Wednesday, March 9, 2011

GOP Votes To Destroy Unions In Wisconsin

No other way to frame this:

CHICAGO — The bitter political standoff in Wisconsin over Gov. Scott Walker’s bid to sharply curtail collective bargaining for public-sector workers ended abruptly Wednesday night, as his Republican counterparts in the State Senate successfully maneuvered to adopt a bill doing just that.

After a three-week stalemate, Republican senators pushed the measure through in less than half an hour, as Democrats complained bitterly and protesters, who had spent many days at the Capitol, continued their chants and jeers.

The Republicans control the State Senate but had been blocked from voting on the issue after Senate Democrats left the state last month to prevent a quorum. Instead, they used a procedural maneuver to force the collective bargaining measure through: they removed elements of Governor Walker’s bill that were technically related to appropriating funds, thus removing a requirement that 20 senators be present for a vote. In the end, the Senate’s 19 Republicans approved the measure, 18-1, without any debate on the floor or a single Democrat in the room.

The remaining bill, which increases health care and pension costs and cuts collective bargaining rights for most public workers in the state, still needs approval from the State Assembly on Thursday morning, but that chamber has already once approved the measure, and most in Wisconsin now considered approval a foregone conclusion.

...

Democrats, meanwhile, condemned the move as an attack on working families, a violation of open-meetings requirements (most of them did not know there was to be a vote until not long before), and a virtual firebomb in state that already found itself politically polarized and consumed with recall efforts, large scale protests, and fury from public workers.

“In thirty minutes, 18 State Senators undid fifty years of civil rights in Wisconsin,” said Mark Miller, the leader of the Senate Democrats who had fled to Illinois on Feb. 17 in order to block just such a vote from occurring. “Their disrespect for the people of Wisconsin and their rights is an outrage that will never be forgotten.”

Mr. Miller continued: “Tonight, 18 Senate Republicans conspired to take government away from the people. Tomorrow we will join the people of Wisconsin in taking back their government.”

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The bill makes significant changes to most public sector unions, limiting collective bargaining to matters of wages only and limiting raises to the Consumer Price Index unless the public approves higher raises in a referendum. It requires most unions to hold votes annually to determine whether most workers still wish to be members. And it ends the state’s collection of union dues from paychecks.

Recall efforts on the eight state senators eligible for recall right now have already begun.

The corporatists have won a battle, make no doubt about that.

Let's see how many of the Republicans who voted for this bill are still in office in a year or two and let's see what happens to "Scott "I'm Ronald Reagan" Walker at the end of this.

The blowback needs to be FIERCE.

Firedoglake lays out what may happen now:

• Legal challenges. There are going to be a number of legal challenges to this bill. It will not be implemented right away. There’s the near-term challenge of how the bill got passed tonight. It was done in a way that may have violated open meetings laws, by not allowing 24 hours notice for a public meeting of the conference committee. There are other statutes about collective bargaining that may be brought up in court and fought. And there’s the issue of the bill having a fiscal impact. Scott Walker spent three weeks claiming that collective bargaining was a fiscal issue, and then the legislature just passed the bill as “non-fiscal.” Courts will have to wade through a lot of this, and it’s sure to go up to the state Supreme Court. Which brings us to…

• Supreme Court fight. The matchup between David Prosser (R) and JoAnn Kloppenberg (D) for the state Supreme Court on April 5 just got very interesting. It’s a statewide vote, and the balance of power on the state Supreme Court is at stake. Right now there are 4 Republicans and 3 Democrats on the court, but one of those Republicans is Prosser. Expect lots of organizing and millions of dollars poured into this election, which is much like a political election, with debates and everything. If Democrats win, the legality of what took place tonight may be put in greater question.

• General strike. Union leaders are reportedly discussing a general strike, and the mood of the protesters, who stormed the Capitol upon word of the bill, echoes that. You could see some kind of near-term labor walkout, at least in Madison and possibly throughout the state.

• Recalls. This will only energize progressives and labor to get the required signatures for recalls. All 8 Republicans eligible for recall voted to strip public employee unions of their rights, despite clear public opposition. Many of these Republicans, frankly, are going to recall as early as this summer, and if just three of them lose, the balance of power will switch to Democrats in the state Senate. There are also races for three open seats in the state Assembly coming up in May, so even more movement could occur.

• Scott Walker. If his approval ratings were slipping before, they may fall off a cliff now. Walker cannot be recalled until January 2012, and that’s a long way off. But depending on the momentum from the state Supreme Court election, recall elections, Assembly open seats, and legal fights, there could easily be enough support to recall Walker by then.

A bad night for unions and workers, but as has been said before, this fight in Wisconsin has galvanized the labor movement and progressives and shown that we can NO LONGER allow the corporatists to frame the fights and have their way in the class war.

The fight continues from here.

Let's get those Republicans eligible to be recalled this summer recalled.

You can send money to the effort here.

4 comments:

  1. Who do these "legislators" represent anyway? Certainly not the constituents who voted for them and naturally assumed there would be some actual advocacy on their behalf.....

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  2. Oh. Damn. RECALL THE BASTARDS.

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  3. A BLEAK day . They had the vote all along, so this was inevitable. Now does this happen in Penn., In., and Ohio also...that is the question? They all have GOP governors, I believe.

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  4. I do have to say something about unions. I was once in a union (IBEW). I paid my dues. Nevertheless, when I and my family needed my representative they did absolutely nothing for us. I took all my union shirts and hats and pissed all over them then I threw them away in the garbage. I found out my union dues went to my representatives to have nice cars, nice houses and the finer things in life. NEVER EVER AGAIN. 2012 CAN NOT COME QUICK ENOUGH TO GET RID OF OBAMA AND THE REST OF THE DEMS AND UNION THUGS OUT ON THEIR TAIL ENDS.

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