Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, fresh off his third victory in four years, dropped some heavy hints about running for president in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday.
Asked by moderator Chuck Todd about a pledge Walker made in October to serve his four-year term, Walker, a Republican, hedged. “I said my plan was for four years. I’ve got a plan to keep going for the next four years. But, you know, certainly I care deeply about not only my state, but my country,” Walker said. “We’ll see what the future holds.”
Polls had shown a close race between Walker and businesswoman Mary Burke this year, raising Democrats’ hopes that they could take out a champion of conservatism, but Walker won with 52.3% of the vote. He also survived a recall election in 2012.
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Todd asked Walker if he would defer to Congressman and fellow Wisconsinite Paul Ryan, who was their party’s vice presidential nominee in 2012.
“I love Paul Ryan. I’ve said many times before I’d be the president of Paul Ryan fan club,” said Walker. But there is a limit to his love, apparently: “But I do think if we’re going to beat Hillary Clinton in this next election, we’ve got to have a message that says, ‘Hillary Clinton is all about Washington.’ I think in many ways, she was the big loser on Tuesday because she embodies everything that’s wrong with Washington.” Pressed by Todd to spell out whether or not that meant he wouldn’t defer to Ryan, Walker said, “Paul Ryan may be the only exception to that rule. But overall, I think governors make much better presidents than members of Congress.”
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But for all of the talk of “executive experience,” Todd pointed to indicators suggesting that Walker’s economic record isn’t all that great. “When it comes to wage growth, it’s below the national average, Wisconsin is. When it comes to job growth, it’s below the national average. And your tax cut policy has created a larger deficit, a $1.8 billion deficit hole that you’re going to have to plug next year. And part of it is because state revenues didn’t come in as expected. Is it possible that the idea of cutting taxes as a way to create jobs and assimilate the economy just isn’t working in Wisconsin?”
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