http://www.peoplesworld.org/right-wing-woes-grow-in-wisconsin/




MADISON - With so many new polls showing Wisconsin Republicans in
trouble after their attack on collective bargaining rights, some have
joked that Republican Gov. Scott Walker may soon introduce a bill
banning voter surveys altogether.

Then he wouldn't have to look at poll results like those released
yesterday, showing a massive defection of independents from Walker,
who won majority support from them in the last election. His
disapproval rate among Wisconsin independents has jumped to 59
percent, according to a survey released yesterday by the polling firm
Greenberg, Quinlan and Rosner.

Adding to right-wing angst are complaints by conservative activists
that the Wisconsin Republican Party is not putting resources into the
recall campaigns against the Democratic senators who fled the state.
That lack of support has forced conservatives to scale back their
recalls against eight Democrats to just three. The scaling back of the
right-wing recall effort comes as the efforts by labor and the
Democrats pick up steam. After only two weeks the Democrats have more
than half the signatures they need already in hand.

The right-wing recall effort never had the same kind of grass roots
backing as behind labor's recall campaign against Republican senators.
The conservative recall was actually started by outside groups from
Utah that had to find local backers to sign on in Wisconsin.

Progressives here are also continuing bold action in the courts.

A new lawsuit was filed yesterday to overturn the anti-union law
rammed through last week by Republican senators.

The suit by Ismael Ozanne, the Dane County district attorney, is the
second from a county official since Walker signed the law banning
collective bargaining.

Like the earlier lawsuit, court papers filed with this one say
Republican lawmakers violated Wisconsin's open meetings laws when they
amended the budget proposal to turn it simply into a bill that killed
collective bargaining rights.

Right wing woes are on the rise in places other than Wisconsin, too.

Ohio's Gov. John Kasich is widely perceived as having flopped in his
town hall effort to sell his draconian budget cuts.

He received only slight and scattered applause from the 900 in
attendance with teachers, public workers and their supporters getting
loud and vocal support when they spoke out against his cuts.

Hope Rummel, a cop from Alliance, Ohio, said she voted for John McCain
in 2008 but is "alarmed by what Republicans are doing now. Nobody gets
rich being a police officer or being a fireman."

A new Washington Post/ABC News Poll, out just after the town hall, had
no good news for either Kasich or Walker.

Fewer than four in 10 surveyed said they could support cuts in
spending for roads and infrastructure or layoffs of state employees.

Only two in 10 would support cuts in Medicaid, cuts to parks and
recreation areas or cuts to public schools.

To top everything off, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
issued a report yesterday that found cuts in programs that help the
working poor are counter-productive when it comes to closing budget
gaps.

The Center's report singled out Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's proposal
to raise taxes on working families by cutting the state's Earned
Income Tax Credit even as he proposes reducing corporate taxes. The
EITC cut would mean more than double the tax bill for a single working
parent with two kids and earnings of $25,000 from $193 to $394.

The CBPP questions why Walker would attack a program conservatives
have long refrained from opposing. EITC, they note, helps the working
poor by creating incentives for remaining on the job.
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