
Mitch Henck: Taking Donald Trump out not so easy
In “Two Minutes with Mitch” radio personality Mitch Henck gives his two cents on whether Donald Trump can be taken out just like Richard Nixon.
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In “Two Minutes with Mitch” radio personality Mitch Henck gives his two cents on whether Donald Trump can be taken out just like Richard Nixon.

Clarke’s new role will be as a public liaison between DHS and police agencies, which is really amazing considering his poor relations with the Milwaukee Police Department and even his own deputies.

I can think of few men more uniquely unqualified to liaise with local law enforcement at this juncture, when the agency is ramping up immigration raids, filling detention centers and carrying out deportations as fast as possible.

A state measure that would require placing sexual offenders in their home counties may make sense. What doesn’t is enacting it by sneaking it into the state budget.

There is no bailing out or patching up Obamacare. It will eventually sink to the bottom of the abyss.

What I’d like to see are itemized bills showing what procedures, hospital stays, drugs and all the other American health care products actually cost.

A recent $425,000 grant to the University of Wisconsin-Stout by the Charles Koch Foundation is the largest single, annual gift ever given to a Wisconsin college or university by the rightwing grantor, but not the first.
Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers STORY TOPICS – White house – State government – Federal government – Local government – Agribusiness – Education – Environment – Iowa – Labor – Law and order – Minnesota – Non-profits – Small business –
http://www.wiseye.org/mp4stream/EVT/EVT_170518_WISPOL_LUNCH.mp4

Sen. Steve Nass clashed with the UW System Thursday on whether it’s trying to use public funds to “bail out” the UW-Oshkosh Foundation. The UW System is currently suing a former UW-Oshkosh chancellor and former vice chancellor in a lawsuit

Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers Advertisement The Madison Club From WisPolitics.com … — Attorney General Brad Schimel argues in a new filing with the U.S. Supreme Court against the “hodgepodge” of social science measures called for by those suing the state
Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers From WisPolitics.com … — The Joint Finance Committee today rejected Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to freeze tuition at the Wisconsin Technical College System, opting to boost funding for financial aid instead. The committee also rejected Dems’
Milwaukee activists today slammed Milwaukee County Sheriff Clarke’s promotion to a position in the Department of Homeland Security, calling the appointment “disgraceful.” They also called on Gov. Scott Walker to appoint a sheriff friendlier toward immigrant families, following Clarke’s announcement
Gov. Scott Walker today lauded the dropping of the state’s unemployment rate last month to 3.2 percent as “further evidence we are continuing to move Wisconsin forward.” This is down 0.2 percent from March’s unemployment rate, and marks the lowest

In “Two Minutes with Mitch” radio personality Mitch Henck gives his two cents on whether Donald Trump can be taken out just like Richard Nixon.

Clarke’s new role will be as a public liaison between DHS and police agencies, which is really amazing considering his poor relations with the Milwaukee Police Department and even his own deputies.

I can think of few men more uniquely unqualified to liaise with local law enforcement at this juncture, when the agency is ramping up immigration raids, filling detention centers and carrying out deportations as fast as possible.

A state measure that would require placing sexual offenders in their home counties may make sense. What doesn’t is enacting it by sneaking it into the state budget.

There is no bailing out or patching up Obamacare. It will eventually sink to the bottom of the abyss.

What I’d like to see are itemized bills showing what procedures, hospital stays, drugs and all the other American health care products actually cost.

A recent $425,000 grant to the University of Wisconsin-Stout by the Charles Koch Foundation is the largest single, annual gift ever given to a Wisconsin college or university by the rightwing grantor, but not the first.
Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers STORY TOPICS – White house – State government – Federal government – Local government – Agribusiness – Education – Environment – Iowa – Labor – Law and order – Minnesota – Non-profits – Small business – Editorials – Columns TOP STORIES Panel scraps tech college tuition
http://www.wiseye.org/mp4stream/EVT/EVT_170518_WISPOL_LUNCH.mp4

Sen. Steve Nass clashed with the UW System Thursday on whether it’s trying to use public funds to “bail out” the UW-Oshkosh Foundation. The UW System is currently suing a former UW-Oshkosh chancellor and former vice chancellor in a lawsuit that alleges the two approved “illegal transfers” of money for

Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers Advertisement The Madison Club From WisPolitics.com … — Attorney General Brad Schimel argues in a new filing with the U.S. Supreme Court against the “hodgepodge” of social science measures called for by those suing the state over its redistricting maps. A split federal three-judge panel late
Exclusively for WisPolitics Subscribers From WisPolitics.com … — The Joint Finance Committee today rejected Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to freeze tuition at the Wisconsin Technical College System, opting to boost funding for financial aid instead. The committee also rejected Dems’ efforts to make WTCS tuition free. Walker’s proposal would have
Milwaukee activists today slammed Milwaukee County Sheriff Clarke’s promotion to a position in the Department of Homeland Security, calling the appointment “disgraceful.” They also called on Gov. Scott Walker to appoint a sheriff friendlier toward immigrant families, following Clarke’s announcement in a radio interview yesterday that he’s leaving his post
Gov. Scott Walker today lauded the dropping of the state’s unemployment rate last month to 3.2 percent as “further evidence we are continuing to move Wisconsin forward.” This is down 0.2 percent from March’s unemployment rate, and marks the lowest level of unemployment since February 2000, according to federal data