Walker Maintains Lead Over Barrett, New Law School Poll Results Show

Republican Gov. Scott Walker leads Democratic challenger Tom Barrett 52% to 45% among likely voters in next week’s recall election, according to results of the Marquette Law School Poll released Wednesday.

The seven point margin is not statistically different from a six point margin in a Law School Poll conducted two weeks earlier, said Charles Franklin, a visiting professor of law and public policy at the Law School and director of the poll. The difference between Walker and Barrett is within the margin of error for the poll, which is 4.1 percentage points.

The poll was conducted May 23 to 26, with most of the 720 people in the sample interviewed before a televised debate between Walker and Barrett, the mayor of Milwaukee, last Friday. Franklin said that it is possible things have changed in the light of the debate or other developments. In releasing the results, he and Mike Gousha, the Law School’s distinguished fellow in law and public policy, showed results of 16 polls this year of the recall race. The Law School Poll results were in line with other results, which have generally shown a small Walker lead in recent weeks. However, a poll also released Wednesday found the two candidates tied at 49%. That poll was conducted by Democratic pollster Celinda Lake.

In other results of the Law School Poll, Democratic President Barack Obama led Republican challenger Mitt Romney 51% to 43% in Wisconsin. Two weeks earlier, the poll found the presidential race to be tied. Franklin said there is still a lot of time for the presidential race to develop.

Full results from the new poll and previous polls can be found by clicking here.

 

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Restorative Justice Conference to Focus on Restoring Faith in Government Through Civil Discourse

Recently Sheldon Lubar, a highly respected and successful Milwaukee businessman, called upon our political leaders to return to civility. Finding that political labels are not particularly helpful, he describes his personal politics as follows:

My politics are for what is right, what makes common sense, what is decent, what will create prosperity and a good life — I am for civility. So what is civility? Webster defines civil, civility, civilization as follows:

A community of citizens. A rational and fair government.

Being polite and courteous is civil. . . . Civility is the positive and sincere consideration of others.

I believe that the founders of our great country sought to create a nation of “civility.” They sought to create a nation that elected leaders who could recognize both sides of all issues and through honest and informed debate could and would resolve differences fairly and then move ahead.

In this heavily financed election season, many are concerned with the lack of civil discourse and respectful debate in our political discussions. People disagree as to the causes of the problem and as to what is needed as solutions. On June 8th, the Marquette Law School Restorative Justice Initiative’s annual conference will present speakers who will focus on our theme for this year, “Restoring Faith in Government: Encouraging Civil Public Discourse.”

Every year we select a relevant issue to examine through a restorative justice lens by asking three critical questions: 1.) Who and what is being harmed by certain conduct? 2.) What is the nature (and the breadth and depth) of the harm? 3.) What needs to be done to work at repairing the harm? This year we chose to focus on civility in political life.

Our conference will examine whether Americans are losing faith in our ability to discuss, much less solve, our political problems. Two state senators and two former lieutenant governors will look at whether people are too discouraged to run for office or even to participate in the political process. Three nationally recognized public policy mediators will present ways to facilitate difficult but respectful discussions with people of diverse views. Speakers will talk about negative advertising and the negative blogging occurring in our print media that often looks like “recreational hostility.” Our keynote speaker, John Avlon, a senior columnist for Newsweek, will share his views on ways to heal polarization in America. We will end the conference with optimism by having a panel of enthusiastic Marquette students who have great hope for our governmental processes in the future. I believe it will be a very good day. I hope you will join us.

 

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Milwaukee-Area Annexation Battles

This post is a response to several recent comments on the Faculty Blog concerning the importance of Milwaukee-area annexation battles in Wisconsin politics. These battles included a pronounced anti-urban bias, and that bias remains evident in present-day attacks on the City of Milwaukee and its residents in the context of gubernatorial recall election. However, the annexation battles themselves do not explain or clarify the attacks.

Historian John Gurda discusses the annexation battles on pages 336-45 in The Making of Milwaukee (1999). The battles were most pronounced from roughly 1948-62. While City of Milwaukee officials vigorously attempted to include newly developing, outlying areas in the City, leaders of these areas were often fiercely opposed. They sought to convert their rural towns into municipalities, to fight Milwaukee’s annexation efforts, and to annex unincorporated areas to their own suburbs. The suburbanites, according to Gurda, were anxious to disassociate themselves from Milwaukee’s poverty. Many of the new suburbanites “found it surprisingly easy to trade their ancestral loyalties for an attitude of outright hostility to the City.”

Today, these new suburbs are thriving.  

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