TPMDC

Progressives Target GOP State Senators In WI With Recall Threat

Demonstrators outside the Wisconsin state Capitol, February 16, 2011.

A pair of national progressive groups are firing the first shots in what could become a full-scale recall campaign against Republican state Senators in Wisconsin, TPM has learned.

The Progressive Change Campaign Committee and Democracy For America are launching a robocall campaign to test the waters for the immediate recall of several state Senators as well as Senate President Michael Ellis and moderate Senator Dale Schultz, who voters would be able to recall in a year under Wisconsin law.

The robocall, voiced by a New London, WI teacher, will be dispatched to 50,000 constituents of Republican Sens. Luther Olsen (District 14), Robert Cowles (2), Dan Kapanke (32), Schultz and Ellis.

The calls gauge voter interest in recalling their Senator.

PCCC and DFA say they can mobilize 40,000 local activists to kickstart a recall effort should voters be ready for one.

“We will not be bullied by Gov. [Scott] Walker’s unfair attempt to attack workers and take away our rights,” Ron Biendseil, one of DFA’s Wisconsin members, said in a statement. “And if the Republicans go along with Walker, they will be looking for new jobs sooner than they think.”

The progressive recall threat is just the latest salvo in a war of words in Wisconsin since Walker announced his intention to strip thousands of unionized state workers of their collective bargaining rights. While the situation has devolved into something of a cold war — with 14 Democratic state Senators preventing Walker’s plan from moving forward by parking themselves in Illinois — politically it has continued to heat up.

Often threatened in recent weeks, recalls in Wisconsin are possible for any elected official a year into his or her service. Republicans have threatened to recall eight of the AWOL Democratic Senators, and Democrats have floated the idea of recalling Walker himself next year.

Recalling Sen. Dale Schultz could pit progressives against a potential ally (of sorts). The moderate former state Senate Republican leader has not publicly signed on to Walker’s bill and has floated a plan to end the impasse and keep collective bargaining rights alive.

PCCC and DFA have not pushed the button on a recall effort yet.

Check out an example of the calls DFA and PCCC will be sending across Wisconsin starting Tuesday:

Top Stories From TPM

Ohio Republicans Push Law To Penalize Colleges For Helping Students Vote

Wow, This is Pretty Epic

Secret Service Looking Into Radio Host’s Graphic Violent Comments About Obama, Hillary Clinton

Florida Man Shoots Himself While Bowling

What Republicans Already Knew About The White House Benghazi Emails

VA GOP's Attorney General Nominee Wanted Women To Report Miscarriages To Police Or Face Jail Time

Disqus Conversations

Click here to read the Disqus Commenting FAQ.

Editor & Publisher

Josh Marshall

Managing Editor

David Kurtz

Associate Editor

Nick Martin

Assistant Editor

Igor Bobic

Reporters

Brian Beutler

Sahil Kapur

Eric Lach

Hunter Walker

Frontpage Editor

Zoë Schlanger

News Writers

Tom Kludt

Video Editor

Michael Lester

General Manager & General Counsel

Millet Israeli

VP, Ad Sales

Bruce Ellerstein

Associate Publisher

Kyle Leighton

Assistant To The Publisher

Joe Ragazzo

Designer/Developer

Matthew Wozniak

Design Associate

Christopher O’Driscoll