It serves Walker right for trying to crush unions.
And I hate to say it, but it serves the people of Wisconsin right for not supporting more of the Democratic challengers in the recall election.
A lot of effort (and hype) went into that recall election, only to see voters
still support the militantly ant-collective bargaining Republican incumbents.
Making noise alone doesn't change policy, as the Wisconsin recall results clearly proved.
Once again, actions speak louder than words--and Wisconsin voters did not take sufficient action to overturn Walker's anti-collective bargaining edict.
If I'd been a voter in Wisconsin, I'd have turned off my TV and not listened to any political advertisements. I would have voted straight Democrat right down the line (especially for any of those who left the state to prevent a quorum from being obtained on the anti-collective bargaining issue.)
The recall election, in my mind, was only about the right of workers to collectively bargain. Period.
A vote for the Republican incumbents was a vote to remove that right. And, in this case, a vote for the Dems was a vote to retain collective bargaining rights.
Wisconsin voters chose the former--to eliminate collective bargaining rights for Wisconsin public employees.
And now they're reaping what they've sewn.