Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ The drive to impeach President Donald Trump has similariti­es to a recall effort in Wisconsin in 2012.

Impeachmen­t clamor harks back to Walker

- By Scott Bauer

MADISON, Wis. — A divisive leader drove the opposition to extreme measures. The political climate was toxic, with little civil debate or middle ground. The clash ended in a high-risk political showdown that captured the nation’s attention and shaped the next election.

This was the 2012 battle to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker, not the 2019 fight to impeach President Donald Trump. But for some who lived through the former, the episodes have clear similariti­es and a warning for Democrats about overreach and distractio­n.

“In both cases, they thought just as they were upset about something, everyone was,” Walker said, describing one of his takeaways from the campaign that failed to remove him from office. “Just because your base feels strongly about something, (that) doesn’t mean that the majority of other voters do.”

Although moderates declined to join liberals back then in voting to eject Walker, Democrats warn against presuming they’ll break the same way for Trump next year in Wisconsin, a state seen as pivotal in 2020.

The Walker recall sprang from a law he signed just months into his first term that effectivel­y ended collective bargaining for most public employees.

Walker didn’t reveal his plan until after he was elected in 2010, and the move sparked massive protests that made Wisconsin the center of a growing national fight over union rights.

Angry activists gathered nearly a million signatures to force the recall. Although Democrats had fought hard against the bill, with some state senators even fleeing the state at one point to avoid a vote, they were initially reluctant to embrace the recall for fear it would hurt then-President Barack Obama’s re-election hopes in 2012.

Walker ultimately won the recall election in June 2012, becoming a conservati­ve hero on his way to a short-lived run for president in 2015.

Trump is accused of improperly withholdin­g U.S. military aid that Ukraine needed to resist Russian aggression in exchange for Ukraine’s new president investigat­ing Trump political rival Joe Biden and his son.

Trump has argued that he was within his rights to ask Ukraine to look into corruption and that impeachmen­t is just an attempt by Democrats to remove him from office.

Both impeachmen­t and attempts to recall governors from office are exceedingl­y rare.

Impeachmen­t has been leveled by the House against only two presidents, Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton 130 years later. Richard Nixon was on the brink of it in 1974 before he resigned.

Walker was only the third governor in U.S. history to face a recall election and the first to survive it.

The rarity of the remedy may help explain why voters are reluctant to do either one, said Charles Franklin, who has regularly surveyed voter attitudes in Wisconsin for Marquette University.

A Marquette University Law School poll conducted just as public impeachmen­t hearings were beginning earlier this month showed that 53 percent of voters in Wisconsin were against removing Trump for office, with just 40 percent in support. National polls have shown a more even divide.

Even more troubling for Wisconsin Democrats was that while 78 percent of Democrats supported removing Trump through impeachmen­t, 93 percent of Republican­s were against it.

That stronger rallying behind the incumbent, with the other side not as unified, parallels what was seen during the Walker recall, Franklin said.

Stephan Thompson, who led the state GOP during the recalls and went on to manage Walker’s successful 2014 re-election campaign, said impeachmen­t is “such a monumental event in history and politics” that it will hang over Democrats the rest of the cycle and make it difficult for them to bring moderate voters back to their side.

“When the left pushes this hard and overreache­s, it helps you band together with people because you’re all in the foxhole together,” Thompson said. “I think that’s something they don’t realize.”

 ?? Craig Schreiner The Associated Press file ?? Labor groups and others rally in Madison, Wis., in 2012 in an effort to recall then-Gov. Scott Walker. Democrats’ drive to impeach President Donald Trump has a parallel in Wisconsin seven years ago, when angry liberals took aim at a Republican governor.
Craig Schreiner The Associated Press file Labor groups and others rally in Madison, Wis., in 2012 in an effort to recall then-Gov. Scott Walker. Democrats’ drive to impeach President Donald Trump has a parallel in Wisconsin seven years ago, when angry liberals took aim at a Republican governor.
 ??  ?? Scott Walker
Scott Walker

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