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

November 17, 2006

Welcome to Florida parts 3 and 4

by @ 17:14. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Item #1 in this update – The Journal Sentinel finally catches up to me, and provides the reason why the ‘Rat requested her recount – “Assembly Speaker-elect Mike Huebsch (R-West Salem) said that clerks discovered an extra 100 votes for the Democrat after the election, prompting the candidate’s request for a recount.” Did I not say this was Florida without the good weather?

Item #2 – Waukesha County proves to be no help to the yet-to-concede loser Kathleen Falk – JB Van Hollen gained a net additional 109 votes in the official canvass of the county. As a reminder, the canvasses are due to the State Elections Board by Monday, November 21.

November 16, 2006

The Cheddarsphere react to Tommy for Pres Part 1/2 continues

(This will be updated more-or-less frequently, and if I can remember to change the time, I will. If I miss you, let me know below and I’ll add you.)

There is a reason why I call it Part 1/2; his abortive run in 2000 was only a quarter of an effort, and I doubt that, despite saying he’ll file to form an exploratory committee, Wisconsin’s biggest tease will go through with it. What the rest of the right side of the Cheddarsphere is saying (Folkbum, Feldstein and company need not apply):

James Wigderson – He promises as President to spend like a drunken sailor on asphalt from sea to shining sea, and a dog track in every community in America. He then said to the farmers of Iowa, “LET’S STICK IT TO MINNESOTA!”

Silent E – Not conservative enough. Not conservative at all. Not pretty enough. No Chance…………..

Peter over on RDW (expecting something similar on his blog shortly) – They don’t call the GOP the Stupid Party for nothing.

Michelle Malkin (so she’s not a Cheddarhead; I grant special dispensation based on this week’s Vent) – Five letters for you–L.O.S.E.R. (damn, but that’s harsh, but what do you expect from someone who displays a bigger set of balls than Fox News)

Aaron (who didn’t hear the news) – I say it’s time for Tommy to run.

Jib – Clearly his ego knows no bounds.

Sean Hackbarth – And soon after he’ll realize he can’t win then drop out.

Jenna – Thompson’s biggest problem is his complete and utter lack of foreign policy experience or knowledge.

Patrick – Tommy, please"¦ please"¦ Just don’t do it..

Charlie Sykes on the 11/16/2006 Sykes-Wagner Podcast – …(I)f the term “dark horse” doesn’t apply here, I don’t know when you would use the term “dark horse”.

Jeff Wagner on the same podcast – …(T)he reality is, it seems to me, that his time has passed.

Marcus Aurelius on the Badger Blog Alliance – I don’t think Tommy would be any better with the veto pen and pork than W or when he was The Guv.

Welcome to Florida part 2

by @ 18:13. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Silent E is wondering whether Wisconsin’s version of Al Gore has conceded. Kathleen Falk hasn’t conceded yet, and depending on when the last county reports its results to the State Elections Board, she’ll have until 11/27 to do so – a candidate has to wait for the final canvas to be reported to file for a recall (due no later than 11/21), then he or she has 3 days to do so (since the state takes a 4-day weekend Thanksgiving week, that extends the deadline from Friday to the following Monday).

That got me digging around the SEB website, and while there isn’t any news from the Falk campaign, there were three recalls ordered in Assembly races (unofficial vote totals courtesy AP/JSOnline:

By way of comparsion, Falk lost 1,062,657 to 1,053,856 (0.42%).

Out of the 3 ordered recounts and one likely recount, the only one with a realistic chance of changing the result is the one in the 43rd. Along those lines, I wonder if there are 10 people in far southern Dane County, western Rock County, and the city/town of Whitewater that are regretting not voting right about now.

November 15, 2006

Rudy and McShame and Tommy – oh my!

(H/T for the Tommy announcement – Fred)

Where, oh where has Ronald Reagan gone? The crop of “Republicans” that have announced a run for the Presidency so far, John McCain, Rudy Giuliani and Tommy Thompson do not exactly inspire me.

