Words matter. These are the best Scott Walker Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
So why am I facing a recall election? Simple: the big government union bosses from Washington want their money. They don’t like the fact that I did something fundamentally pro-worker; something that’s truly about freedom.
I’d like now and into the future to play a bigger role not only in Wisconsin and the Midwest, but nationally. I’d like to have an impact.
More people on unemployment benefits is not success in America, fewer people on not because we kicked them off but because they have been able to get a job in the private sector, because government got out of the way.
I kept my promises.
Political leaders in Illinois kicked the can down the road, raised taxes, and ignored fiscal realities. Now, they’re realizing the consequences of their actions: credit downgrades and negative outlooks.
One of the things I get amused by is when my opponent talks about the middle class.
People create jobs, not the government.
It’s sad to think right now, but probably the Russian and Chinese government know more about Hillary Clinton’s e-mail server than do the members of the United States Congress. And – and that has put our national security at risk.
Looking at America’s history, ordinary people did something extraordinary. Leaders risked their lives for freedoms that we take for granted today. That’s what instills confidence. That’s us. We will move forward and prosper because that’s who we are as Americans.
I think people across America want a leader who’s actually going to listen to them.
One of those promises was to limit the size of government and to have the government serve the people – and not the other way around.
It’s time to put our differences aside and find ways to work together to move Wisconsin forward.
You look at Governor Romney’s record in the private sector, he helped turn businesses around. Certainly a decade ago he took what would have been an international disaster with the U.S. Olympics, and turned it around for America and made us great again with the Olympics in Salt Lake City.
I joke with my kids, who love history, that I’ll be the only governor to be elected twice in his first term.
I have not made any plans for the future, and my wife would kill me if I announced anything before that.
Now things have changed for the better. Our reforms end seniority and tenure so we can hire and fire based on merit and pay based on performance. That means we can put the best and the brightest in our classrooms – and we can keep them there.
My kids were targeted on Facebook by protesters.
What has made America amazing has been the fact that throughout our history, throughout the more than 200 years of our history, there have been men and women of courage who stood up and decided it was more important to look out for the future of their children and their grandchildren than their own political futures.
It is only fair to expect public employees like me and others in the public sector to pay something close to what our neighbors and our fellow citizens do in the private sector.
I hate big government, but I really hate a government that doesn’t work. So when ‘they say we either have to raise taxes or cut core services,’ it’s actually a ‘false choice.’
When we win, it will tell every politician in America that if you are bold, if you do the right thing, if you tackle the tough issues, there will be people standing there right with you.
I think most of us in America understand that people, not the government, creates jobs.
We need someone to turn things around in America.
I have unbelievable support among Republicans.
Who is in charge? Is it taxpayers or is it the special interest groups?
What makes America amazing is that there have always been men and women of courage who were willing to think more about the future of their children and grandchildren than they did about their own political careers.
We could see the Teamsters coming in from New Jersey, the AFL-CIO from Chicago. You could see all of the people being bused in.
I still remember, as a kid, tying a yellow ribbon around a tree in front of my house during the 444 days that Iran held 52 Americans hostage. Iran is not a place we should be doing business with.
We are the ones looking out for the middle class. Who do think pays for the endless expansion of government? Its middle class taxpayers. Our reforms protect middle class taxpayers.
But I don’t want massive layoffs of anyone – public or private. We are planning on shrinking government through attrition and reform, not through random pink slips.
We showed that when we say ‘Wisconsin is open for business’, we mean it.
I promised to empower the taxpayer – instead of a handful of big government union bosses.
A wise governor told me a long time ago, political capital you don’t get more of by keeping it. You get it by using it.
I think most people believe success in government is how many fewer people are in government, not because you kick them off of benefits like unemployment but they’ve been able to control their own destiny because private sector employers have created more jobs.
Elections have consequences.
And I think Governor Romney has a shot if the ‘R’ next to his name doesn’t just stand for ‘Republican,’ it stands for ‘reformer.’
Mitt Romney turned businesses around in the private sector. He saved the Winter Olympics.
So let me be clear, Collective bargaining isn’t a right, it is an expensive entitlement. Once and for all, we are giving the taxpayers a voice in this debate. We put the power back in the hands of the people.
My problem with public sector union leaders, the bosses, has been they stood in the way of protecting the taxpayer.
The real bottom line is, the national unions want their hands on the money.
But Mitt Romney understands, like I understand, that people – not governments – create jobs.
Like many places across the country, Wisconsin lost more than 100,000 jobs from 2008 to 2010. Unemployment during that time topped out at over 9%.
You can make tough decisions that I believe voters for years have asked us to do.
We’ll look to the fall and if there is a new president and a new Senate that’s part of a Congress willing to change, that’s the next step.