His was a landslide victory. Walker’s victory affirmed the party-duopoly which governs the United States because both candidates were system politicians in good standing, both accepted managed democracy as legitimate. Democracy ‘won’: the system ‘worked.’
Walker’s victory is an unqualified disaster for the left, at least for any left committed to popular participation, democratic accountability and equality. It does not matter a jot that Walker had enormous financial resources to use in this election, pace those who claim otherwise (see, for instance, this and this). He did not buy votes. The election was not decided by the work of a Republican Party Sturmabteilung. What matters is Walker was a nationally known political reactionary and who had the backing of the reactionary faction of the nation’s economic elite and oligarchs, and who used these resources to muster the popular support he needed to defeat all of his opponents in what appears to have been a fairly contested election. Walker had to be defeated in order for the left in America to deliver on the promises generated by the Wisconsin Uprising and by the Occupy Movement. Anything less than a Walker defeat in this recall election meant a general and decisive defeat of the political left.
How important was this election? In my estimation, the Wisconsin governor recall election was so important that Walker’s latest victory may well stand alongside Reagan’s destruction of PATCO, the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, Bush v. Gore, passage of the Patriot Act, the 2004 electoral affirmation of the Bush regime and the Iraq Occupation as well as Barack Obama’s steadfast affirmation of the security-surveillance state as recent landmark moments in the dissolution of America’s democracy.



3 Comments

I might agree if Walker had actually gotten a majority of Wisconsin’s votes.
He didn’t come close to that, and TBH, I’m not even convinced he got a majority of the votes cast yesterday. Funny how the exit polls had it much closer.
In Wisconsin, as in the rest of the country, there is, as yet, a great, untapped, mass of votes to be gotten for a party that appeals to them. And I firmly believe such a party will be a party of the left.
I concur 100% OFG. “The loser now will be later to win.”
A failure to oust a bought-and-paid-for reactionary asshole like Walker calls into question the good sense of those who sat out this election. It also reveals union powerlessness and a feckless Democratic Party that could and would not mobilize the faithful to defeat a pariah. But, apart from these functional components of the political system, the left in general failed to mobilize the electoral resources needed to defeat a man who all but announced that he is a class enemy of the working and middle classes. If there ever was an election in which the lesser evil argument had traction, this was it. Walker’s victory thus stands as a monumental failure for the left. And this failure does not speak well of America’s future.