic District, Annette Ziegler and Fred Dooley (respectively).

You want some like the Islamokazis, come get some.

Revisions/extensions (11:18 pm 3/29/2007 and following times below) – Others who are Spartacus (at least that I know of as of the latest time-stamp on the R&E; if I missed you, either post here or at the BBA):
Badger Blogger
The American Mind
Texas Hold’Em Blogger (he’s also John Doe)
Jiblog
The Asian Badger
PeteRepublic
Blogger Beer
An Old Broad’s Ramblings
Musings of a Thoughtful Conservative (who also said that he’s John Doe at the same time)
– Added 10:13 am 3/30/2007 –
Reality Check
silent E speaks
– Added 10:22 am 3/30/2007 –
triticale (who just doesn’t do graphics; he must still be running on Arpanet ;-) – just kidding)
– Added 3:50 pm 3/30/2007 –
On The Borderline
– Added 8:12 pm 3/30/2007 –
Lance Burri
– Added 7:17 am 3/31/2007 –
“Freedom Eden

March 27, 2007

Random tidbits from the Elmbrook money race

by @ 13:48. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel did some digging into the pre-election campaign finance report filed by a group called LEGACY, which wants to have the voters in the Elmbrook School District screw themselves out of $108.8 million (well, make that $300 million by the time interest payments are figured in) through a pair of referendums to remake the two high schools into twin Taj Mahals. First, they’re outspending the the pro-taxpayer Vote No April 3 group by something north of 7.4 to 1; while the borrow-and-tax-and-spenders reported they raised and spent about $7,400 through last week Monday, the no-more-taxers certified that they will neither raise nor spend more than $1,000 through the entire campaign (left unmentioned in the story is that Vote No April 3 also stated they will not receive more than $100 from any individual) and thus are taking the exemption from detailed campaign finances.

That, however, is not the most-interesting tidbit in the borrow-and-spend-and-taxers’ money trail. Who donated what is. Let’s start where the Journtinel started, with Rob and Susan Stieg. Rob works for Boldt Co., who Elmbrook hired to oversee the Twin Taj Mahal renovations at a cost of $550,000. Indeed, Rob is the principal-in-charge of that project. Rob and Susan donated $100 to the cause.

Next, let’s head to the big-money donors. $1,000 came from two different people, and a third person donated $300. Considering that Fred Dooley can’t take a donation over $250, I find it curious that these three people were able to pump in that kind of cash.

Our final stop ends with a pair of real estate companies. $800 came into the campaign from Core Realty Holdings Management Inc. Also, Shorewest Realty did a $100 in-kind donation for a phone bank. I do trust that it was actually from people that work for those firms because the last time I checked, corporations couldn’t donate to campaigns in Wisconsin.

That last tidbit begs the question; why would real estate companies be in favor of higher taxes? The answer is actually very simple; they don’t earn money on property that isn’t sold, and one of the main reasons why property is sold in Wisconsin is because the current property owner can no longer afford the taxes to stay. It does not matter much whether that price is high or depressed.

March 26, 2007

Stupid idiotorial of the week (and an even dumber idea)

by @ 9:44. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Revisions/extensions (10:07 am 3/26/2007) – Added some further thoughts on just how few “competitive” seats would be required and the lack-of-moderation that would result.

The Fifth Column at 4th and State wins with their support of a draft bill being circulated by a pair of ‘Rats that would ensure ‘Rat majorities in the Legislature. Since it’s a draft bill and thus unavailable for public viewing, I’ll just have to take out my chainsaw on O. Ricardo Pimentel and company….

Wisconsin is a purple state. Not rabidly red and not ballistically blue. Pragmatically purple.

And Pimentel and company are cursing because it’s not ballistic.

But you might not be able to tell that, given how intensely partisan the voters’ representatives often are on a variety of important issues. It is as if they represent a state riven into implacable, ideological camps. The result has been a state Legislature unable to move the dial on various vital issues, campaign finance reform key among them.

I for one do not consider this a problem. Of course, I don’t want bigger gubmint, or gubmint meddling further in campaign finance. Look at what a “success” the McShame-Slimeroad Lieberal Protection Act is on the federal level.

