I'm a lifelong Democrat and a career educator. So I'm predictably appalled by Wisconsin's Republican Gov. Scott Walker, who has cut spending for schools and has stripped teachers -- and most of the state's public workers -- of collective bargaining rights.
But I'm also appalled by the recall campaign against Walker by Wisconsin Democrats, who last week chose Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett to run against Walker in a June 5 special election -- a rematch of the 2010 contest.
The recall epitomizes the petty, loser-take-all vindictiveness of contemporary American politics. And if you don't agree, I've got two names for you: former California Gov. Gray Davis and U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
Remember Davis? In 2003, he became just the second governor to be recalled in U.S. history. A year earlier, voters had elected Davis to a second term. As budget and energy woes engulfed California, however, Republicans saw an opportunity to get rid of him.
To rally voters behind Davis, some Democrats correctly predicted that his recall would bring a far less qualified man into the governorship: actor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Other Democrats, including Feinstein, decried how the entire process made a mockery of democracy itself.
"This governor was elected just last November," Feinstein said in a TV advertisement. "Within three months, this recall effort began. It was started by people who were unhappy with the results of a legitimate election, in which 8 million Californians voted."
Feinstein herself had been the target of a recall campaign in 1983, when she was mayor of San Francisco, because of her support for a strict handgun control measure.
If voters tried to remove everyone they disagreed with, she responded successfully, no public official could effectively serve anyone. As she argued in the ballot pamphlet for the 1983 recall election: "Orderly government cannot prevail on the shifting sands of a recall brought, not because of any corruption or incompetence, but because of a difference of opinion on an issue."