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Wisconsin’s
Walker survives recall by wide margin
June 06,
2012
Wisconsin
GOP Gov. Scott Walker wakes up Wednesday knowing he’ll get to finish
his term,
after voters by a wide margin sided with him in a recall election that
attracted national attention and divided much of the state -- from
opposing
political parties to neighbors and even family members.
However,
several key questions remain unanswered, including whether Wisconsin
now can
move past the recent acrimony and what impact the recall results will
have on
the presidential election just five months away.
“Now is the
time for us to come together,” Walker told supporters after claiming
victory.
“Tomorrow we are all Wisconsinites.”
Walker’s
Democratic challenger, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, made a similar plea
in his
concession speech late Tuesday night, urging residents to put aside
their
differences.
“Now we
must look to the future,” said Barrett, who also lost to Walker in 2010.
With nearly
all precincts reporting, Walker had 53 percent of the vote, compared
with 46
percent for Barrett. The margin of victory was wider than many expected
and
slightly better than Walker’s 5.8 percentage-point victory over Barrett
in the
2010 race. Some 2.5 million voters cast their ballots.
Walker’s
lieutenant governor, Rebecca Kleefisch, and at least three Republicans
in state
Senate races survived recalls. Unofficial results showed the Democrat
ahead in
the other Senate race, the outcome of which will determine which party
controls
the Senate at least through the end of the year.
The recall
effort began when the first-term governor and Republicans in the state
legislature rolled back what they considered excesses in the collective
bargaining agreements of public-employee unions -- an effort to cut
Wisconsin’s
estimated $3.6 billion budget shortfall.
Wisconsin
went for President Obama in 2008, but the recall results give
Republicans hope
that their presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, can win there in
November.
“Governor
Walker has demonstrated over the past year what sound fiscal policies
can do to
turn an economy around, and I believe that in November voters across
the
country will demonstrate that they want the same in Washington,” Romney
said.
Republicans
see Walker’s win as evidence voters across the country want their
elected
officials to keep government living within its means. They said this
paves the
way for Romney to become the first Republican candidate to carry
Wisconsin
since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
The outcome
Tuesday is also a blow to the labor movement, which poured considerable
resources into the failed effort to oust Walker.
Of the
three recall elections of governors in U.S. history, only Walker has
survived.
The recall
effort started about a year and a half ago, after the legislature
passed
Walker’s proposal to curb public employee union power, while also
requiring
most public state workers to pay more for health insurance and pension
benefits.
Democrats
and unions argued the governor had gone too far, and they helped
organize
massive statehouse protests and gather 900,000 signatures for the
recall vote.
Roughly $63
million was spent on the race, with much of Walker’s support coming
from
outside of the state.
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