For you out-of-state readers who only know Thompson as an invisible HHS Secretary, he has exactly two conservative accomplishments to his name in his 15 years as governor; welfare reform and school choice (that’s right, both of those actually started in Wisconsin before the national party noticed). Other than that, he is a big-spending social moderate-to-liberal who views conservatives with such distain that he had the “Republican” Party of Wisconsin essentially abandon Mark Neumann in his run against Russ Feingold in 1998.

Of course that’s 2 more than I can think of for McCain, and one more than I can for Giuliani.

First two taxes to go up in Doyle’s second term – vehicles and drivers

by @ 17:50. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Here’s the increased “fee” schedule proposed by the Department of Transportation:

  • Cars – up from $55 to $80, a 44% increase
  • Light trucks weighing less than 4,501 pounds – up from $48.50 to $80, a 65% increase
  • Light trucks weighing between 4,501 and 6,000 pounds – up from $61.50 to $89, a 44.7% increase
  • Light trucks weighing between 6,001 and 8,000 pounds – up from $77.50 to $112, a 44.5% increase

Those tax hikes, which will dump $208 million into the coffers over the next 2 years, will allegedly go to “critical” road needs such as road maintenance and rebuilding the Vote Fraud/FIB Highway between Illinois and Milwaukee. More likely, it, like the $600+ million raided by Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) in the last budget, will go to contributors of Doyle.

Further, they want to increase the fees for the 8-year driver’s licenses from $24 to $34, a 42% increase. Supposedly, that $22 million over the next 2 years will go toward federal requirements to make the licenses a more secure form of ID.

Look for the ‘Rat-infested State Senate to propose a return to the automatic increase in gasoline taxes next year as well. Yipee; we can be COMPLETELY hostile to drivers now.

“Thank” you, Mary Panzer and Dale Schultz, for not taking any action to protect the taxpayers.

Craps Tax Anti-Freeze Sublimination now complete

by @ 14:29. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Jim "Craps" Doyle (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale), as quoted by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in July 2005 – ""˜The result of the freeze that I will sign will be that the average property tax on the average home will not go up at all next year, and will actually go down $5"² in December 2006."

County Board Supervisors Gerry Broderick, Toni Clark, Elizabeth Coggs-Jones, Lynne De Bruin, Marina Dimitrijevic, Chairman Lee Holloway, Willie Johnson Jr, Michael Mayo Sr., Ryan McCue, Richard Nyklewicz Jr., Roger Quindel, John Weishan Jr., Peggy West and James White to the taxpayers of Milwaukee County – A 3.6% levy increase this year AND a guaranteed 5% levy increase next year because of irresponsible spending is just all right with us. PPPHHHHTTTTHHHHH!!!!!!

I want my $5, Doyle. I didn’t get it from the city of Oak Creek, the Oak Creek/Franklin School District, Milwaukee County because of the board, Milwaukee Area Technical College, or Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District. I highly doubt I’m getting it from the Southeast Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission. That leaves it to come out of your pocket.

For the rest of you, this tax anti-freeze ends this year, and thanks to you dumbshits in the 5th, 21st, 23rd and 31st Senate Districts and to the 53% of Wisconsin that are too stupid to know a corrupt politician when you see one, there won’t even be this standing betwee the wallets of the taxpayers of Wisconsin and the vaccuum cleaners that have property tax levying authority. Hello, double-digit tax increases.

Let the recalls begin anew.

November 14, 2006

Even more fallout from the 2006 Republican Meltaway

by @ 16:52. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

JSOnline’s DayWatch – Mike Huebsch is the new Assembly Speaker and Jeff Fitzgerald is the new majority leader.

Will have more thoughts later.

The county budget is vetoed; now it is in our hands.

by @ 16:40. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

First things first, if you haven’t seen Patrick’s video of Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker’s veto announcement, go do so. I was there, and I doubt the TV news will do the announcement justice.

