Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce

Why does Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce HATE Wisconsin?

Why do conservative business people in Wisconsin promote doing LESS business in this great state? WHY? I just don't get it.

Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce insists on leading its newsletter with damaging crap about the economic climate in this great state. It's truly perplexing. 

Their newsletter editor, Jeff Schoepke, continues to diss us (I hope this guy has no career ambitions beyond WMC!):

The national, non-partisan Tax Foundation releases a State Business Tax Climate Index annually. In the 2009 Index, Wisconsin ranks only 38th best, which is also 13th worst. While that’s one spot better than the 2008 ranking, Wisconsin’s business tax climate continues to land in the bottom quarter of all states.

And never mind these jackasses haven't been able to respond to former UW-Madison Chancellor John Wiley's eloquent assertion lambasting this jack-assed-ness (dude knows how to call 'em like he sees 'em!).

The question has to be asked: Does WMC want Wisconsin businesses to fail?!

The Time for an Intervention is Now

The staff and leadership of Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce (WMC) have proven that they are drunk with partisanship. The only hope is for both the rank and file and higher profile members to have a long overdue intervention. The long list of events over the last several months should finally inspire the legitimate business interests to take back their organization from the partisans that now control it. In a relatively short period of time WMC has lost board members and was on the receiving end of a well deserved rebuke from one of the leading businesses in the state, Epic Systems. Their successful effort to fill another seat on the state Supreme Court with an ethically challenged intellectual lightweight brought the scorn of a wide cross-section of independant observers. Now yet another Wisconsin leader is sounding the alarm over the direction and toxic influence of WMC.

The Real WMC Revealed

Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce (WMC) have shown themselves to be little more than a partisan organization in recent years. Rather than simply representing business interests in the state, they have become hugely partisan and practically the funding arm for right wing candidates. Understandably, this increasingly partisan direction has concerned numerous businesses that did not sign up for such controversy. Partisanship has become one of the obvious faces of WMC, but in a recent story in the Isthmus, we may have seen a sign of something more troubling.

The Isthmus profiled Epic Systems, a Madison based software company that has not only grown to be one of the most important companies in Dane County but a powerhouse in both the state and country. While describing the many ways that Epic Systems has been leading their entire industry, the story also takes a look at the leadership behind Epic Systems and their great successes. No look at the company would be complete without mentioning the founder and CEO, Judy Faulkner. The story goes on to give a professional and rather personal profile of the force behind this giant success story. As part of that discussion, the story points out that Judy Faulkner is very forward thinking and progressive when it comes to public policy and other important issues. This certainly does not fit with the increasingly right wing partisan WMC agenda.

Cap. Times Call for Ziegler's Resignation Compelling

The Capital Times became the first daily newspaper to call for the resignation of Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Annette Ziegler.

We can expect more calls for Ziegler's resignation to follow in the coming months.

Ziegler, elected in the spring of 2007, was hit with denunciations for her conduct as a Washington County judge during her successful campaign that drew little attention from Wisconsin voters.

Ziegler, in violation of Wisconsin judicial conflict of interest rules, presided over dozens of cases in which her family had a financial interest, and failed to disclose to the litigants the conflicts in each case.

Now, Ziegler, awaiting discipline for her conduct on the bench as a county judge, is taking criticism for refusing to recuse herself, as a current Supreme Court justice, from a case that is a high priority of the corporate lobbying group, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, that spent over $2 million (surpassing the amount spent by Ziegler’s campaign) to elect Ziegler to her current judgeship.

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