That's why it's so confusing that the same kinds of politicians are elected and re-elected, rather than finding someone who wants to reduce the massive deficit that we have.
Wisconsin had a ~$3.5B deficit and roughly 8% unemployment after Jim Doyle left the Governor's position and Scott Walker went in, changed a lot of spending habits and when he was beaten in the last election, the state has a $585M surplus. Walker also put a lot of money into the schools after fixing the deficit (part of the plan- cut costs, fix the problem and address the needs). The new dogcatcher (former state School Superintendent) ran on a platform of spending more on schools, reducing the state prison population by about half, raising taxes and eliminating the manufacturing and farm tax credits to pay for this stuff. The week before the election, he said he wouldn't raise taxes.
While I like the idea that he wants to fix the roads, he wants to attempt to fix the school problems by throwing money at them and the two largest systems in the state, which are also two of the worst, are incredibly costly as it is with Madison ($331M budget) spending over $11K and Milwaukee ($1.21B budget) spending more than $15K/student. My property tax bill is too high now and Walker reduced that by a good amount while he was in office.