Next, realize that, if the County Board overrides this veto and refuses to have a “do over” on the budget, here’s the cold, hard facts that will bite those of us who live in Milwaukee County:

  • This budget includes a $9 million levy increase.
  • Despite this levy increase, the fact that the County Board put back into the budget a whole slew of positions, but only funded a couple months’ worth of pay puts the county $6.55 million in the red on January 1, 2007.
  • Further, by not accepting Walker’s plan to issue bonds to cover the pension obligations, but assuming the savings from the issuance of those bonds, the county will fall another $6.25 million in the red by the end of the 2007 budget.

The County Board did pass this budget by a vote of 14-5 (with my supervisor, Paul Cesarz, among the 5). However, we can possibly sway three members of that majority to do the budget over: Ryan McCue, Lynne De Bruin, and Roger Quindel. Upholding this veto will give both the taxpayers and the county another chance to get the budget right by everybody.

There is not a moment to lose. The County Board will vote on overriding the veto of the budget tomorrow. Get a hold of your supervisor, especially if you live in the districts of the three I listed above, by callling 278-4222.

It’s now a full veto party

by @ 8:18. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

In case you haven’t heard the news, Scott Walker is now going to veto the entire County Board “budget” later today. While he did find a way to bring the levy back to a zero increase through line-item vetoes, he couldn’t solve the pair of time bombs Lee Holloway and company threw in through the line-item veto pen – the re-adding and partial funding of the jobs Walker wanted to outsource like janitors for a few million (if memory serves, and it’s a bit hazy, somewhere around $6 million), and a shortfall in the pension funding caused by the board’s rejection of bonding the obligation and still taking the savings (again, if the hazy memory serves, right around $13 million).

For those of you with a sense of Bruce Lee films, this quote from Enter the Dragon is definitely appropriate – “What was that? An exhibition? We need emotional content. Try again, this time with feeling.” I can easily see Walker saying that.

November 13, 2006

Quick hits

– Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi is appeasing the moonbat wing of her party by attempting to install John “Cut-and-Run” Murtha as House Majority Leader. I hope you in the middling are paying attention; the Dem “moderates” you elected turned the House much further to the left than you hoped.

– A ChiCom sub popped up within 5 miles of the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk during exercises. While Bill Gertz is trying to claim that it shadowed the battle group, I believe it more likely that the PLAN knew where they would be, had the sub go there ahead of the group and just wait. A diesel-electric sub is nigh impossible to detect on passive sonar when it is making bare steerage. In either case, it’s quite disturbing.

– Russ Feingold announced that, contrary to plans, he won’t be seeking the Democrat nomination for President. While the local newspaper fishwrap bird cage liner paint catcher is deeply saddened, Hillary finds the road open with one less person to take to Fort Marcy Park. Al Qaeda’s favorite Senator, however, will be refocused on the Senate, at least until Clinton asks him to be the VP nominee.

– Good news/bad news on the college football front (more-fully covered at TheWisconsinSportsBar) – Wisconsin moves up to #9 in the latest BCS rankings to become BCS bowl-eligible, but we discover that the BCS bowls can’t take 3 teams from the Big 10. My answer; crush ’em, Ohio State, as the Rose Bowl (which will have the pick of the litter) is expected to take a Big 10 team to replace the Big 10 champ/BCS #1 and Michigan has gone to the Roses more recently than the Badgers, who have gone more-recently than the Buckeyes.

– Speaking of bad news, it’s all over in Hen¢AR. Jimmie Johnson took 2nd at Phoenix to take an almost-insurmountable 63-point lead over Matt Kenseth. They’re cheering in Daytona as they won’t have to alter either the Chase or the points as a whole next year.

– Crow time; after only 9 games, the Packers have matched their win total from last year. Even more shocking, they got win #4 against a team that many people (not me though) considered a challenger to the Bears, and who already got 4 wins.

November 10, 2006

Bar fight in the Assembly

by @ 19:07. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Josh Schroeder makes the case for Dean Kaufert for Assembly Speaker. Owen’s made the case against (previously linked).

