Wisconsin Republican Governor Scott Walker will keynote the Heartland Institute‘s 28th Anniversary Benefit Dinner this evening at Navy Pier in Chicago, IL.ย
Walker recently won the Kochtopus-funded Americans for Prosperity George Washington Award. Now, two months after his recall election steamrolling of Democrat Tom Barrett, the climate change denying group famous for its Unabomber billboard will embrace Walker with much fanfare.ย
Heartland, whose internal documents were published this past spring by DeSmogBlog, sings praises for Walker’s union-busting agenda and his recent recall victory in promoting the event:ย
This yearโs keynote speaker, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, is the nationโs most influential and successful governor.ย Elected in 2010 to balance a budget that was billions of dollars in deficit without raising taxes, he did exactly that, winning the passionate support of taxpayers, business owners, and consumers across the state. After years of economic stagnation caused by high taxes and excessive regulation, Wisconsin is growingย again.
To balance the stateโs budget, Gov. Walker took on powerful public sector unions, reining in their collective bargaining privileges and requiring that public-sector workers start to contribute toward their retirement and health care benefits. Unions fought back, and after they failed to block legislation implementing Walkerโs plan, they tried to recall him in a special election. On June 5, 2012, they failed, as Walker won reelection and a solid mandate to stay hisย course.
The trove of leaked Heartland documents exposed the Institute’s current climate change denying agenda and revealed whose money supports this reality-denying agenda. But DeSmogBlog neglected to talk about the details of โOperation Angry Badgerโ in the documents, as at the time, we thought it was outside the scope of our mission.
Turns out, we wereย wrong.
The WI-Bradley Foundation-Heartland Instituteย Nexus
A significant chunk of the Heartland Exposed documentsย discussed the Heartland Institute’s โOperation Angry Badger.โ These documents laid out the role Heartland would play in serving as a messaging machine for the forthcoming Wisconsin gubernatorial recallย election.ย
The Center for Media and Democracy‘s Brendan Fischer broke down the โAngry Badgerโ detailsย (emphasisย mine):
Leaked documents show that the Chicago-based Heartland Institute is planning to spend $612,000 supporting Wisconsin Governor Scottย Walker.
(Snip)
The leaked documents propose a $612,000 campaign to include print ads, mailers, web ads, and blog posts that would promote the โsuccessesโ of Wisconsin Act 10 and portray Wisconsin teachers as overpaid and schools as underperforming. Act 10 โ also known as the โbudget repair billโ โ included Governor Walker’s plan to curtail collective bargaining for public employees, which its proponents said would result in cost-savings for school districts and make it easier to fire badย teachers.ย
Why was Heartland – a ‘free-market’ think tank most well-known for its role in peddling climate change denial – so invested in supporting Walker in the recall election? And given the controversy surrounding Heartland’s Unabomber billboard failure, why is Walker – who is also set to keynote the Republican National Convention later this month – interested in associating with such an extreme group by serving as the keynote speaker at Heartland’s Annualย Dinner?
Just follow the money and the personnel for someย indications.ย
Milwaukee, WI-Based Bradley Foundation Gives Big Bucks toย Heartland
The Milwaukee, WI-based conservative Bradley Foundation gave $648,000 to Heartland between 1986-2009, according to Media Matters.
The Foundation’s President and CEO, Michael Grebe, served as Chairman for Walker’s 2010 gubernatorial race, in which Walker handily dispatched his challenger, Milwaukee mayor Tom Barrett.
Grebe is also the Chairman of the Board of Philanthropy Roundtable, which, according to the Center for Media and Democracy’s Sourcewatch, โwas established by the Bradley Foundation to help facilitate conservative grantmaking.โย
Bradley gave Philanthropy Roundableย $2,585,000 between 1993-2009, according toย Media Matters.
Compared to its close allies, the Koch Family Foundations – the funding epicenter of the Kochtopus empire and another Heartland funder – the Bradley Foundation has largely operated beneath the public’s radar, particularly in the national media. The veil of secrecy Bradley enjoys was lifted when Wisconsin’s biggest daily newspaper, the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, published a lengthy investigation in November 2011, โFrom local roots, Bradley Foundation builds conservative empire.โย
Walker’s first meeting as Governor-Elect was not with the Koch Brothers, but with upper-level management of Bradley, explained theย Sentinel:
Less than a week after being elected governor, Scott Walker and his wife met privately with one of the most powerful philanthropic forces behind America’s conservativeย movement.
It wasn’t the Koch brothers – the bogeymen for the Americanย left.
