Ben Domenech · June 6, 2012 at 4:06am

All the major networks have called tonight's Wisconsin recall election for Scott Walker.

Scott Walker

Walker’s story is fascinating. His rise to the governorship was itself a remarkable achievement. A college dropout and an Eagle Scout, son of a small-town Baptist minister (First Baptist Church of Delavan), Colorado-born (but you wouldn’t know it from his Packer love). He met Ronald Reagan when he was a teenager on a trip with Boy’s State, and decided to go into politics. He ran for General Assembly five years later at 22, lost. He married a 36 year old woman when he was 25, moved to a better district, and won. And he kept on winning.

Walker still disguises his oddball nature and the cussedness of his character with scads of Wisconsin nice. It’s that combination which makes him a formidable opponent, one stubbornly convinced of the rightness and the essential nature of his views. Those people tend to win if their timing is right.

Confrontations between the people and organized labor aren’t new, but they have a way of translating to the national conversation. A single sentence arguably made Calvin Coolidge president: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any time.” It hit a nerve then, as it has now. I have seen conservative crowds give applause for presidents and political figures all over the country, but I have never seen them applaud as they do for Walker.That applause will only get louder now.

Thus, on the eve of today’s recall election, came comments like this:

“We’re in a battle for freedom in this country,” Reince Priebus, a Wisconsin native and chairman of the Republican National Committee, told about 75 Walker supporters yesterday in Germantown. “We’re not only in a battle for the state of Wisconsin; we’re in a battle for the future of America.”

In most cases, I’d dismiss this approach as overheated rhetoric – Walker’s reforms are nowhere near as severe as they’re made out to be, and they are less exportable than some might like. But branding this as the most important election of the year is not entirely wrong. Walker’s confrontation writ large is not with public sector unions, but with the dying Blue social model. It is one of the longest-lived coalitions in American politics, but one the White House is already letting slip – the marriage decision was a clear sign of that. Tonight's Walker victory may prove to be its death knell.

As Walter Russell Mead writes:  

“A Scott Walker victory would reshape not just Republican politics but Democratic politics as well; leaders like Andrew Cuomo in New York and Rahm Emanuel in Chicago will be paying attention. If Walker wins handily, more Democrats will see the writing on the wall: Support for public sector unions simply isn’t the political winner it once was. This could presage a larger post-blue shift in the Democratic party for decades to come.”

Timing in politics can mean everything, and Walker’s is impeccable.

This, by the way, is how I recommend celebrating. I'm not really a blend guy, but the name makes it appropriate:

Johnnie Walker

Comments:


Glenn the Iconoclast
Joined
Apr '11
Glenn the Iconoclast

I was in Az. for the recall of Ev Mecham, but who was the third governor who faced a recall election?  (Or was Mecham removed by impeachment?  I didn't pay much attention to politics back then.  I seem to remember Mecham was elected by a plurality in a nasty three-way race.)

EJHill
Joined
May '10
EJHill

For sheer amusement, head over to the Daily Kos and read the comments. Schadenfreude ist sehr gut...

Gouverneur Morris
Joined
Feb '11
Jordan Rodriguez

Let the eagle soar!

Annefy
Joined
Oct '11
Annefy

Man, do I wish Andrew Breitbart had lived to see this ...


Joined
Apr '11
MSJL

I'm floored by the current margin (55-44 with 75% of precincts reporting). Either there are still some Dem strongholds yet to come in that will dramatically narrow the margin or this is a watershed election. It seems that two years of nonstop political temper tantrums finally resulted in a decisive shift towards the adults.

Annefy
Joined
Oct '11
Annefy

@Glenn: Gray Davis in CA.

drlorentz
Joined
Sep '10
drlorentz

DrewInWisconsin

 "margin of fraud"

Good one.

John Marzan
Joined
Oct '10
John Marzan
Conn Carroll @conncarroll 1h
yup RT @marcambinder GOP is saying: "Hey! We Won!" First thing we'll do is watch MSNBC, because we want to see how bad the bad guys feel.
Rick Bateman
Joined
May '11
Rick Bateman

drlorentz

Highlama: This is exciting news,  but it begs the question: Why were they statistically tied entering election day, as well as in early exit polling?

I wondered about this too. The reason is unclear. I have my doubts about the objectivity of the polling. Polls can be a form of agitprop. From what I read, the vote was 60/40. This is a landslide, well outside any reasonable margin of error. · 13 minutes ago

Polls intentionally over-sample democrats to skew the numbers and affect turnout:  Daniel Blatt at GayPatroit.com, Ed Morrissey at HotAir.com.

Rush has a very plausible theory on this.  Most polls leading up to a challenging election environment will over-sample democrats in order to affect turnout.  When the writing on the wall is more clear, they will display more accurate predictions, in order to look less stupid (for lack of a better phrase).  Tenth paragraph in, well worth the read though you may need to be a subscriber.

Stick with Rasmussen, most accurate that I've seen.  The daily email is a nice quick snapshot.

DrewInWisconsin
Joined
Aug '11
DrewInWisconsin

John Marzan · 3 minutes ago

Conn Carroll @conncarroll 1h
yup RT @marcambinder GOP is saying: "Hey! We Won!" First thing we'll do is watch MSNBC, because we want to see how bad the bad guys feel.

They're blaming it on the Kochtopus and Citizens United. Sore losers.

John Marzan
Joined
Oct '10
John Marzan

watch foxnews now, walker is doing his victory speech.

Trace
Joined
May '10
Trace Urdan
John Marzan
Joined
Oct '10
John Marzan
Ann Althouse @annalthouse 11m
Barrett's campaign theme was "end the civil war," but his concession speech was: continue to fight. Hypocrisy on stilts. #wirecall
Whiskey Sam
Joined
Jul '10
Whiskey Sam

Wonderful news!  How about the other state senate recalls?

Leigh
Joined
Nov '11
Leigh

Well done, Wisconsinites!  Thank God.

It was a good victory speech, a great night.

Severely Ltd.
Joined
Oct '10
Severely Ltd.

I couldn't be happier with a political result.

David Mayhew
Joined
Feb '11
David Mayhew
Whiskey Sam: Wonderful news!  How about the other state senate recalls? · 15 minutes ago

http://www.jsonline.com/news/statepolitics/june-5-recall-election-results-155977565.html

3 out of 4 called for the GOP with the Republican leading in the 4th.

clmac
Joined
Nov '11
clmac

If you haven't seen this yet, you must check out this video from CNN. The money quote from the anti-Walker girly-man  has to be "Democracy died tonight." Wonderful, hilarious, and, albeit, slightly worrisome at the same time. 

Edited on June 6, 2012 at 6:06am
Mark Belling Fan
Joined
Sep '10
Mark Belling Fan

Democracy = Democrat victory. Polarization = Republican victory.

gnarlydad
Joined
Jun '12
gnarlydad

Highlama: ... We need not rush to assign malicious practice to the exit polsters (though skepticism is wise.) This recall was fueled by searing passions of the  Wisconsin left/progressive/public union members. They have successfully stoked that fire for nearly two years. Who do you think is more likely to answer an exit poll question: the state employee with blood in his eye and an axe to grind, or the farmer on her way home to milk the cows? The poll numbers might just skew themselves.


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