An Analysis of Dane County

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This is an opinion column.

It’s time to celebrate. Dane County put Trump over the top. You know what Biden is now thinking – “Damn if only I had stayed in the race, I could have won.”

Unfortunately, like Hillary Clinton, Harris tried to trainwreck the victory celebration by refusing to concede and instead literally going to bed – leaving 330 million Americans hanging! She didn’t speak until an entire day later, at about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday.

It was clear by 12:48 am that the margin of Trump’s voting win was big enough that Harris could never overcome it, and based upon that, she should have conceded by 1 a.m.  Instead, she insults the nation and hides in her bedroom.

Now since you couldn’t attend the ‘parties’ last night, I attended them for you! I went to the victory party of the Republican Party of Dane County Tuesday night and also went on to attend Hovde’s party after that.

You missed a historic event unfolding before our eyes and it was worth staying up to 3 a.m.

Trump was able to declare victory at 12:48 am CT, because Wisconsin, yes, our humble,  unassuming state, put him over the top of the 270 electoral votes he needed to win. And he won Wisconsin, in part, because Republicans got him over the 23% threshold here in Dane County.

That’s right, the Republican Party of Dane County under chair Brandon Maly busted their butts all year long to turn out the vote. The party raised a record amount of donations, (disclosure: I’m the finance chair), which was put towards social media, radio, billboards, mail, dock knocking, and buying their own signs since there weren’t enough to go around.

In addition, we brought in RFK, Jr, Trump himself, Byron Donalds, and Tulsi Gabbard. (I organized the Tulsi event that occurred in Fitchburg and had a record 900,000 viewers online and 2.8 million downloads!)

The county party actually turned out 7,000 more Republican votes in Dane County as compared to prior Trump elections. In fact, Dane County experienced the largest increase in Trump votes compared to any county in the state, according to Brandon Maly.

That says something – that the leadership of the Republican Party of Dane County created a voter turnout machine. Yes, Trump’s appeal and historic landslide victory (since Reagan) over an elite Marxist re-enforces that a well-organized team working together can get results even in a radical, leftist county! Take note conservatives in liberal counties in other states. My prediction of an electoral college landslide by Trump came true, although there were many moments last night that I was concerned it would not happen.

Trump came to Waunakee! Republican candidates no longer stay away from Dane County under the fear that such visits would drive up liberal turnout. When liberal turnout is already at 90% to 100%, there really was no risk of that.

The key was turning out the conservative base, in particular, Maly said that the targeting of the pocket conservative, those who vote inconsistently, to get them to show up and vote is what made a difference. Conservative candidates cannot ignore Dane County anymore.

But now that Trump won, the liberal revising of history begins…

CNN started off the rhetoric by saying Harris inherited the Biden team and that she inherited the mess (never mind she voted in the Senate to pass all the spending bills), implying that none of it was her fault. Also, they engaged in ‘Blaming’ Musk… or I should say, giving him all the credit was another big feature of media rants like Musk did it all and Trump had nothing to do with the win.  In their minds, Trump couldn’t possibly have done this himself.

I sometimes watch the leftist media so I can see what their thinking is, and to be able to anticipate what they are going to come up with. CNN was also falling all over themselves the day after the election to advise Trump, yes, give him advice! Can you believe that? Saying how he needs to do this and that. Implying that he may not engage in a peaceful transfer of power. Ahh, I hate to shake you idiots at CNN, but the burden of a peaceful transfer of power falls on the incumbents in office.

And before that, CNN talked about “how difficult it will be to govern in Washington next year”, and they told Trump how to behave. Well, let me tell you CNN, it’s you that needs to behave – no more attacks on Trump, no more impeachments, no more lies, no more phony dossiers, no more b.s. If you want Trump to treat you fair then you need to treat him fair. Don’t expect him to play nice after you spent the last eight years sucker-punching him over and over.

One CNN speaker said that “Trump didn’t think he was winning.” Ahh, no, he knew he would win months ago, and so did the Dems, which is why they forced Biden out of the race. Then, after that phony initial blip in her popularity, Harris plunged in the polls when reality set in.

Another CNN talking head said that “countries around the world are scared.”  Oh, hogwash.  What a bunch of phony baloney. They’re actually looking forward to Trump taking heat off them by quashing these wars that Biden-Harris started.

What I really loved is the incredibly diverse expansion of the Republican Party that occurred. People of all colors, shapes, and sizes joined the party. Real Americans. Hardworking Americans. Great Americans. It’s the most diverse party I’ve seen ever.

