So here we go again.
Almost eight years ago, citizens in Wisconsin showed up at the State Capitol because the newly-elected GOP Governor Scott Walker had unveiled his plan drawn up in secret to strip public employees of bargaining and workplace rights and to reduce their clout at the ballot box.
It was a deliberate power grab and exercise of "divide-and-conquer," in Walker's words, disguised as a "modest" budget measure - - again, his language.
On Monday, citizens in Wisconsin will again show up at the State Capitol because the newly-defeated GOP Governor Scott Walker and his loyalist legislative servants have unveiled another plan also drawn up in secret - - again to use state power to strip citizens and local communities of voting rights, and this time going even further by snatching away from legitimately-elected incoming Democratic officials their fairly-won, office-holding privileges.
It's another deliberate power grab, this time disguised as a "reasonable" reset of authority shared among all three branches of state government, when, in fact, the GOP-controlled Legislature had giddily-given Walker extra powers to carry out the 'chamber of commerce' vision of government that his special-interest donors had paid for.
And as they did with their 2011, 'drop-the-bomb' Act 10 education depredation legislation, these Wisconsin Republican officials may get most of all of what they want because they - - a) rigged the Legislature through grotesque gerrymandering, and b) have a State Supreme Court majority, strengthened by fill-in Walker appointments - - a hard-right ideological advantage which the GOP's newest grab for power seeks to further embed by rigging the 2020 election calendar to boost the chances for one of Walker's hand-picked favorites.
I acknowledge that this is a dispiriting scenario, made more distasteful because Republicans will get unearned satisfaction from draining away the sweetness which Democrats' deserved to savor after putting in the work to win upset November 6th victories.
Republicans also will enjoy watching Democrats and grassroots progressives having to continue to spend time and money fighting the government for access, fairness and rights about which there should be no such struggle.
Think about it: we're almost in 2019, other states are making voting easier through online or mail-in balloting, and GOP public officials in Wisconsin are again trying to make it even harder to vote.
And Republicans also know if they succeed in constricting turnout and reducing Democrats' leverage in Wisconsin, as they are doing also in neighboring Michigan, the GOP has a better shot at holding those key states' electoral votes in 2020 for Trump, or his replacement.
But here's the thing: these transparently slimy moves are all inevitably doomed to collapse in the face of stronger realities, namely that the GOP is getting older and whiter and weaker and the electorate getting younger, and more diverse and engaged.
These are some of the very pressures which help explain why Walker, despite all the advantages of incumbency - - from easy media to free airplanes to armored carloads of dark, outside money - - lost to 30,000 votes. To a bi-racial ticket.
Anachronistic politicians like Walker, Fitzgerald and Vos are also aging into the same accelerating insignificance which defines their party and its agendas. To an ever-higher tech, digital world, Walker, Fitzgerald and Vos are the candidates of the eight-track tape deck and corded phone.
Those three men are all now in their 50's, middle-aged, clutching at power and defined by careerist political jobs principally-based in the Wisconsin Legislature - - nearly a half-century of public trough satisfactions are on their ledgers - - but it's a domain that does necessarily translate into bigger and better things and which they used more like a hammock than a trampoline.
And yes, Walker did bounce all the way out to the governorship, but not only did he just get rejected by the voters for over-staying his welcome, he's now involved in a extra-legal power grab on his way out the door that is so undemocratic as to undermine any claim on a legacy other than permanent public enmity.
Can you name a cutting-edge business that would hire any of them? A publication which would seek any of them out for a personally-drafted thousand words about the future? Do you see yourself standing in front of thier official portraits one day and saying, "Now there was a leader."
So I see what these Republicans are doing with the power they possess as vindictive and morally bankrupt, and certainly a pathetic waste of all the good they could have done helping address some of the injustices and shortcomings of our time if they'd sincerely believed in public service and the public sector.
But that's not the case, so just as Trump helped organize the mid-term blue wave that helped cost his party the Wisconsin governship and control of the US House of Representatives which further imperils his incumbency, this 11th-desperation by one-dimensional and arrogant Wisconsin Republicans contains the same inevitably of backlash and failure.