On Nov. 8, 2010, the Walkers broke bread at the upscale Bacchus restaurant in the Cudahy Tower with the board and senior staff of the Milwaukee-based Lynde and Harry Bradleyย Foundation.
The Bradley Empire has actually doled out far more money to conservative causes (not including electoral efforts) in the past decade than has the Koch Empire.
โIt receives a fraction of the attention given the billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch and the Scaife family,โ wrote theย Sentinel. โBut the Bradley Foundation is in a different league: From 2001 to 2009, it doled out nearly as much money as the seven Koch and Scaife foundations combined.โ
The Bradley Empire Uses Walker to Push Post-Recallย Agenda
Foundation money doesn’t grow on trees. It comes from various donors who share mutual ideological and fiduciary interests. In the case of the Bradley Empire, these interests are multi-tentacled, but the thread that ties the interests together is that they’re always in the interest ofย corporations.
The $612,000 funneled to Heartland to work the โOperation Angry Badgerโ Walker recall effort could be looked at as a small down payment investment. Walker’s victory now gives him the mandate to push the corporate agenda full-steam ahead – and push this agenda heย has.
With the recall complete, and the national spotlight shifting away from Walker, he got to work creating numerous committees and working groups to service private interests ahead of the public interest, both now and long into the future. This is bestย highlighted in an ongoing investigative series by The Progressiveย magazine’s Rebecca Kemble.
Two of the key working groups, The Council on Workforce Investment and the College and Workforce Readiness Council, โare working closely with Competitive Wisconsin, an alliance of politically connected businesses organized by Jim Wood, president of their family PR firm Wood Communications,โ according to Kemble’s reporting.
Competitive Wisconsin, Kemble went onto to explain, launched something called the โBe Bold Campaignโ in 2010. This campaign called for the creation of theย Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC), a public-private partnership that eventually was turned into reality as WI Act 7ย (also known as Special Session SB 6 and Special Session AB 6)ย on February 9, 2011. This wasย merely two days before Walker announced he would be pushing the union-busting โBudget Repair Bill.โย
Competitive Wisconsin spent 95% of its lobbying time in the first half of 2011 making the case for Act 7, according to the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board. This ran at a cost of $3,750 – or roughlyย three-fifths of the moneyย ($4,875) it spent on lobbying for the half-yearย period.ย
The WEDC, in turn, is currently putting together an influential study set to be released after Labor Day, according to a press release.ย โThe $300,000 study is being funded by grants from the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., the Bradley Foundation, and corporate donations,โ wroteย The Wisconsin State Journal.ย
The study is titled โBe Bold 2,โ a sequel to the study that created the WEDC to beginย with.
A โBoldโ Push For Jobs in Wisconsin’s Growing Oil and Gasย Industry?
โBe Bold 2โ will be released under the auspices of Competitive Wisconsin, though it is co-funded by the WEDC and the Bradley Foundation. Competitive Wisconsin’s โstrategic counselโ is Jim Wood, President of Wood Communications Group.ย
Wood Communications Group is a self-described โfull-service public relations firm, providing problem solving and communication tools that work in the real world.โย Importantly, one of its clients is Murphy Oil Corporation.ย
Murphy has a refinery in Superior, WI, which is refining tar sands crude that makes its way into the state via theย Enbridge Alberta Clipper Pipeline, approved by the Obama Administrationย in August 2009.
In late July, the Alberta Clipper Pipeline spilled 1,200 barrels of oil near Grand Marsh, WI, according to Enbridge. Not even two weeks after the spill, Enbridge was given the go-ahead to restart pipeline operations.ย
Wisconsin is alsoย home to four Koch Industries tar sands refineries, owned by its subsidiary, Flint Hills Resources. Koch PAC donated $43,000 to the Walker campaign in 2010, whileย James Kowitz, Manager of the Murphy Oil Superior refinery gave Walker $800ย prior to his 2010ย victory.ย ย ย
โOperation Angry Badgerโ A Wildย Success
Of course the fossil fuel industry-funded Heartland Institute doesn’t want Wisconsin citizens to think about how the tar sands crude that flows through the pipelines and refineries in their state causes climateย change.ย
After a close look at the tight ties that bind Walker to the Bradley Empire, its anti-union initiatives in Wisconsin, and Bradley’s ties to the Heartland Institute, one can see that Walker’s speaking gig at Heartland’s 28th Annual Dinner actually makes perfectย sense.ย
And coming full circle, by the looks of it, โOperation Angry Badgerโ has been nothing short of a wild success for its special interestย backers.
Photo Credit:ย Megan McCormick | WikiMedia
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