Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pridemore wrong on Evers’ jobs

- D.L. Davis Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

The pushback against Gov. Tony Evers’ safer-at-home order aimed at slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s has included a lawsuit filed by Republican leaders and rallies at the Capitol.

One such gathering, an Open Wisconsin rally on April 24 attracted about 1,500 people, according to Capitol police.

Among them: former state Rep. Don Pridemore, R-Hartford.

Pridemore told Shawn Johnson, State Capitol Bureau chief for Wisconsin Public Radio, that he is aiming to launch a recall effort against Evers and Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes.

On his Twitter account, Johnson quoted Pridemore saying he was at the rally to “wake Tony Evers up. Tony Evers has been in an ivory tower all his life. He’s never had a real job.”

In a recording of the interview shared with PolitiFact Wisconsin, Pridemore can be heard expanding on the “never had a real job” comment by saying that “without that experience, (Evers) doesn’t know how the people are suffering with this stay-at-home business.”

There is some bluster and hyperbole here, of course.

But what about Pridemore’s starkest claim?

Is it true Evers has “never had a real job”?

The non-response response

Attempts to reach Pridemore via telephone and email to request backup for his claim were unsuccessf­ul. In the past, Pridemore has refused to speak with journalist­s from certain media outlets, including the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Pridemore has said he will run to replace state Sen. Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau. Fitzgerald is running to replace U.S. Rep. Jim Sensenbren­ner, R-Wis., who is retiring at the end of his term.

It is also worth noting that Pridemore ran for the position of Wisconsin superinten­dent of public instructio­n in April 2013 and was defeated by Evers, who held the post at the time.

A response response

Evers’ spokeswoma­n Melissa Baldauff chided Pridemore for not being more familiar with the governor’s background “considerin­g he lost an election for state superinten­dent by more than 20 points to then-Supt. Evers back in 2013.”

Evers had been in that post since July 2009. It’s fair to say this position is probably what Pridemore was referring to as being in an “ivory tower.” And, while elected officials work, it’s fair to say most people don’t think of elected positions as everyday, run-of-the-mill jobs.

So, what else has Evers done? Baldauff said Evers’ first job was “as a kid, scraping mold off of cheese in his hometown of Plymouth, Wisconsin.”

In a Nov. 6, 2018, campaign podcast interview with The Capital Times featuring Republican Gov. Scott Walker and challenger Evers, Evers said: “I worked in three separate cheese factories in Plymouth, and my high-level job was scraping mold off of cheese.”

(For those now raising their eyebrows: scraping mold from cheese was indeed a job decades ago.)

John Umhoefer, executive director of the Wisconsin Cheese Makers Associatio­n, said the governor is describing a job he had about 50 years ago, and yes, it is quite reasonable to state that people were employed in that era to trim cheese blocks and wheels prior to further processing.

“The cheese industry is quite different than it was around 1970, including major improvemen­ts in packaging systems, packaging films, natural mold inhibitors, and temperatur­e and humidity-controlled storage facilities,” Umhoefer said in an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin.

“The Governor has described working in facilities that the dairy industry would call converters or processors,” Umhoefer continued. “These facilities hold and process cheese that was made elsewhere. Often the cheese is cut into chunks, slices, cubes or shreds at a converting company. In 1970, it is believable that cheese blocks and wheels were trimmed (scraped, to use his word) to remove harmless surface molds prior to being cut for consumer use.”

Umhoefer pointed out that “mold is much less of an issue today with the packaging and storage improvemen­ts.”

In addition, Baldauff said, the young adult Evers “worked as a caregiver in a nursing home.”

Most of the governor’s career, Baldauff said, has been in public education, serving as an educator and administra­tor in school districts around the state (including Tomah, Oakfield, Baraboo, Oshkosh, and Verona).

Evers’ biography, according to the Just Facts/Vote Smart website includes these jobs:

Former teacher, Baraboo School District; former superinten­dent, Oakfield School District; former principal, Tomah School District; former superinten­dent, Verona School District; deputy state superinten­dent, State of Wisconsin, 2001-2009; chief administra­tor, Cooperativ­e Educationa­l Service Agency 6, 1992-2000; superinten­dent of public instructio­n, State of Wisconsin, 2009-2019; and governor, State of Wisconsin, 2019-present.

“If working to support our dairy industry, caring for our neighbors in longterm care facilities, and educating our kids don’t constitute ‘real jobs’ to Mr. Pridemore, I can’t imagine what does,” Baldauff said.

Our ruling

Pridemore said Evers has “never had a real job.”

It’s probably news to dairy workers that scraping mold from cheese was not considered a real job. Ditto for nursing home caregivers, school teachers and principals. (Elected officials would probably disagree as well).

We rate the claim False.

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