Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Tony Evers and Foxconn. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Tony Evers and Foxconn. Sort by date Show all posts

Aug 31, 2018

Foxconn in Wisconsin — Tony Evers Changes Position from 'No Comment' to Blather

Foxconn in Wisconsin is now a
bi-partisan boondoggle. Tony
Evers has joined Scott Walker
in the endgame: Foxconn stays,
Wisconsin loses.
Madison, Wisconsin — Tony Evers, the Democratic Party nominee for governor, favors the most massive state give-away to a foreign corporation in United States history — Foxconn.

Evers is quiet on the campaign trail on Foxconn, as many Democratic supporters who oppose Foxconn caution silence on Evers' support, lest anti-Foxconn supporters vote Green or Libertarian out of disgust with Evers.

Major elements of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin have abandoned open opposition to Foxconn, in effect siding with Gov. Scott Walker (R) and Republicans on this radical policy change, that even has towns in Illinois fearful of environmental damage.

The Foxconn public-funding initiative is spectacular, and would codify changes in how Wisconsin and numerous municipalities would operate for years.

Tony Evers continues his posture on Foxconn as Wisconsin has made a significant transformation on becoming a colonial agent of the Taiwanese corporation and other industrial special interests from 2011 - 2018. Evers rejects litigation in federal court against Foxconn as his campaign position remains: Wish Foxconn away, which is fantasyland, hence Foxconn stays.

Three days after the Primary election, Aug. 14,  a campaign piece appeared in BizTimes out of Milwaukee.

Arthur Thomas notes: "Evers’ campaign declined to comment on the election results in the context of Foxconn."

This is unusual for a major party candidate on a big campaign issue.

Evers has offered rhetoric on the obvious down side of funneling $billions to Foxconn, and exempting the corporation from Wisconsin environmental law, and changing (apparently illegally) how challenges can proceed in state court against Foxconn and only Foxconn.

But Evers has offered only vague drivel not befitting the gravity of Foxconn as public policy as Foxconn upped its PR offensive in August.

Days after Evers' inexplicable no comment in BizTimes, Thomas updated his piece:

After this story was published, Evers’ campaign provided a statement from the candidate, criticizing the size of the Foxconn support and incentives – $4.5 billion counting state and local packages and other infrastructure investments – and the estimated 25-year wait for the state to see a return on its investment.

'That’s a lousy investment,' Evers said. 'Foxconn has already backtracked on several of its promises and is not being held accountable by Walker. When I’m governor, we’ll hold Foxconn’s feet to the fire and make sure that Wisconsin is getting the best return on investment possible.'

So, Tony Evers will now hold Foxconn’s feet to the fire. What does this mean? Evers will make sure. What does this mean?

Evers didn't say and Thomas didn't report.

What it means is Foxconn stays, and Evers takes occasional shots at it, hoping noone notices what he is doing. It's call lip service.

The BizTimes statement exemplifies Evers' deceitful campaign posture: Emit negative messages on the unpopular Foxconn, and avoid any substantial comment on the enabling Foxconn legislation and the contract between Wisconsin and Foxconn.

Wisconsin has two scenarios in General Election voting beginning in three weeks.

1. Tony Evers changes his pro-Foxconn position and vows to oppose Foxconn in federal court.* Concomitant with this policy change, Evers makes specific pitches for votes from the Libertarian and Green parties, and grassroots clean water activists.
[*State court is out, unless part of a multiple-jurisdictional, multi-party litigation strategy in both federal and state court. Repeal of enabling legislation is out, unless improbably the gerrymandered firewall in the State Assembly is breached.]

Evers wins in a landslide.

2. Tony Evers maintains his current and deceitful pro-Foxconn posture and risks giving the election to Scott Walker as Wisconsinites abandon another weaselly corporatist Democrat, ala Hillary Clinton.

Oct 8, 2018

Foxconn Scam in Wisconsin Is Bipartisan, Aided by Democratic Party and Mouthpieces

Scott Walker pro-Foxconn campaign ad in Wisconsin.
Madison, Wisconsin — John Nichols keeps lying about Foxconn in Wisconsin in his new column this weekend.

The Wisconsin political world knows knows Nichols is lying about Foxconn.

But Foxconn has become a lie agreed upon by many in an effort to obscure the pro-Foxconn position of the Democratic Party gubernatorial nominee, Tony Evers.

For a serious discussion of Foxconn and the 2018 Wisconsin general election, see Lawrence Tabak in the American Prospect.

Writes Tabek:

[A]s of yet, [Evers] has not articulated exactly how he would go about modifying the signed contracts and the promised subsidies, nor is it clear that an onslaught of Walker ads touting the thousands of wonderful Foxconn jobs and concomitant statewide economic bounty will fail to sway. After all, which is easier to parse: 13,000 'family-supporting jobs' or 'just thinking' about what a few billion dollars could do if spent on education.

Tony Evers is a weak and less-than-knowledgeable candidate.

Democratic Party allies know this and are scrambling, though the current political terrain is as hospitable to a D-designated candidate not named Obama than in some 10 years.

Nichols' big lies on Foxconn concern the positions of the two major-party candidates for governor — Gov. Scott Walker (R) and Evers (D).

Scott Walker and Foxconn

First up, there is Walker's effort on Foxconn about which Nichols properly lays out the economic and fiscal outlines of the boondoggle, against Walker's crowing Foxconn is an "opportunity to completely transform our state’s economy."

Nichols ascribes onto Scott Walker good intentions that will lead to unwanted consequences, but only because Walker is "clueless" and was "duped" by Foxconn.

Nichols concludes: "The Foxconn deal has always felt like a scheme to help secure the re-election of a governor who has repeatedly stumbled when it comes to job creation — not a serious proposal for the state’s future."

