Tag Archives: Tom Barrett

South Milwaukee Election Results: Huge Turnout, Walker Scores Narrow Local Victory

Update: I went back to my post on the 2010 gubernatorial election and found that the gap between Walker and Barrett actually narrowed slightly in South Milwaukee in the past two years. 

Gov. Scott Walker may have won Tuesday’s recall election big statewide, but that wasn’t the case here.

A closer-than-expected margin is among the interesting local results in South Milwaukee …

  • Walker beat Tom Barrett by less than 400 votes in South Milwaukee: 4,767, or 51.7%, to 4,372, or 47.5%.
  • Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch topped Mahlon Mitchell by a similar margin.
  • And turnout was huge: more than 78%. Of the city’s 11,976 registered voters, 9,223 actually voted. Impressive.

Check out the complete results here … and post your comments below!

5 Comments

Filed under 2012 Elections

It’s Election Day: Vote!

No reminder needed, but today is election day.

No matter where you stand, I ask you to do your civic duty and vote. Here are some details …

  • Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  • Not sure where to vote? There is a list of polling places on the city website Elections page. And check out this district map.
  • And here is a sample ballot.

Also, please tell blog readers your experience at the polls. Long lines? Short lines? Issues with voting? Post a comment below.

Check back to this blog later tonight for local election results … and I’ll see you at the polls!

Leave a comment

Filed under 2012 Elections

South Milwaukee Election Results: Barrett Rolls Over Falk In Recall Primary

Not surprisingly, Tom Barrett easily beat Kathleen Falk in the Democratic gubernatorial recall primary on Tuesday in South Milwaukee. The margin among local voters, however, is noteworthy.

Barrett more than doubled up Falk, 67.4% to 28%, or 1,660 to 689 votes, in South Milwaukee. Kathleen Vinehout got 47 votes, and Douglas La Follette got 46. That margin is well ahead of the statewide spread.

Other results and observations:

  • Gov. Scott Walker beat “fake” Republican candidate Arthur Kohl-Riggs, 97.8% to 2%, in South Milwaukee.
  • Mahlon Mitchell easily won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor with 43.7% of the local vote to 27.7% for Isaac Weix and 26% for Ira Robbins. The fact that a “fake” Democrat (Weix) got such a high percentage of the vote locally is concerning to me — probably as concerning as the fact that these “fake” candidates were allowed to run, on both sides, in the first place.
  • Turnout was a surprisingly high 41.4%, as 4,849 of the city’s 11,699 registered voters cast a ballot on Tuesday.
One other observation, for what it’s worth — and reading tea leaves in elections like this can be tricky business: More Democratic votes (2,461) were cast for governor locally than Republican votes (2,364). How that translates (if it translates at all) to the June 5 general election remains to be seen.

Check out the complete results on the city’s website. What are your observations? Post them below!

9 Comments

Filed under 2012 Elections

It’s Election Day: Vote!

No reminder is probably needed, but here’s one anyway: Today is recall primary day.

Please do your civic duty and vote.

Not sure where? Check out the election information page on the city’s website, where you can find a list of polling places, district maps and sample ballots.

Let me know what you see at the polls. Also, if you haven’t already, please vote in the poll on the right side of this page.

Turnout of between 30 and 35% is expected statewide.

Leave a comment

Filed under 2012 Elections

Decisions: Recall Absentee Voting Now Open

The recall primary for governor and lieutenant governor is coming up quickly — May 8 — and you can now vote in the race.

In-person absentee voting — for real and “fake” candidates alike — is allowed at City Hall until 5 p.m. on Friday, May 4, and absentee ballots will be mailed soon to those who have requested them.

Check out sample ballots and other election information on the city website.

And keep in mind that it looks like voter ID laws will not be in place for the May 8 primaries, and maybe beyond, due to the ongoing court case.

Also, be sure to vote in the poll on the right side of this page!

Leave a comment

Filed under 2012 Elections

Where I Stand on Consolidation

With communities across Wisconsin facing the sobering budget realities of massive cuts in state aid combined with state-imposed tax levy limits, there is an increasing call for local governments to consider consolidating services.

The Journal Sentinel has been clear and consistent in its position, as has Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett. And now other local leaders are getting on board.

From the latter story:

Driven by concerns over state funding cuts, municipal leaders from Milwaukee County on Monday unanimously endorsed taking a first step toward broader joint service arrangements.

Members of the Intergovernmental Cooperation Council backed a review of “the possibility of sharing, merging, consolidating, downsizing, right-sizing or rethinking the operations of local government.” The mayors, village presidents and county executive who make up the council membership unanimously favored the move, which includes help from the nonpartisan Public Policy Forum.

Where do I stand?

