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Scott Walker

Scott Walker73 posts

Scott Walker is governor of Wisconsin, born in 1967 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. After college he entered politics as a Republican starting as an Assemblyman in the state legislature, then as Milwaukee County Executive. He is running for president in the 2016 elections. He is best known for standing up to unions, limiting collective bargaining rights, and balancing budgets by cutting spending. He is married to Tonette Tarantino and they have two sons.

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13 Jul, 2015

Running for President

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Walker declares his candidacy for President, portraying himself as a man who gets things done, who got a conservative agenda passed in a state that normally supports Democrats, and who has curtailed the power of labor unions.

In the Republican field, there are some who are good fighters, but they haven’t won those battles. And there are others who’ve won elections, but haven’t consistently taken on the big fights. We showed you can do both. I am running for president to fight and win for the American people.

 

2 Dec, 2007

Seeks reelection

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Walker seeks another four-year term as Milwaukee County Executive so he can continue streamlining county services and cutting costs. He wants to reduce the county workforce further, expand public-private partnerships, contract out or privatize county services, and encourage faith based groups to work with delinquent youth to increase public safety.

I look at a number of areas and say there’s a whole lot more we can do. . . . We’ve got to get even more aggressive at being innovative.

24 Jan, 2005

Announces run for governor

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At a news conference in his Wauwatosa home, Walker announces that he will challenge Governor James Doyle in the 2006 election. He is campaigning on a message of tax reform and open government. He says his values are:

protecting the sanctity of marriage, the right to life, our ability to preserve our families and homes, the importance of voter integrity, and the value of the free market.

25 Feb, 2004

Debates

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At the Kiwanis Club of Milwaukee, Walker debates David Riemer, for the office of County Executive. On funding for parks, Walker says that state government is the key. State mandated justice programs have limited county funding for quality-of-life services. On the increase of public transit fares, he says that it was caused by rising labor and fuel costs. But he is for shifting sales tax revenue from automobile sales that go to the state’s general fund to transit. He is also for a law allowing the carrying of concealed weapons. Riemer says that Walker should stop blaming labor unions, the state government and others for his failures to reverse trends that hurt county government:

You never hear any acceptance of responsibility to provide leadership.

Refuses to sign pledge

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Walker refuses to sign a pledge given to him by his opponent, David Riemer, stating that he will serve out the full term if reelected as Milwaukee County Executive. Riemer says that to fix the problems in the county requires a full commitment. Walker, who has expressed a desire to run for governor in 2006, says this is a non-issue:

I have absolutely no intention at this point of running for any other office but for reelection as Milwaukee County Executive, and I plan on focusing all my energies and talents on meeting those tasks.

11 Feb, 2003

Kicks off reelection campaign

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Walker kicks off his reelection campaign at a cocktail-hour event at Villa Terrace Museum hosted by 107 backers who pledge to give $500 to $1,000. The event brings in more than $80,000 for his first fund-raiser.

10 Apr, 2002

Speaks at forum

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Running for Milwaukee County Executive, Walker speaks at the League of Women Voters forum outlining what he will do as county executive. He favors a part-time county board, the elimination of the executive’s job, and many other proposals to consolidate and cooperate with other levels of government. He is for libraries being able to charge fees for some services, against the elimination of the shared revenue system and he is for cities and towns being able to levy a local sales tax. He believes that tough issues need to be tackled, not handled with a soft touch.

It requires an aggressive level of leadership to try and move things forward.

21 Oct, 1998

Anti-crime, anti-tax campaign

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In his reelection bid for State Assembly, Walker campaigns on a tough anti-crime and anti-tax message. He supports a tax-cut plan that will save the average household $1,494 in income taxes over five years, life-time imprisonment for pedophiles and laws to protect vulnerable senior citizens from abuse. Commenting on truth-in-sentencing legislation he co-authored:

You serve 100% of your time. Ten years means ten years. I’ve found even with people who lean left of center, they’re in favor of incarcerating prisoners.

His opponent, Jim Heidenreich, disagrees:

It’s gotten real punitive. Mr. Walker supports building neighborhood prisons, not neighborhood schools. He’s big on building prisons; he’s big on shipping prisoners out of state. But let’s quit shipping ’em out of state, and let’s put some money into rehabilitation. That’s just as important as punishment.

29 Oct, 1996

Reelection campaign

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Running for reelection for State Assembly, Walker campaigns on a tough anti-crime and anti-tax message.

Crime is clearly still the most important issue in this district. I’ve been pleased to be able to deliver on that.

He also worked on property tax relief which resulted in spending restraints on education. Although the Wauwatosa school district increased its spending nearly 3%, matching the rate of inflation, school officials had to make difficult budgeting decisions.

That is not necessarily a bad thing. Some could argue that the school budget isn’t increasing at the level they would like it to be. That in part is what got us, as a state, into the problem of property taxes.

His opponent, Dale Dulberger, disagrees saying that the restraints have harmed schools:

On a whole range of issues, I think his voting record doesn’t reflect the values of the people of Wauwatosa. He’s taken some extreme positions that I think are out of step with the people of Wauwatosa.

6 Nov, 1990

Loses election for State Assembly seat

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Walker runs for a State Assembly seat against Gwen Moore. He campaigns on an anti-crime message promising more police on the street and tougher sentences for drug dealers.

The number one fear is crime. For too long, we have ignored this issue and now it is time to do something about it.

Walker loses only receiving 31 percent of the vote. His campaign manager:

In hindsight, there was really no chance.