This framing of the Scott Walker project in Wisconsin is ridiculous, though Walker certainly wants to use Foxconn to prop up his reelection.

Scott Walker was not duped by Foxconn.

Foxconn is a serious, intentional proposal for Wisconsin's future — a low-wage economy amid an unprecedented transformation of the legal terrain to benefit Foxconn against all other citizens, communities and businesses, and massive redistribution of public wealth to private interests.

Administrative law, environmental law, Due Process, and all manner of litigation rights have been altered to benefit one legal entity. This obviously begs many questions about the rights of non-Foxconn players: Everyone else in the regulatory and legal systems.

Foxconn as a corporation is conferred by statute and/or contract explicit permission to pollute and deplete public waters, licensed with special rights against litigants in the heretofore neutral state judicial system, and is given one-of-a-kind protection and legal advice by the Wisconsin Dept of Natural Resources.

Foxconn is a unique legal entity that enjoys privileges far-beyond that of other businesses, non-profits and citizens. This new legal status Foxconn has is not an accident accomplished by a clueless and stumbling Scott Walker.

Foxconn as a super, extraordinary corporate entity was created on purpose and with bad intentions by Walker and Republicans who are engineering corporate rule over the rest of the state.

$Billions for Foxconn is another objective Walker and Republicans have shoved down Wisconsin in a manner that, to any reasonable person, connotes purpose.

Why Nichols and Evers omit the clear aims and objectives of Foxconn is inexplicable, except for the fact Evers maintains his position in favor of Foxconn in the hope few voters notice his duplicity.

Against Walker and Foxconn, Evers couches his support for Foxconn in mush.

Evers' statements about Foxconn consistently echo his commitment while paying lip-service to Foxconn critics because Foxconn is unpopular in Wisconsin, especially in the the northern two-thirds of the state.

Here's Riccardo Torres in the Racine Journal-Times in September:

'It’s a lousy deal, and we’re going to have to hold Foxconn’s feet to the fire going forward,' said Tony Evers.

Evers did not say he would undo or change the agreement with Foxconn if elected governor.

'We can, and we should, compel them to be good corporate citizens,' Evers said.

Gee, it's a good thing Tony Evers is vowing to hold feet to the fire, (wtf does this mean?), and compelling Foxconn to behave as a good corporate citizen.

This tells us nothing about public policy beyond the fact Evers will keep Foxconn.

Maybe Evers will recite the rite of Exorcism: The power of Christ compels, you, Foxconn. Tear up your contract and leave Wisconsin. ... Give us the response, Democrats.

Or maybe Evers has a secret plan to end Foxconn.

State government of, by and for Foxconn is a betrayal.

Tony Evers is complicit.

Jan 30, 2019

Foxconn Always Was a Scam — Republicans and Gov Tony Evers Are Complicit Is Spectacular Scandal

Foxconn in Wisconsin is a
bi-partisan boondoggle. Tony
Evers joined Scott Walker
in the endgame: Foxconn stays,
Wisconsin loses. News that
Foxconn will build no
factories leaves pols gasping
for spin, lies.

Wisconsin pols are silent


Madison, Wisconsin — Foxconn won't be building any manufacturing centers in Wisconsin, reports Reuters in an exclusive, (Bloomberg, NBCNews).

"In Wisconsin we’re not building a factory. You can’t use a factory to view our Wisconsin investment," said Louis Woo, special assistant to Foxconn Chief Executive Terry Gou.

The news reveals a spectacular $Billion con that implicates every Republican in the state legislature, several Democrats including Gov. Tony Evers, and major Republican politicians including Paul Ryan and Donald Trump.

The political fall-out will be wide and unpredictable.

In June 2018 at the ceremonial groundbreaking in southeastern Wisconsin, Trump acclaimed the proposed Foxconn center as "the 8th wonder of the world," (CBS News). Foxconn CEO, Terry Gou, told Trump "off-the-record" that the company will triple its promised $10 billion investment in Wisconsin to $30 billion, Trump claimed, aka a lie (Associated Press).

Trump lied. Walker lied.

Tony Evers lied.

Evers ran a shameful pro-Foxconn campaign, implicitly promising to stick the state with $100s of millions of debt and repeatedly side-stepping questions about the legally dubious public subsidies and exemptions from state law for the pathologically dishonest Taiwanese corporation.

A typical Tony Evers mush position on Foxconn is from Sept 2018 in the Racine Journal-Times:

Evers did not say he would undo or change the agreement with Foxconn if elected governor.

'We can, and we should, compel them to be good corporate citizens,' Evers said. 

That worked out well.

Evers could not be reached for comment, reports Reuters.

Of course not. Evers is too busy holding Foxconn's feet to the fire, as he dishonestly termed his pro-Foxconn position.

Those families whose homes and land were stolen to benefit Foxconn?

It's likely Tony Evers will have nothing to say about them,; he never has before

From August 2018 on Wisconsin families who don't matter to Tony Evers and Scott Walker:

Rodney and Catherine Jensen have land.
Foxconn wants the Jensens' land.
Everyone from Scott Walker to Tony
Evers to the village of Mount Pleasant
sides with Foxconn. Who will
stand with the Jensens?
A Wisconsin couple is getting their land stolen from under them to benefit a foreign corporation.

The thieves are the village of Mount Pleasant acting on behalf of the Foxconn Technology Group.

The village is lying to residents, Rodney and Catherine Jensen, designating their land as blighted  — broadly defined as "'substandard' or 'deteriorated' land that is detrimental to public health or safety," (Beachy, Inside Track, State Bar of Wisconsin).

This deception is perpetrated to serve the Taiwanese corporation.

The Jensens think they have been wronged by Foxconn, and by their local municipality.

So the Jensens filed suit in August in their fight to keep their land against designs on their property by Foxconn.