It sure looks like conservatism and Republicanism are dead in Wisconsin either way. Damn.

Milwaukee County budget veto party

by @ 15:10. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

Just received this from the Walker folks –

NEWS ALERT

The Milwaukee County Board passed a budget that increased the tax levy by over $9 million. County Executive Walker will announce his vetoes on Tuesday, November 14th. Details from the County Executive’s Office are below:

Location:
KEI Landscaping Company
824 E. Rawson Avenue
Oak Creek

Date: Tuesday, November 14
Time: 12 noon

If you wish to attend please R.S.V.P. to (414) 278-4930

I’m THERE!

Revisions/extensions (6:43 pm 11/10/2006) – Scott has more on the budget-busting the county board did over at Boots and Sabers.

More fallout from the Republican Meltaway – state edition

by @ 9:53. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Owen confirms that Mike Huebsch will be the next Assembly speaker.

I knew there was a reason why I didn’t like the choice; Huebsch was one of those that sought to ram corn-a-hole down our throats. On the other hand, he didn’t appear in my tax rogues gallery, so there might be some hope yet.

Revisions/extensions (3:05 pm/3:15 pm 11/10/2006) – JSOnline’s DayWatch reports that Dean Kaufert has tossed his hat in the ring. Dunno about his leadership style, but he avoided both the corn-a-hole ram and the tax rogues gallery. The ONLY things he did right were to avoid those two bellweather votes. Owen has the details on how Kaufert has been anything but conservative. I should’ve known better than to trust anything from the Fox Valley.

November 9, 2006

Could Walker have beaten Doyle?

by @ 23:34. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

I don’t think so, but there is an interesting take on this from former Milwaukee Sentinel political reporter Ken Lamke (H/T – Charlie). Let’s take Lamke’s arguments one at a time:

Either Mark Green, this year’s losing GOP gubernatorial candidate, or Scott Walker would have benefitted from winning a contested GOP primary.

Voters give a primary winner a real boost for the general election — as opposed to the boost obtained from merely running ahead in a poll, for example. Winning an election is real.

In addition, a primary in the out party prevents the incumbent, in this case Doyle, from going negative against his opponent until after the primary, simply because he doesn’t know who’s going to win the primary. Either Green or Walker would have been spared five months of negative Doyle TV ads had there been a primary.

Ring-a-ding-ding. With an active primary, we would’ve been spared the summer of Doyle smearing Green with absolutely no response. On the other hand, this fight would have caused the winner’s campaign funds to be completely drained, and that post-primary boost would have been completely evaporated with the inability to counter Doyle’s post-primary campaign. See the attorney general’s race; Kathleen Falk ran out of money temporarily after knocking off Peg Lautenschlager, which let JB Van Hollen successfully define heras a no-prosecute anti-business suit-filer. Despite hitching her wagon to Doyle’s and running a November Slime Surprise, she was one of the few Dems that lost.

I believe Walker would have beaten Green in a GOP primary. Walker himself ill (sic) believes it. He dropped out only because he thought he wouldn’t have enough money after the primary to beat Doyle.

If I remember the conversations at Drinking Right with Walker correctly (feel free to correct me, Scott), Walker thought that the fight would leave the winner, whether it be himself or Green, with no money left to beat Doyle.

But look at Walker’s advantages over Green as a general election candidate:

  • Walker would have held down Doyle’s 62 percent margin in Democratic Milwaukee County, which Walker has carried twice as county executive. Walker might even have beaten Doyle in Milwaukee County.

Walker might have shaved 1-2 points (roughly 3,000-6,500), but no more because there is so much straight-ticket voting. Remember, county executive is a non-partisan position, while governor is a partisan one. That is why David Clarke, who does not belong to the Democratic Party of Wisconsin, ran as a Dem.

  • Walker’s anti-tax message would have been more effective than Green’s. Walker has never proposed a tax increase in six county budgets.