Hovde

As for Hovde, obviously, there were a number of split-ticket voters; people who voted for Trump but not for Hovde.  Odd, but I do know a number of Americans who voted for liberals all their lives, but told me that they were voting for Trump. I am guessing that they then voted for Tammy Baldwin so that they had something to talk about with their liberal circle of friends. And Thomas Leager siphoned away votes from Hovde. The Associated Press reported that Democrat donors recruited him.

What’s Next?

  1. There will be a massive purge of files by the Biden administration – to destroy evidence before they leave office. For example, we’ll never know if there are UFOs. 😉
  2. Biden will pardon his own son.
  3. Trump should pardon everyone in his prior administration that was attacked by lawfare and all the January 6th Americans, and yes, himself. He needs to clear the decks so he can focus on governing and leading, instead of dealing with all the b.s. they throw at him.
  4. Trump will fire the special prosecutor.
  5. The wars in Ukraine and Israel will come to an end by summer 2025 because Trump will give them a free hand to win.
  6. Biden will steal all the presidential documents and store them in the trunk of his convertible.
  7. The American hostages being held by Hamas, yes, remember them? will be released by inauguration day.
  8. Americans across our great nation will begin feeling good about themselves.
  9. Trump will ask Fed chair Powell to resign, and if he doesn’t, he’ll fire him. We can’t have Trump’s economic turnaround plan put on hold by the Fed chair.
  10. Trump will implement a mass deportation plan, but it needs to contain incentives. If you leave freely, you can register on the way out, and then you’ll get first dibs on returning lawfully once the immigration law is updated and amended.
  11. We’ll see a restoration of law and order.

One last question – why the hell can’t Milwaukee get their voting results out on time? Every election it’s the same thing, we’re all waiting on Milwaukee. Hey Milwaukee, how about fixing this? Apparently, even Oak Creek didn’t have their results released even at 10 am this morning, the day after!

Fun Facts About T. Wall – T. Wall is Finance Chair of the Republican Party of Dane County and raised over $741,000 since January 1 this year for turning out the vote in Dane County. </

Wisconsin Right Now is a news organization focused on covering the news from a conservative point of view, in particular on politics and policy issues through analysis and opinions, and is protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.  WRN does not make endorsements of candidates or direct readers to vote for or against any candidate or issue.  On October 18 and November 23, 2023, Donald Trump tweeted out on Trumps Truth Social account T. Walls October 6th column on Trumps property valuations.  T. Wall has appeared on Fox News, Jesse Waters Show on Fox, Newsmax, CBS, NBC, Spectrum News 1, USA Today, X.com, YouTube, and numerous Madison and Milwaukee news programs and local newspapers (Wisconsin State Journal, Capital Times, Middleton Review, Middleton Times Tribune, and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a dozen other Wisconsin papers) and previously wrote a column for InBusiness magazine and the Middleton Times Tribune for five years each.  T. Wall holds a degree from the UW in economics and an M.S. in real estate analysis and valuation and his full-time career is as a real estate developer.  Disclaimer:  The opinions of the writer are not necessarily those of this publication or the left!

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(The Center Square) – A conservative Wisconsin Supreme Court justice called the courts’ decision to hear a case challenging the state’s congressional maps doing the “bidding of its political masters” rather than a proper decision.

The court sent an order stating that it would hear an appeal of a three-judge panel’s ruling not to hear the case but said that it would not hear the case on a requested expedited schedule.

“The Democratic Party bought multiple seats on this court to achieve yet another outcome unobtainable democratically,” Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote in dissent.

Bradley joined Justice Annette Ziegler in dissent against hear the case from the Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy that a three-judge panel dismissed on April 28.

“It is indeed rare that I feel compelled to object to hearing a case,” Ziegler wrote. “But here, I have concluded this is too important to stand silent. The public should be informed of the requests afoot and it should have the opportunity to stay abreast of these proceedings.

“And, of course, the briefing and arguments could cause me to conclude that this appeal was proper and relief should be granted. We shall see.”

The majority of judges took offense at Bradley’s insinuation that the decision to hear the case was politically motivated, calling the dissent “false, inappropriate, and disingenuous charges.”

“Deciding to hear a case does not reflect any weighing of the merits of any party’s claims, let alone prejudgment about who will prevail and why,” Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote. “We do not prejudge cases, and for that reason, we do not comment at this early stage on the parties’ legal theories, or try to develop arguments in favor of one side or another.”

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Sen. Patrick Testin, R-Stevens Point, went as far as saying that a pair of trustees “lied to all our faces” in committee testimony when they said that tuition would not be raised again this soon.