This happens because the districts legislators have crafted for themselves are too lopsidedly blue or red. This means maximum advantage for incumbents’ own re-elections and the luxury of remaining as ideological as they choose. The better to survive primary races to earn, essentially by default, their party’s votes in the general election.

Actually, the problem is that once a leggie is elected, nobody ever gathers up the gumption (or, thanks to campaign finance rules both current and proposed, money) to challenge him or her, especially in the primary, so the leftward tug exerted in Madistan by the other members of the Party-In-Government and the presstitutes is left uncountered by the leanings of the district.

This system pretty much guarantees that the Legislature clones itself virtually every election, though circumstances can change outcomes at the margins, as in the 2006 election, when the state Senate changed hands and Democrats picked up seats in the Assembly.

I wouldn’t necessarily call that changing the outcome at the margin. On second thought, considering the lack of Republican leadership exhibited by Dale Schultz (and before him, Mary Panzer and Mike Ellis), that can’t even be called a change. Countering that, how does the Journtinel explain the shift from a 60+-seat majority in the Assembly for the ‘Rats in the mid 1980s to a 60+-seat majority that the Pubbies so recently enjoyed?

The likely cause of that shift, however, was the Iraq war and general dissatisfaction with the national party in power for a variety of other reasons as well. This had discernible local fallout.

But absent such political riptides, the present-day redistricting system is simply too prone to promoting political inbreeding. A paucity of new blood from sturdier stock means an imperfect genetic pool, politically speaking, with bad traits repeated through the generations.

Even a flashing VCR is right once a day.

Redistricting reform can be the political equivalent of genetic engineering.

We all know how well gubmint has done with social engineering, so let’s have them do genetic engineering </sarcasm>.

Wisconsin simply must reinvent itself politically so its representatives are more reflective of the state’s pragmatic norms than its political extremes.

To do that, competitiveness must be what substantively guides the redrawing of legislative districts that occurs every 10 years after the U.S. census. If most districts are solidly blue and solidly red, with little chance of seats ever changing hands, there is virtually no incentive for lawmakers to legislate from anything but immovable positions. There is no need to moderate positions to reflect minority-party views existing in their districts. Those people and those views then don’t get represented by their representatives.

You want competitiveness? How about a forced ouster of every PIG every so often?

There is circulating in the state Legislature a draft bill, the result of a compromise between Reps. Fred Kessler (D-Milwaukee) and Spencer Black (D-Madison), that would impose this condition of competitiveness on more of Wisconsin’s state legislative districts.

The bill is imperfect but is ideal as a jumping-off point to change how the state crafts its legislative districts. That change is imperative.

Off the cliff, that is.

It would create a state redistricting board composed of state constitutional officers, plus one – the attorney general, secretary of state, state treasurer, superintendent of public instruction and a member appointed by the state Supreme Court.

Strict partisans might sense a Democratic tilt. But this board would not draw the lines. That would be left to the revisor of statutes, a civil servant appointed by the Legislature. He, in turn, would be constrained from broad political mischief by a formula in the legislation that results in more competitive districts.

The revisor of statutes would present three plans to the board, which would pick one.

I’m shocked, SHOCKED that there would be a ‘Rat tilt.</Casablanca>. You can bet that they’ll choose the one that services their desires for a socialist Wisconsin the best. As for the fool that would draw the lines, the only way there would be consensus on who that fool is would be if one party controlled both houses of the Legislature, and since the he or she would be serving at the pleasure of the party in power, the job would necessarily be contingent on pleasing the party in power.

The formula involves the revisor considering the state’s party split by looking at how Wisconsin voters on average split their ballots in the previous five general elections.

Talk about cloning a mindset.

Say that split was 51% Republican and 49% Democrat. A 99-seat Assembly would have 50 seats with voter percentages favoring the Republicans. Those 50 seats would be drawn so that Republicans number above that average 51%.

In this formula, Democrats would get majorities in 17 of the state Senate’s 33 districts.

Kessler says this simply reflects the reality that it’s perhaps not possible in much of Wisconsin to craft competitive districts given residential patterns – people living next to like-minded people.

