HUDSON, Wisconsin – New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker are walking side by side through Empire Buckets, marveling as the workers shape and weld giant pieces of metal into rounded containers for industrial material.
“This could be on ‘Dirty Jobs’ – you know, that cable show?” Walker says to Christie. Christie nods and smiles.
After the tour, the two men stop to hold a press conference in front of one of the outfit’s smaller vessels; it’s still taller than a person.
“That’s a big boy, let me tell ya,” one of the workers tells the two Republican governors. The bucket is big, Christie and Walker both agree.
Christie has traveled from New Jersey to this small town on the Minnesota border to help Walker in his close fight for reelection. There’s a certain level of irony – and magnanimity – associated with the visit. If Walker beats Democratic challenger Mary Burke this November, Walker — revered by conservatives for his successful take down of public employee unions — will be further lionized on the right, and catapulted straight into Christie’s path to the 2016 presidential nomination.
If Walker loses — polls show a tight race with Burke — his national hopes would be dashed.
“Last week alone, down in the crossing down at Green Bay, two of the national big government union bosses were in this state, and you know what they said?” Walker said. “We’re the number one target. We’re the number one target.”
On this visit, Christie is playing the role of attack dog, going after Burke over plagiarism in her jobs plan; a consultant working on her campaign included word-for-word passages that appeared in the jobs plans of other Democratic gubernatorial candidates.
“If you can’t trust her honesty and her integrity when she tells you that this is her plan, why would you trust her honesty and integrity about anything else she tells you?” Christie said during a press conference after the bucket factory tour.
For Walker, Christie’s presence has added the value of attracting attention from press in the nearby Twin Cities; the TV stations and papers in Minneapolis and St. Paul usually ignore the Wisconsin governor, Walker says, because most of their viewers live in Minnesota.
The race in Wisconsin in 2014 is the latest evidence that the state remains as polarized as ever. Since taking office in early 2011, Walker has rammed through a succession of conservative policies that (most egregiously, Democrats believe) included eliminating collective bargaining for public sector employees. Those efforts led to a recall election against Walker in 2012 which he won handily, but which left the state even more angry and divided.
The result, Walker acknowledges, is an electorate with almost no middle.
“For years it was kind of a 40-40-20 state: 40% leaned to the left, 40% kind of leaned to the right and about 20% were in the middle. That middle has shrunk a little bit,” he said.
Try a lot: Polls show that only about 4% of voters are undecided at this point in the race.
That’s the climate that surrounds an investigation into Walker’s political fundraising.
Walker had insisted that a federal judge had halted the probe. But a lawsuit from the Wisconsin Club for Growth was just kicked back into state court after a federal panel ruled that the state could keep looking into illegally coordination with Walker’s campaign.
Walker insists he never raised funds improperly.
“Yes,” he told msnbc when asked if he was 100% comfortable that he and his aides followed the spirit of the law.
It’s all playing out against a national backdrop: Walker’s reelection fight has turned into a test of whether aggressive conservative governance can win Republicans elections in purple states – or whether going too far will backfire. And that explains a lot about why Christie, who rode to a whopping re-election win last year in an otherwise blue state — is here.
“One last test everybody – one last test – because they’re testing you this time too, and what they want to do is make an example of him to other governors around the country,” Christie said.
Democrats’ last hope
“Mary, Mary, Mary,” Burke’s supporters are chanting, waiting for their candidate to step into the Brown County Democratic headquarters not far from Lambeau Field, the revered home of the Green Bay Pakers. (Sitting on the tables are handy pocket-sized schedules for Badgers and Packers football games this fall, branded “Mary Burke for Governor.”)
It’s a Tuesday afternoon, but the room is packed. The crowd runs the gamut from a woman wearing peace sign earrings to an older gentleman who says, “If you need an ex-Marine to tell Scott Walker to go f**k himself, I’m your man.” (He is not quite prepared to attach his name to that quote in print.)
Kasie Hunt
Ben Mayer








