Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker rose to national prominence in 2011 when the Republican waged — and won — a war against public employee unions in Wisconsin, and substantially restricted workers’ collective bargaining rights in the state. Now, with Walker a newly-declared presidential hopeful, unions are hoping to exact revenge.
Unions have failed at that task once already, when they came up short in an effort to recall him from office in 2012. And if they are aiming to be more successful in derailing Walker at the national level, they are keeping their plans close to the chest.
%22To%20a%20lot%20of%20the%20country%2C%20Scott%20Walker%20is%20still%20a%20fresh%20face.%20…%20So%20first%20and%20foremost%20people%20need%20to%20know%20who%20is%20he%20and%20what%20his%20agenda%20is.%22′
Michelle Ringuette, a senior official with the American Federation of Teachers, told msnbc that the union — which represents 1.6 million members — was “absolutely” going to get involved in the GOP primary process, specifically to target Walker. While AFT has not yet carved out a budget to take him on, Ringuette said paid ads — in addition to field operations and public information campaigns — are all on the table.
“To a lot of the country, Scott Walker is still a fresh face. He’s not really well known. So first and foremost people need to know who is he and what his agenda is,” said Ringuette, whose labor group recently endorsed Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton for president.
Christina Brey, a spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Education Association Council — the state affiliate of the National Education Association (the largest labor union in the country) — said they too would “widen our message” against Walker. For starters, that means reaching out to partners and educators across state lines, largely through grassroots initiatives and social media.
One source in the labor community, who has been in coalition meetings with labor groups, said unions’ targeting of Walker will focus on highlighting his economic record in a state that has struggled with job growth. That will also mean drawing comparisons to neighboring Minnesota, which is leading Wisconsin in practically every economic indicator – despite both states having similar manufacturing and farming building blocks, a history of organized labor, and electing new governors in 2010.
Big Labor’s message is clear: Minnesota and its union-friendly Democratic governor are a success, while Wisconsin and its union-busting Republican governor are a disaster.
RELATED: Walker touts far-right accomplishments in campaign launch
Other labor leaders have pounced on Walker’s bid but haven’t indicated what they might do to thwart it. “Scott Walker is a national disgrace,” AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka said in a blisteringly concise, six-word statement on Monday. Spokesman Josh Goldstein explained that when candidates like Walker decry the minimum wage, or when former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said Americans should work longer hours, “they’re going to hear the backlash … We’re not sitting on our hands while any candidates attack working people.”
Goldstein said targeted ads could be part of the game plan, but would not go into detail about the exact strategy or how much the group was willing to spend in the primary season.








