<p> Framework of WI Government</p><p>• Describe the purpose of having state and local governments in addition to the national government.</p><p>• What topics might be most important to Wisconsin’s state and local governments and why?</p><p>• What topics are meaningful and of interest to you as a Wisconsinite and why?</p><p> WI Government</p><p> Three branches:</p><p>• Legislative (senate and assembly)</p><p>• Executive (governor)</p><p>• Judicial (courts)</p><p>• Local Units:</p><p>• 72 counties</p><p>• 190 cities</p><p>• 404 villages</p><p>• 1,257 towns</p><p>• 425 school districts</p><p> Origins of the State Government</p><p> Became the WI Territory in 1836</p><p>• 1846 U.S. Congress authorized the people in the territory to form a constitution and state gov’t in order to be admitted into the Union.</p><p> First proposal was rejected due to provisions of banking, voting rights, property rights of married women, and homesteading.</p><p> Second draft was ratified in 1848 (30th state)</p><p> All aspects of WI are subject to the U.S. Constitution</p><p> Tenth Amendment</p><p>• “Powers not delegated to the U.S…are reserved to the State…”</p><p> Making the State Gov’t Work</p><p> Legislative branch enacts laws that give the greatest benefit to the greatest number while protecting individual rights.</p><p>• All members may introduce bills</p><p>• All members may also offer amendments (changes) Executive branch carries out the law</p><p>• Governor’s State of the State address – tells the legislature the condition of the state, and recommend suggestions.</p><p>• Once enacted, the governor actively implements the policy through oversight of agencies</p><p> “faithfully executed”</p><p> Judicial branch interprets the law</p><p> Bill becomes a Law</p><p> Passed by the legislature and signed by the governor.</p><p>• If vetoed, it can only become a bill if approved a second time by two-thirds vote in each house of the legislature.</p><p> Opinions/concerns of WI citizens are the major source for ideas</p><p>• Write a letter to a newspaper, legislator, governor or hire a lobbyist</p><p> State agencies will also voice concerns and recommendations </p><p> Challenges faced as our population grows and changes</p><p> Local Units of Government</p><p> Within limits of statutory law, each unit (counties, cities, villages, and towns) has the power to tax and to make legally binding rules governing its own affairs.</p><p> Each local unit operates differently in regards to personnel and operations</p><p>• Board of supervisors (counties), Village president, City mayor/common council, town meetings</p><p> Immigrant Voting Reading Questions</p><p> What voting requirement has become law under the administration of Scott Walker?</p><p> What is “declarant alien” voting (we were the first state to include it in our constitution)?</p><p> Describe the process for an immigrant to declare their intention to become a naturalized citizen.</p><p>• 3 steps</p><p> Why did Wisconsin adopt an amendment in 1908 cancelling the right of declarants to vote?</p><p> Why might this our voting history be considered important to know (aside from for your test)?</p><p> Progressivism and the WI Idea</p><p> 1900-1925 – seek answers to problems caused by an increasingly industrial and technological society.</p><p>• In other states, social movements tried to address these changes Greenback Party and Populist Party</p><p>• 1900 – “Progressives” gained control of the Republican Party.</p><p> Following the Civil War, Republicans controlled state governments</p><p> Interests and actions of government and business converged (personally and pragmatically)</p><p> Progressive Republicans – business and government was to serve the people.</p><p> Appealed to citizens who wanted honest government and moderate economic reforms – expand democracy and improve public morality.</p><p> Robert La Follette</p><p> La Follette WI</p><p> “Fighting Bob” became a nationwide symbol of progressive reform making the state and emblem of progressive experimentation.</p><p> Wisconsin Idea</p><p>• UW Faculty – helped draft laws and served as experts on gov’t commissions.</p><p>• University President Charles Van Hise</p><p>• Charles McCarthy</p><p> The Progressive movement began as a small faction of the Republican Party</p><p>• Factions within factions – leaders who enlisted different groups to progressive causes.