Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s address to GOP donors Saturday at the Republican Jewish Coalition meeting in Las Vegas sounded an awful lot like a stump speech.
The Republican, a potential 2016 presidential contender, hit on some of the right’s favorite issues — states’ rights, lower taxes, and a stronger military — while slamming Democrats over federal programs that he said encourage dependency on the government.
President Obama’s administration “measures success by how many people are dependent on the government. That’s waving the white flag, isn’t it?” Walker said. “We measure success on just the opposite, by how many people are no longer dependent on the government.”
“That’s not just a Republican or conservative ideal, that’s an American ideal,” Walker added.
Walker also weighed in on foreign policy, arguing that the U.S. needs to strengthen its military in order to better defend its interests and to be a “good ally” to Israel.
“I’m not eager to see or send our men and women to battle,” Walker said. “I think it’s also important that if we’re gonna have a deterrence, we have to have something to back it up.”
The issue of America’s “strength” was a focus of Walker’s speech. He noted his concern about the country’s standing in the world under the current administration, citing the president’s responses to crises in Syria, Iran and Ukraine.
“If people around the world, not just our allies, but our adversaries — if they don’t believe we’re strong, they’ll take action,” Walker said.









