Jan 20 2008
My Race for County Supervisor in this Morning’s Paper
The Journal Sentinel has an article in this morning’s paper about the candidates running for Milwaukee County Supervisor in the 15th district.
It’s encouraging to see the paper showing an active interest in the local races for office this spring at an early stage like this.
Daniel Cody says De Bruin has become too conservative for the 15th District on Milwaukee’s west side. Cody, a county Democratic Party official, said he’d be more vigorous. He favors “reinvesting in the parks system and revitalizing transit.” Cody said he might favor a sales tax increase for parks and transit if it also resulted in lower property taxes.
By JESSICA McBRIDE January 19, 2008
Dear District Attorney Brad Schimel,
My husband won’t be thrilled that I wrote this column. It deals with his old office, so it’s awkward. He thinks you’re a good guy. I do, too. Please don’t assume my opinions reflect his. My opinions are my own only.
I once saw you at a cop’s retirement party. You seemed comfortable there. You were the law enforcement candidate in the district attorney’s race, not the glib politician. I like that about you. I think you’ve got the potential to be an excellent DA because you’ve got a lot of integrity.
However, it’s my job to write about the goings-on in Waukesha County. So, I must ask: What’s going on?
I recognize that the media will praise you for not doing things conservatives like. I also recognize it’s not your job to do things conservatives like.
However, I was hoping you wouldn’t go easy on illegal immigrant criminals, drug offenders and sneaky Jim Doyle campaign attorneys, while suddenly getting all bothered by Scott Jensen. I didn’t expect pro-marijuana Web sites would heap praise on you during your first year in office.
I know you’re bound by the law, not politics. Even so, some of your decisions baffle me.
You were quoted in the newspaper recently pushing for Jensen’s criminal case to remain in Dane County (he’s filed a court motion seeking to change the venue to Waukesha County.) The Capital Times subsequently praised you. You stated you were working with the attorney general’s office to keep the trial in Dane. Shouldn’t you guys be working together to make sure Jensen gets a fair trial, which - news flash - is not going to happen in Dane? You might as well advocate that Ahab prosecute Moby Dick.
You told the Madison reporters that you knew little about the case except what was in the newspaper, so why weigh in now? Please read the investigative documents that came out during Jensen’s first trial (Don’t go by what you read in most newspapers. They barely covered them). After plowing through the actual reports, I came to believe that the Jensen prosecution was selective and unfair. The Democratic DA’s own investigative reports show he had the goods on numerous Democrats, yet he didn’t charge them. And that’s just for starters.
If you don’t like political prosecutions - and you haven’t been a very political DA so far - then you shouldn’t be OK with what happened to Jensen because it was the personification of a political prosecution. I’m not asking that you, ironically, make a political decision here yourself. I just wish that, if given the chance, you’d embrace the opportunity to review this case with a fresh eye and, if you see evidence of unfairness, you’d correct it. This is a case crying out for another prosecutor’s eye.
You also withdrew Waukesha County’s request to get federal immigration enforcement authority, even though your support for the request remains on your campaign Web site. The program would have made Waukesha County a nationwide model for dealing with illegal immigrants who commit crimes.
I acknowledge the sheriff and police chief pulled their support first, and federal immigration officials promised to move faster to detain illegal immigrants suspected of committing crimes. The problem is that no one - including the feds - is systematically tracking which criminal defendants in our county are illegal immigrants.
There was no reason to rescind this - pleasing the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial board doesn’t count - and every reason to do it. The head of the top Latino social service agency in town even supported the plan (a fact the media largely ignored). The authority would have been narrowly tailored to empower local cops to detain and identify illegal immigrants WHO COMMIT CRIMES.
How many illegal immigrants are in the criminal justice system right now? If you can answer that question, call me. I’ll run the number next week.
If you can’t, please reconsider. This is about public safety. For those who think illegal immigration is only a national issue, I have three words: Frame Park rapist.
You also took a pass at making a case against Michael Maistelman, the governor’s campaign attorney who was shamelessly firing off e-mails to the state Elections Board before it destroyed Mark Green’s campaign.
Aggressive prosecutors can go down in flames occasionally (Georgia Thompson), but they also uphold an important societal line by taking tough cases. Give me the principled, aggressive prosecutor any day over the too-cautious one (McCann).
You next advocated for decriminalizing marijuana. This got you praised on the Madison Web site of a group advocating against “marijuana prohibition.” You were quoted as saying lots of people have tried marijuana and “times have changed.”
That’s why we shouldn’t decriminalize the drug.
Soon after, it was reported that authorities seized more marijuana in Waukesha County than the previous eight years combined, a record.
DA Schimel, I want you to succeed. This is constructive criticism, not a personal attack.
But I feel like Cher in “Moonstruck” right now: “Snap out of it”!
Sincerely,
Jessica McBride
Daniel Cody says De Bruin has become too conservative
Challenger Daniel Wycklendt says he would take a more conservative approach than De Bruin
Heh … Too conservative, not conservative enough. Sheesh.
I thought that “story” was a striking example of how the local newspaper fails to cover local campaigns and candidates. There is a very good chance that the story, with five short paragraphs, is all the JS intends to write on this race before the primary. And that’s a shame.
Right Bill, and I think I relayed some of that in the original post. My hope of course is that they will be focusing a bit more on races throughout the County and City like mine and providing some real substantive coverage not only of the candidates, but the issues as well.
I was just pleased that it was more than a column for each candidate listing age, time in district, public service record, etc. But yes, hopefully there is more coverage than the piece in Sunday’s paper, especially considering this is one of the more competitive races this spring.
@Yeah: The difference there is my statement that she’s becoming too conservative for the district, and Mr. Wycklend saying he’d be even more conservative than her.