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January 29, 2018 | MacIver News Service
We’re nearly a month into the New Year, and have already started to see friction at the Capitol. This week was no different–liberal supreme court candidates sizing each other up, the stalling of a Base Budget Review bill, the undusting of legislation from the Great Depression. All of this and more are summed up below in this week’s Capitol Update!
Gov. Walker’s State of the State
This past Wednesday, Governor Scott Walker gave his annual State of the State address to the Legislature. Gov. Walker began by listing off the positive economic indicators for Wisconsin, and then briefly laid out plans for the upcoming year.
https://t.co/0jtg2ri6UL Governor Scott Walker spent the bulk of his 2018 reminding Wisconsinites how far the state has come during his 7 years as governor. But he said there’s still a lot to get done, and he wants to get it done before the legislature breaks for the year. MNS’ … pic.twitter.com/Ules0d8Kom
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 25, 2018
The plans, namely reform programs, include redistributing state surplus money to the citizens of Wisconsin, seeking health care stability after the American Care Act, welfare reform and education and economic development.
Among the bills: expanding work requirements to 30 hours/week up from 20; requiring passing a drug test to receive benefits; asset limits to prevent well-off individuals from receiving welfare checks
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 24, 2018
Read a full report from MacIver’s Matt Kittle here.
Full Video from MacIver of Supreme Court Forum
Last Monday, the state Federalist Society hosted a State Supreme Court Forum, featuring the two different viewpoints in the race to replace Judge Michael Gableman: judicial activists and a constitutionalist.
“I would be an unshakable champion of liberal democratic values,” – attorney Tim Burns, liberal candidate for WI Supreme Court. #wiright #wipolitics #SCOWIS
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 23, 2018
“It’s not a court of good ideas, it’s a court of law. Good ideas are implemented in other branches of government.” Judge Michael Screnock, conservative candidate for WI Supreme Court on his stance against activism on the bench. #wiright #wipolitics #SCOWIS
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 23, 2018
While the two liberal candidates, Judge Rebecca Dallet and attorney Tim Burns, fought about politics and activist credentials, the third candidate, Judge Michael Screnock, remained “mostly remained above the fray,” according to MacIver’s Matt Kittle. The primary election for the non-partisan race will be held February 20, and the general election will be held April 3.
The full video of the forum can be accessed below.
Base Budget Review Bill
In 2009, former Governor Jim Doyle scrapped a law that required the Wisconsin Legislature to consistently review the entirety of the Wisconsin State Budget. After gliding smoothly through the Senate, a reintroduction of a Base Budget Review Bill found itself stalled in the Assembly on January 17. Right now, taxpayers are scammed by the base-year doubled budgeting model where a bureaucrat looks at last year’s budget, adds in three to five percent more spending without justification or thought and calls that the bare-minimum base budget that cannot under any circumstances be “cut.”
According to MacIver’s Matt Kittle, “The Assembly on Tuesday passed an amended version of reform legislation requiring state government agencies, the courts and the Legislature to periodically review – and justify – their budgets.” The Senate now has to vote again, but on the amended version. Read more about the bill here.
ICYMI: State Budget Reform Measure, Zero Base Budget Reporting Requirement, Dropped At Last Minute…https://t.co/a1SbP8qnkw#wiright #wipolitics
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 18, 2018
Conservation Corps Bill
This week, the State Legislature decided to vote Wisconsin back to the Great Depression Era. Assembly Bill 688 reestablishes “Conservation Corps,” a program that was created initially as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal.” The program was established to provide public works jobs to young men affected by the Depression.
“Those who cherish liberty should always be leery of ideas that expand government. Taxpayers know all too well that once a government program is created, it is nearly impossible to ever end that program, no matter how outdated that program is. The resurrection of the Conservation Corps is proof that even when you are successful in killing a government program, you really haven’t killed it,” said MacIver Institute President Brett Healy.
The bill cleared the Assembly on Tuesday. Read MacIver’s Chris Rochester’s update on the bill here.
Without discussion on a voice vote, Assembly passes the bill that resurrects the WI Conservation Corps – a relic of the New Deal. #wiright #wipolitics https://t.co/zSkVg0t7pn
— MacIver Institute (@MacIverWisc) January 23, 2018