Exit polls: Wisconsin voters divided on collective bargaining issue

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Talk about a sharply divided electorate. Tuesday's election to recall Gov. Scott Walker is too close to call, as voters split about evenly between the governor and his Democratic challenger, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, according to early exit poll results in the state. Voters were passionately divided on the Republican-backed law that ended collective bargaining for most public employees and teachers.

About half said they supported the changes to the collective bargaining law, and a similar share approved of Walker's handling of the issue. Views on collective bargaining were a dividing line in the electorate, with 9 in 10 who approved of the new laws backing Walker and a similar share who disapproved behind Barrett.

Walker angered Democrats and union members last year when, shortly after taking office, he signed legislation that effectively ended collective bargaining for public employees in Wisconsin. The Republican governor presented the measure as necessary to avoid wholesale layoffs, although opponents said it was simply a way of dividing public-sector unions from private unions to weaken labor's political clout in the traditionally strong union state.

Union households made up about a third of the electorate, and about two-thirds of them backed Barrett, about the same level of support he received among the group in 2010. The Democratic candidate improved on his 2010 performance among African-Americans, those with incomes below $50,000 and independents.

Tuesday's contest was a rematch of the 2010 election in which Walker won the office, and both candidates retained more than 9 in 10 ofthose who backed them in 2010. About one in 10 voters said they did not vote in 2010, and they broke heavily for Barrett.

Despite tens of millions of dollars in advertising, most voters decided on a candidate before the final ballots were even set.

About 9 in 10 in early exit polling said they decided who to vote for before May, raising questions about the impact all that money for TV advertising had on the electorate.

Those who did make up their minds in the final month of the campaign broke for Barrett by nearly 30 points.

Those were the key findings of preliminary exit polls conducted Tuesday for The Associated Press. The political world closely watched the recall election for signs of the electorate's mindset just five months before this presidential battleground weighs in on the White House race between President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

Obama carried Wisconsin by a comfortable margin in 2008 en route to the White House.

But a Walker victory would make the state more attractive to Romney as he seeks to do what no Republican has done since 1984 - carry the state in a presidential election.

Preliminary results from the exit polls suggest Obama fares well among voters in Tuesday's contest, though November's electorate might be substantially different. Among recall voters, Obama topped Romney overall, as the candidate who would do a better job handling the economy and on helping the middle class. A sizable 1 in 6, however, said they trust neither party's candidate on the economy, which is likely to be the main issue in the presidential campaign.

Walker's performance in creating jobs in the state was a point of major contention in the recall contest, and here too voters were split on how he handled it.

Walker's push for changes to the collective bargaining law prompted huge demonstrations on Madison's capital square as well as a successful petition drive last fall to recall Walker.

Yet, on Tuesday, most Wisconsin voters suggested the criteria for recalls should be tougher. There have only been three such elections in the nation's history, the most recent in 2003, when voters recalled Democratic California Gov. Gray Davis.

The vast majority of voters said recall elections should be allowed in at least some cases, though most feel they are appropriate only in cases of official misconduct.

"I just think the whole recall election was uncalled for and it was just a big waste of taxpayers' money,'' said Jeff Naunheim, 48, a warranty analyst from St. Francis who voted for Walker in the recall. "I don't think he did anything illegal. And if this is going to set the standard on how things are going to go in the future, it's going to be an ugly, divided mess.''

The exit poll of 2,245 Wisconsin voters was conducted for The Associated Press by Edison Research in a random sample of 35 precincts statewide. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points; it is higher for subgroups