The Great Midwestern Divide: Why Minnesota and Wisconsin’s Political Schism MattersThe governorships of conservative Scott Walker (R-Wis.) and progressive Mark Dayton (D-Minn.) have yielded dramatically different results.JULY 26, 2017 BY THEO ANDERSON
http://inthesetimes.com/article/20312/two-paths-diverged-in-the-midwest-scott-walker-mark-dayton
Scott Walker promised to make Wisconsin "open for business"—but his right-wing policies have harmed the state's workers, the economy and the environment. (Katherine Welles)When Scott Walker became governor of Wisconsin in 2011, he put up signs along state borders proclaiming the state “open for business.â€
The signs, Walker said, marked a profound shift in the way Wisconsin “treats job creators.†Within months of taking office, he pushed through a series of tax cuts aimed at corporations and the rich. Manufacturing and agricultural businesses, for example, saw an estimated $874 million sliced from their taxes over 10 years. Walker promised that such measures would supercharge the economy and lead to 250,000 new jobs in four years. Forbes applauded his agenda and compared it favorably to Minnesota, where “Gov. Mark Dayton pushes for tax increases on the rich.â€
[...]
Yet the results of Walker’s “open for business†agenda haven’t been as promised; “job creators†have been derelict in their duty. Last year, the number of jobs in the state increased by about 17,000, bringing the total jobs created under Walker to roughly 185,000—some 65,000 short of what he’d promised to accomplish by January 2015. During Walker’s tenure, Wisconsin has consistently trailed most other states in job growth.
Minnesota, meanwhile, tacked the other way and raised taxes on the rich in order to invest in schools. The 2013 budget levied a two percent tax increase on couples who make more than $250,000 per year. The hike generated $1.1 billion over two years, about half of which was earmarked to cover the state’s budget deficit. Much of the rest went to education: $234 million in general funding for public schools, $134 million to expand all-day kindergarten statewide, and another $80 million to invest in early childhood education and special education.
[...]