Of all the battleground states, Wisconsin has gone furthest along the path that the Romney-Ryan ticket would like to take the US: smaller government through tough spending cuts. The cuts championed by Gov. Scott Walker have proved controversial, cutting $1 billion from education and aid to local government over two years, but they've balanced the budget and generated larger-than-expected tax revenues – up 4.7 percent in fiscal year 2012.
Now in surplus and with more than $120 million in a rainy day fund, Wisconsin's budget has "marked a notable departure from past practice, with deep structural cuts, including to employee benefits and local aid, to achieve forecast balance," rating agency Fitch noted earlier this month.
GOP vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan, a native of Janesville, Wis., would be proud.
Wisconsin has achieved this remarkable fiscal turnaround despite the worst economic recovery among the battleground states. Through September, it is one of only five states in the nation to have lost jobs over the past year. (The governor argues the estimates are inaccurate and points to actual quarterly counts showing a 1.7 percent increase in private-sector employment and 1.2 percent annual increase overall through March, which is just ahead of New Hampshire and on par with Virginia.) Either way, Wisconsin's economic performance is nothing to brag about. It is less than halfway back to its peak employment before the recession and heavily dependent on manufacturing, which has slowed nationally in recent months.
In June, Governor Walker survived a recall election.
Advantage: Obama, within the margin of error.