Note the language here, kids. First you get a tiny hypothetical bone thrown to the Pubbies, then the reality of ‘Rat domination is driven home like a piledriver. Oh, and Red Fred, how exactly does Oak Creek connect to UWM and Milwaukee’s East Side? My map of the 7th Senate District shows that it runs through MMSD’s Jones Island, not exactly a hotbed of residential activity.

But this bill would mandate competitiveness in 20 Assembly seats and eight Senate seats, with narrow enough margins between Republicans and Democrats so either candidate has a chance.

So the guaranteed ‘Rat majority in the Senate is anywhere between 1 and 17. Convenient, isn’t it?

(Start extensions) Further, this “mandated” comptetitiveness will do absolutely, positively NOTHING for moderation. I could’ve swore the “new blue blood” Dems that put SanFranNan 2 heartbeats from the Presidency was supposed to “moderate” the ‘Rats. However, they’re running things much like Tip O’Neill did back in the day, with aspirations of being the second coming of Carl Albert (except without the honor to allow a replacement of the VP).

We’re not convinced the formula is workable and are particularly puzzled by how it divides the bulk of non-competitive Assembly and Senate seats. We are convinced, however, that mandating competitiveness, even by formula, is the right direction – if it can be done and still comply with the minority representation dictates of the Voting Rights Act.

It’s not workable – unless you want to turn Wisconsin into a Soviet Republic. Again, if you want competitiveness, auto-retire the leggies every so often.

The revisor of statutes – with no expertise on this issue – is likely not the best redistricting agent. The Legislative Reference Bureau is a better choice.

But it’s so much easier to pressure one person than an entire department.

And reform legislation also should deal with congressional districts, which the state is tasked with drawing.

How better to make the Congressional delegation 6-2 ‘Rats after 2010 while ousting those “pesky” Pubbies Jim Sensenbrenner and Paul Ryan (both live near the border of their respective districts) then to turn over that redistricting to a bunch of ‘Rat hacks?

Other states have enacted reform but subordinated competitiveness. That is not reform.

Neither is this.

This kind of change in Wisconsin would require a constitutional amendment, meaning votes by two consecutive legislatures before it is put on the ballot.

How touching; the Jourtinel actually recognizes that there is a built-in process for amending the state constitution, and it doesn’t involve activist Supreme Court justices. I wonder if they’ll remember that when assuming the editorial position on the state Supreme Court race (er, no).

The temptation will be for legislative leadership to quietly deep-six this bill. It should instead view it as an opportunity. It should recognize that if it also enacts broad campaign finance reform, redistricting reform could make this the year that Wisconsin becomes the nation’s model for good government.

All I have to say is, “Match generated bearings and shoot!”

March 23, 2007

The Craps tax bite just gets larger

by @ 18:33. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

JSOnline’s DayWatch is reporting that the non-partisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau has estimated that, instead of an average $75 property tax hike due to the Craps Tax Anti-Freeze Ver. 2.0, it’s going to be a $94 one. For those that deal in percentages, that’s now 3.4% instead of 2.7%.

Methinks they’re still understating it. Don’t forget to “thank” Jim “Craps” Doyle, Mary “Panzy” Panzer, and Dale Schultz, the three individuals most responsible for the death of any hope of tax relief.

James Harris says it so much better than I can

by @ 18:23. Filed under Law and order, Politics - Wisconsin.

Go, read his take on the crisis that is Milwaukee, then if you’re in any position to do anything about solving that crisis, whether you’re a politico or “merely” a citizen, DO IT!

Latest evidence that Milwaukee is “not in a crisis”

by @ 11:38. Filed under Law and order, Politics - Wisconsin.

From today’s JSOnline’s DayWatch

  • A 16-year-old boy was shot and killed about about 1:50 a.m. this morning in a yard in the 2100 block of N. 38th St. – I could’ve swore that today was a school day at MPS.
  • A 23-year-old man was ejected from a car and died about 2:40 this morning after a crash he apparently initiated on S. Layton Blvd., police said. According to police reports, the man started attacking the 23-year-old woman who was driving the car southbound. – Two words, and only two words can describe this one; “Just damn”.
  • An 18-year-old student at Pulaski High School was arrested after a gun was found in his locker Thursday, Milwaukee police said today The gun was not loaded, said police spokeswoman Anne E. Schwartz. She said the boy dropped the gun from his pocket during a class Thursday…. – Not only is MPS failing to teach kids to any sort of standard, they can’t even teach basic stay-out-of-jail skills. The FIRST place the cops are going to start looking for a gun after you drop it in a classroom (where you shouldn’t be armed in the first place) is your locker.