Reports Michael Burke in the Racine Journal-Times:

The Jensens’ lawsuit, filed by Madison attorney Erik Olsen of Eminent Domain Services, states that the couple’s property is 'not blighted by any definition.'

It also contends the village is attempting to take their property in order to facilitate the Foxconn Technology Group project 'and for the direct benefit of Foxconn.' 

This attempted theft of land seems an outrage in an election year for governor.

Yet, the two major candidates, Tony Evers and Gov Scott Walker, house no mention of this theft in progress on their campaign websites.

Evers and Walker's position is Foxconn stays, Wisconsin families lose.

It appears in the political arena, families like the Jensens have no standing, and are not considered players.

When $billions of subsidies and special perks are granted Foxconn, who speaks for the Jensens?

Noone.

Jan 31, 2019

Gov Evers Maintains Silence on Foxconn Pull-out as Atty Matt Flynn Blasts Republicans and Inaction

Wisconsin citizens need to
poke Gov Tony Evers (D)
with a stick because this
guy looks like he spent
the last week outside, lying
down, being bit by animals.
Did Evers read the news
about Foxconn's jobs pull-out?

Bait-and-Switch $Billion Boondoggle Draws Not One Word from New Wisconsin Governor


Madison, Wisconsin — Wisconsin State Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R) and Republicans are doing most of the talking following news Foxconn reneged on an agreement to site a manufacturing plant in southeastern Wisconsin.

What was hailed 18 months ago as the start of "a Midwestern manufacturing renaissance" (NYT) is now just another lie politicians and corporate execs tell the public when they take massive public subsidies.

Following the Reuters blockbuster exclusive on Foxconn, Republicans yesterday came out of the gate fast, repeating an old lie saying Foxconn's decision was made because of "uncertainty" with the new Gov Tony Evers (D) administration. But not even Foxconn touches that line.

What is certain is the silence from Tony Evers — dead silence. As in not one word from Evers.

No Evers appearing before a press conference, saying 'ask me anything.'

This asks the question, did Tony Evers spend the last 72 hours outside, lying down in the Wisconsin deep freeze? Someone should poke his body with a stick and see if we get any sign of life:

C'mon Tony. Wake up; you okay? Foxconn is pulling out the promised 1,000s of blue collar jobs, dude! What are your orders?

- Hold their feet to the fire! Make Foxconn good corporate citizens.

What Wisconsin has from Tony Evers is one tweet from the state Dept. of Administration reading:

In the coming weeks, the Evers Administration will continue to commit time, resources, and personnel to ensure that the interests of Wisconsin workers and taxpayers are protected and promoted by our approach to the Foxconn project.
These Tony Evers guys are on the case. The Associated Press reports also that a top Evers aide, Joel Brennan, says he was "surprised" by the Foxconn story.

That's little comfort for a state already on the hook for $100s of millions no matter what the Taiwanese corporation decides is best for its shareholders.

I asked Jake Edwards, a Wisconsin economic-political writer, how much Wisconsin was on the hook for. Edwards replied in rough calculations:

Depends if Foxconn gets 1,000 people working on the project by end of this year (not necessarily in Racine Co).

If they get that, my quick count is

15% of facility cost for 2/7 of total subsidy (estimated at $386 mil)

$28 mil for job credits
$912 mil in local subsidies and infrastructure
$400 mil in cost and debt for I-94
$130 mil to upgrade local roads into state highways (which took away $90 mil from other state projects)
$150 mil in sales tax cuts for construction materials

That comes close to $2 billion. And Foxconn says they can't make it even with all this help?

Tony Evers resembles an undulating mass that when taking shape congeals into a form indistinguishable from a hastily constructed snowball, the kind made from powdered snow, and just as revealing of the administration's position on the Foxconn-Wisconsin contract.

Who is defending Wisconsin's interest now that Tony Evers is out of commission?

Attorney Matt Flynn took to Resistance Radio yesterday, Jan 30, and offered a harsh assessment of Foxconn, Republicans and Tony Evers' performance thus far.

One Wisconsin Now is hitting every lie emitted by Republicans.

In the absence of Tony Evers, Matt Flynn's analyses, specific challenge to Republican
Speaker Vos and Evers on social media, and calling out Wisconsin Republicans for their numerous lies about Foxconn's siphoning of Wisconsin continue:

To protect Wisconsin, Flynn is advocating a complex legal strategy against Foxconn in multiple courts by multiple parties that includes a private lawsuit on Constitutional grounds, and a public lawsuit by Wisconsin officials for breach of contract.

Flynn made his comments on Resistance Radio (Devil's Advocate radio) yesterday.
Said Flynn in part, taking questions on Resistance Radio (Hour Two of two hours with Flynn on the Devil's Advocate) on the heavily criticized Foxconn contract that draws national ridicule:

This is not a precise [Foxconn-Wisconsin] contract. If you read it, the claw-back is very ambiguous: 'Use best efforts' and all this kind of stuff. And the political establishment is supporting them [Foxconn]. And I think that's wrong.

This is not a crisply worded contract. The people that negotiated it had no business doing it, and they didn't have the ability to do it.

Asked if to explain how the paucity of job creation and the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation's authority to amend the contract ought to concern the Wisconsin people, Flynn said:

The Republican Party and WEDC [Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation] don't have a clue on how to explain this contract because they got taken to the cleaners.

So, I'll explain it just right now. And that is that a very, very minimal production of jobs, that could be Chinese engineers, will trigger a large and disproportionate [public] payment. That's very concerning.

The second thing that I want to say is about the amendment. The reason for the lameduck session to take this out of Tony Evers' hands, until September, was precisely to manipulate and defend breaches of contract against us.

The Republican Party will injure this state to benefit their donors, and to appease their large donors so they don't run Primaries against them. ...

