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The Kochs Sue to Control the Cato Institute

Since 1977, the Cato Institute has been America’s chief libertarian think tank. Cato had four shareholder-founders: Ed Crane, Charles Koch, George Pearson, and William Niskanen. Following Niskanen’s death last fall, there’s been an ongoing, behind-the-scenes controversy about what would happen to Niskanen’s shares in the organization.

Would the shares go to his widow, or does billionaire Charles Koch have a right to purchase them (if Cato does not or cannot)? Charles Koch has been at odds with Crane’s non-partisan philosophy for Cato, so the ownership of the shares is consequential.

If the Kochs had more shares, they would control Cato, and could take it in any direction they wanted. Cato would likely look more like Charles & David Koch’s Americans for Prosperity, an avowedly partisan and conservative organization.

In the fall, just about everyone in the libertarian movement knew that the Kochs would try to use Niskanen’s death to wrest control of Cato from Crane. This conflict been a long-time coming. Talk of behind-the-scenes (now failed) discussions on Cato’s future has been widespread.

The Kochs are now suing to determine who has the right to Niskanen’s shares.

Here’s Crane’s statement on the Kochs’ lawsuit:

Charles G. Koch has filed a lawsuit as part of an effort to gain control of the Cato Institute, which he co-founded with me in 1977. While Mr. Koch and entities controlled by him have supported the Cato Institute financially since that time, Mr. Koch and his affiliates have exercised no significant influence over the direction or management of the Cato Institute, or the work done here.

Mr. Koch’s actions in Kansas court yesterday represent an effort by him to transform Cato from an independent, nonpartisan research organization into a political entity that might better support his partisan agenda. We view Mr. Koch’s actions as an attempt at a hostile takeover, and intend to fight it vehemently in order to continue as an independent research organization, advocating for Individual liberty, limited government, free markets and peace.

For more about the Kochs’ lawsuit, see the Washington Post and the court documents in the case.

Writing at Slate, David Weigel describes what’s at stake:

And so, with libertarianism at its modern apex, the Kochs are trying to wrestle the movement’s leading think tank away from the guy [Ed Crane] who built it up. (Literally. They just completed a renovation.)

More to come.

Posted originally on 3.2.12 at Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 3.2.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s winter is not over quite yet. Friday looks to be a day of rain and snow, with a high temperature of thirty-nine.

On this day in 1877, “Republican Rutherford B. Hayes was declared the winner of the 1876 presidential election over Democrat Samuel J. Tilden, even though Tilden had won the popular vote.”

Today in Wisconsin history, in 1953, former

U.S. Senator Russ Feingold was born in Janesville, Wisconsin. Feingold graduated from Janesville Craig High School in 1971. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1975 and attended Magdalen College in Oxford, England as a Rhodes Scholar. He received a graduate degree in 1977 and graduated from Harvard University Law School in 1979.

He was admitted to the Wisconsin bar in 1979 and practiced law in Madison, Wisconsin from 1979-1985. He served as a visiting professor at Beloit College 1985 and a member of the Wisconsin State Senate from 1983 to 1993. Feingold was elected in 1992 as a Democrat to the United States Senate, reelected in 1998 and in 2004 for the term ending January 3, 2011. [Source:Biographical Directory of the United States Congress].

Google’s daily puzzle is about Paris, a dance hall, and a 19th century artist: “What Parisian dance hall made famous a very short poster artist of the late 19th century?”

Recall Organizer Lori Compas’s Declaration Speech

Embedded below is a video of recall-organizer-turned-candidate Lori Compas declaring against Sen. Majority Leader Fitzgerald in Wisconsin’s 13th District. Despite Sen. Fitzgerald’s numerous challenges to petition signatures, I’d guess a recall election in his district will happen.

(It’s a partisan video, from SSWIDTMS. Compas’s remarks are my only interest; the origin of the video isn’t important to me. )

(I’ve written a bit about Compas & Fitzgerald previously. See, Sen. Majority Leader Fitzgerald’s 12.19.11 Open Office.)

After her formal speech, she makes a few additional remarks near the end of the video. I’ll not offer commentary now, except to say what anyone can see – she’s a natural, unaffected speaker.

I don’t live in the 13th District, but of the many Wisconsin races this year (president, US senator, a gubernatorial recall, senatorial recalls, legislative races, and local elections), I think this race may be among the most interesting.

Posted originally on 3.1.12 at Daily Adams.

Assessing Walker and Barrett as Debaters

Among the Democrats who might challenge Gov. Walker is one who challenged him in 2010. Milwaukee’s Mayor Tom Barrett ran and lost in a 1,128,941 to 1,004,303 tally.

Barrett may run against Walker in a recall, so here’s an assessment of Barrett and Walker as debaters in the 2010 campaign. There’s more to write, another time, about Barrett’s chances in a Democratic primary (very good, despite Kathleen Falk’s many union endorsements) and his chances in a rematch against Walker (as good or better than any other Democrat).

