Community | January 25, 2012 | 31 comments

Wis. governor fights recall with out-of-state cash

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chew_chew
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin's polarizing governor is fighting attempts to recall him with money from out-of-state donors, who helped him bring in more than $12 million since last year.

An Associated Press analysis of campaign finance reports Republican Gov. Scott Walker filed Monday showed 61 percent of the $4.1 million he raised during the five-week reporting period came from out of state.

Many of the contributions came from big donors, including $250,000 from conservative Texas financier Bob Perry and a total of $750,000 from three people in Missouri. More than half of Walker's money came from people who donated $20,000 or more, such as Michael Bidwill, president of the NFL's Arizona Cardinals, who gave $25,000.

Walker's furious fundraising comes as Wisconsin election officials continue to review an estimated 1.9 million signatures collected to recall the governor, lieutenant governor and four Republican state senators.

The recall effort was spurred by anger over Walker's first year in office, in particular a law he pushed through that effectively ended collective bargaining rights for most public workers.

The $12.1 million Walker has raised since January 2011 breaks the previous record for fundraising by a candidate for state office in Wisconsin. Walker set the earlier record when he raised $10 million on his way to victory in 2010.

Walker's latest efforts take advantage of a state law that allows targets of a recall to ignore the usual $10,000 per-donor cap and raise unlimited amounts until an election is set. Walker has been traversing the country raising money and speaking at gatherings of conservatives from Texas to New York and Tennessee.

"We haven't seen anything like this before," Mike McCabe, director of the government watchdog group the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, said Tuesday. His group's analysis of Walker's latest fundraising totals, which covered Dec. 11 through Jan. 17, showed that 33 donors gave between $20,000 and $250,000 for a total of $2.3 million.

Walker's campaign spokeswoman Ciara Matthews said the level of donations shows Walker's message is resonating with voters.

"These donations will allow us to fight back against this baseless recall and ensure Gov. Walker can continue to lay the foundation for a more successful Wisconsin and keep government working on the side of taxpayers," she said.

Recall organizers raised just a fraction of what Walker did.

The Democratic Party and United Wisconsin, which worked together on the petition drive, reported raising $480,000 collectively since Dec. 11. Walker raised $4.5 million over the same five-week period, while Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch raised $102,000.

Two Democrats, former Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk and state Sen. Tim Cullen of Janesville, have announced they will seek their party's nomination to take on Walker. A number of others are considering running.

Unlike Walker's donors, most of those funding Democrats — 67 percent — live in Wisconsin.

Democrats, who are bound by the state's campaign donation limits, have said they don't expect to keep up with Walker's fundraising.

"We will be outspent three or four to one," state Democratic Party Chairman Mike Tate said.

McCabe, with the Democracy Campaign, said Walker will have a "commanding" financial advantage over any challenger. Walker has repeatedly said he is going after out-of-state money because he anticipates national organized labor groups will spend heavily in support of the candidate Democrats eventually chose.

McCabe predicted that outside groups will come in on both sides, but Walker will maintain his financial advantage.

"There's no question," he said. "I don't think any Democratic candidate can possibly catch up."

Walker has spent $9.8 million over the past 54 weeks, with much of it going toward television advertising that started the night before those gathering signatures on recall petitions hit the streets. He reported having $2.6 million in cash left.

Some of Walker's biggest backers are well-known conservatives.

Bidwill is a frequent donor to Republican candidates across the country. Perry, a Texas home builder, helped pay for the Swift Boat Veterans ads that attacked Sen. John Kerry during the 2004 presidential campaign. Perry has a total of $500,000 to Walker's campaign.

The three others who gave Walker $250,000 each during one week this month were Missouri residents David C. Humphreys and his sister Sarah Atkins, both of Tamko Building Products, and Stanley M. Herzog of Herzog Contracting.

Members of the Humphreys family are some of the largest Republican donors in Missouri.

David Humphreys, who contributed $125,000 last year to the expected gubernatorial campaign of Missouri's Republican Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder, made news last fall by asking for his money back after Kinder admitted he frequented an Illinois strip club while he was a state senator in the 1990s. Kinder did not return the money but ultimately decided against running for governor.

___

Associated Press writers Troy Thibodeaux in New Orleans and David Lieb in Jefferson City, Mo., contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/wis-governor-fights-recall-state-cash-203752994.html
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31 comments // Wis. governor fights recall with out-of-state cash

  • bike10
    • 0
      bike10  
    • Scott Walker is example of best bought governor corporations. Thanks to the five activists judges on the US Supreme Court.

    • 4 months ago
  • warman1138
  • Leen61
  • alanb4130_
    • 0
      alanb4130_  
    • This is exactly the kind of politics that Republicans relish in . Regulations are bad, let the free market do what ever it wants to while destroying America and blame it on the black guy and the more money in politics the merrier.

