Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Harley sales fall. Big win for Trump.

Trump even called for a consumer boycott, yet apparently will also have Scott Walker as Team Trump's Wisconsin re-election chair.

So when you read today that Harley-Davidson's sales are dropping, don't forget who had made it his business to poke a stick in the company's spokes or sat by and watched:
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TUESDAY, JULY 3, 2018


Supine Scott Walker enables Trump's WI-trashing rage


Behaving less like a President and more like the score-settling investor loser in a proxy fight, Trump further gaslights his attack on Milwaukee's iconic Harley-Davidson:
Trump now says administration will boost competitors
Riders from Pennsylvania roll away from a stop at the Harley Davidson Museum in downtown Milwaukee. The corporate headquarters and engine works are a few miles away.
Is there a Russian motorcycle company Putin wants to kick start in the US market?

We used to ask what Putin has on Trump. Now I wonder what Trump has on Walker? Or is this as simple as lead sled dog relating to the dog at the back?

Also raised, this question:

Why does Trump keep undermining a state which tilted the election his way by hammering its signature diary, lumber, cranberry, grain, ginseng, biker, beer, and other mainstay employers - - not to mention bashing new Kenosha-area  arrival Amazon  - - and why is WI GOP Gov. Scott Walker so fawningly prostrate at Trump's feet?

Monday, January 28, 2019

Cole, Evers' DNR pick, adds strong water advocate

Props to Wisconsin DNR Secretary-designee Preston Cole for announcing the appointment of Great Lakes advocate and former DNR Water Division Administrator Todd Ambs

Lake Michigan

to the agency's #3 management post.

The Ambs' appointment will return to the DNR some of the expertise and historical memory stripped away during Scott Walker's eight-year war on the agency and the environment.

By contrast, the first Walker/Cathy Stepp appointee to hold the position equivalent was Scott Gunderson, a GOP legislator who was involved the very messy kid-gloves treatment accorded by the agency to a septic waste hauler who spread his loads too close to residential wells. And who had been a donor to Gunderson. True story.

In November, 2017 Ambs contributed substantially to a posting on this from a number of current and past DNR staffers, along with a variety of other observers, about the damage done during the Walker years and what could be done to repair it.

The commentary stretched over two lengthy posts, which I combined, here, and I commend all the submissions for your review.

I will extract Ambs contribution below so you can get a feel for who's being added to the DNR team and what the appointment may portend:

Insiders, experts explain WI GOP's damage to the environment
---------------------------------------------------------

DESTROYING THE NATURAL CAPITAL OF WISCONSIN

As the former Water Division Administrator for the Wisconsin DNR, I have watched with sorrow and dismay as the Wisconsin Legislature and the Walker Administration have dramatically reduced protections for the waters of our state – waters that are held in trust for all of us.

From passing a bill that actually prohibits the department from taking actions to protect public drinking water supplies to administrative actions in the department that have decimated the commitment to integrated water resource management, each action has been taken with a disregard for protecting the resource and a laser focus on making it easier for the regulated permit holders to conduct business without regard to the environment.

The latest legislative proposal to remove state protections for one million acres of wetlands in the state, ignores a basic fact. The economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the environment. The third largest industry in Wisconsin is tourism. 

It sustains much of the state but in particular, the northern third of Wisconsin. We have world class resources in this state. On the water ledger alone, we find 15,000 lakes, 84,000 miles of rivers and streams, 5.3 million acres of wetlands and 1100 miles of Great Lakes shoreline. 

We have groundwater resources that are the envy of much of the world, let alone the nation, although they are not evenly distributed and in short supply in some areas. 

We have water resources that have historically provided the foundation for the tourism industry and a strong quality of life for the rest of the workforce in the state, because we had world class protections for these world class resources.

All of those protections and in turn, this economic driver for the state, are under continuing assault. 

For many years, the mission of the Water Division, which doesn’t even exist anymore, was four-fold:

* Fully enforce the Clean Water Act
* Uphold the Public Trust Doctrine
* Protect Drinking and Groundwater Supplies
* Maintain Outstanding Fisheries

Objectives and strategies were developed around those goals. Progress was measured against those priorities. We weren’t always successful and it wasn’t always as integrated and efficient as we aspired to be, but we knew what we were trying to achieve. 