At some point somebody in this administration has got to get off the dime and start action for breach of contract. Period, end of story. ...

Mount Pleasant and Racine are on the hook for over $900-million, $900-million! The tax base down there can't support $90-million; it's a small tax base.

And the people of Racine; everybody says, 'oh, they want this thing, [Foxconn].' They don't want this thing. I saw the citizens at the Mount Pleasant Board meeting. I've spoken in Racine. And nobody wants this thing.

I think that the people down there that voted for it, Democrats, made a mistake thinking that that's what they wanted.

But we're all Americans, we 're all Wisconsinites. 

The Chinese come over here, try to get our intellectual property —  we're not putting up with it.

If Matt Flynn, a private citizen who gets paid nothing, is spending hours and hours warning about the Foxconn boondoggle, and fielding questions from the Wisconsin people, why in the hell is the sitting governor, Tony Evers, not out doing the same?

Aug 23, 2018

Tony Evers Is Silent on Foxconn Four Weeks from Absentee Voting Start

In Wisconsin, Gov. Scott
Walker's discredited claim
that 13,000 new jobs will
materialize with a $4 billion
public investment is meeting
with incredulity. Walker's 2018
campaign, Friends of Scott
Walker, is pitching the
scheme dubbed the
Fox Con. Dem Party
nominee for gov,
Tony Evers, refuses
to take a clear position.

Off your ass, Tony Evers


Madison, Wisconsin — We're four weeks out to the first absentee voters casting their ballots in the Gov. Scott Walker-Tony Evers race in the Wisconsin General Election.

Democratic Party nominee for governor, Tony Evers, still will not issue a public statement against the Foxconn-Wisconsin contract, negotiated by Republicans, for Republicans and against working families.

The Foxconn boondoggle does not play well among most voters. It ought not, it's lunacy.

Foxconn is a winner for Democrats but the Democratic Party nominee for governor, Tony Evers, retains his posture there is nothing to be done to stop the foreign company from polluting and depleting our water, and destroying our wetlands, saying we can only wish Foxconn to become good corporate citizens.

Meanwhile, Gov. Scott Walker (R) ballyhoos the $ billions in subsidies to Foxconn.

Reports Arthur Thomas in the BizTimes in mid-August: "Evers’ campaign declined to comment on the election results in the context of Foxconn."

We have the sitting Republican governor running for reelection, Donald Trump and legislative Republicans lying through their teeth about Foxconn. Evers won't say a word

Evers is spineless.

Walker is already up running Foxconn ads around the state and the internet.

Foxconn still polls badly, and a libertarian candidate, Phil Anderson, is drawing seven percent among registered voters who don't like the idea of $ billion subsidies to private, foreign interests, (Marquette Law School Poll).

Here's Phil Anderson on Foxconn and the Economy: "We oppose all efforts of State government to pick winners and losers in the economy."

Anderson is not going win seven percent in the general election.

But only an idiot or the Democratic Party nominee for governor believes Anderson is not capable of picking up enough votes to swing a close election.

Most every Democratic Party voter hates Foxconn and wants the contract torn up.

As Tony Evers silently runs away from Scott Walker's Soviet-style industrial planning, few are willing to speak up and urge Evers to do the right thing by Wisconsin families.

For the Democratic Party of Wisconsin, the go-to move on Foxconn is noone breathe, noone dare speak and fall in line behind milquetoast Tony — because when in the last eight years has the Democratic Party ever made a political miscalculation?

Here's some advice from Bloomberg on Foxconn from last August (2017), for the edification of Evers:

Such incentives [as $3 billion, (now $4 billion) in public funds] are generally an awful way to lure jobs -- expensive, inefficient and fraught with unintended consequences.

They can prompt costly bidding wars between states and impede other budget priorities. They have little effect on employment, growth or wages. They may induce unwise borrowing.

Companies often come back again and again, as blackmailers tend to, seeking yet more blandishments. And nothing stops them from walking away when times get tough.

States are also apt to loosen the rules. Among other perks, Foxconn won’t need to obtain the state permits ordinarily required to discharge dredged material into local wetlands.

Nor will it have to submit to standard environmental-impact studies. Such exceptions make for irrational public policy.

One might argue, as politicians often do, that even bad jobs underwritten by taxpayers are preferable to no jobs at all. But that’s wrongheaded: If those tax dollars were freed to find more productive uses, they’d boost efficiency and growth elsewhere in the economy -- and thus create more jobs.
Tony Evers, you're really screwing up, man.

Sep 22, 2018

Wisconsin Gov Candidate, Tony Evers, Hit in The American Prospect on Foxconn

Scott Walker pro-Foxconn campaign ads are everywhere
in Wisconsin.
Update: More mush from Tony Evers on Foxconn: "It’s a lousy deal, and we’re going to have to hold Foxconn’s feet to the fire going forward."

Evers did not say he would undo or change the agreement with Foxconn if elected governor.

"We can, and we should, compel them to be good corporate citizens," Evers said, (Torres, Racine Journal-Times)

Madison, Wisconsin — Tony Evers, the Democratic Party nominee for governor, favors the most massive state give-away to a foreign corporation in United States history — Foxconn.

As policy, the Foxconn give-away of $billions in public monies is lunacy, jammed through the gerrymandered Republican legislature in August-Sept 2017 supported by lies.

Yet, in the Wisconsin political culture, the Democratic Party's Tony Evers' complicity in the Foxconn debacle is a truth that dare not be spoken outside independent progressive citizen-action movements.

A piece just out the The American Prospect by Lawrence Tabak offers a run-down on Foxconn in Wisconsin, including the fact the Tony Evers campaign refuses to support litigation against the Foxconn-Wisconsin contract.

