Wisconsin voters moving to recall vote on Republicans.

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Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
350
126
No its actually a terrible analogy.

This law effects the terms of negotiating wages and benefits of people the state employs and is totally within the law and constitution of the united states to do. It does not take anyones "rights" away. Again, the right to dictate to your employer how your wages will be negotiated does not exist.

To compare it with outlawing speech is complete intellectual absurdity.

No you are utterly analogy-challenged.

Example:

I make an analogy about ships in the panama canal traffic by referencing something about cars on freeways.

You then respond "you just compared cars to ships! Terrible, cars are on LAND and ships are on WATER!!!!"

Completely analogy challenged. I DID NOT COMPARE WHAT YOU THINK.

Hopeless to explain. It was explained once already.
 

XZeroII

Lifer
Jun 30, 2001
12,572
0
0
An election that was decided 57 percent to 43 percent IS the actual definiton of a landslide.

In an election, yes. For approval ratings based on a single issue, no. You're comparing apples and oranges. Also, update your title because 8 republicans are being considered for recall but 8 democrats are also being considered. Basically everyone elegable to be recalled is currently being considered. So if you really care about the truth rather than spreading FUD, update your title.
 

matt0611

Golden Member
Oct 22, 2010
1,879
0
0
No you are utterly analogy-challenged.

Example:

I make an analogy about ships in the panama canal traffic by referencing something about cars on freeways.

You then respond "you just compared cars to ships! Terrible, cars are on LAND and ships are on WATER!!!!"

Completely analogy challenged. I DID NOT COMPARE WHAT YOU THINK.

Hopeless to explain. It was explained once already.


I love it when Craig gets owned. Just deflect and run away :D

You don't even understand what a "right" is. You still have not demonstrated this law infringes upon anyones rights. Get back to me when you can do that.
 
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tk149

Diamond Member
Apr 3, 2002
7,253
1
0
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics...wisconsin-union-fight-enters-phase-two/72044/

http://www.salon.com/news/budget_showdown/?story=/tech/htww/2011/03/04/the_wisconsin_endgame


With Recall Push, Wisconsin Union Fight Enters Phase Two

"What do we now?" question finally has been answered: recall the Republican state senators who back the bill.

In Wisconsin, all elected officials are eligible for recall after holding office for one year. That makes the just-elected Walker untouchable until 2012, so the recall drive will target the eight Republican state senators who have stood firm against the unions.

The first signature creates an automatic deadline: twenty five percent of registered voters have to sign the petition within in sixty days to trigger a district wide recall.

Just how nervous is Scott Walker feeling in Wisconsin? The Washington Post's Greg Sargent alerts us to a Wall Street Journal article and a local news item in Wisconsin suggesting that two more Republican state senators may be on the verge of rejecting Walker's budget repair bill. Republicans have 19-14 majority in the state Senate, and with one senator already on record in opposition, two more nay votes will kill the bill.

Even conservative polling outfits have started reporting that significant majorities of Wisconsin citizens voters disapprove of Walker.






The Tea Party will just be a passing footnote in history.

I know you tailor your articles to push your partisan views, but someday, I hope that you will actually take the time to read and post both sides of the story.


Recall Campaigns Under Way For 16 State Senators

MADISON, Wis. -- New political battle lines are being drawn as constituents around Wisconsin launch efforts to recall state lawmakers.
Political experts call it an unprecedented move, as formal recall campaigns are in motion for 16 of Wisconsin's 33 state senators: eight Democrats and eight Republicans. That's everyone in the Senate who's legally eligible to face a recall this year, meaning they've been in office for more than a year.

"We filed on Feb. 25, and we have 60 days to collect 20,352 signatures, which is a really big task," said DeForest resident Jeff Horn. "Those are due on April 26."

Horn said he hopes his formal petition to recall Democratic state Sen. Mark Miller will change the stalemate at the state Capitol.

"I've never done a recall before," said Horn. "I've never circulated a petition even for a candidate. In fact, until the last election, I've never contributed money to a campaign."

Horn is just one of several hoping to recall eight Senate Democrats. On the other side of the aisle, an effort to oust 8 GOP senators is also in the works.


"Just seeing what we had over this weekend, we collected something like 15 percent of the number needed to trigger a recall in just a couple of days," said Greme Zielinski, communications director for the Democratic Party of Wisconsin. "We had thousands of volunteers out collecting thousands of signatures in just a short amount of time."

"By both threatening recalls on the Republicans that are supporting Gov. Walker and recalls of Democrats who are in Illinois, they're hoping this might bring more incentive to negotiate and compromise," said political science professor David Cannon, who believes the wave of recalls won't become the norm.

"It kind of undermines the democratic process if recalls get to be too common," said Canon. "But I think this is an unusual situation. I don't see this being replicated in the future every time someone is upset with their incumbent, going after them with a recall."

If any of these recalls efforts get enough signatures, elections will take place six weeks later. If a primary unfolds, that race will take place four weeks after the end of the recall petition. Then the actual recall election will take place six weeks after the primary.

As far as the movement to recall Walker, at this point, organizers are putting together a database of potential voters who will sign a possible Walker recall petition. The movement would need 540,000 signatures to force a recall election of the governor, organizers said.