This debate took place on 10.15.2010 at Marquette Law School’s Eckstein Hall.

Manner. Both seem confident, but Barrett more so. Milwaukee’s mayor is more relaxed, and more conversational.

Delivery. Barrett speaks easily and smoothly, but he would do better if he were to emphasize key points with changes in tone. A sharper tone, a greater intensity, would benefit to him.

Walker needs to speak more slowly than he does here, with a bit less intensity. Candidate Walker’s approach was useful (to convey urgency), but Wisconsin’s on a knife-edge in 2012. It’s not incumbent Gov. Walker, but a recall challenger, who needs to convey a sense of urgency now.

Clash. Clash in a debate is a good thing. It doesn’t mean incivility; it simply means that the debaters respond directly to each other’s contentions. A debate without clash is one where the debaters talk past each other, each with his or her own topics, often little more than platitudes.

There is productive clash in this debate, throughout. With a difference, however: Walker begins answers with a single-sentence summary, and then elaborates. It’s effective. Barrett, by contrast, often takes two or three sentences to make his initial point. That’s too long. Walker’s like someone who was taught to begin every paragraph with a topic sentence. It’s a useful technique.

There’s a ‘things to come’ moment in this debate, too. Listen to candidate Walker at 11:39 in the video, and you’ll hear him hit public employees as the source of Milwaukee County’s fiscal problems. Walker never proposes — and never proposed during the campaign — changes in Wisconsin’s collective bargaining rights for public employees. But he does call public employees the ‘haves’ in contrast to others, the ‘have-nots.’ Barrett responds tepidly, in an unfocused way, to Walker’s firm and direct assessment.

The election result would have been the same despite a different answer from Barrett, but neither one of these men would have a margin for a lukewarm reply now.

Attire. No one should go into a debate thinking about how to dress; attire should be a matter of instinct. No matter how much people insist on substance, some appearances matter greatly to people, however. They’ll forgive natural appearance in a way they won’t forgive sloppiness, signs of exhaustion, or nervousness.

Both these men are dressed similarly, although Walker wears a darker suit, of a color that conveys intensity. Neither one wears his two-button coat as well as Mike Gousha wears a three-button one. (Admittedly, a three-button one fits more closely.) Walker’s coat collar rides above his shirt collar, and Barrett’s coat is bunched near his shoulders. A two-button coat is still the standard for men in politics, but it’s sometimes hard to wear one at a seated at table.

The coat should rest on the shirt collar. These gentlemen shouldn’t have to worry about that; a campaign should have someone to look after this sort of thing.

I’ve never thought much of flags on lapels, but they have become a required accessory for both major parties. There’s a message in these candidates’ choices: Walker wears a flag, Barrett a ribbon that has the flag’s stars and stripes. Walker’s is the more traditional; Barrett’s the more specific (in support of soldiers aboard).

Both are fine, and it was sensible of Barrett to wear a version. (Some voters find the lapel flags reassuring. Barrett likely reassured some disinclined to him, and meaningfully unsettled no one inclined to him, by wearing one.)

There’s been so much talk about the half-hearted campaign Barrett ran in 2010. I’ve shared that view. Watching the debate again with fresh eyes, now, I find that Barrett does well, but needs an increase in intensity. If he summons that, he’d do well in a rematch.

Walker, in this 2010 debate, is the same as his political persona since: single-minded, succinct, one-speed, ahead. There’s room for change, but he’ll easily satisfy is supporters, should there ever be debates during a recall election.

The real question here, for Democrats: Do you really think union-endorsed Kathleen Falk would do better than Barrett in this environment? I’d say you’re greatly mistaken if you do. Barrett (or Kathleen Vinehout) would convey greater energy and enthusiasm than Falk.

Democrats may think the world of Falk (and some do), but a campaign’s neither a gold watch nor a certificate of appreciation.

Originally posted on 3.1.12 at Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 3.1.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s had a mild winter, and March begins here with a mostly cloudy day and a high of forty-one. Farther north, in places like Merrill, Wisconsin, it’s been a time of digging out from a heavy snowfall. In their part of the world, Punxsutawney Phil‘s forecast of six more weeks of winter looks about right.

The Wisconsin Historical Society lists a few Badger State accomplishments for March 1st:

1838 – First School in Madison

On this date the first school opened in Madison. The school was located in the front end of Isaac H. Palmer’s log cabin on the corner of what is now King and Doty streets, near the Capitol. Miss Louisa Brayton was hired to instruct pupils for $2 a week, half of which was spent on room and board.