Evers' deceitful campaign posture reads: "When I’m governor, we’ll hold Foxconn’s feet to the fire and make sure that Wisconsin is getting the best return on investment possible."

This is what passes for policy commitment on Foxconn from Tony Evers.

The American Prospect piece is implicitly critical of this mush. Writes Tabak:

The soft-spoken Evers may believe he can convince Wisconsin voters that Walker has misspent billions of taxpayer dollars to bring Foxconn to the state. But as of yet, he has not articulated exactly how he would go about modifying the signed contracts and the promised subsidies, nor is it clear that an onslaught of Walker ads touting the thousands of wonderful Foxconn jobs and concomitant statewide economic bounty will fail to sway. After all, which is easier to parse: 13,000 'family-supporting jobs' or 'just thinking' about what a few billion dollars could do if spent on education. (emphasis added)

Foxconn remains widely unpopular, especially in the northern two-thirds of the state where Tony Evers must outperform losing Democratic Party showings in 2010, 2014, and 2016.

Another truth about Tony Evers is that he is mediocre school bureaucrat from east-central (white) Wisconsin with a pedestrian understanding of public policy, ill-equipped to meaningfully oppose the Republican Party's wrecking ball Wisconsin has suffered the last seven years.

The same political groupthink and Democratic Party consultants who bequeathed Gov. Scott Walker (R) and Donald Trump onto Wisconsin is capable of thwarting what should be an easy win for an opponent of Walker in 2018 Wisconsin.

As has been written in these pages, those concerned about democracy in Wisconsin can take solace in the heavy political winds against Walker and Republicans this campaign cycle.

Rural women are especially appalled by Republicans, inform anecdotes from two central and northern Wisconsin political field operations from Democratic Party nominees for the legislature.

Can citizen action lift a milquetoast Tony Evers over Scott Walker?

Yes, it can; but a call to Tony Evers' campaign and a kick in his ass are called for as Foxconn's unpopularity mounts.

See Rick Romell's latest piece in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

Feb 2, 2019

Gov Tony Evers Flacks for Foxconn, Trump and Wisconsin Republicans

Madison, Wisconsin — Gov Tony Evers (D) has finally spoken.

News yesterday that Donald Trump in a single phone call reanimated Foxconn Technology Group's commitment to site a $10 billion liquid-crystal-display manufacturing facility in southeast Wisconsin  strains the credulity of the most gullible (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel).

The alleged new commitment by Foxconn follows a report earlier this week in Reuters that the same plans for building the manufacturing facility and hiring a large manufacturing workforce have been shelved.

Trump's assurance is good enough for Tony Evers. But the hard-boiled school bureaucrat did tell reporters that Foxconn's "communication" needs consistency.

"It’s just a matter of their communication strategy being more consistent," Evers said. "I’m comfortable that they’re still committed to the state, they’re committed to this Generation 6 technology, but that doesn’t mean that we (won’t) encourage them to be more transparent and consistent in their messaging." (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)

Evers' tardy response raises more questions.

Why is Tony Evers not protecting Wisconsin?

Why is Tony Evers reacting to a blockbuster report with comments that reduce a $ billion boondoggle to a "messaging" problem.

Reads the Reuters report:
Now, those plans may be scaled back or even shelved, Louis Woo, special assistant to Foxconn Chief Executive Terry Gou, told Reuters. He said the company was still evaluating options for Wisconsin, but cited the steep cost of making advanced TV screens in the United States, where labor expenses are comparatively high.

'In terms of TV, we have no place in the U.S.,' Woo said in an interview. We can’t compete.' ...

Rather than a focus on LCD manufacturing, Foxconn wants to create a 'technology hub' in Wisconsin.

'In Wisconsin we’re not building a factory. You can’t use a factory to view our Wisconsin investment,' Woo said. 

If readers are getting whiplash, consider that Trump claims Gou told Trump "off the record" in a private conversation in August 2017 that the real Foxconn investment was not $10 billion, but rather $30 billion (Associated Press).

Does anyone believe the Foxconn scam, as imprecise and amateurish as the agreement is?

Tony Evers sounds like he's making excuses for Republicans and Foxconn:

Reports the Wisconsin State Journal:

Evers, meanwhile, said he spoke to Woo Friday morning and came away 'comfortable' that they’re still committed to the state.

'But that doesn’t mean that we won’t continue to encourage them to be more transparent and consistent in their messaging,' Evers said. 'The economy is apparently changing from their worldview that they have to make some changes. That’s understandable, but we have to make sure the transparency is there.'

Asked if he’s confident that Foxconn will fulfill its original plans to create as many as 13,000 jobs in Wisconsin, Evers said, 'The 13,000 is not going to happen tomorrow.'

'We’ll monitor it,' he said. 'The good news is, as the Republicans continue to tell us, is the jobs are contingent on getting tax credits. So there’s some protections there.' 

The Associated Press reports:

Evers says he spoke with Foxconn executive Louis Woo on Friday and he’s comfortable that the company remains committed to Wisconsin. But he says there’s 'no limit to skepticism' if the company’s messaging isn’t coherent. He says his administration is stressing to the company that transparency is key in such a high-profile project.

State and local leaders have promised Foxconn an unprecedented $4 billion in incentives.

Tony Evers is confused.

Evers' job is protecting Wisconsin, not Trump, not Foxconn and not Republicans.

Wisconsin Democrats, meanwhile, are staying silent on Evers' piss-poor performance, instead offering whisper campaigns and character assassination directed toward critics of Foxconn.

Feb 8, 2019

Wisconsin Writers Hiding Tony Evers' Empty Suit

Madison, Wisconsin—"I don't know who the Democratic Party is. I just don't know who they are anymore," said Terrance Warthen, co-chair of Our Wisconsin Revolution, in 2017 (MSNBC).

Warthen is in good company.

