As we all know, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker handily defeated Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett last night and became the first American governor in history to defeat a recall vote. This is sure to have some ramifications for the November election as well. We can easily figure out what many of these will be:
First, public sector union employees in Wisconsin and many other states will be disheartened by the results. They believed, until the end, that their ground game would be sufficient to win. This has been a source of Democratic victories since 1992, when Clinton targeted those unions, rather than the industrial ones that were the key to Democratic election successes throughout the Midwest and Northeast for decades. Presumably his rationale was that public sector employment (and dues) was much more stable than for those in the private sector.
Second, as state deficits became inexorable after the 2008 recession, though, civil service jobs were lost at rapid, never before seen levels. Governors who were elected in 2010 weren’t beholden to the power of the unions and were able to go after their long-term negotiating advantage. After last night, many politicians in other states will be successful in efforts to constrain the unions. So, I think we may see similar actions in purple states.
Third, union activists have to be disappointed with the lack of support they received from Barack Obama. He continued his trend as President of only engaging at a high level when he was pretty sure that his side would win. Since, in many swing states, union activists are the key, this should reduce Democratic voter turnout in November. This should affect a lot of elections, primarily for Congress.
Finally, I’d expect a lot more Republican enthusiasm for the general election. This will probably be accompanied by more money. I’d guess that this combination is apt to cause the Republicans to do better in the Senate than was previously thought. Until last night’s landslide, I’d have guessed that they would win 50-51 seats. Now, a couple of others where the Democrats had an edge will move into the GOP column, giving them long term control there.
As an aside, the recall effort was silly to begin with. People don’t like poor sports; when your side loses in politics, sports, or life, just suck it up and try to do better next time. The 2010 election results happened because Republicans were much more likely to vote than Democrats. If they didn’t like the policies that were enacted, unions and their allies would have been better served to work for 2014.









June 6th, 2012 at 5:26 am
All good. The Dems are saying that Obama was a coward for not trying to help this race. Imagine our heroic president a chicken!
June 6th, 2012 at 5:26 am
I agree that this recall effort was silly and a waste of time, energy and money for the Democrats and unions. But it may well turn out to be their last gasp of air, as we now see the Liberals washing up on the shore like dead, bloated fish.
June 6th, 2012 at 5:27 am
Obama is a ZERO, not a hero!
June 6th, 2012 at 5:28 am
Sort of like a Great Lakes version of a BP oil spill, eh, Andy?
June 6th, 2012 at 5:37 am
It’s sort of refreshing that he’s not a coward only when facing down pelosi and reid.
June 6th, 2012 at 5:42 am
wow, that was a garbled comment that I made. I was tring to say that obama is gutless when faced with any real opposition.
June 6th, 2012 at 8:57 am
Michael Moore suggested the unions should tweet in their support come November.
I liked it! Especially coming from Michael Moore.
June 6th, 2012 at 9:38 am
Arribe, we know what you mean! But, trying to make sense of Obama always makes people feel silly headed.
flyingmonkey, I’ll be tweeting my support for Obama’s retirement party in November.
June 6th, 2012 at 12:55 pm
The effect is that theres no moonbats posting.
They’re all in a catatonic state still staring at the TV
June 6th, 2012 at 1:31 pm
The Moonbats are confused. Obama says one thing. Bill Clinton another. They are like Push-Me-Pull-You.
June 6th, 2012 at 1:39 pm
This election was rigged. Rigged by out of state money, disenfranchisement of Democrat voters, and probably even hacked voting machines.
The results were wildly different that what the polls predicted, and the exit polls showed that most voters said they planned to vote for Obama in November. This is very strange, considering that the Republican “won,” don’t you think?
Walker is a right wing extremists and a felon, and he should be in jail. Hopefully some day soon he will be.
June 6th, 2012 at 4:54 pm
Baby.