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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Conservative Vandals Egg Capitol Office of Republican Dale Schultz for Opposing Redistricting Change.

I wonder if the DOA will estimate the cost of removing egg yoke from Sen. Dale Schultz' office windows...a million bucks, three million? 

While demonstrators over the winter didn't vandalize the Capitol, but were accused of doing just that by the far right wing media, those same (alleged) conservatives are now out vandalizing the Capitol. But this time it's justified? Security is now examining surveillance tapes to perhaps identify the culprits. But was this the destructive act of right wingnuts? Who else would target a GOP traitor to Walker's cause? 

Hypocrites all. 


WSJ: WISC-TV reports the first-floor office of Republican state Sen. Dale Schultz of Richland Center had splatters of egg on the exterior marble and eggshells on the balcony Wednesday morning.

WISC: Schultz says "I have no idea what happened or where it came from," he said. "The fact that somebody would egg the state Capitol makes me feel really bad because, as a member of the state Capitol Executive Residence Board, I feel like I'm privileged to take care of this wonderful building. It's the people's building, and anybody who would do that I think is committing an affront to the people of Wisconsin."

Schultz went against his party … he'd vote against a Republican-proposed bill that would have made new legislative districts effective for recall elections. “And I don't see any connection, and my main concern is that this tends to delegitimize people who have real grievances and every right to be here," Schultz said.

The social issues pushed by the Walker administration have stalled, so Walker is desperate to pass as much conservative tripe he can before any possible recall elections.
Gov. Walker is considering calling for another special session before the end of the year. He said it would again focus on jobs. "…venture capitol, things like that," said Walker.

"I would really want to know, 'what's the point? Why is he calling us back in?,'" asked Sen. Jon Erpenbach. "To come back and talk about deregulation or to come back and talk about like today we're in special session in dealing with a bill on trespassing, what the hell does that have to do with jobs? Nothing," said Erpenbach. 

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