WRellim
Member
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2007
- Messages
- 2,140
Wisconsin "flipped the pancake" to see if the other side will do any better...
See: Wisconsin only state where Democrats lost governor, Senate seat, [and entire State] Legislature
Not only did Russ Feingold get ousted (by purported "Tea Party(R)" Ron Johnson -- wait and see on that one... hopefully I'm wrong, but he "smells" funny to me).
But, the Governorship is now (R) -- a decent (and fairly young) Republican Scott Walker.
And both the State Senate and State Assembly are back in (R) hands as well.
Whether this will do any good remains to be seen...
I know several of the "newbies" who just got elected, and the vast majority of them are merely (R)'s who have been waiting in the wings for their turn... they jumped on board the "Tea Party" as relative political unknowns and rode it into the station -- but truth is that most of them would have gotten on just about ANY train to achieve that. (These are the kind that "paid their dues" by campaigning for Bush, Romney, and then Insane-McCain -- principles be damned, they were working solely to learn the system, establish network contacts, meet the donors, and collect political capital.)
IOW, what is driving most of them is plain and simple personal ambition for power {and the money that flows to it} not any agenda of liberty or freedom, or even fiscal conservatism, much less small government.
We have a few that have some "partial clues" but as newbies, they stand to be co-opted by the system and the power-players within it.
I will be shocked if this side of the pancake is really all THAT different than the other... but there's always the chance.
Cheers!
See: Wisconsin only state where Democrats lost governor, Senate seat, [and entire State] Legislature
Not only did Russ Feingold get ousted (by purported "Tea Party(R)" Ron Johnson -- wait and see on that one... hopefully I'm wrong, but he "smells" funny to me).
But, the Governorship is now (R) -- a decent (and fairly young) Republican Scott Walker.
And both the State Senate and State Assembly are back in (R) hands as well.
Whether this will do any good remains to be seen...
I know several of the "newbies" who just got elected, and the vast majority of them are merely (R)'s who have been waiting in the wings for their turn... they jumped on board the "Tea Party" as relative political unknowns and rode it into the station -- but truth is that most of them would have gotten on just about ANY train to achieve that. (These are the kind that "paid their dues" by campaigning for Bush, Romney, and then Insane-McCain -- principles be damned, they were working solely to learn the system, establish network contacts, meet the donors, and collect political capital.)
IOW, what is driving most of them is plain and simple personal ambition for power {and the money that flows to it} not any agenda of liberty or freedom, or even fiscal conservatism, much less small government.
We have a few that have some "partial clues" but as newbies, they stand to be co-opted by the system and the power-players within it.
I will be shocked if this side of the pancake is really all THAT different than the other... but there's always the chance.
Cheers!
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