Fox News Latino
July 13, 2015
Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker announced Monday morning on social media and in a
campaign video that he was joining the packed GOP presidential race.
“I’m
in,” tweeted the Republican, who built a national profile largely due
to his clashes with labor unions. His track record on national policy
issues is murkier.
For
instance, Walker, who is the first governor in U.S. history to defeat a
recall election, has flip-flopped his position on immigration a number
of times in recent months.
Some
have suggested that the governor is still cementing his views, while
trying to keep in mind Republican voters who don’t agree with him on the
issues.
Just
two years ago, Walker supported a pathway to citizenship for
undocumented immigrants, saying it “makes sense” in the case of some of
the millions of undocumented
workers already in the country.
“You’ve
got to find a way to say that people who are in line right now have
first preference,” he said at Politico’s State Solutions Conference in
Washington, D.C. “We
just have a broken system. And to me, if somebody wants to come in and
live the American dream and work hard … we should have a system that
works and lets people in.”
Earlier
this year, Walker’s position shifted to be more hard-line. “I don’t
believe in amnesty” for those in the country without proper
documentation, he said.
Yet,
according to the Washington Post, he told a private gathering of New
Hampshire business leaders in March of this year that he supports
providing some undocumented
immigrants with a pathway to citizenship.
In
April, Walker went further than most in the rest of the Republican
field by saying legal immigration may need to be regulated further to
protect U.S. jobs
“In
terms of legal immigration, how we need to approach that going forward
is saying—the next president and the next congress need to make
decisions about a legal immigration
system that’s based on, first and foremost, on protecting American
workers and American wages,” he told Glenn Beck, according to Slate.
In a campaign video released Monday, Walker spoke directly to the camera touting his willingness to take on big fights.
“We didn’t nibble around the edges,” he says.
Now,
on the eve of his campaign launch, Walker's task is to remind
Republican voters about the four-year-old fight and the recall election
sparked by his efforts to weaken
unions — and a series of lesser-known triumphs he says set him apart
from the crowded Republican field.
"If
you could accomplish half of what he's done in Wisconsin in Washington,
D.C., you would go down as one of the greatest presidents ever," said
Walker's top political
adviser Rick Wiley.
Walker
cut income and corporate taxes by nearly $2 billion, lowered property
taxes, legalized the carrying of concealed weapons, made abortions more
difficult to obtain,
required photo identification when voting and made Wisconsin a
right-to-work state.
His
budget this year, which plugged a $2.2 billion shortfall when he signed
it into law Sunday, requires drug screenings for public benefit
recipients, expands the private
school voucher program, freezes tuition at the University of Wisconsin
while cutting funding by $250 million and removing tenure protections
from state law.
Such
achievements may appeal to conservatives who hold outsized sway in
Republican primaries, yet some could create challenges in a general
election should Walker ultimately
become the GOP's nominee. Voter ID laws, abortion restrictions, liberal
gun policies and education cuts are not necessarily popular among
swing-state independents.
"Ultimately
Walker has to show all these victories and political successes have
shown real results," said Democratic pollster Paul Maslin.
Walker's
record is well-known to Wisconsin voters, a state where the second-term
governor engenders fierce loyalty and fierce opposition. Protesters who
first crowded
the state Capitol in 2011 in demonstrations as large as 100,000 still
gather daily, although only about a dozen or so at a time, to sing
anti-Walker songs.
Anger
over Walker's 2011 union law led to the failed 2012 recall. His team
created a video this week, called "Recall the Recalls," to tell that
story again, especially
for those who are taking their first serious look at Walker as a
presidential candidate.
And
while he's not yet a presidential candidate in the eyes of the law, the
labor dispute helped give him a significant head start in the 2016
money race.
Walker's
three governor's races left him with a far-reaching donor database of
more than 300,000 names. He shattered state fundraising records,
collecting $83 million
for his three Wisconsin elections, much of it coming from outside the
state.
He
begins his 2016 presidential bid with at least $20 million to spread
his message, raised by two outside groups not subject to campaign
finance donation limits, according
to sources with direct knowledge of the fundraising operation. They
spoke on the condition of anonymity to publicly discuss private
fundraising strategy.
Walker's
union clashes will be featured prominently on the day of his
announcement, to be held in the same convention hall where he hosted his
victory party after the
recall election.
"A
lot of people, that was their first introduction to Walker," Wiley
said, calling the union battle and subsequent recall win "one of our
biggest assets."
Yet the specific impact of Walker's fight with labor unions is open to debate.
The
governor often highlights rising test scores and graduation rates as
evidence that the 2011 union law worked. What he doesn't mention is
Wisconsin's graduation rates
were increasing for years before he took office, and the recent growth
is not as strong as the national average. Wisconsin's ACT scores have
been among the best in the nation since before Walker was elected. They
ranked third the year before he took office
and ranked second in 2012.
Walker
also talks about how the 2011 union law saved taxpayers $3 billion as
of late 2014, saying state and local governments have used "tools" he
provided them to reduce
spending on pensions and health benefits for public employees.
While
it's true that the state and local governments have saved roughly that
amount, the costs have been shifted to the employees who have to pay
more for those benefits.
Critics note that Walker too often ignores where he's fallen short.
The
state's chief economic development agency that Walker created, a hybrid
public-private partnership, has been beset with problems, including
handing out $124 million
in loans without properly vetting the recipients. Walker was over
100,000 jobs short on his signature 2010 campaign promise to create
250,000 private-sector jobs. Wisconsin's job growth has lagged not only
the national average but its Midwest neighbors as
well.
He's
also been dogged by two investigations, neither of which have yet to
result in charges filed against him. The first resulted in a variety of
criminal convictions,
including misconduct in office, against six of his former aides and
associates when he was Milwaukee County executive.
The
second investigation, currently on hold while the state Supreme Court
considers a trio of lawsuits, centers on whether Walker's recall
campaign illegally coordinated
with independent groups.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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