“Unfortunately, students and their families are the ones who will be paying the price for this dishonesty,” Testin said in a statement. “At least we now know that we can no longer take the UW Board of Regents at their word.

“My Joint Finance Committee colleagues and I certainly will not forget this betrayal when the regents and UW officials come begging to us for more money during next year’s state budget deliberations. This is simply unacceptable.”

The 2% increase for resident undergraduate tuition would be effective this fall. The university said in a press release that the increase is below the current inflation rate. The increase also includes a 3.5% increase in segregated fees, which are for student services, activities, programs, and facilities. In all, it would be a 2.5% average increase across tuition, segregated fees and room and board.

“We recognize Wisconsin families are managing rising costs in every part of their lives, and that reality informed this proposal,” Universities of Wisconsin Interim President Renée Wachter said in a statement. “This is a measured increase that helps our universities continue providing strong student support and high-quality academic experiences while keeping a UW education among the most affordable in the Midwest.”

Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Gillett, pointed out that, over the past 10 years, the system has added 2,400 non-faculty staff positions while educating 16,000 fewer students.

Wimberger said that, if the system would “eliminate their administrative bloat,” it would free up $750 million.

“UW’s leadership is continuing to pass its payroll expenses onto students and their families, when it should be cutting its massive bureaucracy and reinvesting its funds to create a more valuable student experience,” Wimberger said in a statement. “No amount of money will ever be enough for satisfy these bureaucrats, and the bright students who attend our universities are only left with a worse education.”

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(The Center Square) – More than three-dozen Wisconsin lawmakers want Gov. Tony Evers to pause his plan to cut sentences short for some criminals in the state.

Rep. Jim Piwowarczyk, R-Hubertus, released the letter to the governor, saying crimes victims in the state need more time and more of a voice in the process.

“Many Wisconsinites are stunned that convicted cop killers are even being considered for commutation. Cases like Ted Oswald's murder of Waukesha Police Captain James Lutz are exactly why so many families believed Wisconsin's truth-in-sentencing laws finally brought certainty and finality for victims and their loved ones," the lawmakers wrote.

Evers announced in April he is ending a pause in commutations in Wisconsin, and he is reviewing thousands of requests.

“It’s time for Wisconsin to join red and blue states across our country and finally move our justice system into the 21st Century by reforming our criminal justice and corrections systems to improve public safety, reduce the likelihood that individuals will reoffend when they enter our communities, and save taxpayer dollars in the long run,” the governor said in a statement.

Piwowarczyk said the governor's announcement not only caught families off-guard, but has created a problem for what he called "overwhelmed" state and local prosecutors who are required to abide by Marcy's Law that has protections for crime victims and their families.

“Victims and their loved ones deserve certainty, transparency, and respect from our justice system,” Piwowarczyk said. “Instead, families are being blindsided by commutation applications through social media posts and news reports. That is unacceptable. Wisconsin’s commutation process must put victims first, not reopen emotional wounds without proper notification or meaningful input.”

Piwowarczyk and the other lawmakers asked in their letter for a pause in commutations to allow lawmakers to:

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● Extend victim notification periods to at least 90 days;

● Guarantee hearings that allow victims and families to be heard directly;

● Require full notification to district attorneys and sentencing judges;

● Remove all homicide offenders from eligibility for commutation consideration.

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The university claimed that it does not hold the contract and that it was denying access to what it called “draft documents” related to Tripp Umbach and payments to the firm.

“The university does not hold the contract, therefore there are no responsive records,” a public records custodian wrote to The Center Square in response to a public records request. “After a thorough search, the university has determined no record exists at the University of Wisconsin Madison related to your request.”

The Center Square also requested the documents from the University of Wisconsin system administration following the public records denial.

In April, the university released a 58-page document making claims that the university makes a $38.9 billion total economic impact on the state.

Universities across the country contract with Tripp Umbach for the firm to produce similar reports, which are then used in requests for public funding or donations to the college or university.

Tripp Umbach produces reports for health care and economic development organizations along with colleges and says on its website that “our work enables leaders to make informed decisions, secure support, and implement strategies that deliver measurable results.”

Economists regularly criticize economic impact reports produced by contractors such as Tripp Umbach for not following economic principles and only including revenue figures, along with invented multipliers, in order to produce larger numbers than the real economic figures.

Sports teams also use economic impact reports when they are seeking public funding for stadiums or large events in order to convince the public and politicians that those projects are worth large public funding figures.

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