Nope, this is not a crisis, at least according to Mayor Tom “Milk Carton” Barrett. If it weren’t so tragic, I might laugh at that proposition, because it definitely IS a crisis.

Speaking of DayWatch, is anybody else having issues with the HTML in their RSS feed (I won’t mention that they don’t provide hotlinks to individual posts)? Sometimes, the closing “>” will show up as “&gt;” (the HTML code for that all-important symbol), sometimes it will properly trigger the display of the enclosed HTML, and those changes on that same post throughout the day will trigger the “update” feature in SharpReader. Also, any links that do show up will not open properly.

March 22, 2007

What else was “found” on Busalacchi’s Palm Pilot

by @ 6:49. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

If you believe that an unaltered copy of DOT Secretary Frank Busalacchi’s calendar from 2003 and 2004 was found on his Palm Pilot after it was erased from state servers, not only do I have a bridge to sell you, but I have a list of other things found on there:

  • The location of Noah’s Ark (the real one, not the water park in the Dells)
  • A recording of Jimmy Hoffa’s burial
  • The 800 FBI files the Clintons took
  • Former Senate “Republican Leader” Dale Schultz’s cajones
  • Busalacchi’s real NCAA bracket, which had a rematch of Marquette and Wisconsin (after Marquette beats UW-Parkside)
  • The identity of this year’s mole on “24”
  • The mission profile for Wing Attack Plan “R”

March 21, 2007

And the cover-up continues

by @ 15:28. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Good news – they’ve found Frankie Bag-O-Cash Busalacchi’s calendar for 2003 and 2004 on his Palm Pilot.

Bad news – Busalacchi had time to wipe any mention of Troha from it.

Exit question for those with Palm Pilots; is there enough memory on those things to keep contacts from 3 and 4 years ago? Something doesn’t smell right here.

Dammit, Chris – why did you pull that?

by @ 15:07. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Revisions/extensions (4:28 pm 3/21/2007) – Chris pulled the post, dammit. I simply struck throught the no-longer-relevant portions and pulled the link. It was truly classic DY.

Further revisions/extensions (6:41 pm 3/21/2007) – If only he didn’t have to out himself before taking his current gig,….

I proudly present to you the single best take on the revelation in today’s Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the Department of Transportation “accidentally” erased Secretary Frank Busalacchi’s calendar, as well as his top deputy’s calendar and nobody else’s, for 2003 and 2004. If Chris Schneider is right, that’s why the archived-for-all-time (no ‘Rats here to save me) Bouncing Mozzarella got bounced.

Seriously, there is no way in hell that calendar could have accidentally disappeared. EVERY last GUI I’ve ever dealt with has asked for confirmation before deleting, while almost every backup program I’ve ever done does not. Even if the state were still using command-line technology, “DEL” isn’t exactly easily-confused with “COPY” or “BACKUP”.

Now, what is next? Since there is no longer a direct link to any activity that happened in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, I don’t know if US Attorney for Eastern Wisconsin Steve Biskupic can find a hook into this. Dane County DA Brian Blanchard, who has primary responsibility for prosecuting crimes committed in Madison, is nothing more than a partisan hack doing the bidding of the Madistan branch of the DPW (not-coincidentally, the branch that continues to occupy the governor’s mansion). AG JB Van Hollen saw nothing wrong with Team Craps in the 3+ years he was US Attorney for Western Wisconsin (responsible for, among other things, Madison) while Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) and Busalacchi were in the executive branch, and there’s nothing that suggests he sees anything wrong now. Van Hollen’s replacement in that office is so invisible I don’t even know who it is.

So, why did those two calendars and only those two calendars “accidentally” disappear? Could some of those entries contained evidence that Busalacchi illegally had the DOT provide indicted Doyle moneyman Dennis Troha with help settling tax bills with other states? If so, could those entries also contain evidence that Busalacchi was ordered to provide that help? Inquiring minds want to know, and not just mine.

[No Runny Eggs is proudly powered by WordPress.]