So what is this DNR trying to achieve for the water resources of our state? I have seen no evidence of a natural resource based mission anymore. 

Yes, the DNR should always be working to issue permits in an efficient and timely manner. 

But if the driving force behind those permits is simply to issue them as fast as possible, then just move the whole operation to the Department of Regulations and Licensing and skip the pretense of natural resource protection. 

Finally, as many people have already pointed out, the real issue here may well be the sheer lack of resources to do the job. 

Perhaps we should start with funding. Our neighbors in Minnesota raised their sales tax through a state referendum. Voters overwhelmingly approved a tax that generates nearly $200 million a year for clean water, parks, and wildlife.

Why not something similar here? If users are supposed to fully fund activities they desire, such as the recent decision to fund state parks only through fees, then we should look to raise other fees as well.  

Some candidates should include:

* Waste water permits – these fees have not been raised since the 1990’s.

* High capacity well permits – last raised in 2004. 

* Permits for Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations – fees for CAFO’s were last adjusted when we had a total of 40 of these large animal raising operations. We now have nearly 300 and have roughly the same number of staff to review and approve permits and make sure that these farms are operating in accordance with those permits.

The stakes here are high, not just for our natural resources but for our economy as well. Make no mistake. Each time we eliminate a protection for our natural capital, our resources, we reduce the ability to sustain our economic well-being as well. - - 

Todd L. Ambs was the Water Division Administrator in the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources from 2003-2010. 

High-flying Walker forgets public employees who keep him safe

His every Tweet validates the November election.

Walker shows again and again us on Twitter that's he's still all about himself, and not the air traffic controllers or the plow operators who smooth his way.


 23 minutes ago
Grabbed lunch at the Original Pantry Cafe. Mmmmm!



Grabbed a burger at Northpoint in General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee. Mmmmm!
Great to talk with the folks who make travel fun with the American Hotel and Lodging Association at their summit in LA!
Triple grilled cheese sandwich, pickle & tomato soup with fresh lemonade!  Nice.

Sunday, January 27, 2019

About government, Reagan was wrong. Ron Johnson, too.

Recent days have provided a powerful seminar on the need for government programs and the workers who provide the services.

The people and the structure are an indispensable whole  - - from air traffic controllers to food safety inspectors to weather forecasters to Coast Guard rescue personnel to the people who cut your tax refund checks.


Send those workers home, and stop paying the contractors who supply and back them up, and we're all living somewhere between Bananastan and Stupidville.

And across Wisconsin, an approaching snowstorm - - the third in recent weeks - -  along with perhaps historically-low chill factors will put thousands of first responders, plow operators and public health workers again in harm's way so the rest of us can stay safe.



Their hard work under duress to be followed by repairs to water main breaks and street cracks that will arrive when this deep freeze thaws. 


Remember, it's only January. 

Enter into this larger picture which benefits from expertise and clarity one Ron Johnson, Wisconsin's useless GOP senior Senator.

As Trump's government shutdown was reaching its political bottom a few days ago, and Republicans were panicking about Blue Wave 2.0 rising ahead of the 2020 elections, Johnson absolved himself of any responsibility for this GOP  mess with some literal finger-pointing at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell:


"This is your fault," Johnson reportedly said to McConnell at a private, GOP-Senators' lunch. 


Such bravery, behind close doors - - just the kind of self-dealing weaseling that will consign Johnson and his fellow GOP Senate 'public service' clods to the partisan minority come January, 2021 for multiple counts of dereliction of duty.

The technicalities of Senate procedure aside, remember that Johnson was an early anti-government Tea Party enthusiast who said he got the idea to run for US Senate in 2010 after Fox News commentator Dick Morris asked for "a rich guy" in Wisconsin willing to take on then-incumbent Democratic Senator Russ Feingold.


Here's Johnson telling that true story


A crippled government in favor of private-sector special-interest dominance has long been the foundation of the GOP. Reagan reduced it to a slogan - - "government IS the problem." 


And Johnson, you should also recall, provided the key "yes" vote in the Senate to approve the Trump-Ryan tax cut plan after successfully inserting a provision to shovel an extra windfall to one category of business that just happened to be how his own business is structured.