In Wisconsin, not much is known about Wisconsin Gov Tony Evers (D) beyond the fact he is not Scott Walker, a compelling attribute after eight years of unmitigated disaster.

But several progressive writers are working feverishly to conceal the fact that Evers is an uninformed, moribund, Republican-lite empty suit who just doesn't get it.

One month into the Evers administration, there is a public relations campaign from Paul Fanlund, John Nichols, Ruth Conniff and Dave Zweifel, all of whom rush to say that Tony Evers is some variation of nice.

This Tony Evers team of writers omits the fact the new governor has done nothing during the campaign, transition and administration in working against the lunatic, illegal and unconstitutional Foxconn-Wisconsin contract that Scott Walker concealed from Wisconsin, for example.

Outside of Tony Evers' world, Foxconn and the corporatist scam it represents are catastrophic, and  seeking some personal attribute to highlight it is a fools' game that ignores the radical work of rightiwingers whom the corporate press still term "conservative." This is not about "messaging," to which Evers has reduced the Foxconn scam.

Here are examples from the Evers-does-has-clothes caucus.

Paul Fanlund - Tony Evers is "personally likable," just like Sen Tammy Baldwin (D).

Fanlund ignores it was Baldwin's hard-hitting camapign "that used the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) to effectively frame her opponent as doing the bidding of corporate special interests" (In These Times). Baldwin "garnered 150,000 votes more than Tony Evers," notes the piece and it was not by being Ms. Nice Girl.

John Nichols - "[Tony] Evers defeated Scott Walker precisely because the former state superintendent of public instruction speaks to a longing on the part of Wisconsinites for a presumption of civility."

Nichols has been pushing this line for months.

I know many activists around the state of many persuasions and none of them voted for Tony Evers because they long for civility. It is all about clean water, local control, collective bargaining, public schools and the University of Wisconsin System, among human rights concerns.

I have never spoken to Scott Walker because I don't like the company of racists and rightwing Christians, but if I did meet Walker, I would be willing to bet he would be likeable and civil.

So what?

This brings us to:

Ruth Conniff - Conniff quotes Evers' inaugural address, noting Evers' call for kindness and civility.

C'mon, every politician calls for kindness, peace, love and understanding.

This is what Conniff has to prop up Evers?

Dave Zweifel - "Evers showed once again that his style shuns nastiness," writes Zweifel. Finally, Zweifel does offer, "kowtowing to big business—million-dollar, even billion-dollar, payouts to hugely successful corporations started to grate" on voters.

But Zweifel like many other pro-Evers writers is working to reduce politics to personality, holding out the hope, for example, that State Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R) may hear the "governor's message."

---

As Republicans have mobilized the corporate-prison-racist-Evangelical coalition as never before, the Tony Evers crowd calls for depoliticization, saying it's time to be nice, civil and bipartisan.

The Evers crowd does have some friends on the rightwing who emphasize the personal over policy—Peggy Noonan.

Noonan chastised Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) for not appearing likeable, warm and spirited at the State of the Union spectacle.

AOC offered a response to Noonan, that Wisconsin's pro-Evers crowd should consider:
Terrance Warthen and AOC have it right.

In Wisconsin, the Democratic Party and its amen corner have veered into a post-policy world where elected officials must prioritize being nice, likable, civil and spunky in the manner of a 1970s cheerleader—not that there is anything wrong with that, just that I would prefer the governor to be a fighter and straight shooter with more than a pedestrian knowledge of public policy.

Tony Evers could be really nice and resign, offering the executive branch to Lt Gov Mandela Barnes (D), who gets it.

Oct 18, 2018

Foxconn in Wisconsin Is Unpopular, Destructive and Supported by Gov Scott Walker and Dem Nominee for Gov, Tony Evers

Scott Walker's pro-Foxconn campaign ads are everywhere
in Wisconsin, and face little opposition.
Update: Tony Evers sticks to his make sure [Foxconn is] the best corporate citizen as possible, ... we're going to hold their feet to fire nonsequitur, (Madison.com).
 ---
Madison, Wisconsin — Gov. Scott Walker (R) knows how to put on a show.

That Scott Walker's show is a con is no deterrent for Wisconsin's most accomplished liar since Joe McCarthy.

A political charlatan, Walker apparently thinks he can use the Foxconn boondoggle as a major stepping stone for reelection to turn Wisconsin into a political sewer.

Walker may be correct in this assessment.

The Democratic Party nominee, Tony Evers, decided not to run against Foxconn as Evers offers blather to the Wisconsin people of whom is demanded $Billions to be directed to the Taiwanese bad guy of corporate bad guys.

Even as hard-hitting anti-Foxconn ads blast State Sen. Howard Markleim (R-Spring Green, Wisconsin), in a critical legislative race in southwestern Wisconsin, Tony Evers' Foxconn-related comments range from mush to silence.

For national political observers asking about Wisconsin, the state has not turned red the last eight years.

It's just that the Democratic Party that has turned incompetent, enamored of groupthink as a consultant-based Party, out-of-touch with the people.

The Donald Trump, Paul Ryan and Scott Walker-hailed Foxconn is merely exhibit one for the conclusion Democrats are often kind-of-stupid here.

The prevailing political winds and innovative rights-based, municipal policy that help Democratic-leaning voters aside, Tony Evers may be responsible for blowing a political lay-up in Wisconsin.

The Wisconsin gubernatorial race is a toss-up; it should not be.

Below is an ad from the Greater Wisconsin Committee against the odious State Sen. Howard Markleim (R-Spring Green, Wisconsin).

Such ads should be running statewide, against Scott Walker and every Republican on the ballot.

Democratic Party and progressive pols and writers who think Tony Evers should be offering pabulum on Foxconn are simply, 100-percent, absolutely and incontrovertibly wrong.

