MILWAUKEE — President Obama called on a crowd of more than 3,400 to get their friends and loved ones to the polls on Nov. 4 at a rare 2014 campaign stop dedicated to firing up the base to replace Republican Gov. Scott Walker with Democrat Mary Burke.
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“When you step into that voting booth, you have a choice to make,” Obama said. “It boils down to a simple question: Who’s going to fight for you?”
Burke, a former commerce secretary and a member of the Madison School Board, has been locked in a neck-and-neck race against Walker, with the candidates essentially tied for the past six months. As things have stayed close, Burke has hammered Walker on his failure to create more jobs, his cuts to education budgets, his record on women’s rights, and his refusal to raise the state’s minimum wage.
And with the race essentially tied with both candidates polling at 47%, Obama urged the crowd to take advantage of the remaining three days of early voting. “Grab your friends, grab your coworkers, grab your lazy cousin who’s sitting at home, who never votes during the midterms, sitting at home watching reruns of old Packer games. Take all of them to cast their ballots.”
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“We believe our country is stronger when women are equal participants in the economy,” Obama said, contrasting Burke to her opponent, adding, “I don’t understand why you’d want to repeal a law to make sure women are being treated fairly on the job.” Walker, for his part, repealed a law in 2012 that made it easier for victims of wage discrimination to take their cases to court.
People started lining up outside North Division High School hours ahead of time, and winds picked up as the lines started snaking back in front of the school and down another city block. Students leaving for the day shouted from school buses at people as they arrived. “You tell Obama I said hey!” one teenage boy yelled at a cluster of people leaning on canes and walkers.
At one point, a young, female protester interrupted Obama’s speech, and after the crowed shouted her down, Obama said she was there over the failure to pass immigration reform. Rather than interject at campaign events, he said, “she should be protesting the Republicans in Congress” who have stonewalled legislation.
The campaign stop in Milwaukee is part of a larger effort to boost turnout among the state’s Democratic base in a midterm election that is expected to be bad for Democrats. North Division High School is located in an African-American neighborhood, in a ward that he carried in 2012 with 99% of the vote. His visit caps off a series of campaign stops by other major Democratic figures, including Michelle Obama and former President Bill Clinton who campaigned for Burke in Milwaukee earlier this month.
The Wisconsin governor’s race is one of the closest in the country, and a victory for Burke would signal a popular rebuke of the confrontational approach that made Walker famous in 2011, when he effectively ended collective bargaining rights for public sector unions in the state. That move led to massive protests and a failed recall attempt, but after one term under Walker, Wisconsin is still lagging behind many states in the Midwest in job creation and economic growth.
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