Shameless Fraud: Liberal Voter Admits He’s Signed Petitions to Recall Wisconsin Gov. Walker “About 80 Times”
Posted By Vicki McClure Davidson on December 12, 2011

February 2011, Age of Civility for Democrats: Wisconsin government/teacher union protest sign reads, 'Hosni + Hilter = Dictator Scott Walker'
How quick and loud and often would MSNBC, CNN, or Al Gore’s Current TV scream bloody murder if a conservative voter had confessed to the local press that he had signed petitions more than 80 times to recall a Democrat governor?
But since it is to recall Wisconsin’s Republican Gov. Scott Walker, we get national media silence.
If one Wisconsin liberal has admitted to signing recall petitions multiple times, guaranteed there are scores, or hundreds, or thousands more.
You may also recall that underaged children in Wisconsin at an Occupy Milwaukee protest were bribed with cigarettes by anti-Walker petitioners to sign recall petitions. Even though they weren’t old enough to vote nor sign any petition. And they were asked to bring their underaged friends to also sign. Yay, more cigarettes!
Rules and laws are meant to be broken if a statist, liberal, progessive, or socialist can get what he or she wants. The end always justifies the means, and the left-wing media usually won’t interfere by doing its job and reporting it nor condemning it. However, if a conservative were to ever try to pull such a stunt… it would be hell fire and brimstone time. And rightfully so.
Reported by Conservative Byte, Man Claims He Signed Walker Recall Petitions 80 Times:
A Milwaukee man is making claims that he’s signed petitions to recall Governor Scott Walker dozens of times.
“I think I signed about 80 times,” the unidentified man told WISN, our ABC sister station in Milwaukee. “I signed a lot of them for the past two weeks. I’ve been seeing them at the Grand Avenue Mall, out here by Pick N Save and stuff like that.”
Asked if he knows only one of his signatures will be counted, he said, “Oh well. Whatever it takes to get Scott Walker out of here, I’m happy.”
The Government Accountability Board will receive the recall petitions when they are due January 17, but the GAP won’t necessarily catch people who signed more than once.
The GAP says in accordance with state law it’s not that agency’s job to catch duplicate signatures. That’s ultimately left to whomever is being recalled — in this case, Governor Walker and Lieutenant Governor Rebecca Kleefisch.
Democrat strategists and public sector union officials from around America have been hard at work in Wisconsin in their unrelenting attack on Governor Scott Walker and his efforts to restore fiscal sanity to the Dairy State. The Recall Scott Walker campaign claims to be well on their way to collecting the 540,208 signatures required to force a recall election.
Not surprisingly there have been rumors of signature padding and fraud associated with the Recall Scott Walker petition campaign.
[...]
Grass roots volunteers are already planning to pitch-in and engage in the thankless, but vital task of signature verification. The full-on assault by the public sector unions and their democrat enablers will be met with the honest efforts of ordinary citizens who understand what is at stake in this battle.
Are you paying attention to this flagrant corruption of the process, Wisconsin voters? Stand up to the fraud, don’t let them get away with this atrocity.

Liberal hate: Note shoved under Republican lawmaker's door during government union protests last spring - 'THE ONLY GOOD REPUBLICAN IS A DEAD REPUBLICAN'

Scott Walker is one of my heroes for standing up to the unions, one of the most evil and powerful forces in politics. Given what is at stake in Wisconsin, and the ramifications elsewhere, it is very important to ensure this recall attempt is done legitimately. And based on precedent, it is very likely that some fraud was inevitable, as this proves (assuming it’s true). It’s scary to think what other fraud might be going on, but hopefully this revelation prompts a fastidious audit of the process. Considering Walker’s approval ratings (which seem to be in the high 40′s), it seems unlikely that a recall attempt, legitimately done, would be successful.