A video turned up by a liberal blogger shows Gov. Scott Walker saying before the 2010 election that he would negotiate pay and pension changes with public employees using collective bargaining.

Jud Lounsbury of Uppity Wisconsin posted the video of Walker's appearance before the Oshkosh Northwestern's Editorial Board in October 2010. Walker defeated Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett on Nov. 2, 2010.

Here is the relevant section of the exchange between Walker and a staffer for The Northwestern (starting at 7:50):

Editorial Board Member: Before, we were talking about state employees contributing to their plan, paying their share of the pension plan. Collective bargaining come into that?

Walker: Yep (nodding yes).

Editorial Board Member: How do you get that negotiated and accepted by the state employee unions?

Walker: You still have to negotiate it. I did that at the county as well.

You can read the full blog post here.

After introducing his controversial budget-repair plan, Walker said he had campaigned on the provisions in that measure, including curbs on collective bargaining. The law limited collective bargaining by most state, local and school employees and also required them to pay more for health care and pensions.

"We introduced a measure last week, a measure I ran on during the campaign, a measure I talked about in November during the transition, a measure I talked about in December when we fought off the employee contracts, an idea I talked about in the inauguration, an idea I talked about in the state of the state," Walker said on Feb. 17, 2011. "If anyone doesn't know what's coming, they've been asleep for the past two years."

PolitiFact Wisconsin rated Walker's statement False.