    • 4 months ago
  • ThirdSection
    • +3
      ThirdSection  
    • When Walker gets convicted for corruption and sent to prison, I hope it's one of those tough joints with the gangs and whatnot, and not one of those white-collar day-camps.

    • 4 months ago
  • Ambill94
    • +1
      Ambill94  
    • On November 7th...someone should add up all the corp/personal donations made to Republlican jerks like this guy from out of state or out of country donors and make those same donors pay an equal amount to paying down the debt in each of those states...what a collosal waste of money...

    • 4 months ago
  • ithink
  • cherry5000
    • +2
      cherry5000  
    • when is scotty boy going to realize that people power trumps money. to the people of wisconsin get out there a vote this douchebag out of office and his cronies.

    • 4 months ago
  • chew_chew
  • ThirdSection
  • ThirdSection
  • sugarmountian
    • +2
      sugarmountian  
    • The little weasel may have enough money to float the Titanic, but I think the voters in Wisconsin have his number. Go Wisconsin! Fire the weasel!

    • 4 months ago
  • KB723
    • +2
      KB723  
    • The three others who gave Walker $250,000 each during one week this month were Missouri residents David C. Humphreys and his sister Sarah Atkins, both of Tamko Building Products, and Stanley M. Herzog of Herzog Contracting.

      Sheeesh I can use some Free Money Too.... =)

    • 4 months ago
  • ThirdSection
  • KB723
  • Ambill94
  • letsliveinpeace
  • attilatheblond
    • +2
      attilatheblond  
    • Great post, chew_chew! +'d and much appreciate the heads up about this one. Not spending much time online today and would have missed this important post without your message. Thanks mucho.

    • 4 months ago
  • attilatheblond
    • +4
      attilatheblond  
    • All politics may be local, but the money that is all powerful most certainly is not.

      Back in the early, mid 70s, RW fundy xians started taking over local school boards and education started a bad downward slide. Some of those people went on to higher office and the tax rebellions got serious. Reagan got in and the class war got into high gear.

      Money for local services dried up when Reagan got in as Gov of CA. Counties had to raise property taxes and people put in Prop 13, forever tying the hands of CA legislators to really get their job done. Then the whole thing went national.

      Now the powers that have the money have been going local again, taking over state houses and legislatures where they can. Purpose? Seems it is to make sure workers lose ground via the death knell to unions AND deliberate disfranchisement of whole demagraphic groups, which not so oddly tend to vote DEM.

      Here in MT, a setting senator, who may not be popular with DEMS nationwide but represents the state and people pretty well, is being attacked by outside money that wants to give do-nothing drunkard and dipshit Denny Rehberg a big promotion. The votes of senators from Montana count the same as the votes from the senators from NY or CA, but it's a lot cheaper for the corporate money men to fund a campaign here than in NY or CA.

      That Walker dared to complain about the recall movement getting outside $$ and then be out of state at a $2500 a plate fundraiser in another state tells a lot about him and the masters he serves. They want rules and limits on us, and no rules/no limits for themselves. That is not democracy, that is not free speech, that is an oligarchy and that is what Walker works for.

    • 4 months ago
  • MSII
    • +2
      MSII  
    • attilatheblond:

      Corporate-fascist-neufeudalism that's correct it's the republithug agenda 100%. Absolute rule by 1 party of ultra-rich-white-evangelical (manson) families, enthroned for eternity (until their precious jezuz comes and finishes off the world they're working so hard to murder) amen.

    • 4 months ago
  • attilatheblond
  • chew_chew
  • scooter3282
    • +4
      scooter3282  
    • This is the whole political story behind Walker. He does not have the majority of the state electorate supporting him right now so he has to go to his Koch backed groups with his hat in hand to save his political ass. We will soon see the flood of misinformation hit the airwaves about what prosperity he has or will bring to the state of WI (don't look at the actual stats). We will see just how many gullible and easily manipulated voters there are in the state. Will they suspend their disbelief and the actual facts on the ground of what Walker's agenda has/will wrought upon their lives and keep this Koch whore in power? All we can hope for is that sanity and reason prevail. Nice post, chew_chew.

    • 4 months ago
  • budsnews
  • scooter3282
  • KB723
  • chew_chew
  • KB723
  • Leen61
    • +10
      Leen61  
    • This is how the political process in WI has been corrupted. Walker has NO grassroots backing in the state. This is what the recall campagin will target.

    • 4 months ago
  • letsliveinpeace
  • chew_chew
    • +4
      chew_chew  
    • The $12.1 million Walker has raised since January 2011 breaks the previous record for fundraising by a candidate for state office in Wisconsin. Walker set the earlier record when he raised $10 million on his way to victory in 2010.

    • 4 months ago
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