Additionally, thanks to GOP partisans like Johnson, the minimal tax reductions that Wisconsin's middle class might see will completely disappear in 10 years, actually resulting in a tax increase. Meanwhile, Johnson's plastics company and other business and corporate interests will enjoy permanent tax cuts.
A shutdown government was malfunctioning precisely the way Johnson and his fellow government-bashers had in mind.

The more poorly it performed, and the fewer resources it had at its disposal, the more validated was the Republican narrative about the public sector even if they had to rig events to make their point.

Don't forget that the government-and-worker-hating & public-sector/public-health damaging Scott Walker promised to take his "wreak havoc" brand to Washington, DC were his nutty plan to become President been successful.

"As if that were a good thing," The Washington Post had snarked. More, here.

Ergo, Trump. and his enablers, like McConnell, Johnson, Paul Ryan and everyone caught in Robert Mueller's net.

No. Government isn't the problem.

The problem is the people who get into government, enjoy all its perks, and spend their time abusing it to serve their own agendas and other special-interest goals.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

When Roger Stone said Walker & Co. rigged 'at least' 5 elections

Well this has been hanging out since 2016.

Bueller, Mueller, anybody?

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2016


Walker, Priebus are serial election fraudsters, says ex-Trump confidante 

Best part of this very curious story is the modifier "at least." 
Former Trump Advisor: Scott Walker Has 'Rigged' 5 Elections
Roger Stone Accuses Gov. Walker, GOP Chair Priebus Of Election Fraud
Stone and Trump go back 30 years, and were extremely close, Stone says.

Update: And isn't it amazing that Walker also has a Maria Butina connection, and says he'll be busy helping get Trump re-elected? A lot of coincidences to mueller over.
Roger Stone crop.jpg

Friday, January 25, 2019

Trump put on a show this week to inform those Walker speeches

No one in Wisconsin was probably paying closer attention to all of Donald Trump's winning this week - - you know, his soaring poll numbers, wildly popular government shutdown, full funding for his wall that Nancy Pelosi enthusiastically handed over, and Roger Stone's exoneration by Robert Mueller on behalf of a grateful nation - - than our own Scott Walker.

Walker said he'd be busy after losing his re-election bid speaking on behalf of Trump's re-election, and this week proved that Walker will have to carefully edit all that material along with Trump's earlier successes - - like the program to instill early independence among children of asylum seekers and standing firm against state killers from Saudi Arabia to Russia to North Korea - - into speeches kept to a reasonable length.

I can't wait.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Risser bill would ban wildlife-killing contests in Wisconsin

Outrage over coyote-killing contests in Wisconsin is producing a move to outlaw them.
2009-Coyote-Yosemite.jpg

From: Sen.Risser <Sen.Risser@legis.wisconsin.gov
Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2019 4:38 PM
To: *Legislative All Senate; *Legislative All Assembly;
Subject: Co-Sponsorship of LRB-1453/1: relating to wildlife killing contests

TO:               Legislative Colleagues 

FROM:           Senator Fred Risser

DATE:           January 24, 2019

RE:                 LRB 1453/1 relating to: prohibiting contests for killing wild animals and providing a penalty

In Wisconsin, there is no prohibition to wildlife killing contests. These contests use various tactics to attract, manipulate, confuse, and even temporarily blind wildlife in order to kill as many animals as possible. Dogs, semi-automatic weapons, ATVs, traps, snares, and snowmobiles are often used in such contests, including participants chasing animals on snowmobiles to the point of exhaustion and running them over repeatedly. 

Many hunters have condemned these contests as unethical and say they create a bad name for those who hunt ethically. This bill would prohibit all wildlife killing contests, much like laws in California and Vermont which prohibit predator killing contests.

If you would like to sign-on to this bill, please contact Senator Risser’s office (6-1627), or by email, no later than Friday, February 1, 2019.  

Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau

This bill prohibits the organization of and participation in contests for killing wild animals. “Contest” is defined as an organized or sponsored competition with the objective of taking, capturing, or killing a wild animal for entertainment or for the chance to win designated prizes. “Contest” does not include a lawful fishing tournament. The bill prohibits a person from doing any of the following: 1) organizing, conducting, or sponsoring a contest; 2) providing a venue for a contest; and 3) participating in a contest. A violation of these prohibitions is punishable by a forfeiture. 
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.

Polling backs Evers, policies and exposes GOP isolation

So far, Wisconsinites generally like what they are seeing from Tony Evers. From Republicans, not so much.