Jul 13, 2018

Wisconsin Dem Guv Candidates Debate — Tony Evers Bashes Students, Stands Alone on Key Campaign Issues

Wisconsin candidates for the Democratic Party
nomination for governor appeared at forum at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee on July 12, 2018
Campaign Analysis

Public Schools Chief Takes GOP Positions Far to Right of Democratic Field


Madison, Wisconsin — The eight candidates for the Democratic Party nomination for governor appeared at a forum last night and made news as one candidate backed higher tuition for technical students, said Foxconn is here to stay, days after panning marijuana legalization and opposing mass pardoning of non-violent 'offenders.'

On the campaign trail, seven candidates for the nomination have blasted skyrocketing mass incarceration in Wisconsin and declining state support for college and technical schools.

Tony Evers has defied the field, dismissing calls for free tuition for technical schools and rejecting candidate calls for marijuana legalization and mass gubernatorial pardons, (Keith, Fox6Now-Milwaukee).

At last night's debate held at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Evers rejected a popular proposal that technical college students get free tuition for two years, delivering an unexpected slap.

"I think there should be some skin in the game," said Evers, suggesting tech students are not invested in their education and training under the tuition-relief proposal, (Fannon, WKOW-TV-Madison).

Earlier this week, Evers, the Superintendent of the Dept. of Public Instruction, continued his move to the political right on the issues of legalizing marijuana and mass pardoning, a tact garnering derision from candidate Matt Flynn, who called Evers "Republican-lite."

Flynn has repeatedly called for "legalizing marijuana and pardoning people who are locked up for possessing the drug," (Keith, Fox6Now-Milwaukee).

Evers comes from small-town, overwhelmingly white east-central Wisconsin, where he served as superintendent of the Oakfield School district, carrying on the provincial culture of the region, a fact Evers attempts to obscure in his campaign website, (Meet Tony Evers).

Evers also differs from Flynn in particular and rest of field broadly on Foxconn.

Reports WisPoltics from the debate:

Later, Milwaukee attorney Matt Flynn pressed Evers on the [Foxconn] package. Declaring he would 'kill the Foxconn deal,' Flynn noted Evers has no experience as a commercial litigator and suggested he was just repeating what he’d heard from others.

Evers countered it was a 'horrible deal' and 'we’re giving them way too much.' He supported reworking the contract.

'The bottom line is we have to have a "plan B",' Evers said. 'I can’t sit up here and tell the people of Wisconsin, by the way, this isn’t going to happen. They’re already there. Since they’re already there, we have to make sure the people of Wisconsin are treated fairly.'

Flynn and the rest of the field's opposition to Foxconn, mass incarceration, and strangling student debt marks a contrast from the white man from Plymouth and Oakfield.

Aug 28, 2018

Foxconn Slithers Ahead as Tony Evers and Scott Walker Praise Slime Left for Wisconsin

Foxconn is keeping tabs on Wisconsin race for governor.
Madison, Wisconsin — Gov. Scott Walker (R) trumpeted the news about Foxconn gifting UW-Madison $100-million, (Twitter).

Seems too good to be true. It is.

Like most things involving Scott Walker, the latest Foxconn development is a scam to reward special interests at the expense of Wisconsin.

As 2018 is a mid-term election year, we can expect Democratic Party nominee Tony Evers to expose and campaign against the Foxconn lunacy? No.

Tony Evers' position remains: Foxconn stays, Wisconsin bleeds.

Evers' amen corner is becoming desperate as Evers' pro-Foxconn position becomes public the week before Labor Day.

For the hard corps Tony Evers supporters, Foxconn and $billion subsidies are the price of defeating Scott Walker.

For many others, the latest Scott Walker move to turn Wisconsin into a Taiwanese colony calls for a public statement from Tony Evers opposing Foxconn in federal court.

Tony Evers tells Wisconsin again, you will pay for Foxconn and you will like it.

Here are some numbers from the Wisconsin 2016 Presidential General Election that should concern the Democratic Party of Wisconsin today.

12,162 votes     .41% Constitution Party

106,674 votes  3.58% Libertarian Party

31,072 votes    1.04% Green Party

Tony Evers keeps up his ridiculous pro-Foxconn stance, it's likely we see similar percentages this Nov, enough to swing a close election.

Aug 17, 2018

Tony Evers Is Silent on Opposing Foxconn in Wisconsin

In Wisconsin, Gov. Scott
Walker's discredited claim
that 13,000 new jobs will
materialize with a $4 billion
public investment is meeting
with incredulity. Walker's 2018
campaign, Friends of Scott
Walker, is pitching the
scheme dubbed the
Fox Con. Dem Party
nominee for gov,
Tony Evers, refuses
to take a clear position.

Foxconn Is Not a Bad Actor; Can't Un-ring Bell Remains Position of Dem Nominee for Gov


Madison, Wisconsin — Talk to folks in the northern two-thirds of the state and ask how the Foxconn boondoggle plays. Not well.

Foxconn is a political winner for Democrats but the Democratic Party nominee for gov, Tony Evers, retains his posture there is nothing that can be done to stop the foreign company from polluting and depleting our water, saying in effect we can only wish Foxconn to become good corporate citizens.

Meanwhile, Gov. Scott Walker (R) maintains his position that ballyhoos the $ billions in subsidies to Foxconn.

Reports Arthur Thomasin the BizTimes: "Evers’ campaign declined to comment on the election results in the context of Foxconn."

Yes, because why would Tony Evers craft precise policy positions on the worst deal Wisconsin has ever negotiated, a massive giveaway on which the sitting Repulbican governor is running for reelection, and a lie that is hyped by Donald Trump.

Foxconn as fiscal and economic plutonium works as a metaphor. This scheme is deadly to economic development, fiscal health of the state, and the ability of local governments to protect their communities from corporate bad actors.