Let me start with a caveat: If you can not prove that the quality of the consolidated (or shared or merged) service is at worst the same, and ideally better, than what is currently being provided, I would have a hard time even considering it.

But, if it meets that threshold, and in many cases I am betting it will, then I say we absolutely need to look at consolidating, sharing or merging services. And the reason why is simple: There are few other options left, barring reducing or eliminating vital and value-adding services.

Now, there are important criticisms often raised against consolidation, including the potential degradation of services. As I mentioned above, I won’t support an initiative that allows for that.

The other big concern is cost. Consolidation can be expensive, especially on the front end. Savings, if there are any to be had, come later. There is a real cost to the up-front investment.

But “invest” is the operative word, isn’t it? I look at consolidation as potentially an investment in the future of a community and in the things that make suburban living appealing — the delivery of strong services that we much too often take for granted. Compromising those services must only be a last resort, so we need to look at all options to avoid that.

In other words, consolidation must be on the table.

It’s been studied in past, and it’s worthy of further study. What didn’t work five years ago may work now. This is a different day and time, with different legislative forces and different economic realities driving these considerations.

That’s why I was glad to see the ICC take the action it did earlier this week.

Keep in mind that consolidation through shared services, and on a small scale, is already working in South Milwaukee. We now share a health inspector with other South Shore communities, and I can’t be happier with the quality of the service we get in that area. I’ve seen it first-hand through the South Milwaukee Downtown Market.

However, let’s not go too far. The concept of “over-consolidation” — i.e., metropolitan government — is a concern. On this issue, the loss of community identity and local control are hurdles too big to overcome. Indeed, South Milwaukee Mayor Tom Zepecki is right when he told the Journal Sentinel this: “Metro government is a scary thought. I don’t see any future for a large metro government.”

I hope the future for more limited consolidation is brighter. Let’s at least have the discussion.

Of course, I want to know what you think about this issue. Post your comments below.

5 Comments

Filed under Community

What About the Rest of Us? A Word on “Faux Mandates”

On Jan. 1, Journal Sentinel colunmnist and respected local historian John Gurda wrote a column for the Sunday paper headlined: “Beware Faux Mandates: Other Politicians Through History Have Mistaken Election for Mandate.”

I can’t get that column out of my mind these days. Because it was so prophetic … and so right.

Gurda wrote:

Scott Walker is skating rather blithely on the same thin ice as Ryan. He defeated Tom Barrett 52% to 47% in November. That’s a five-point spread – decisive, but hardly a landslide.

Walker has to live – and govern – with the knowledge that nearly half the state’s voters don’t want him in the executive mansion, and that some of his loyal supporters disagree sharply with his opposition to high-speed rail.

True humility in his situation might suggest a conciliatory, consensus-building approach, but Walker has plunged ahead with the spotless conscience of the utterly convinced, a man forever untroubled by shades of gray. Acting for all the world as if he had a mandate, the governor-elect who won’t even hold office until tomorrow has already scuttled the high-speed rail project and cowed the Legislature into leaving the state employees’ labor contract on the table.

So, I ask: Where is the mandate? Where is undeniable support for making the sweeping changes Walker has already led since being elected, especially the union-busting legislation he is pushing through now?

If Walker had beaten Barrett 60-40%, or even 55-45%, that might be another story. But we are talking about five percentage points here — a closer race than many, including me, predicted. Five points. I ask again, where is the mandate?

Of course, Walker has strong support from his base on his so-called “budget repair bill.” The people who love Scott Walker love that he is out to essentially put an end to collective bargaining and, in turn, public sector unions. That much is clear.

But just how many people is that, exactly? Fifty percent of the state? Less? What about the rest of us? What about the tens of thousands of protesters who are showing up in Madison day after day to fight against this legislation (including Saturday)? Do their voices count here? Does my voice count?

Now, I’m not blind to the fact that, on the whole, there was a historic Republican wave in Wisconsin in the November elections. The governorship, the state legislature, a U.S. Senate seat and several Congressional races all turned over toward Republicans. I get that, although I argue this “throw the bums out” mentality will be the norm, not the excpection, moving forward in state and national politics, including 2014.

That said, even the 2010 election was no mandate, certainly not Walker’s disappointing showing against Barrett. I just wish Walker would stop treating it like one and, as Gurda writes, quit plunging “ahead with the spotless conscience of the utterly convinced, a man forever untroubled by shades of gray.”

Walker needs to compromise on the collective bargaining issue, as unlikely (impossible) as that is. 

But don’t take my word for it — listen to the more than one million people who voted for Barrett … and the countless others who may not have voted in November but, if the election were held today, would run to the polls to sweep Walker from office.

8 Comments

Filed under Politics