In
light of the recent protests in Wisconsin over their Republican
governor, Scott Walker, trying to strip the teachers of
their hard-earned, longtime right to negotiate the terms
of their contract, we must be real and look at the larger
picture. The vast numbers of those fighting for the just
cause is impressive; a reaction to an adverse action against
them. This is “the American Way.” But upon closer examination,
we have to ask, “why the reparative tactics?” Why should
Wisconsin have to mobilize 70,000 supporters of workers
rights when they should never have had to defend them at
all? It’s because the working class of Wisconsin sat on
their hands on Election Day.
What
I want to know is where were you at election time? Now,
you have to play catch-up. Governor Walker is now executing
the dream of fiscal conservatives: destroy the unions.
I hear political pundits scream that he won a mandate
to do just what he’s doing. No, I don’t think so…Walker
won election in November 2010 with 52% to 46% of the vote.
That means that just under half the voters of Wisconsin
didn’t want what he was selling. Nothing
overwhelming there.
Thousands
of teachers, nurses, firefighters and other public sector
workers camped out at the Wisconsin Capitol for weeks, protesting
Republican Gov. Scott Walker's efforts to reduce their take-home
pay - by increasing their contribution to their pension
plans and health care benefits - and eliminate their
collective bargaining rights. Yes…eliminate! The argument
from the Right is “there is no right to collectively
bargain in the Constitution.” Gov. Haley Barbour (R-MS)
said that very thing on NBC’s Sunday talk show directly
to AFL-CIO President Richard Trumpka. All I could think
was, “there’s no right to inherit your parent’s money
when they die in the Constitution either, but Republicans
sure defend that!”
The
assault is clear and obvious - and was during last year’s
election season - that the Right was intent on doing serious
damage to both government and poor people. The assault
on the working class was also par for the course.
In
Wisconsin, Republicans control the state Legislature, and
initially it seemed certain that Walker's proposal would
pass easily. But then the Democrats in the Legislature went
into hiding, leaving that body one vote shy of a quorum.
As of this writing, the Legislature was at a standstill
as state police searched high and low for the missing lawmakers.
A move necessary to protect the interests of the minority:
union members. Yes, unionized workers only make up 12%
of America’s workforce. That means 88% of the workforce
is unprotected and subject to unfettered attack at any given
time…and obviously doesn’t care—until the fiscal-ites come
for them.
Just
like other conservative Republican governors, including
John Kasich of Ohio, Chris Christie of New Jersey, Mitch
Daniels of Indiana and Rick Scott of Florida, the Wisconsin
governor aims to drain the power of public employee unions,
especially the teachers' union, since public education is
said to be the single biggest expenditure for every state.
Although
Walker claims he was forced to impose cutbacks because the
state is broke, teachers noticed that he offered generous
tax breaks to businesses that were equivalent to the value
of their givebacks. Economists over the past two week’s
have dissected the budgetary emergency argument that Walker
has spouted.
The
uprising in Madison is symptomatic of a simmering rage among
the nation's teachers. They have grown angry and demoralized
over the past two years as attacks on their profession escalated.
In my hometown, Washington, DC, we had one of the most vicious
attacks on our city’s teachers when “manufactured superstar,
Michelle Rhee, unapologetically fired 200-plus teachers
under the guise of “bad teachers”; then once challenged,
changed the reason to “budgetary emergency,” then, once
unveiled on that falsehood, charged the teachers with being
“bad” again. DC voters had their say when they voted Rhee
and her boss, Mayor Adrian Fenty, out of office in the next
election cycle. They had to play catch-up.
So
a weekend ago, Moveon.org held rallies across the country
in support of public employees and others outraged at the
Wisconsin budget-cutting bill they consider an attack on
unions. The galvanizing of left-of-center groups gets hot
& heavy when the Right gets going, huh? I can’t, for
the life of me, understand why this wasn’t important to
do last November? MoveOn.org and other liberal and labor
groups held noon events at all 50 state capitals. That’s
where it’s important…all 50 states. Does anyone remember
Howard Dean’s 50-state strategy? He was onto something…
My
point here is that every election is an important
one. Back-end organizing always has dire consequences.
The old saying, “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound
of cure,” still holds true. However, this generation has
seemed to have forgotten it. If I may use the race car
analogy: It is imperative for the Left to remember that
there is never a time to hit the rest stop; while you’re
resting, the Right is still driving. They may be reckless,
off-course, two-at-the-wheel, or even drunk, but they’re
still driving.
The
focal point of the protests was the Wisconsin Capitol, where
a snow and cold failed to deter about 70,000 who drummed,
chanted and marched. "Hey, hey, ho, ho, Governor Walker
has got to go," chanted the group rallying in Madison.
My take on it is that Governor Walker should have never
got in, so he could have to go! If we’re to protect the
rights important to our existence, we can’t fall asleep
at the wheel.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author of
the on-line commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is host of the internet-based
talk radio show, Socially Speaking in Washington, DC.
Click
here to contact Mr. Redd.
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