The economic and environmental scale and impact of Foxconn is immense.

But Walker in his Evangelical certainty knows Foxconn is what Jesus wants for Wisconsin, until he is called away to the private sector.

A problem for Wisconsin is Tony Evers' current position on Foxconn is a model of vacuity.

Keep up the great work, Tony.

Mar 6, 2019

Foxconn in Wisconsin Remains $Billion Ghost Ship with an Uncomprehending New Governor at the Helm

Updated - Madison, Wisconsin—Publication of a feature piece on the Foxconn catastrophe in The Capital Times has renewed questions about the passivity of Gov Tony Evers (D) and his refusal to research and commence a civil suit against Foxconn.

Defeated Gov Scott Walker (R) negotiated this lunacy, but Walker and Evers' policy on Foxconn is identical.

Telling in the piece by Lawrence Tabak is the description of Evers on hearing news that promised manufacturing jobs were not in Wisconsin's future. Evers released a bizarre statement that failed to address the news that 13,000 promised jobs had vanished.

Instead, Evers muttered words that related to Foxconn messaging.

Writes Tabak:

[Evers] cited Foxconn’s lack of transparency and consistency, and promised that 'we’ll continue to encourage it.' A touch of frustration came through when he added that there was 'no limit to the skepticism if the messaging isn’t consistent.'

So, even with 13,000 jobs at stake, Tony Evers offered reporters in late January an inane statement about encouraging clear messaging and promising to become skeptical in the absence of clear messaging.

Matt Flynn, a veteran litigator and frequent critic of Foxconn, is publicly pointing out the inadequacy of Walker and Evers' approach to the complex contract between Foxconn and Wisconsin.

It's unclear if Evers is listening or even understands the Foxconn contract.

Aug 26, 2018

Gov Candidate Tony Evers Remains Silent on Foxconn Contract

Updated - Madison, Wisconsin — Weeks from the absentee voting start in the Wisconsin mid-term General Election, is this the year we dump Gov. Scott Walker (R)?

Not if the Democratic Party nominee for governor, Tony Evers, gets his way.

Evers is avoiding questions about major policy more assiduously than Scott Walker dodges questions about Walker's historic cuts to education and health care.

This campaign season, instead of policy discussion, Wisconsin voters are treated to a non-stop smorgasbord of what Evers ate at McDonald's.

This steady diet of fluff from Evers includes no mention of the most massive corporate give-away in U.S. history — Foxconn, specifically the question of Evers litigating the Foxconn-Wisconsin contract in federal court.

The Foxconn-Wisconsin 29-page contract remained secret until after the deal was signed by Walker's administration and the Foxconn chair, WKOW reported last year.

Evers in his weaselly manner becoming common now-a-days retains his position amounting to Foxconn stays, Wisconsin bleeds, a position Evers is trying to keep secret.

Evers has not mentioned Foxconn since the Aug 14 Primary Election, going completely dark on a major issue on which Scott Walker continues to campaign.

Evers' past comments include a vague promise to try to convince Foxconn to give up its $ billion subsidies, its guarantees to flaunt local and state law on water protections, among other negotiated perks given to Foxconn in the contract approved November 2017, and enabling legislation.

Mal Contends will continue its effort to get an answer from Evers on opposing the Foxconn contract.

With each day that Tony Evers refuses questions on Foxconn comes new evidence the Foxconn scam is bi-partisan.

Sep 16, 2018

Absentee Voting Starts in a Week in Gov Campaign Clunking Forward

Scott Walker campaign ads are everywhere in Wisconsin.
Updated - Madison, Wisconsin — Absentee voting begins in less than a week, but a lack of urgency marks the gubernatorial election here between Gov. Scott Walker (R) and Tony Evers.

Still, perusing the Sunday papers, the political websites, and candidate TV spots, there is a one clear, issue-focused campaign for Wisconsin governor — Gov. Scott Walker (R). It's the truth.

Pro-Foxconn ads (Google ad at right) by Walker seem ubiquitous, while Tony Evers refuses a position on Foxconn.

A response TV spot featuring Walker's running mate, Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch (R), delivers a powerful and compelling message against healthcare corporations' not covering pre-existing conditions.

That Walker and Republicans are disingenuous and hostile to healthcare is not a message that appears to penetrate the casual Wisconsin voter.

Scott Walker is campaigning on issues Democrats used to
own. Above is a Google ad featuring Scott Walker
reaching out to college students
. Walker is also
airing a similar TV spot.
No anti-Scott Walker voter who views the Rebecca Kleefisch ad does so without becoming worried, especially after looking up the clunky Tony Evers healthcare messages.

Healthcare is another issue that Democrats should own.

But Tony Evers is a disabled campaigner on issues and like Walker cannot offer political journalists informed, extemporaneous comment on healthcare.

"Election year promises won’t cover up Walker’s career of working to sabotage Wisconsinites’ health care and take us back to the days when insurance companies could deny you coverage if you got sick. He simply has no credibility on this issue, and Wisconsinites have no reason to believe he’d change with another term," said Tony Evers in a campaign statement, (Bauer, AP).

Evers cannot handle an issue like healthcare without his campaign formulating statements.

Scott Walker proclaims himself the champion of education, college students and working families.

Judges in purely marketing and communications messaging, Scott Walker is waxing Tony Evers.

Those concerned about democracy and the future of Wisconsin can take some solace in the heavy political winds against Walker and Republicans this campaign cycle.

Rural women are especially appalled by Republicans, inform anecdotes from two central and northern Wisconsin political field operations from Democratic Party nominees for the legislature.

Can citizen action lift a milquetoast Tony Evers over Scott Walker?

Yes, it can; but a call to Tony Evers' campaign and a kick in his ass are called for.