Taxes as an issue flat-out failed on Tuesday. I’ve already outlined how it failed.

  • Walker would have been immune from the Doyle attacks tying Congressman Green to the mess in Washington.

Those attacks were predicated on getting the State Elections Board to reverse 30 years of policy. I am certain that Doyle would have found some way to slime Walker, likely using the Legislature Caucus scandal against Walker.

  • And Walker would have done much better than Green among the anti-gay marriage amendment voters. About 280,000 people voted for both the anti-gay marriage amendment AND at the same time voted for Doyle, who opposed the amendment. The socially conservative Walker, the son of a preacher, would have allied himself with the anti-gay marriage amendment to a much greater degree than Green did. Many of those anti-gay marriage/Doyle voters — socially conservative Democrats — would have backed Walker. They have in Milwaukee County.

Again, the backing of Walker has been in non-partisan elections. Like county executive, and more-importantly, unlike the governor’s race, the DOMA amendment was not affected in the least by straight-ticket voting. I doubt that much more than 50,000 of those bifurcated voters would have gone over to Walker, not nearly enough to overcome Doyle’s margin of victory.

It also ignored the fact that there are two “Republican” parties in Wisconsin; the southeast Wisconsin party made up primarily of conservatives and the “Republican” Party of Wisconsin made up primarily of outstate liberals. The latter has a visceral hatred for conservatives, especially SE Wisconsin conservatives, that is arguably greater than their hatred of the Democrats. While Green suffered heavily among the outstaters because of his chasing of the SE Wisconsin vote, Walker would have fared worse. That would have wiped out the gains Walker got from Milwaukee and DOMA.

Bonus – Answer to Charlie’s question – the Republicans did not pick up a single Democrat seat in the governor’s mansions, the Senate or the House, incumbent or otherwise. The closest they got was in Georgia’s 12th Congressional, but the Pubbie fell several hundred votes short.

Fallout from the Republican Meltaway – state edition

by @ 14:02. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Owen reports that Dale Schultz is out, Scott Fitzgerald is in as state Senate Minority “Leader”.

Do note the continued use of quotes. They’re there for 2 reasons:

– With the Senate Dems united and in the majority, there won’t be any bills coming out of the Legislature that Doyle will be vetoing. Ergo, the only power left to the minority leader, the ability to hold his or her caucus together enough to prevent the override, is rendered obselete.

– Fitzgerald sticks his finger in the wind before taking a stand on any issue. That is not a sign of a leader.

Bonus coverage – Dennis York says that Mike Huebsch (R-a place without talk radio) will be the next Speaker of the Assembly, where the Pubbies have a 5-seat margin. Don’t look for him to be nearly as effective in thwarting Jim Doyle and the Senate Dems as Chuck Chvala was in thwarting Tommy Thompson and Assembly Pubbies.

November 8, 2006

Welcome to Florida

by @ 11:22. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

According to the top-of-the-hour newscast, Kathleen Falk will not concede until at least the official canvas is completed, and then likely will pursue a recount strategy. Why am I not surprised? Is it because Craps needs her to refuse state cooperation into the federal investigation into him? Is it because Craps doesn’t really think that his running mate, Babs Lawton, is ready for prime time should he go down? In any case, the AG’s race isn’t over for at least another 20 days (November 27th, the last day that Falk can request a recount).

Almost instant analysis

Brian Fraley, who engineered one of the two lone bright spots in Wisconsin, asks what the license plate of the truck that ran over us is. Let’s see if I can’t help answer the question after sobering up some:

Taxes are dead as a campaign issue. – If you’ve read this blog at all, you know I’ve pimped the tax issue since I started. I hate to admit it has failed spectacularily, but it has.

