Democratic Party Chairman Mike Tate announced on the party’s website Monday that recall petitions will be circulated starting Nov. 15, giving supporters of the effort until Jan. 13 to collect 540,208 signatures.
Walker has become a national hero to many Republicans and conservatives and is a hot ticket on the fundraising and speaking circuit. But he is the top target for unions and Democrats as he became the face of the anti-union movement this year with his proposal that took away nearly all collective bargaining rights from most public workers.
“It has become clearer than ever that the people of Wisconsin — the traditions and institutions of our great state — cannot endure any more of Scott Walker’s abuses. To preserve Wisconsin, we must begin the recall of Walker as soon as possible,” Tate said in a statement on the website.
Two Republican state senators who voted for the law lost recall elections this summer, while four other Republicans and three Democrats survived recalls. The nine elections attracted $44 million in spending from national unions, conservative groups and others.
A group called United Wisconsin is leading the Walker recall effort and has collected pledges from more than 200,000 people to sign recall petitions. The group’s founder, Mike Brown of Appleton, did not immediately respond to an e-mail requesting comment Monday night.
The Republican Party of Wisconsin said it welcomed the recall effort.
“Wisconsin school districts and local municipalities have saved millions of taxpayer dollars thanks to the Governor’s reforms, and we welcome and encourage a comparison between the positive results we’re seeing around the state and the failed policies of the past favored by those seeking a recall,” Stephan Thompson, the state Republican Party’s executive director, said in a statement.
Tate’s statement accused Walker of being “dishonest with the people of Wisconsin” when he ran for governor last year.
“Soon after he took office, he proposed a radical change to state law by trying to take away state workers’ rights to collective bargaining which he never mentioned once during the campaign,” Tate said. “We cannot sit back and allow Scott Walker to continue to dismantle our education system, run our government as an auxiliary of corporate special interests, put our clean air and water at risk, and ignore an unemployment crisis that his policies exacerbated.”
A spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Republican Party said earlier that the party would respond after Tate’s announcement.
There have only been two successful gubernatorial recall elections in US history. The first was in 1921 in North Dakota and the only other was when California Gov. Gray Davis was removed from office and replaced by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2003.
Under Wisconsin law, a recall can’t be started until a year after the officeholder was inaugurated. Walker was inaugurated on Jan. 3, which made Nov. 4 the soonest the recall effort could begin.
Once recall backers file the required paperwork to start collecting signatures, they have 60 days to return the 540,208 required to trigger the election. If the effort starts on Nov. 15, the deadline for supporters to turn in petitions would be Jan. 13.
Once signatures are submitted to the Government Accountability Board, it has 31 days to review them. But it will likely seek an extension to review the large number or signatures, similar to one it received this summer for recalls targeting nine state senators.
Legal fights could also delay any election.
If the board certifies the signatures, the recall petition must be held six Tuesdays from that date. If more than two candidates run, that election would be the primary. A general election would be four weeks after that.
No Democrat has announced plans to run against Walker. People mentioned as potential candidates include US Rep. Ron Kind of La Crosse, former US Rep. Dave Obey of Wausau, Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca of Kenosha, state Sen. Jon Erpenbach of Waunakee, and former Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk.
Effort to recall Wisconsin governor to start Nov. 15
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Tue, 2011-10-11 11:03
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