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CNN.com Story on Gov. Walker's 'Overreach' Loaded with Unanimous Anti-Walker 'Experts'

By Matthew Balan | March 01, 2011 | 20:41

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CNN's Ed Hornick apparently couldn't find anyone who disagreed with the notion that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker "overreached" in his push to eliminate collective bargaining for public sector unions. He couldn't even quote Walker himself. Hornick's Tuesday article quoted from two political science professors, a "progressive" editorial writer, and a former United States comptroller general, who helped forward this liberal-pleasing hypothesis.

The writer all but gave the answer to the question proposed in the title of his CNN.com article ("Did Wisconsin governor overreach in union battle?") in his lead sentence: "Some political experts have said that Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, in a battle with public employee unions over the right to collective bargaining, has overreached in his attempts to shore up the state's budget shortfall." The graphic accompanying the article featured a pro-union protestor's sign that labeled Governor Walker a "dope," in a parody of Shepard Fairey's red, white, and blue depiction of President Obama (see below).

Screen Cap from CNN.com article posted at http://edition.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/03/01/wisconsin.governor.politics/Hornick's first expert, Professor David Canon from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, stated that he thought "it'd be fair to categorize the proposal (to cut union bargaining) as an overreach...Maybe the biggest reason for that claim is the fact that he didn't campaign on this." After noting that "Walker, a former state legislator and Milwaukee County executive before he was elected governor last year, said he looks to Ronald Reagan for guidance in the current battle in which he's engaged," the CNN journalist continued that "one critic said Walker's public face conjures up images of a more recent president":

"Walker has been combative and steadfast, reminiscent more of George W. Bush's mystifying and utterly unjustified self-confidence (remember "I'm the decider?") than anything Ronald Reagan ever said or did," wrote Paul Fanlund of Wisconsin's progressive Capital Times.

Two paragraphs later, the writer quoted from a second professor, Thomas Holbrook of University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, who posted three times to Huffington Post in October 2010 (a detail Hornick didn't mention):

Opponents have questioned Walker's motives as seeking prominence among like-minded conservatives or pursuing a vendetta against a traditional Republican foe. But another Wisconsin political scientist said while Walker "may, at some level, see himself as a vanguard of this new Republican effort," the governor is motivated by convictions.

"I don't see this as delusions of grandeur or him doing this in any way to propel himself on the national stage," said Thomas Holbrook, a professor of government at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. "The type of person he is, these are the things he believes needs to be done and he's got the majorities so he's going to do it."

Holbrook said Walker showed similar convictions when he was Milwaukee County executive from 2002 to 2010.

"He tended to stick to his guns there and say 'This is what I want, this is what I'm pushing for' and maybe he didn't get it in the end," Holbrook said. "But he didn't have a majority by any means."

Later in the article, Holbrook predicted that Walker's apparent "overreach" would hurt his political ambitions: "He has an opportunity with these huge majorities in the legislature to get his agenda through and that's what he's doing...As for his political future, I'm not sure this is going to benefit him in the long run. I see it as more of coming from conviction and opportunity."

Hornick's third "expert," David Walker (no relation to Scott Walker), was appointed comptroller general by former President Bill Clinton in 1998, and served through most of the Bush administration's two terms until early 2008. General Walker agreed with Professor Canon concerning the Wisconsin governor's "overreach," though acknowledging that he had "legitimate concerns about the collective bargaining process":

"However, he seems to have overreached in connection with some of his proposed solutions," David Walker wrote [in a February 28, 2011 piece on The Washington Post's website titled "Gov. Walker is overreaching on some solutions"]. "While there are many reasons that government workers should not be able to bargain over pension and health benefit levels, it is reasonable for them to be able to bargain over current pay, employee benefit contributions and normal work rules."

Near the end of his article, he CNN writer quoted again from Professor Canon, who reenforced his earlier "overreach" notion:

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When [Governor] Walker was campaigning, he said he wanted unions to start contributing more.

"But nobody saw this collective bargaining part of the proposal coming," Canon said. "That's why I think this could be seen as overreach. There's a pretty good chance he would not have been elected had this been part of the campaign in November."

Despite all the attention on the Republican governor, Hornick didn't quote from him at any point in his article, nor did quote from anyone who disagreed with the idea that the politician "overreached." One could easily conclude that the question posed in his article's title was merely rhetorical.

[H/t: Twitter user DaleFranks]

— Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here.

