Walker's Reaction
Walker campaign responds to Green and Doyle by saying Green and Doyle were responding to Walker.
“Once again Scott Walker has taken the lead on a difficult issue, to be joined later by his two opponents,” said Bruce Pfaff, campaign manager for Scott Walker. “Ten days ago Scott introduced significant reforms on ethics reform, and now Jim Doyle and Mark Green have decided that the ethics is an important issue.”Interesting take.




6 Comments:
Well, he's got the sequence of events working for him. 2nd major flare up of the campaign in a row that Green initially found himself on the wrong side.
Did you actually read the press release? Does Walker read his releases? Or for that matter write them? Because nearly every press release he puts out (campaign or from the exec office)is riddled with grammatical errors. How is anyone supposed to take him and his "team" seriously? Furthermore, does he like sounding like the little kid on the playground screaming "look at me, look at me!!"
Dear Anonymous (AKA Mark Green's "Team")
Isn't "look at me, look at me" what a primary season is for?
And I'll take a few grammatical errors on a press release from someone that has actually presented budgets that froze or cut property taxes and that can win against Jim Doyle.
I have no problem taking Scott Walker serious because he has PROVEN that he actually does what he says he is going to do.
Given the grammatical errors in the above comment, I think a chapter of the Grammatically Challenged for Walker should be established. Given our current president, it's obvious that intelligence isn't a quality particularly valued in our leaders. However, lack of attention to detail, laziness (failure to use spell check-hello?), and perhaps lack of intelligence are not qualities I want in a governor or in the staff that a governor hires. Bodes poorly for Mr. Walker.
Let me get this straight. Walker ends up pushing his opponent to throw away $30,000 and the incumbent governor to pretend to see the road to Damascus, and we're quibbling over a press release and the grammar used in a comment on a blog?
I haven't decided for either candidate yet, but if that's the best the Green partisans can do I guess I can expect a lot of misspelled press releases from the governor's office the next four years.
Which way does Walker want it? To take credit for making Green rid himself of the money? I'm not sure since he's giving such a mixed message on it. Didn't he tell Charile Sykes that he never told Mark Green what to do with the money?
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