So says many key findings in the first Marquette University Law School poll after the November elections about Democrat Evers' agenda and performance compared to the GOP approach:
On health care, school funding, the minimum wage, corrections reform and redistricting, voters backed the new Democratic governor's positions...[and]...disapproved of the controversial GOP lame-duck session held late last year, which limited the powers of Evers as well as Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul.
GOP legislators sat on their hands during much of Gov. Evers' State of the State speech Monday. The MU Law School poll shows that the GOP is also sitting on a lot of negative numbers, like 55-31% disapproval of their lame-duck session which produced bills ham-stringing the incoming Governor and Attorney General. You can read the full poll results, here
The poll shows overwhelming backing for non-partisan redistricting; lacking it, Republicans continue to maintain their firm grip on the Legislature and much policy formulation and financing while standing for unpopular positions - - hardly a prescription for smart or fair governance.

Some polling highlights, expressed in percentages:

Should Walker run for either US Senate of Governor in 2022? No-53, Yes-37.

Trump's favorability rating: 53-Unfavorable, 42-Favorable.

Should a wall be built across the southern border? No-62, Yes-25.

Do you support accepting federal funding to expand Medicaid/BadgerCare in Wisconsin? Yes-62, No-25.

Should Wisconsin withdraw from a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of ObamaCare? Yes-48, No-42.

More later

It appears that Vos is writing Walker's material. Sad.

Kids used to play "red rover, red rover." 

Now Wisconsin Republicans have their own new game: 

"Red menace, red menace!"

Robin Vos sounded the alarm Monday night on statewide TV.
We won’t let government grow out of control and we won’t let socialism to take root in our state.
Though he had just finished extolling a lot of government spending and intervention in the marketplace:
In northeastern Wisconsin, Marinette Marine is expanding and building the future of our nation’s naval fleet. Outside Lambeau Field, the Titletown development is taking shape and attracting visitors, even, in the off-season. In Milwaukee, the Fiserv Forum is having an amazing inaugural season especially with the Milwaukee Bucks having the best record in the NBA. Throughout Wisconsin, many farmers had their first growing season of HEMP in more than 70 years.
Vos pledged to protect WI from pre-existing socialism. Whew!
Surely he just forgot about the $4.5 billion in public subsidies headed for Foxconn, in his own district.

Now defeated Gov. Scott Walker is sounding the alarm on Twitter, with two emojis!
 4 hours ago4 hours agoMoreSocialism gone bad in Venezuela ðŸ‡»ðŸ‡ª. We do NOT want that in America ðŸ‡ºðŸ‡¸!
So Vos is writing Walker's material now. What a turn around.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

R. Kleefisch will run US celebration of women's right to vote

Fresh off her party's failed efforts to add barriers to unfettered voting, defeated GOP WI Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch is off to the capital of Big Government, USA to chair a commission celebrating women's voting rights. 
Former Republican Lt. Governor Rebecca Kleefisch announced Wednesday her new position as executive director of the Women's Suffrage Centennial Commission based in Washington, D.C.
Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch (cropped).jpg 
I assume a nice government paycheck will accompany the appointment once Donald Trump agrees that government employees may be paid for their work.

Wisconsin Democratic US Senator Tammy Baldwin was lead sponsor of the bill which created the commission, and she was joined by thirteen other Democratic Senators and Maine Republican Susan Collins, records show

Side note: How ironic is the Kleefisch appointment, given that the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin has been a plaintiff in litigation against Walker-era voting suppression, and that women have played key roles organizing against those restrictive laws.

Further side note: She should get a past tense verb in her Twitter page intro:
Rebecca KleefischVerified account@RebeccaforReal I'm Rebecca Kleefisch, Lieutenant Governor of the State of Wisconsin.
We have a new one, to whom Kleefisch lost earlier this month, fyi:
Lt. Governor Mandela BarnesVerified account@LGMandelaBarnes Lieutenant Governor of the State of Wisconsin 



GOP Assembly Speaker Vos hiring more staff & lawyers, yet...

Overlooked that partisan spending at his direction to tweet this:
 13 hours ago13 hours agoMoreGovernment has too much of our money.
No, you can't make this stuff up, but there is a disconnect.
Robin Vos speaks at Racine Tea Party event (8378614585).jpg