1924 – Astronaut “Deke” Slayton Born

On this date astronaut Donald Kent “Deke” Slayton was born in Sparta. He graduated from Sparta High School and received a bachelor of science degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1949. Slayton entered the Air Force as an aviation cadet and received his wings in April 1943 after completing flight training at Vernon and Waco, Texas. During World War II, he flew 56 combat missions in Europe as a B-25 pilot with the 340th Bombardment Group and later joined the 319th Bombardment Group in Okinawa and flew seven combat missions over Japan in A-26s.

Slayton was one of the original seven Project Mercury astronauts selected in April 1959 but did not make a space flight until 1975. He was assigned to fly the second Project Mercury orbital mission, but was grounded by an irregular heart beat. Slayton made his first space flight as Apollodocking module pilot of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. From December 1975 through November 1977, Slayton served as Manager for Approach and Landing Test Project. Slayton retired from NASA in 1982. Slayton died of brain cancer on June 13, 1993 in League City, Texas. [Source: NASA]

1985 – Kohl purchases Bucks

On this day in 1985 Milwaukee businessman and future United States Senator Herb Kohl purchased the Milwaukee Bucks for 18 million dollars. By 1999 the team was worth an estimated 100 million dollars. [Source: Harvard Business School Bulletin, December 1999

Forbes lists the Bucks’ worth over $250 million today.

In Google’s daily puzzle, a little geography, a little anthropology: “What tribe has lived since 1300 AD near the canyon you’d explore from Bright Angel Trail?”

Lori Compas Declares Recall Candidacy Against Sen. Majority Leader Fitzgerald

Compas led a recall petition drive against Sen. Fitzgerald, and she’s now declared her candidacy for the13th Sen. District. I’ve no idea how the race will go, but it will be worth following. (I’ve written a bit about Compas & Fitzgerald previously. See, Sen. Majority Leader Fitzgerald’s 12.19.11 Open Office.)

The always-solid Mary Spicuzza reports on Compas’s declaration at the State Journal, and relates a predictably oafish comment from Sen. Fitzgerald:

Unlike my opponent, I have a proven track record and a real plan to improve our business climate and create jobs

My opponent: Fitzgerald can’t use Compas’s name. That’s too funny. By now, she’s well-known. Fitzgerald’s a meat-and-potatoes man, and his press releases since 2011 have been monotone. He has only one style: hard-hitting, unleavened with any humor, wit, or ironic sensibility.

The story also reports an odd fact, I wouldn’t have guessed, about the candidates’ ages: Spicuzza reports that Compas is forty-one, and Fitzgerald is forty-eight. She looks younger, and he looks older, than their respective ages. I’ve never bothered to check Fitzgerald’s age, but he looks like a man in his late fifties, not his late forties.

Perhaps it’s just his manner, but whatever the reason, the apparent difference makes a generational point.

Daily Bread for 2.29.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s forecast calls for rain, with perhaps a bit of snow, and a high temperature of forty-five.

On this leap day, Google commemorates the birthday of Giaochino Rossini, born on 2.29.1792.  They mark the occasion with a doodle in his honor –

A Wikipedia entry on Rossini describes his accomplishments. Among them, of course, The Barber of Seville.

Generations later, Warner Brothers produced a parody that’s probably as famous to Americans as the Rossini’s original –

In Google’s daily puzzle, a numeral asks a question: “The ancient Romans didn’t know me, but the Mayans did. What numeral am I?” more >>

The Whitewater District’s Search that Wasn’t

Months ago, at a party, someone asked me if the Whitewater Schools would conduct a genuine search for a high school principal. I said no: they’d take the interim principal, insist he was the only candidate, and make him the permanent high school principal.

(That’s exactly what happened Monday night, 2.27.12. There are many times that one would rather be wrong than be right about something.)

How would that be possible, I was then asked? Isn’t a search process supposed to have at least two candidates, so that the district would have a choice among possibilities? Well, of course it is, I replied, but there will be some sort of rationalization about having only one candidate.

And so there has been a rationalization, in the form of a new search standard: if there’s only one internal candidate, and the committees interviewing him don’t reject him, then he gets the job.

Very few people – especially on committees that insiders’ carefully select – are prepared to fight against complacency, even if that fight involves asking merely for two candidates from whom to choose.

Under the new standard, so as long as a sole candidate doesn’t start twitching uncontrollably, or begin barking like a dog, he’s sure to get the job.

There’s something funny about the insistence that three committees approved this single-candidate process, as though repetition could possibly be to the district’s credit.

On the contrary, the repetition three times of the same single-candidate process is evidence of how mediocre is the district’s approach, and how cloudy its board’s thinking.

It’s even more embarrassing that the district and its cheering section think that the board’s unanimous approval of a third-tier approach somehow absolves — anoints really — a single-candidate process.

Who thinks this way? People who think that if an authority puts its stamp on something, then it must be right.

If three hospitals insisted upon the benefits of bleeding with leeches, and the American Medical Association endorsed the practice, it would still be unsound.

This was an indolent process, in the place of a true, dedicated search.