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Scott Walker denies comparing liberal protestors to terrorists
Washington (CNN)Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker says his home-state battles against labor unions prepare him to take on terrorism -- but he denies he's comparing the two.
Walker drew attention at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Thursday with his response to a question about how he'd handle ISIS, and the "radical Islamic terrorism" he condemned during his speech.
"If I can take on 100,000 protesters, I can do the same across the globe," he told the audience.
The answer allowed Walker to pivot back to his most comfortable space -- his experience battling entrenched Democratic interests in Wisconsin. But it also sounded odd: Statehouse protestors, after all, don't use weapons.
Afterward, Walker told reporters he wasn't making a direct comparison.
"You all will misconstrue things the way you see fit," he said, "but I think it's pretty clear, that's the closest thing I have in terms of handling a difficult situation, not that there's any parallel between the two."
His attack on members of the media mirrored comments he'd made days ago, when he accused reporters who'd pressed him on whether he agreed with former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani's comment that President Barack Obama doesn't love America and whether he believes Obama is a Christian of seeking a "gotcha" moment and refused to answer.
Democrats quickly pounced on Walker's latest comment, with liberal opposition research group American Bridge blasting it out to reporters and the Democratic National Committee highlighting it, as well.
"If Scott Walker thinks that it's appropriate to compare working people speaking up for their rights to brutal terrorists, then he is even less qualified to be president than I thought. Maybe he should go back to punting," DNC spokesman Mo Elleithee said.
"We need a president, a leader, who will stand up and say, 'we will take the fight to them and not wait until they bring the fight to America's soil, to our children and our grandchildren,'" he said.
Later, in a short opening speech, he added: "We need to show the world that in America, you have no better ally and no greater enemy. In America, we will stand up for what is right and stand against what is wrong."
Asked by an audience member about how he'd deal with the threat of the ISIS, Walker responded that he gets FBI threat briefings from his adjutant general and that "without divulging confidential information," he's been concerned about the group for years.
That's when he turned to his experience in Wisconsin taking on the protestors.
Walker spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski underscored Walker's explanation later, saying the comment was intended to highlight his leadership capabilities.
"Governor Walker believes our fight against ISIS is one of the most important issues our country faces. He was in no way comparing any American citizen to ISIS," she said in an email. "What the governor was saying was when faced with adversity he chooses strength and leadership. Those are the qualities we need to fix the leadership void this White House has created."
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Hey, Walker said it at CPAC. One of many rants meant to feed the ravenous appetite of the residents of ultra conservative never-never land.
Not an excuse for his stupid statement (that his aides later "clarified"), but those kind of off-the-wall outbursts are part of the circus that defines CPAC.
Last edited by Rongone (2/27/2015 9:43 am)
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If he can take on someone like this, walker is definitely ready for ISIS!
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Here's the kind of hard hitting issues they take up at CPAC:
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This was even too much for Republican Rick Perry.
“
These are Americans”: Rick Perry slams Scott Walker’s ISIS-union comparison
Last edited by Goose (2/27/2015 3:27 pm)
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It looks like Scott Walker has a friend. Radio's Rush Limbaugh has rallied to Walker's defense saying that Walker is a "fighter", and that the media is out to destroy him.
Rush has a point. I just hate it when the media unfairly smears a candidate by,,,,, well, by taking the words that come out of his mouth, and then, you know,,,,,,, reporting them to the public.
What a Dirty trick!
Last edited by Goose (2/27/2015 3:45 pm)
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Why do they even pander to these crazies? They can't win an national election with the cartoon characters they would pick. They embolden the nut case base and the nut cases in turn are destroying their party. Just kick them out and concentrate on having a rational, thoughtful party. Mainstream America doesn't want deranged extremists running things. I think the whole Republican party has lost it's mind.
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This is disturbing. For him to feel that a portion of the Americans he gets paid to represent are the equivalent to terrorists that cut people's heads off is just disturbing and wrong.
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There is so much wrong with Walker's statement.
There is his idea that somehow, some way, dealing with a labor dispute qualifies someone to battle international terrorism. How does that work?
Then, of course, there is the 900 gorilla in the room. When Scott Walker wants to conjure up someone evil enough to compare to ISIS, he reaches into his brain and comes up with,,,,,,,,, public employees?
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There goes his bid for president.