The US is in a dark moment, requiring serious people who can recognize real problems. People like Scott Walker helped to get us here: a divider who has undermined democracy.
Fortunately, some of us were there in 2011 and can set the record straight. Thread.
The WI protests featured 100,000 people. They were angry that Walker went after public sector unions with no warning. They protested peacefully. But to Walker, that is the same as a violent assault by an armed mob on the Capitol (below). ImageImage
The WI protests were remarkably peaceful, so much so that a prank caller to Walker pretending to be a Koch brother suggested that Walker plant some troublemakers in the crowd. "We thought about that" said Walker, who would later compare the peaceful protestors to ISIS. Image
Fox News tried to help Walker claim the WI protests were violent, splicing in footage of fights in CA into the peaceful WI one. Protestors mocked this by carrying inflatable palm trees.
madison.com/wsj/news/local…
The WI protests were supposed to be Walkers origin story for his flaccid presidential run, so he has always overstated them.
Put it this way, I brought my kids down there, and they were about as rowdy as the Saturday farmers market at the State Capitol. ImageImage
Its not just that Walker is a hypocrite. He also has played a role in getting us to the current moment. Riding the tea party 2010 wave election, Walker led the way in democratic backsliding, changing the rules of the game to disenfranchise voters.
Walker pushed the most extreme gerrymander and voter ID laws in the country, and disbanded a nonpartisan election board when they started asking questions about his campaign finance activities. One of his last acts of Governor was to strip powers from his Democratic successor. ImageImageImageImage
Ok, can we just take a moment to remember Scott Walker's Venn diagram
How does this anti-democratic approach of Walker align with the insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol? I wrote this in the Washington Post during the lame duck power grab.
washingtonpost.com/opinions/wisco… Image
The point is that Walker is part of an escalation of anti-democratic action. It starts with the premise that its fine to undermine democracy a bit for a little more power, and ends with a willingness to completely deny election outcomes. See @jbouie here.
nytimes.com/2021/01/05/opi…
In sum, if you look back at the WI 2011 protests and the storming of the Capitol this week, the anti-democratic mindset of the Trump mob shows is much more aligned with the actions of Walker than those who protested him in WI.
Walker should be ashamed to make the comparison.

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More from @donmoyn

10 Jan
All the evidence needed for impeachment is already out there washingtonpost.com/nation/interac…
Read this: the head of the executive branch directed a mob to attack the legislative branch to prevent them from certifying an election. There is no way to just move past this without accountability. washingtonpost.com/politics/insid…
The mob the President directed to the Capitol were shouting "Hang Mike Pence" and "Where's Nancy?" In other words, they were targeting the next two officials in the presidential line of succession.
Officials were calling anyone who could help as they feared for their lives. Image
Read 5 tweets
7 Jan
Appreciate the sentiments calling for discourse here from the President of Wesleyan. But perhaps the most concrete signal that people in his position could take is to pledge not to host and normalize political figures on record of opposing US democracy.
Like this guy, who led the efforts to strip electors in the House yesterday based on a lie that the election was fraudulent and who is now justifying the actions of the insurrectionists based on the same lie.
To be clear, this is likely a bad idea, since it is always risky to put criteria on what is acceptable speech. But I want to draw out the idea a little bit, if only to illustrate some points about campus speech
Read 11 tweets
7 Jan
John Hawley complaining that people in Pennsylvania were allowed to vote by mail, a law passed by the PA legislature and accepted by the Senate.
Romney giving him dagger eyes.
Senator Casey from PA up next. Notes that the law to allow vote-by-mail was approved by Republicans and no-one suggested it was unconstitutional until Trump lost. Characterizes the type of claims that Hawley ( tho not mentioning him by name) made as lies that drove the mob today.
Romney: "Today was heartbreaking and I was shaken to the core...We gather due to a selfish man's injured pride...What happened here today was an insurrection incited by the President of the United States." Those who support him are "complicit...that will be their legacy."
Read 4 tweets
6 Jan
Think it is safe to say that very few of us, even those of us who warned about the dangers of Trumpism, expected to see images like this in our lifetime. The damage to US democracy is profound. Image
US strength depends in no small part on our (imperfect) willingness to defend democratic ideals. The storming of the US Capitol will be cheered by the enemies of democracy, who will use it to reinforce authoritarian control over their people.
The desecration of the US Capitol feels so shocking that maybe it will cause some to wake up.
The reality is that there is a large anti-democratic faction in America. They have made clear that you are with them or against them, so make a choice. nytimes.com/live/2021/01/0… ImageImageImageImage
Read 4 tweets
6 Jan
Inside: Republicans vote not to accept the results of a free and fair election
Outside: Trump supporters attempt to storm Congress
This is what Trump and his enablers have wrought: People waving American and blue line flags are battling police in an attempt to overturn an American election
There is no moral difference between the elected officials who are objecting to democratic processes, and those violently seeking the overrun the heart of US democracy outside. If anything, those who should know better are more morally culpable.
Read 5 tweets
6 Jan
Future historian: "Trump's policy contributions are relatively minor. His most lasting policy legacy was to use the bully pulpit to destroy the remaining vestiges of trust in the functioning of US institutions."
And yes, I know that the generic indicator of "trust in government" has been on a long decline since Nixon. (The spike is 9/11). Image
The low trust in government measure is driven by mistrust of politicians. People trust specific public services or career officials more. So 37% have a fair amount of confidence that politicians try to do the right thing, but 61% for career govt officials. pewresearch.org/politics/2019/…
Read 6 tweets

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