About the Author

Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Matthew Balan on Twitter.
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Comments

Walker has been combative and

Submitted by motherbelt on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 8:59pm.

Walker has been combative and steadfast, reminiscent more of George W. Bush's mystifying and utterly unjustified self-confidence (remember "I'm the decider?") than anything Ronald Reagan ever said or did," wrote Paul Fanlund of Wisconsin's progressive Capital Times

Hey, Mr. Fanlund...maybe he's more reminiscent of Barack Obama's mystifying and utterly unjustified self-confidence (remember "The election's over. I won?")

The difference is that, rather than fighting with the legislature over things he knows they won't do, Obama gets one of his czars or regulatory agencies to do it without them.

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How dare Walker stick to his convictions.

Submitted by drsamherman on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 9:13pm.

What's next?  Keeping his word?  Oh for shame...

/Sarcasm off

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What is Political Science

Submitted by Russian55 on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 9:41pm.

These experts in "Political Science" (which is very political and not science) come form academia because there is NO OTHER USE for the discipline.  How many "political scientists" are employed in private industry as such?

I suspect most of those who get such degrees either teach or work for left wing think tanks unless they become lawyers.

How many political scientists have created jobs?  Contributed to the advancement of mankind?  Cured diseases? 

Perhaps the problem is that you cannot find people who have worked hard to build so much that does NOT come at the expense of the taxpayer who would agree with the question.

---

Those who beat their swords into plowshares will end up plowing for those who kept their swords in the first place!

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The overreaching hand

Submitted by Ashrak on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 10:18pm.

got slapped in November. Some boneheaded fool called it a "Shellacking"......

They can lie all they want to but it is only going to see more election losses. The folks have had enough.

That an individual right exists requires that some policy positions be removed from the table of debate.
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It's sad to watch CNN slowly

Submitted by Miss_Me_Yet on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 10:21pm.

It's sad to watch CNN slowly die from cancer. Especially when that cancer is CNN.They have sunk so low they now just make stuff up, bring on pretend experts and humiliate themselves in a continuous 24 / 7 recycled loop.

Oh well, it could be worse. They could be MSNBC.

Liberals ... we can't live with them, they couldn't survive without us ...

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More projection by liberals.

Submitted by johnsonl on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 10:35pm.

Obamao, liberals and unions have overreached by trying to push our economy over the edge into socialism. They have failed.

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Doing what you promised?

Submitted by octavioj on Tue, 03/01/2011 - 11:31pm.

O said it before in these pages but the governor is just doing what he promised, not overreaching. The facts:

Stephen Hayes from the Weekly Standard covered this in the blog:

  http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/scott-walker-campaigned-reforming-wisconsin-s-collective-bargaining-rules_552370.html   In the article he mentioned the union makes explicit mention that his promises would involve ending collective bargaining. The date of the article is Aug 29th 2010, hence before the election. Here is a link to the article:   http://www.jsonline.com/news/statepolitics/101771723.html   Also since his election the governor has been discussing the issue overtly in the media. Back in 2010, June of 2010 for that matter, governor Walker said he would ask unions to pay for benefits. Here it is an article:

http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20100618/APC0101/6180488/Milwaukee-County-Executive-Scott-Walker-a-Republican-candidate-to-be-Wisconsin-governor-proposes-state-employees-pay-for-pensions

He also talked about making Wisconsin a right-to-work state back in December:

http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20101209/APC0101/12090557/Republican-Gov-elect-Scott-Walker-wants-state-workers-to-sacrifice

Back in December also a recent elected Congresswoman said changes in collective bargain could be forthcoming:

http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20101220/APC0101/12200463/Wisconsin-Rep-elect-Michelle-Litjens-determined-to-cut-inefficiencies-in-government

Republicans have also complained about the collective bargain process in the previous Congress:

http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20101216/APC0101/12160523/Wisconsin-state-worker-contracts-stall-in-state-Senate

Also back in December the same paper predicted there would be a bloody fight:

http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20101216/APC0101/12160523/Wisconsin-state-worker-contracts-stall-in-state-Senate

And this is just one paper.

Also there was a very good editorial in the Milwaukee Journal that discussed why taking away the collective bargaining power was needed to make the concessions stick. It contends if collective bargaining remains the concessions would be erased in the very next contract, taking the issue back to the status quo. The article:

http://www.jsonline.com/news/opinion/116355379.html
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Gov. Walker

Submitted by 612chris on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 4:11pm.