</p><p> Accomplishments</p><p> James Davidson (1906-11):</p><p>• State control of corporation stock issues</p><p>• Extension of the power of the railroad commission to regulate transportation</p><p>• Fixing of railroad fares</p><p>• Stricter regulation of insurance companies</p><p> Francis McGovern</p><p>• Workers’ Compensation Law</p><p>• Regulate factory safety</p><p>• Formation of cooperatives</p><p>• State income tax</p><p>• State life insurance fund • Limited working hours for women and children</p><p>• Forest and waterpower conservation acts.</p><p> Progressive Followers</p><p> La Follette never gained complete control over the state’s Republican Party or even WI Progressives.</p><p>• Orderly change, rather than fundamental shift in economic and social order.</p><p>• Many of the reforms were moderate/acceptable</p><p>• WI citizens either viewed reforms as excessive state interference or wanted more sweeping changes (Socialist Party)</p><p> 1930s – Depression/Unemployment</p><p>• FDR’s New Deal</p><p> Edwin Witte (Social Security 1935) trained by Progressive Wisconsin economics professor John R. Commons (unemployment compensation).</p><p>• Kennedy’s “New Frontier” and Johnson’s “Great Society”</p><p> Socialism in Milwaukee</p><p> Early 20th century was also the era of Socialism in Milwaukee</p><p>• “Sewer socialism” – back-to-basics strategies</p><p>• Cleaning up neighborhoods and factories with new sanitation systems, municipally-owned water and power systems, community parks, and improved education.</p><p>• Replace the capitalist system with a planned economy of state-owned industries</p><p> Protect workers from business monopolies</p><p> Improve conditions for the working class and achieve a more efficient administration of government</p><p>• Socialists did not advocate a violent revolution</p><p> Come by ballots</p><p> Social-Democratic Party in 1897</p><p>• After the violence and chaos of the eight-hour day campaign in 1886, Milwaukee’s laboring classes turned to political action.</p><p>• Joined with labor to form a new political party, the Social-Democrats</p><p>• Milwaukee became the first Socialist city in the United States.</p><p> Victor Berger</p><p> Victor Berger = symbol of Milwaukee Socialism. • Austrian immigrant</p><p>• Developed a program of political action that was a variety of moderate reform, under the name of Socialism.</p><p>• Drew on Milwaukee’s German population and active labor movement.</p><p>• Emphasized the need for honest government</p><p> Popular appeal in a city long notorious for corruption and administrative inefficiency.</p><p> 1910 – Socialists won major electoral victories in Milwaukee</p><p>• Emil Seidel – nation’s first Socialist mayor</p><p>• Got most other city offices and a majority of seats on the city council and the county board.</p><p>• Victor Berger – first socialist Congressman.</p><p> 1916 – Milwaukee citizens elected another Socialist mayor – Daniel Hoan.</p><p>• Remained in office until 1940 </p><p>• Socialists continued to exert a powerful influence in Milwaukee.</p><p> Berger in Congress</p><p> 1918 – won a seat in Congress</p><p>• House of Representatives refused to permit him to take his seat.</p><p> Violated the federal Espionage Act – supported the anti-war statement of the 1917 Socialist Convention in St. Louis</p><p>• Wisconsin’s governor called a special election to fill Berger’s seat in 1919</p><p> Voters again elected him to Congress – but he was still refused to be seated.</p><p>• Ran again in 1920 but was defeated by Republican William Stafford</p><p> 1922 – ran for Congress and won</p><p>• House allowed Berger to take his seat (3 successive terms)</p><p> Socialist vs. Progressivism</p><p> Socialists and Progressives were suspicious of each other</p><p>• Socialists wanted nothing to do with the Republican Party, the parent party of the Progressives</p><p> They saw them as weak on reform</p><p> Both proved by example that honest, efficient government could work on the state and local level.</p><p>• Socialists got support from Milwaukee voters for their city-wide reform programs.</p><p>• Professionals supported a Socialist mayor – reputation as the best-governed city in the United States. </p>
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