ICYMI: "Walker won't hit jobs target, state's own report predicts"
The Capital Times is reporting that Scott Walker's own Dept. of Revenue predicts Walker will fail at his central promise to create 250,000 new jobs.
The Capital Times is reporting that Scott Walker's own Dept. of Revenue predicts Walker will fail at his central promise to create 250,000 new jobs.
As Scott Walker continues to fail at his promise to create 250,000 jobs in his first term, another independent report has condemned his scandal-plagued jobs agency.
As Scott Walker continues to fail at his 250,000 jobs promise, a new audit reveals a wide-ranging scandal at the agency he charged with creating jobs in the first place.
A new analysis in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel shows Scott Walker's recent claims of job creation to be an out-right lie.
Just like in 2010, Scott Walker and his Republican Party ran on the central premise of focusing on job creation, yet the days and weeks following the election have revealed an agenda packed full of radical ideas, and slim on plans to foster economic development.
A new analysis published in today's Milwaukee Journal Sentinel shows that in an "otherwise dismal year," where Democrats statewide garnered substantially more votes, Republicans still profited from their unprecedented, illegal redistricting scheme.
A recent analysis in the New York Times shows that, even as Scott Walker's Wisconsin tails the nation and the region in job creation, Wisconsin ranks ahead of 33 other states, and the District of Columbia, in corporate welfare payments to business.
Ethically-troubled Scott Walker once again is the subject of bid-rigging concerns, with news that $1 million in taxpayer dollars were directed to a firm just weeks after its director gave $25,000 in campaign cash to Walker.
Following is the statement of Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chair Mike Tate in response to the two years prison time given to a Scott Walker appointee on Friday, as well as breaking news that Walker's former campaign chief has been cooperating with criminal prosecutors in the ongoing John Doe corruption probe.