He has been bought and sold by the Koch bros and the fine money they offered him to run and play by their rules.
The lack of truth regarding pension funds is outragous.  All public employees PAY into the pension fund.  The public employee pension funds in WI  is one of the few that is rated at having close to %96  of the dollars avilable to pay out to the public members.
I fail to understand why this information is not getting mainstream media coverage.
Talk about lies!
I am a proud and happy union member.  Yes, I do PAY  for my pension.  Every week it comes out of my check.
To compare my wages with that of non-union members only means that non-union members are not being paid a fair wage.
It is disgusting to try and place the poor against the poor in every effort to increase the profits of the corportations.
The corporations will not be happy until everyone is making $5.50 an hour without any health care or pensions.
Thank you

 

612chris
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612 chris,,, a proud and happy union member.

Submitted by upcountrywater on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 4:31pm.

sheesh, Spring time !!!

 

EDIT: Government unions have nothing in common with private sector unions because they don't have hostile management on the other side of the bargaining table. To the contrary, the "bosses" of government employees are co-conspirators with them in bilking the taxpayers.

Far from being careful stewards of the taxpayers' money, politicians are on the same side of the bargaining table as government employees -- against the taxpayers, who aren't allowed to be part of the negotiation.

You Didn't Build That.

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Tell it to someone who cares

Submitted by Blonde on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 4:37pm.

You can spread your union lies about Gov. Walker and the "collective bargaining" lie in Wisconsin.

I know for a fact that the provision covering "Collective Bargaining" for the Teachers Union in Wisconsin has the proviso that almost all state and local municipalities must purchase their benefits directly from the union.

Carry on.  Your lies won't fly here.

I hope Walker's little exposure causes every single public sector union to be forced to give up their wrench to legally rob the taxpayers of this nation.  We are done with the public bloodsuckers.

Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)

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nice try Chris*

Submitted by cajun2 on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 5:10pm.

The Koch brothers gave Walker a total of $43,000 to his campaign fund which was over $9million. The three unions that did support Gov Walker combined gave Walker over $300,000. Now who owns Gov Walker?

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While there are some benifits

Submitted by Liberallies on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 5:12pm.

While there are some benifits to Unions and at one point in time unions were necessary to control abuse by employers of employees, today's unions have become what they once fought against.

Unions today care about one thing, money, money, membership and money.

Unions are THE most anti-democracy organizations in America. There are countless of unions who collect dues from individuals who do not like their union or want anything to do with their unions. These dues are then put to use for Liberal and Democratic causes even if members who pay dues are conservative and Republican.

Also, unions are all about tenure. They make it impossible to fire incompetent workers while non-tenure union workers are left to fend for themselves by unions.

Unions also push for the lowest level of productivity. My brother works as a mechanical engineer designing engines. He sees first hand the stupidity of unions and how they push their workers to ask for more benefits, more money while working less and less hours, days, times, etc.

Union members ask and demand a lot, but they give back very little in return.

The reason more and more business look for workers outside of the USA is because unions have made ridiculous demands from corporations inside the USA.

I constantly have this argument with individuals who cry about manufacturing jobs leaving the USA for other countries. I always reply, ask unions to stop making ridiculous wage and benefit demands and you will see manufacturing jobs return to America.

The FACT is that unions destroyed America's auto business. They destroyed Detroit and most of Michigan.

Unions, sadly, have become a disease. They no longer protect workers from corporate abuse. Unions abuse members.

Ask a union member who has ever stood up to a union what happens to him and her. I have seen this first hand. It is very, very ugly.

AND no one has ever said that union members do not pay for their own benefits, but they pay a ridiculous low amoutn compared to their non-union counter parts! Plus, the benefits that public sector union members get are paid by...TAX PAYERS!!! Thus, tax payers do have a say on how much public sector union members should be given in benefits.

and this is FAR from being about workers' right. If this were the case, how come union workers are not all up in arms against Obama who is the head of the federal government which gives terrible benefits to union workers? Wisconsin and the rest of the States give much better benefits and salaries to their union workers than the Federal Government which is headed by Obama!!!

What is going on in Wisconsin is about demonizing Republicans and Conservatives NOT about the rights of workers.

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chris

Submitted by Radical1979 on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 5:42pm.

If you are in a union, you're not poor.

Proud member of the 53%!
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