Let’s take a look at two races; the 21st Senate and the Oak Creek/Franklin school referendum, both in areas that have been historically anti-tax. Before the now-retired Cathy Stepp, the previous two senators from the Racine area were tossed out because they advocated higher taxes. Indeed, George Petak suffered the first successful recall of a senator in ages over voting for the Miller Park sales tax. Running to replace Stepp were Bill McReynolds, who demonstrated fiscal responsibility as Racine County executive, and John Lehman, who actually said that Wisconsin was not a tax hell. The tax-and-spender won by 5 percentage points.

In Oak Creek and eastern Franklin, the school board sought a third spending referendum in a decade, one that costs more than either of the two previously passed, and made no effort to hide that they’ll be back for much more to address “needs” that were allegedly addressed by those two previous referenda as soon as the building authorized by that referendum is completed. Thanks in no small part to all these referenda, property taxes in the district rose to among the highest in the county. On the other hand, this was one of the hotbeds of the revolt of 2002, with Oak Creek sending a tax-freezing Republican to the Assembly, breaking 80 years of Democrat dominance of the district. That representative has run unopposed in both 2004 and 2006. The latest jam to the taxpayers won by 4 percentage points.

Ethics is a “break”, not “make” issue for Republicans. – A LOT of Republicans with at best tenuous ties to Jack Abramoff and Mark Foley went down in flames. Meanwhile, Jim Doyle, Rod Blagojevich, Bob Menendez and William Jefferson, all Democrats being criminally investigated for various corruption charges, live on to collect more taxpayer-funded paychecks.

Negative campaigning works, at least if you start early. – Let’s take a look at the governor’s and attorney general’s races. Jim Doyle’s campaign team started attacking Mark Green the moment Scott Walker dropped out of the race. Green’s campaign remained silent until September, and then didn’t go negative right away.

Similarily, JB Van Hollen’s campaign team started pointing out Kathleen Falk’s complete lack of prosecutorial experience the day after the primaries. Falk went very negative very late in the race.

The “dinosaur” media still has a lot of sharp teeth. – As invested as talk radio and right-wing bloggers were in trying to stop the Democrat tsunami, the traditional media became invested in creating said tsunami. Guess who won.

Pushing social conservative values still works most of the time. – Defenses of traditional marriage passed in almost every state in which it was an issue, and the return of the death penalty in Wisconsin was strongly endorsed. Balancing that out was the marriage defense failure in Arizona and the rejection of a strong anti-abortion initiative in South Dakota.

Similarily, law and order is a winning issue. – See the attorney general race. Also, note that David Clarke, who is still working on turning the Milwaukee County Sheriff Department into a professional urban police force, handily defeated Don Holt, who wanted to return the department into solely a revenue generator. Further, John Chisholm, who at least says he wants to prosecute aggressively, handily whipped Lew Wasserman, who wanted to expand the catch-and-release program that is the DA’s office.

Revisions/extensions (9:30 am 11/8/2006) – Thanks for trying to talk me down, Charlie. I am going to need a lot of help with this one.

Winners and losers

Revisions/extensions (8:15 am 11/8/2006) – We have a winner in the AG race, and I added a few other races I didn’t have before.
Further revisions/extensions (10:40 pm 11/8/2006) – Scratch the Virginia recount; George Allen is more honorable than Kathleen Falk. Needles to say, Allen is a Pubbie, while Falk is a ‘Rat.

Time to go through the winners and losers:

Winners –

Democrats – Well, duh. The ‘Rats took both houses of Congress (pending a likely recount in Virginia), the majority of governor’s mansions (including soundly keeping Jim “Craps” Doyle in position to reward his contributors and exact retribution on everybody else), and the state Senate.

Terrorists – With control of Congress, the ‘Rats will defund the War on Terror and likely seek to conduct a “Constitutional coup” (they don’t have the 67 votes in the Senate to install Nancy Pelosi though). If the Islamokazis are smart, they’ll lay off the attacks a bit longer and let the ‘Rats also take the White House.

Crooked politicians – Doyle, Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich and New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez (all ‘Rats) all won. Also, William Jefferson, the Louisiana ‘Rat with the $90,000 in the freezer, finished first in his Congressional re-election bid and faces a runoff.

