By Brendan O'Brien MILWAUKEE, June 1 (Reuters) - George Posker and Neal Muller, union workers at a small manufacturing plant near Madison, want to see Wisconsin Republican Governor Scott Walker recalled from office
GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, FOX NEWS HOST: For the next hour, you will go behind the scenes of the Wisconsin election recall. You will hear from all four candidates. You will meet the Tea Partiers who have traveled far and wide to make their voices heard in
Wisconsin election officials are predicting that 60 to 65 percent of the voting age population, or about 2.6 million to 2.8 million people, will cast ballots in the recall election. Central Wisconsin county clerks expect a similar or perhaps higher
(Corrects punctuation in headline, changes date from May 31 to June 1) * Conservative "grassroots" groups seen raising $140mln in 2012 * Wisconsin a major test, victory could bring more funds * Conservative success could push Republicans further right
MILWAUKEE — The Democratic cavalry finally arrived this week in Wisconsin. After grumbling by local Democrats about the dearth of national support for the recall of Gov. Scott Walker, a string of the party's biggest stars filed