Almost eight years ago, citizens in Wisconsin showed up at the State Capitol because the newly-elected GOP Governor Scott Walker had unveiled his plan drawn up in secret to strip public employees of bargaining and workplace rights and to reduce their clout at the ballot box.
It was a deliberate power grab and exercise of "divide-and-conquer," in Walker's words, disguised as a "modest" budget measure - - again, his language.
On Monday, citizens in Wisconsin will again show up at the State Capitol because the newly-defeated GOP Governor Scott Walker and his loyalist legislative servants have unveiled another plan also drawn up in secret - - again to use state power to strip citizens and local communities of voting rights, and this time going even further by snatching away from legitimately-elected incoming Democratic officials their fairly-won, office-holding privileges.
It's another deliberate power grab, this time disguised as a "reasonable" reset of authority shared among all three branches of state government, when, in fact, the GOP-controlled Legislature had giddily-given Walker extra powers to carry out the 'chamber of commerce' vision of government that his special-interest donors had paid for.
And as they did with their 2011, 'drop-the-bomb' Act 10 education depredation legislation, these Wisconsin Republican officials may get most of all of what they want because they - - a) rigged the Legislature through grotesque gerrymandering, and b) have a State Supreme Court majority, strengthened by fill-in Walker appointments - - a hard-right ideological advantage which the GOP's newest grab for power seeks to further embed by rigging the 2020 election calendar to boost the chances for one of Walker's hand-picked favorites.
I acknowledge that this is a dispiriting scenario, made more distasteful because Republicans will get unearned satisfaction from draining away the sweetness which Democrats' deserved to savor after putting in the work to win upset November 6th victories.
Republicans also will enjoy watching Democrats and grassroots progressives having to continue to spend time and money fighting the government for access, fairness and rights about which there should be no such struggle.
Think about it: we're almost in 2019, other states are making voting easier through online or mail-in balloting, and GOP public officials in Wisconsin are again trying to make it even harder to vote.
And Republicans also know if they succeed in constricting turnout and reducing Democrats' leverage in Wisconsin, as they are doing also in neighboring Michigan, the GOP has a better shot at holding those key states' electoral votes in 2020 for Trump, or his replacement.
But here's the thing: these transparently slimy moves are all inevitably doomed to collapse in the face of stronger realities, namely that the GOP is getting older and whiter and weaker and the electorate getting younger, and more diverse and engaged.
These are some of the very pressures which help explain why Walker, despite all the advantages of incumbency - - from easy media to free airplanes to armored carloads of dark, outside money - - lost to 30,000 votes. To a bi-racial ticket.
Anachronistic politicians like Walker, Fitzgerald and Vos are also aging into the same accelerating insignificance which defines their party and its agendas. To an ever-higher tech, digital world, Walker, Fitzgerald and Vos are the candidates of the eight-track tape deck and corded phone.
Those three men are all now in their 50's, middle-aged, clutching at power and defined by careerist political jobs principally-based in the Wisconsin Legislature - - nearly a half-century of public trough satisfactions are on their ledgers - - but it's a domain that does necessarily translate into bigger and better things and which they used more like a hammock than a trampoline.
And yes, Walker did bounce all the way out to the governorship, but not only did he just get rejected by the voters for over-staying his welcome, he's now involved in a extra-legal power grab on his way out the door that is so undemocratic as to undermine any claim on a legacy other than permanent public enmity.
Can you name a cutting-edge business that would hire any of them? A publication which would seek any of them out for a personally-drafted thousand words about the future? Do you see yourself standing in front of thier official portraits one day and saying, "Now there was a leader."
So I see what these Republicans are doing with the power they possess as vindictive and morally bankrupt, and certainly a pathetic waste of all the good they could have done helping address some of the injustices and shortcomings of our time if they'd sincerely believed in public service and the public sector.
But that's not the case, so just as Trump helped organize the mid-term blue wave that helped cost his party the Wisconsin governship and control of the US House of Representatives which further imperils his incumbency, this 11th-desperation by one-dimensional and arrogant Wisconsin Republicans contains the same inevitably of backlash and failure.