Traditional marriage – Every state with a referendum on the ballot regarding marriage except one (Arizona the outlier, with Colorado, Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia and Wisconsin the majority) voted to uphold traditional marriage.

Law and order – JB Van Hollen beat back official Doyle whitewasher Kathleen Falk for AG, and John Chisholm at least ensured that Milwaukee County DA’s office won’t become even more of a catch-and-release office than it already is.

Losers –

Republicans – Well, duh. Every type of Pubbie, from the very conservative (Rick Santorum) to the RepubicRATs (Lincoln Chafee) lost.

Taxpayers – Between Doyle, the state Senate ‘Rats (especially John Lehman and Jim Sullivan) and various referenda (including, unfortunately, another $28.5 million in Oak Creek/Franklin), taxes will continue to skyrocket with no limits.

The other bit of good news from last night

by @ 3:32. Filed under Law and order, Politics - Wisconsin.

99% of the vote in –

J.B. Van Hollen (R) 1,055,342
Kathleen Falk (D) 1,046,327

Law and order now moves into the “winner” column.

“Thank” you Mary Panzer

by @ 1:31. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes, WTPA.

Before I start on the winners and losers from this election, I would like to extend a personal “thanks” to former State Senate Majority “Leader” Mary Panzer for killing TABOR in 2004. Because of her, and because of the resulting re-election of Jim “Craps” Doyle (ALWAYS For Sale) and the takeover of the State Senate by the ‘Rats, taxes will continue to skyrocket in Wisconsin the next 6 years.

Had she shepherded TABOR through in 2004 (and assuming it would have gone through this past session as well), it would have been on the ballot in this election. Now, with the party that officially says that taxes are not high enough in charge of one house of the Legislature, we won’t be able to get either a freeze or any form of TABOR/TPA through this session, or get it onto the ballot until 2012. I hope to be long gone from Wisconsin by then.

November 7, 2006

The polls are now closed

This is the Emergency Blogging System. Even if Papa’s had a WiFi hotspot and steveegg had a laptop, he wouldn’t be live-blogging the election.

The time is now 8 pm Central Standard Time. If the ‘Rats haven’t conned a judge to let them continue to bus people in from Illinois, the polls are now closed. It’s all over but the counting (and hopefully not the recounting and re-recounting and re-re-recounting like in Washington State in 2004).

PSA from the EBS

This is the Emergency Blogging System. Steveegg is busy working the Casper for Everything Victory Party/November Drinking Right at Papa’s Social Club.

One hour, one hour left in the voting day. If you’re going to vote for the NRE-recommended candidates, do so NOW, then come on down to Papa’s. If not, then in the immortal words of Fighting Bob Anderson, “Tahellwitchoo!”

Shenanigans part 5 – The State Doylie Elections Board strikes again

by @ 12:12. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

JSOnline’s DayWatch is now reporting that the State Doylie Elections Board has ordered Milwaukee poll workers to take down signs that say that felons who attempt to vote may be prosecuted. These signs were put up by the Milwaukee Elections Commission at the urging of both the city attorney’s office and the county district attorney’s office.

Guess the Doylies aren’t liking Jim “Craps” Doyle’s (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) chances.

Shenanigans – part 4

by @ 12:03. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

JSOnline’s DayWatch reports that a polling site at Madison East High School received a bomb threat. The initial report at 11:34 had the site shut down and Madison considering asking for an extension, while the update at 11:54 said that the site was open until 11:40, then shut down for an estimated 20-minute search.

Catch the bastard(s) that made the threat and let him/her/them swing.

Revisions/extensions (1:18 pm 11/7/2006) – According to JSOnline’s DayWatch, they moved the machines outside and are voting again.

Early voting patterns heavy

by @ 9:35. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

Various sources from JSOnline’s DayWatch to Owen to my own personal experience (19th when the polls opened with a nice line) all indicate that turnout is heavy in southeast Wisconsin. Keep it up!

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